To my
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Notes
on Pronunciation
The
spellings and pronunciations of the names and words in THE KELTIAD are probably
unfamiliar to most readers, unless one happens to be thoroughly steeped in
things like the Mabinogion or the Cuchulainn cycle. The Celtic languages
(Irish, Scots Gaelic, Welsh, Cornish, Manx and Breton) upon which I have drawn
for my nomenclature are not related to any tongue that might provide a clue as
to their derivation or spoken sound. Outside of loan-words, they have no Latin
root as do the Romance tongues, and they are in fact derived from a totally
different branch of the Indo-European linguistic tree.
Therefore
I have taken certain, not always consistent, liberties with orthography in the
interests of reader convenience, though of course one may deal with the names
any way one likes, or even not at all. But for those who might like to humor
the author, ! have made this list of some of the more difficult names, words
and phonetic combinations.
One
further note, to those {and they are legion) whose Celtic linguistic
scholarship exceeds my poor own: The words used herein are meant to be Keltic,
not Celtic. I have appropriated fairly even-handedly from most of the Celtic
languages—and from Elizabethan English and Lowland Scots (Lallans) as well
where it seemed good to do so—both archaisms and words that are in common
modern usage, and in not a few cases I have tampered with their meanings to
suit my own purposes. Therefore do not be unduly alarmed should familiar words
turn out to be not all they seem. Words may be reasonably assumed to change
over time and distance; Keltia is very far away by both measures, and who is to
say (if not I) what words they shall be speaking and what meaning those words
shall have.
vii
Vltl
Patricia
Kennealy
But
just in case that does not suffice to avert the wrath of the purists, I hereby
claim prior protection under the Humpty-Dumpty Law: "When / use a word ...
it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less." Now you are
warned.
Vowels
Generally
the usual, though a is mostly pronounced "ah" and ( never takes the
sound of "eye," but always an "ee" or "ih" sound.
Thus: "ard-ree" for Ard-righ, not "ard-rye." Final e is
always sounded; thus: "Slay-nee" for Slaine, not "Slain";
Shane is pronounced as in English.
Vowel
Combinations
aoi;
ao: au:
ae, ai:
&:
io:
"ee"
as in "heel"
"ay"
as in "pay"
"ow"
as in "cow,
Jaun
rhymes with
"I"
as in "high.'
Aeron
and Slaine, where the sound is
"day."
The
accent gives it length. Thus, dan is pronounced
"dawn."
"ih"
if unaccented. If accented (io), then "ee."
' never
"aw" as in "saw"; thus crown," not with
"fawn." Exceptions: the proper names ay" as in
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
IX
Consonants
c: always a "k" sound. (To avoid the
obvious problem here, the more usual Celt, Celtic, Celtia have been spelled
Kelt, Keltic, Keltia, throughout.)
ch, kh:
gutturals as in the German "ach," never "ch" as in
"choose"
g: always hard, as in "get" or
"give"
bh: pronounced as "v"
dd: pronounced as "th" in
"then," not as in "thin"
Some of
the more difficult names
Aeron:
AIR-on
Aoibhell:
ee-VELL
Gwydion:
GWID-eeon
Rioghnach:
REE-oh-nakh
Caerdroia:
car-DROY-uh
Taoiseach:
TEE-shokh
Sidhe:
shee
Annwn:
annoon
Nudd:
neethe (sometimes spelled Neith)
Sorcha:
SURR-uh-kha
Taliesin:
tal-YES-in
Kynon:
kinnon
Pryderi:
pree-DARE-ee
dQhin:
doo-heen
irin
Mage": EE-rin MAH-gay
Scone:
properly, skoon; but, as you please
Characters
Kelts
AERON
AOIBHELL, High Queen of Kelts
GWYDION
AP ARAWN, King of Keltia, Prince of Gwynedd,
First
Lord of War MORWEN DOUGLAS, Duchess of Lochcarron, Taoiseach of
Keltia
ROHAN,
Prince of Thomond, Aeron's brother and heir SORCHA Ni REILLE (Sarah O'Reilly),
former Terran DESMOND, cousin to Aeron, son to the late Elharn Ironbrow SHANE,
cousin to Aeron INDEC, an Abbess-mother of the Ban-draoi BRONWEN, a Ban-draoi
novice SABIA Ni DALAIGH, friend to Aeron GRELUN, an officer in Gwydion's
service POWELU, Prince of Dyved PRYDERI, Lord of Caradigion, his son CARADOC
LLASSAR, High Admiral of the Keltic starfleet GWENNAN CHYNOWETH, Captain of the
flagship Firedrake DENZIL CAMERON, commander in Rohan's service STRUAN CAMERON,
his brother. Master of Horse FEDELMA NI GARRA, Fian general DONAL MAC AVERA,
Captain-General of the Fianna HELWEN DRUMMOND, Kin to the Dragon CUMARA, a
merrow
ALLYN
SON OF MIDNA, a lord of the Sidhe DECLAN, brother to Aeron FIONNUALA, sister to
Aeron GAVIN, Earl of Straloch. Lord Extern KYNON AP ACCOLON, Kymro and traitor
RiocHNACH, Princess of the Name, sister to Aeron
xi
Xll
Patricia
Kennealy
NIALL O
KEREVAN, Duke of Tir-connell, her husband KIERAN, brother to Aeron, twin to
Declan
ElLUNEDOFGARIOCH,
his wife
MELANGELL,
cousin to Aeron SLAINE, cousin to Aeron, sister to Desmond ITHELL, a woman of
Upper Darkdale GWYN AP NUDD, King of the Sidhe ETAIN, his queen
Terrans
HACO
GREX, Terran Ambassador to Keltia
THOMAS
DE VALADON, consul
DEONORA
MARONCHUK, consul
WARREN
HATHAWAY, Lieutenant, FSS Sword
ATHENEE
MIKHAILOVA, Ensign, FSS Sword
SARAH
O'REILLY, Lieutenant, FSS Sword (now Sorcha
ni
Reille) THEO HARUKO, Captain, FSS Sword; deceased
Coranians
JAUN
AKHERA, Emperor of the Cabiri
STREPHON,
his grandfather and predecessor as Emperor
HELIOR,
his mother
SANCHONIATHON,
his brother
TINAO,
his mistress
HANNO,
Captain-General of the Imperial armies on Tara
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
GARALLAZ,
aide to Jaun Akhera
IRIN
MACE, chief priest of the Cabiri order
INDARRAK,
servant to Tinao
xiu
Fomori
ELATHAN,
King of Fomor
CAMISSA,
his queen
TALORCAN,
his half-brother
BASILEA,
Queen-Dowager of Fomor, Elathan's mother
RAUNI,
sister to Elathan
THONA,
concubine to the late King Bres, mother to Talorcan
BORVOS,
captain of Elathan's guard
TREIC,
his lieutenant
XIV
Patricia
Kenneafy
In The
Copper Crown;
It is
the Earth year 3512. The FSS Sword, a probe ship from Earth sent out to make
diplomatic first contact with alien civilizations, arrives unknowingly in what
turns out to be Keltic space.
An
interstellar kingdom comprising seven star-systems, Keltia was founded in 453
A.D. by Kelts from Earth led by St. Brendan the Astrogator. It is ruled at
present by the young High Queen Aeron, who, seeing in the Sword's arrival a
chance for Keltia to re-establish friendly relations with the world from which
her people came so long ago, sets about achieving an alliance.
Aeron's
wish is by no means universal, however, neither within her own realm nor beyond
the Curtain Wall, the psionically-maintained forcefield that conceals Keltia
from the rest of the galaxy. The Cabin Imperium and the kingdom of Fomor,
ancient and bitter enemies of the Kelts, have been informed of the contact with
Earth by the traitor princess Arianeira, sister of Aeron's consort-to-be,
Gwydion; and now Jaun Akhera, heir to the Cabiri Emperor Strephon, and Bres,
the king of Fomor, join forces to invade and occupy Keltia before Keltia can
ally with Earth.
Theb
Haruko, the Japanasian captain of the Sword, and his lieutenant Sarah O'Reilly,
who by now have become Aeron's friends, discover to their horror that Hugh
Tindal, one of their fellow crewmen, has been seduced into joining Arianeira's
treasonous plot. But before they can tell Aeron of this, Arianeira uses black
sorcery to breach the Curtain Wall and let in the Imperial and Fomori fleets.
In the
savage battles that follow, the Kelts, though successful in space, cannot throw
back the invaders from the Throneworld
xv
XVI
Patricia
Kennealy
of
Tara. Aeron herself engages in a fierce duel of vengeance with Bres, the
Fomorian king, who has just slain her friend Haruko, and who, three years
before, ambushed the starship carrying her parents and her first consort,
Roderick, all of whom perished.
She
kills Bres, whose son Elathan, now King, immediately withdraws from the war and
takes his armies home to Fomor; Elathan had been opposed all along to the war
with Kelts, to the angry disgust of his father and his half-brother, Talorcan,
and now that he has become King he can do as he wishes. Aeron, however, has
been terribly wounded in the Fight with Bres, and she is saved only by the
sorcery of Gwydion, who uses his considerable powers to create a magical pool
to heal her of her injuries.
Caerdroia,
the Keltic capital, finally falls to Jaun Akhera's own desperate use of
sorcery—which art Aeron has steadfastly refused to employ in resistance—and
Aeron, Gwydion and Morwen, the Keltic prime minister, are all taken prisoner by
the Imperials.
Arianeira,
however, repents of her treachery, and, with Gwydion's complicity, arranges an
escape for Aeron and Morwen. Although Aeron refuses to leave without Gwydion,
at last he manages to trick her into going, and she and Morwen flee. When Jaun
Akhera discovers that the Queen and her prime minister have both fled the City,
and that his supposed ally Arianeira was the one who effected their escape, he
is enraged, and fully intends to kill Arianeira for her betrayal. But Arianeira
has already killed herself to atone for her treason to Aeron, and to thwart
Jaun Akhera's vengeance, and she dies in her brother Gwydion's arms.
The
planet Tara remains in Imperial hands, with Jaun Akhera and his brother
Sanchoniathon in occupation of Caerdroia—and with Gwydion as a willing hostage.
He does so to keep Keltia for Aeron and in hopes of organizing a resistance;
before the City's fall he dispatches the royal family and others—including the
Terran lieutenant O'Reilly, who has elected to remain in Keltia after the
Sword's return to Earth—to parts unknown for sanctuary.
After a
long and terrible flight over the mountains, in deep snow and bitter cold,
Aeron and Morwen manage to reach a secret spaceport where Arianeira has hidden
Aeron's starship Retaliator, and in that ship they escape from the planet and
from Keltia.
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
xvu
They
are bound on a long and difficult quest, even the reality of which is
uncertain: to find the lost and legendary Treasures of Keltia, taken away from
the kingdom fifteen centuries before by the great King Arthur himself—magical
weapons that will enable Aeron to win back her realm from Jaun Akhera, and, if
such is her final choice, to destroy Jaun Akhera and win an empire of her own
for herself and for Gwydion. But first she and Morwen must find Arthur . . .
Ni bu
Arthur ond trafu. ("Arthur himself had but his time.")
Chapter
1
/n the
days following his coronation, Elathan of Fomor had had little time to call his
own. The Iron Crown of his ancestors had been set upon his head, the fealty of
his barons had been accepted, the body of his father, Bres, had been placed in
the dim dusty vaults beneath the palace with the fifty-four kings and queens
who had preceded him as mon-archs of Fomor. Time now to begin to rule, not
merely to reign.
In
truth, there was much that had need of being ruled, and well did Elathan know
it. In his first hour as king, he had taken a decision that would without
question shape not only his own reign but the destiny of Fomor for generations
and reigns to come: Thousands of star-miles away, upon the Keltic throneworld
of Tara, Elathan had called his armies from the war with Keltia—had whistled
them off like hounds from the hunt—and against all advice had quit the war,
taking his forces home to Fomor with the body of his father. But the war had
gone on all the same without him, a war neither of Elathan's making nor to
Elathan's liking—a war begun in treachery by Jaun Akhera, heir to the Cabin
Imperium, and joined in by Bres out of vengeance and a long, long hatred.
A
shadow of sorrow crossed Elathan's face at the thought of his father. They had
never been close—Bres had reserved such affection as he could feel, or show,
for his youngest child, his blond daughter Rauni, and for Talorcan, his son by
bis longtime concubine Thona—and in these last few months they had been not
merely estranged but actively antagonistic. All the same, Bres had been
Elathan's King as well as his father, and the loss was a real one.
Well,
Bres was beyond all vengeance now, stain upon Tara by the Keltic queen herself,
in a combat that had put paid to a quarrel seventy years old, and had nearly
put paid to Queen
19
20
Patricia
Kennealy
Aeron
as well. But she had not died: She had been taken prisoner by Jaun Akhera, and
then she had escaped—fled off-planet, her friend and First Minister Morwen
Douglas with her and all the Imperial fleets after her.
And
they had not found her! Elathan felt a surge of elation at the thought:
hopefulness that she would continue to elude capture, and no astonishment
whatever that he should feel so.
He
would not mind an escape of sorts himself: to flee the Court and his capital of
Tory, to slip away to his favorite country seat in the southern hills—no
attendants, no courtiers, no guards, just him and Camissa his lady. They had
been happy there before—before.Bres had seen fit to throw Fomor into unholy
alliance with the Imperium and vengeful war with the Kelts—and they would be
happy there again; though of course any such idyll would now have to wait until
after their wedding, and that itself would have to wait on the six months'
official mourning for Bres. But after that . . . The thought of Camissa brought
a peace to his spirit and an ease to his bearing, and he smiled.
The
chamberlain who had stood so patiently before him all this while took the smile
as recognition, and coughed discreetly.
"The
ambassadors from Alphor wait outside, Majesty. Shall I show them in?"
Elathan
came back into the present with a start, nodded reluctant assent and rose from
the ivory chair as the doors opened on the Coranian envoys. He had been
dreading this official encounter since the day of his crowning, had put it off,
in fact, as long as he had dared; but he could keep Strephon's minions waiting
no longer, not without risking insult—or retaliation.
He had
broken with protocol so far, however, as to receive them here, in his private
office, at his desk with all its working clutter, instead of in the Presence
Chamber as was customary. It was a subtle reminder—not too subtle, he hoped—
that the ambassadors would be certain to pass on home to the Emperor Strephon.
He
watched them as they came gliding across the room. It was the dead of winter
here in Tory; yet the Coranians had defied the bitter cold and leaden skies to
appear in full regalia of their home planet: long, ankle-hobbling skirts of
intricately pleated white linen over narrow trousers of rich figured cloth,
chests half-bared under short jackets, gold-embroidered sleeveless coats
falling below their knees. Upon their heads were
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
21
small
shapeless caps like velvet bags, banded with jewelled cords, and their
gold-capped slippers too were velvet. Their garb looked extremely foreign by
contrast to the simply cut robes of the Fomori; their faces were gilded by the
variable sun that had made their homeworld of Alphor by turns into a freezing
desert and a burning waste. Beneath the velvet caps, their hair was thick,
straight, dark.
They
stopped on the other side of the desk and bowed deeply to Elathan as the
chamberlain withdrew. He returned the obeisance with the curt nod of a
sovereign, concealing his distaste, and indicated that they might sit in his
presence. But they carefully waited until he had resumed his own chair before
they did so.
"My
lords," murmured Elathan, freeing them to speak.
"We
extend the felicitations of the Cabiri Emperor Strephon, long may he reign, to
his noble cousin of Fomor," said the emissary who seemed senior of the
two. "And, of course, the Imperium's deepest sorrow for the untimely
demise of Your Majesty's royal father, in so abhorrent a manner."
Elathan
did not reply at once. "We thank our cousin Strephon for this earnest of
his sympathy and concern," he said then. "You are here to take up
your diplomatic duties, my lord—?"
"I
am called Emen Gaitz, Majesty," said the ambassador, looking more than a
little chagrined, for Elathan should certainly have known his name, and, the
envoy almost instantly realized, undoubtedly did . . . "May I present my
colleague Chamara?" he murmured, chastened.
"Your
credentials?"
Silently
Emen Gaitz extended a gold diptych to Elathan, who broke the thin seal and gave
the contents a cursory scan.
"Your
Majesty will find all in order . . . We are indeed appointed duly by the
Emperor to the court of Fomor, but we have also another errand, of somewhat
more delicacy, entrusted to us by another member of the Imperial family."
Elathan,
frowning slightly, set the diptych aside and leaned back in his chair,
steepling his long fingers under his chin and waiting for them to continue.
It was
Chamara who now took up the conversation. "We know well of the high
regard." he began, "in which Your Majesty of Fomor is held by His
Highness Jaun Akhera, the Imperial Heir, and, feeling certain that this regard
is fully reciprocated—" Here he faltered, for Elathan's face was
22
Patricia
Kennealy
completely
devoid of expression, but he rallied and went on. "We have in any case
been instructed by Her Imperial Serenity the Princess Helior, acting for her
son Jaun Akhera, to inquire respectfully of Your Grace if you would not deign
to reconsider your position, and reopen hostilities against Keltia."
Keltia
. . . The word buzzed in Elathan's ears like a bee-bird, made the room swim
before his eyes. What in the name of all gods did he have to do, to prove to
folk that he was sincere in his stated policy, that he wanted to be friends
with the Kelts, and with Aeron . . .
"The
Princess Helior, no less than her son, is surely aware of the circumstances
under which I recalled my armies from the Keltic war. What could Fomor possibly
hope to gain by resuming the ill-considered fight that killed her king?"
"Among
other things, lord, vengeance for that king's death," said Emen Gaitz
eagerly. "It was Aeron Aoibhell, Keltia's own queen, who struck down your
royal father. She is now, as Your Grace knows, a common fugitive, and Jaun
Akhera holds her throneworld in the teeth of everything the Kelts can throw
against him."
"And
that says much for Jaun Akhera. But that is still no good reason, in fact no
reason at all, why I should bring my armies again to a fight I had no wish to
be part of in the first place. I said so to Jaun Akhera himself, long before
battle began, and again after the death of my father."
The
envoys looked uncomfortable. "The Princess Helior prays you think of
future friendship, lord, if nothing else," said Chamara after a while.
"Jaun Akhera is of Your Majesty's own age, and he looks to you—as friend,
contemporary and future ally—for assistance. Your late royal father—"
"My
late royal father," said Elathan, an edge to his voice now, "was the
one who wished for a war of vengeance upon the Kelts; my father, lord, not I.
That feud is now ended, at least as far as I am concerned, and I think I may
speak in this matter for the Queen of Kelts as well. I say this once only: I
will not reopen the war with Keltia under any circumstances, and if Aeron
Aoibhell lives to return to her kingdom, and takes it back again from Jaun
Akhera—as I am firmly convinced she shall—then it is my declared intention to
make peace with her, monarch to monarch, House to House, person to person. The
enmity between her family and mine has gone on long enough, and has cost of
royal blood more than enough. Past time to bring it to an end." He rose,
and they
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
23
scrambled
hastily to their feet. "If there is no more we must speak of?"
They
smoothed the pleats of their clothing, smiling professionally, spreading their
hands in indication that their speeches were done.
"Well,
then. I accept your duty as envoys, and ! look forward to seeing you here at
Court. As to the rest of what we have spoken of today—you understand we have
not spoken of it. I give you good day, my lords."
He fell
back into his chair as the doors swung closed behind the Coranians; and so he
did not see the man who loitered alone in the great open hall beyond the study
doors, and who now, with a quick furtive glance around, fell into step as if by
purest chance with the Imperial envoys.
They
stopped, startled, and began to bow to the newcomer as formally and
respectfully, though less deeply, as they had bowed to the King of Fomor
himself. But he cut their obeisances off and conducted them quickly out of the
hall, glancing around yet again to be sure that none had seen them go. Once
safely out of sight of the royal environs, he turned to them, smiling
winningiy.
"Ah
sirs," said Talorcan, half-brother to Elathan, son of Bres and his legal
concubine the Lady Thona, "would it please you to speak further of your
true business here at Tory? For I," he said, "may be of assistance to
you in such matter, and—howsoever my royal brother may decide—I would not turn
down the friendship of the next Cabiri Emperor. Shall we speak more of this in
my chambers?"
'
"Aeron? Do you sleep?" Morwen Douglas, Duchess of Lochcarron and
First Minister of Keltia, stood in the doorway of the starship cabin and smiled
indulgently at its occupant.
The one
she addressed lay curled up on the blastcouch in an attitude full of elegance,
long slim legs crossed at the ankle and drawn up slightly, red-gold hair draped
over her like a coverlet. Aeron Aoibhell, High Queen of Keltia, Morwen's
foster-sister and onetime sister-in-law, stirred, stretched and sat up all in
one fluid movement.
"Not
now . . , Any road, I am all slept out. Let me take the ship for the next watch
and what is left of this one. I feel a need to take counsel of myself, and that
is easier done at the helm than lolling here."
Morwen's
smile widened. "Well, should Her Majesty need
24
Patricia
Kennealy
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
25
other
counsel—I will not say wiser counsel—let her not forget she has to hand the
services of her Taoiseach. But 1 think I will sleep now a while myself;
besides, you are the only one here knows where we are bound."
"I
have told you where we are bound."
"Oh
aye: We go in search of Arthur—a king dead fifteen hundred years—and in search
of the Thirteen Treasures of Keltia—which may or may not exist, and which he
may or may not have taken away with him. Not the most certain of
destinations."
"Perhaps
not. But if Your Grace of Lochcarron will delay your rest until you have read a
little in this" —she tossed to Morwen a small book bound in dark-blue
leather, and rose from the couch as she spoke— "you will shortly have a
better idea of where we are bound. That is, if you truly wish to know?"
Morwen
snatched the little volume from its arc through the air. "I am not
entirely sure just yet . . ."
When
Aeron, grinning at her friend's exasperation, had gone past her, headed for the
command cabin of Retaliator, Morwen looked down reluctantly at the
silver-stamped blue leather cover.
"
'Preithi Annuvin,' " she said softly and reverently. "From the hand
and harp of Taliesin ap Gwyddno himself . . ."
She
shook her blond head and dropped down on the blastcouch. Almost the only thing
Aeron had as yet chosen to impart to her was that this book would be their map
for the desperate quest ahead. For this journey they were now embarked upon was
not one of pleasure, nor of choice, nor even of their own planning. It was flight
plain and simple: flight into exile, flight arranged at the cost of others'
lives, to save their own lives and to seekjielp that would save their kingdom.
And—again
according to Aeron—this bard dead for a millennium and a half would guide them
. . .
*'Oh
gods, Aeron," said Morwen, looking after her friend, "I pray you know
what it is that you do."
She
leaned back against the pillows in the hollow left by Aeron; unfastening the
silver clasps of the little book, she opened the blue leather covers and began
to read.
In the
Keltic capita) of Caerdroia, in Aeron's tower bedchamber overlooking the sea,
Gwydion put aside the book that had been in his hands, rose, and walked to the
windows
that
gave on the city. His eyes, ordinarily so all-seeing, saw Caerdroia no more
than they had seen the pages of the book, for his mind—and his heart—had fled
many light-years away, moving with Retaliator as she sailed into the unknown.
Yet for
all his skill and power, he could not see that ship with any sight; she, and
those who sailed her. had passed beyond the reach of telepathy and prescience
and even hope. All he could do was yearn; and that, for the Prince of Gwynedd
and the King of Keltia, was not permissible, not now, and never for long.
But in
truth he had not found his self-chosen captivity as
onerous
as he had expected to. Having resolved to remain as
"hostage
in Caerdroia—as he had patiently explained to both
^eron
his consort and Jaun Akhera his captor—he had not for
one
instant regretted his decision. He had stayed so that Aeron
would
have a kingdom to return to; as First Lord of War on
"the
royal council, as Pendragon of Lirias, leader of the Dragon
Kinship,
and, most of all, as Aeron's chosen lord, he was the
:
.logical one to remain.
>
And both Jaun Akhera and Aeron had perfectly well under-;!«tood his reasons,
though Aeron had fought bitterly against jliis decision, and had had in the end
to be tricked into yHight . . . But she would have died on the scaffold had she
; i.;Steyed, and Morwen with her; and that he could not have r'borne. So he had
seen to it that she fled, and his sister ( ^rianeira—she who had betrayed her
Queen, her brother and
•^Jief
country into Imperial hands—had arranged the escape
•^before
killing herself, all in atonement for her treachery . . .
.; i
The wjnd through the open casement stirred Gwydion's
..>>•
Ufartt hair, and his handsome face showed for a moment his
Jtfespair.
Well, things had gone as they were fated, and more
folk
than An had met their dan in this quarrel. Unbidden, the
.. fee
of Theo Haruko formed before his eyes: Haruko, the
japanasian
captain of the Terran embassy ship that, only
&Qnths
before, had rediscovered Keltia for the first time in
•
.i'tttfee thousand years; Haruko who had been his friend—and
Aeron's.
A^wave
of pain swamped all his defenses at the renewed of Aeron, and this time he let
it take him. For all his relief that she at least was beyond Jaun Akhera's the
doubts he had held at bay for a month now around him like camurs ringing a wounded
stag. she safe, was she well, was she even alive . . . She was
26
Patricia
Kennealy
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
27
clever
and courageous, right enough, a true Aoibhel! and a true monarch; but would
that be sufficient for the task she had accepted and the path she had set
herself to waik? Ah, Aeronwy —Gwydion leaned his forehead against the
sun-warmed stone of the window embrasure—gods with you, cariad . . .
He did
not turn as one of the omnipresent guards, deceptively casual, peered through
the doorway to see what their.royal charge was up to. Though never was Gwydion
unwatched by at least four sentries of Jaun Akhera's personal troops, few
demands were made upon him, and he had all the leisure, he could wish to read,
or play his beloved telyn, or waik in the palace gardens with Aeron's
wolfhounds—and his Coranian guards. Even the wolfhounds, though, had managed to
escape from Turusachan: After a few weeks' pining, they had fled one night to
hunt their absent mistress, and now Gwydion walked alone, and wished he could
have followed.
He had
even on three occasions been permitted the extraordinary grace of riding out
from the gates of the City, under heavy escort, north to the Avon Dia and east
as far as Miremoss. The liberty had been granted under the guise of necessary
exercise, but Gwydion knew very well the hope that had been in the
Marbh-draoi's mind: that this brief taste of greater freedoms would push his
recalcitrant prisoner in the direction of collaboration—or at the very least
away from
recalcitrance.
Gwydion
laughed, a little bitterly. Pity it was that Jaun Akhera and so many of his
closest advisors were such proficient sorcerers. Otherwise Gwydion had
shapeshifted long ago, and been away from Turusachan in form of a hare or sea
eagle or some other creature both swift and natural to the region. Or even
another wolfhound to run with Ardattin and Cabal. . . But a spell of such power
and complexity required time and effort both; he would have been detected long
before his power could have been called in, and he would have been summarily,
and unpleasantly, stopped.
So
Gwydion remained, turning away all Jaun Akhera's overtures of friendship with
the same grace and good humor as he used to turn away Jaun Akhera's threats;
and nothing changed.
It was
the height of the rainy season in that part of Alphor where lay the Imperial
city of Escal-dun. Persistent rains from, a gray sky had turned the endless
sands beyond the city walls
into a
quagmire; within the high streaming aurichaicum walls, the mood of the city's
inhabitants was as gray.
"But
why will you not! Girdle of Auset, the boy is my son, your grandson—you
yourself named him etcheko-primu, Imperial Heir!"
Even
the thick doors emblazoned with the gold Imperial eagles were not proof against
the bitterness of that cry; beyond the doors, the guards kept impassive faces
and studied not to bear, knowing only too well that their lives most surely
hung Upon that tacit ignorance.
Within
the columned stoa, a woman in clear bright red paced back and forth, in her
anger vivid against the rainlight. Her thick black-brown hair was cut precisely
even with her shoulder-blades; around her slim neck was the narrow gold collar
worn by members of the Imperial House of the Plexari. Her name was Helior.
The
father she so passionately harangued lay, as was his habit, on silk pillows
piled thick upon a longchair of solid gold. He was an old man, bald, his skin
furrowed and dew-lapped with great age, though its texture was still that of a
young man's; his eyes that had once been clear amber-gold were paled now to the
color of citrines seen through moving water. Those eyes were at this moment
bent narrowly upon his eldest child, and they held annoyance, amusement and
indulgence in equal proportions.
"That
I did," said Strephon with a snort. "The Cabin Emperor may choose his
heir as he pleases, and once you ; yourself had resigned your rights in favor
of your son—or are you regretting that decision? —No, I thought not; in any
event, Jaun Akhera was the only logical one of your brood to choose. As for
your brother's spawn, the less said the better, though there will be trouble
there later on. Young Akhi will be well able to deal with it."
/
"If he lives to come home again from Keltia!" snarled Helior.
"Why you ever permitted him to proceed with that Invasion I shall never
know—a sleeveless errand if ever there was one ... But once you did commit him
to it, my father, it Seems to me that the course of honor would have been to
^support him in his need."
\
Strephon shifted on his pillows, dabbling his fingers in the ^ornamental
carp-pool.
"Honor
doesn't enter into it. Jaun Akhera knew there Should be, after my
initial—investment, not one smallest
28
Patricia
Kenneaty
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
29
flitterworth
of additional help from me. Besides, if he cannot manage to turn things around
for him in Keitia with the seventy legions he has remaining after Bres's
defection" —the Emperor's voice gave particular emphasis to the number—
"then he richly deserves whatever fate the Kelts may deal him, and I shall
look elsewhere for another, and worthier, heir. He was careless enough to allow
the Keltic queen to escape, and her chief minister with her; and he must be
made to bear the consequences of that lapse."
Helior,
who had been drawing breath for a bitter refutal, angrily clamped her lips
together. That point could not be argued, and her father knew she knew it:
Aeron Aoibhell and Morwen Douglas had indeed managed to elude her son and all
seventy of those crack legions; had from all reports made a harrowing march
through snow-mountains to a remote space-base—garrisoned by Imperial
troops!—and had stolen a ship from under the noses of those troops and gotten
clean away off-planet ...
"And
he was also careless enough to permit his own hand-picked ally, the Princess
Arianeira, to betray him in turn as she had betrayed her Queen; it was she who
arranged Aeron's escape." Strephon shook his head, but his eyes under
lowered lids watched his daughter's every move. "A sad and sorry performance."
"He
succeeds in keeping caged an eagle indeed—Gwydion Prince of Gwynedd,"
returned Helior with considerable sharpness. "That one is no
peacock-princeling, nor plumed bustard either."
That
was certainly true enough, conceded Strephon privately. Gwydion of Don was not
only Keltia's chief warlord but the consort of Keltia's queen, and, as a
hostage, worth several planets at the most conservative reckoning.
"That
was well done, I admit it freely. But of little use in the long run if it lures
not Aeron back again to Keitia . . . Still, we shall see. And now—" He
fluttered jewelled fingers in the air, and Helior curtsied deeply, hands
crossed on her breast.
Outside
in the broad hallway, she stood a moment in thought, then hurried in a rustle
of silk toward the family quarters in the palace's garden wing used by her
son—and shared by him with his mistress, the Lady Tinao.
Aboard
the Earth ship Sword, nothing stirred; nothing save the banks of light and
complex circuitry, blinking erratically to life in waves of incomprehensible
patterns, switching themselves on and off, monitoring course and velocity,
correcting where necessary.
The
blinking banks monitored other things as well: the lives of the six people who
lay in motionless stasis in the coidsleep cabins. Two of these were Terrans;
Warren Hathaway and Athenee Mikhailova, ship's officers, two of the three
remaining survivors of the original embassy probe mission that had brought the
Sword to Keltic space. Their companions remained in Keitia: Captain Theo Haruko,
dead in a hero's grave in royal ground; Hugh Tindal, dead for a traitor in an
unmarked ditch; and Sarah O'Reilly, very much alive, and, since she was hunted
for by the agents of Jaun Akhera, safe in the custody of the Ban-draoi Sisters,
hidden away in a convent on the planet Vannin.
The
other four sleepers were Kelts, Aeron Aoibhell's ambassadors to Earth: her
sister the Princess Fionnuala and her Council minister for out-Wail affairs,
Gavin Earl of Straloch. One was a bard: Morgan Cairbre, sent on the mission as
master-spy as much as master-bard. And the last was a warrior Emrys Penmarc'h,
a lieutenant in the service of Gwydion, and one who was Kin to the Dragon.
The
Sword was on course to Earth, programmed to inter-, cept, if possible, the
Terran embassy ship which was even now sailing to Keitia with a full consular
aboard her, to take up Queen Aeron's invitation to open negotiations for full
diplomatic ties between Earth and Keitia. And that fact was what had brought
about the invasion of Keitia by the Cabin Empire and its ally of necessity, the
kingdom of Fomor the fact that these two powers, Keitia and Earth, kin from
old, were after three thousand years of separation now minded to reconcile.
That neither Fomor nor the Cabiri Empire could countenance; and so Keitia had
come to be betrayed and invaded, never knowing if indeed the same, fate had not
been visited upon Earth; and the six aboard the Sword knew nothing of any of
it. When the Terran embassy ship was within hailing distance, the droids would
awaken them; until that .time, they slept peacefully on.
; Not far from where Gwydion Prince of D6n
had just laid •side his book, Jaun Akhera, Prince of Alphor and Imperial
30
Patricia
Kennealv
Heir,
slammed a palm down in irritation upon the touchboard of the computer that
formed the top of his desk. The screen lighted like an aurora, then with a
wheezing noise died away into blankness.
Jaun
Akhera stared at it a moment longer, then looked up to meet his brother's eyes.
"I
am sorry, Akhi," said Sanchoniathon, turning one palm outward helplessly.
"But there is nothing to be done. There will be no more help from
Strephon; our mother has tried and failed, and even that message was not gotten
to us without great difficulty. We are to do whatever we must with whatever is
left to us."
His
elder brother swore briefly. "Apparently! Hanno?"
Jaun
Akhera's captain-general came to attention where he stood prudently nearer the
door.
"You
know the situation as well as do I, my lord," he said. "While we hold
this planet, and the City, we are safe; but no more than that. The Keltic
starfleet will not venture inside the Criosanna, for fear of what we might do
to those of their people under our hand. But beyond Tara's moons it is a
different story, and outside this system—" He shrugged, palms open in the
same gesture of futility Sanchoniathon had used.
"Outside
this system, we are defeated, or near enough to it. Not acceptable." Jaun
Akhera had begun to pace by the windows that overlooked the sea. "Who
leads the Keltic fleet since Elharn was slain?"
"Prince
Rohan is in command, but the new High Admiral to take Elham's place is called
Caradoc Llassar. He is a veteran of the Halistra conflicts—you remember, that
Keltic protectorate system the Phalanx so long coveted—and eveiy bit as devious
as his predecessor."
Jaun
Akhera swore again. "And what of Aeron?"
Hanno
and Sanchoniathon exchanged quick dreading looks. Neither man had wanted to
have to answer this question, and both had known it would certainly be asked .
. .
"There
is no news, Akhi," said Sanchoniathon carefully. "None but what we
already know: that she and Morwen arc undoubtedly off-planet, as Gwydion has
claimed; and that, five days after we took the City, her personal ship was
stolen from a spacebase a hundred miles to the south of here."
"A
spacebase guarded by troops of my own household division!" Jaun Akhera was
furious all over again when he
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
31
thought
of it. "Well," he said after a while, "from the claw we may
judge of the tiger—or the She-wolf. If she lives, she will go on what way she
has begun; of that, at least, we can be certain. Where do you think she is
likely to go?"
"Earth,"
said Hanno. "Perhaps she is even there by now; it would depend on the sort
of transport she may have found herself. If she is indeed the one who stole
Retaliator—her own ship, after all, and I must say I cannot imagine who else
would have, or could have, done it—she will have certainly come to Earth by
now, if that ship is as fast as everyone seems to think it is."
Jaun
Akhera snorted. "It is; Gwydion enjoyed telling me so much too much for it
not to be true."
"Well,
what then? We cannot move from Caerdroia, and we cannot take the war beyond
this system."
"What
then?" repeated Jaun Akhera. "If we cannot take the war elsewhere,
perhaps we can make it come to us ... Since we can get no help from without, as
my grandfather has decreed, then we must make shift to get help from within. I
will see what may be done to find some."
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
33
Chapter
2
Sarah
O'Reilly stood on the edge of the little landing-field, possessed of such an
impatience and excitement that she resembled nothing so much as a racehorse
held in before the start. Her feet did a little shuffle in place, her face was
lifted eagerly to the sky, and her brown hair—she had been letting it grow in
Keltic fashion since her arrival on Tara, and tt was now down past her
shoulder-blades—blew behind her on a warm wind.
Try as
she might, she could not manage to control her anticipation. The Sisters would
not approve, she thought a little guiltiiy. They have been trying so hard to
teach me control and restraint, and now, as soon as a little of both is called
for— But that was not strictly true, and she knew it. It had not been a person devoid
of self-control who had been communications lieutenant aboard the probe ship
Sword, and no unrestrained individual had been the friend of Theo Haruko, and
certainly the Ard-rian of Keltia herself had not chosen one lacking in
self-discipline to be her personal squire . . , O'Reilly felt the familiar tug
of anxiety at the thought of Aeron, and those other friends now bound for Earth
on the Sword, and the renewed pang of loss for Theo her captain. / have not
forgotten you! she cried to those ghostly presences so real before her. Oh, I
have not forgotten . . ,
Then
all the fretful shadows vanished, as out of the low clouds a familiar silver
ship came in a flashing curve, dropping fast and steep and coming in to land a
hundred yards away. The high keen of the thrusters died as the power was cut;
then as the doorseals opened, O'Reilly was free to run forward at last.
A tall
man emerged from the portal. Dark-haired, dark-mus-tached, clad in the brown
uniform of the Fianna, he staggered a little as O'Reilly threw herself into his
arms.
32
"Softly,
anwylyd," he protested with a smile. "Have the Ban-draoi sisters not
been teaching you patience and purposeless waiting?"
"A
neat trick," said O'Reilly with some bitterness, "for such as can
manage it. I think 1 shall never be among them. Oh, I have missed you,
Desmond—"
"And
I you." Desmond Aoibhell bent his head to kiss her then. "But it has
not been so long, considering. I may be Aeron's cousin, but that means only all
the more duties in her absence for me and the rest of the family; she leaves a
gap is no small task to fill. Also is there a war on, as you know."
"It
has been three weeks! Quite long enough. Besides"— she fitted herself
under his shoulder as they walked from the field, slipping her arm around his
waist beneath his cloak—"most of the time I do not know what is happening
with the war; and if the Abbess Indec knows, she does not always see fit to
tell me. Though God knows why she might think / should be spared such knowledge
... no one else in Keltia is. It's bad enough 1 have to stay here at all."
"You
know very well why you were sent here to Glassary," said Desmond,
tightening his arm around her shoulders. "Aeron thought to keep you safe,
for that Jaun Akhera was searching for you and your fellow Terrans, and this
seemed to her an excellent place to do so. Any road, you suggested Glassary to
her yourself."
"Oh,
I know—it's just that it's very hard for me to sit here safe and healthy and
happy, while the rest of you are . . ." O'Reilly gestured with her free
hand, and on her face now was bitter disdain for her noncombatant status.
"Well,
I am here now."
"So
you are." She leaned close into his side again, ashamed of her outburst,
ashamed still more that she had allowed him to see it,
"All
the same," continued Desmond, "I would not be here even yet, were I
not on a scout's errand for Rohan, and as it is I can spare only a few hours.
But I would not have passed so near to Vannin without seeing you." They
had come to the shell-paved road that climbed to the Ban-draoi convent of
Glassary, its buildings of cream-colored stone low-set, square-built and solid
on its hill in the middle of the island. "Very little else is new,"
he added, anticipating her questions. "Still no word of Aeron and Morwen;
the Imperials still hold the Throneworld; Gwydion is still the Marbh-
34
Patricia
Kennealy
draoi's
prisoner in Turusachan—though that last at least may. soon change."
O'ReiHy's
head snapped up, her eyes sparkling with sudden hope. "A rescue? You will
get him out?"
"There
is—a possibility; which is all I may say of it, even to you."
"1
see—and I am glad." She sighed and moved away a little- "Are you
hungry? Do you wish to bathe and eat now, or later, or what?"
Desmond
laughed. "Or what? Might we go somewhere private and talk awhile, you and
I? There are some things I wish to speak of are best spoken of outside convent
walls."
O'Reilly
blushed. "I know just the place."
Aboard
Retaliator, Morwen sat with her chin in her hands and her elbows on her knees,
staring disconsolately at the little book on the bed before her with an
expression that needed no gloss. Aeron, coming in, saw the look and smiled.
"It
is no real scholar's matter, Wenna. You need not strike so hard to crack the
nut."
Morwen
cast her a baleful upward glance. "Easy for one who has studied at Seren
Beirdd to say so. Well then, ollave, translate the words of Taliesin to
simplicities that a poor ignorant cumal such as 1 might understand. No doubt I
am not so learned as i might be, or apparently should be."
"Nay,
sulk not. We will puzzle it out together." Aeron took the book and turned
it so that both of them might read. "Now, we know that Taliesin ap Gwyddno
was Arthur's oldest and most beloved friend; they had been boyhood playfellows
in Arvon, Druid schoolmates later on, though Arthur went to Dinas Affaraon to
study with the Pheryllt for the rank of master-Druid and Taliesin's first love
was ever bardery. Still they remained close, and when Arthur began his great
labors Taliesin was the first comrade he called to his side."
"And
one of the last to leave him, if we can believe this." Morwen indicated
the book with a jerk of her delicate chin.
"Oh,
but I think we must. Do not forget, he was the beloved of Arthur's sister,
Morgan, and she so great a sorceress as would have seen the least httlest
shadow of a He in his face, and read it in his heart . . . Nay, what Taliesin
has set down here is pure truth. It remains only for us to sort it out. It is
couched in the highest style of the ribgh-bardain, and damnable
difficult."
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
35
"Not
so for—" Morwen caught back her thought before the name was out.
"Nay,"
agreed Aeron quietly, her face expressionless. "Not so for Gwydion. But he
is not here, and so you and I must do our own poor best. Come then, my
Taoiseach, let us read." She opened the book to where she had placed her
sgian as marker. " 'Three times the fullness of Prydwen we went into it;
except seven, none returned from Caer Sidi.' "
The
words of the wild, ancient chaunt echoed in the cabin, sounding huge and cold
and full of mystery out there among the stars. Morwen felt the fine hairs on
the back of her neck begin to rise; she hugged herself for comfort, hands
rubbing her upper arms, suddenly chilled, as Aeron's voice went on and on, as
strangely changed and charged as were the words themselves.
"Three
times the fullness of Prydwen we went into it. Except seven, none returned from
Caer Sidi.
Am 1
not a candidate for fame, to be heard in the
chaunting?
In Caer
Pedryvan four times revolving. The Shout above the Abyss, when was first it
heard? Is this not the Cup of the King of the Dead, Ridged round its edge with
pearls? It gives no life to a coward, nor to one forsworn. A sword of light to
a seeker will be given. And before the portals of Uffern the horns of light
shall
burn.
And
when we went with Arthur in his splendid labors, Except seven, none returned
from Caer Vediwid.
Am I
not a candidate for renown, to be heard in the
singing?
In Caer
Pedryvan, in the Isle of the Strong Door, Where twilight and black dark come
together, Is not bright blood the guest-drink offered? The point of the lance
of battle lies tapped in fumes of
sleep,
When
shall it waken?
And the
bronze lid of Fal's eye, when shall it open? Three times the fullness of
Prydwen were we that went
on sea;
36 Patricia Kenneafy
What
time we went with Arthur of glorious memory. Except seven, none returned from
Caer Rigor.
No
praise give I to the lords of swords,
For
beyond Caer Wydyr they saw not Arthur's might.
In gear
of battle stood they upon the walls,
But
hard it was to speak with their watchman.
Thrice
the freight of Fairface were we mat went with
Arthur,
Save seven, none returned from Caer Coronach."
Aeron's
voice, clear and steady until now, faltered suddenly, as her eyes ranging
forward perceived the text to come. Morwen glanced anxiously, and curiously, at
her, but Aeron was already continuing as if the tiny break had not been.
"Complete
shall be the prison of Gweir in Caer Sidi, Through the spite of Pwyll and
Pryderi. Few before him went into it, the sea's blue chains to
hold
him fast.
Before
the Spoils of Annwn shall he sing, And until the end of time shall he be a bard
for it. Three times the fullness of Prydwen we went into it; Except seven, none
returned from Caer Sidi."
So the
poem ended, and there was silence in the small cabin, and for long moments
neither woman stirred.
Then
Aeron: "Oh but these are winged words! Gwyn son of Nudd has sent us well
... Did you hear, Wenna? Did you hear where we must go?"
"I
heard naught save a tale of death and dolor," said Morwen flatly.
"Seven alone escaped from a mort of caers with baneful names—oh, Aeron,
what guide is this, there is nothing here for us! Look, he speaks of Prydwen,
even, as if she sailed oceans, not space: He says 'were we that went on sea.'
How is that to chime with our course, or our need?"
Aeron
riffled the stiff parchment pages. When she spoke again, she seemed to change
the subject.
"What
means the word 'morimaruse' in the tongue of the Prytani?"
Morwen
looked hard at her—had Aeron lost her wits for true?—then answered with some
bewilderment.
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
37
"Well,
'mar' means 'death,* so that 'i-maruse' is 'of the dead' or 'of death.' "
"So.
And 'mor'?"
"In
all our tongues, 'mor' is—" Morwen stopped abruptly. Gods, my own
nameword, and I did not make the leap to it. . . " 'Mor* is to do with the
sea. Oh, Aeron, can this be so?"
/'Gods
willing. Do not forget, the maker of this poem was both .bard and Druid. He
would not have made so important a chaunt accessible to the casual reader. Nay,
the sea Taliesin speaks of here is the Morimaruse itself.''
Morwen
felt a chill touch her again at the name. The Morimaruse, the great galactic
dust-sea that they had been on course for ever since they had passed the
Curtain Wall . . .
"And
the caers?"
Aeron
clasped her hands behind her head and leaned back against the metal brattice.
"Ah.
That is rather more problematical; and more difficult to construe, for the poem
is ancient and has been much broken and repieced over the centuries. But when
first Gwydion told me of Gwyn's message to me, that I must remember Prydwen and
the Iqst Treasures, I straightway thought of Taliesin and this same poem. You
know the poem itself was lost for some hundreds of years; any road, we gave
much study to it when I was at Seren Beirdd for my schooling, and I have never
forgotten it—far less the turn it gave me when first I read it, like a hare
leaping over my grave . . . So, before Caerdroia fell, I sent to the Bardic
Library and brought away this book." She drew a light fingertip over the
silver-stamped device on the leather binding: the Gwynedd stag. "This copy
came down in Gwydion's family for many generations; maybe even from Taliesin
himself, he was an ancestor of their House ..."
"Surely
you have not carried it with you all this time? How did you get it from
Caerdroia?"
"I
did not," said Aeron levelly. "Ari did. Gwydion had told her of the
book and the prophecy alike, when they held their ruseful meeting to plot our
escape from the City. I found the book here in my cabin that first night."
"That
was—" Morwen fell silent, knowing Aeron knew her thought: That was nobly
done of Arianeira, her last debt of repentance fully paid . . .
"Aye.
Aye, it was . . . Well, to return to the poem, I think
38
Patricia
Kennealv
each
one of those named caers has meaning; more to the point, meaning for us. I
think they are places within, or perhaps beyond, the Morimaruse. Planets,
maybe, at least some of them; or they might be clearings, as it were, within
the dustclouds of the Sea itself. Any road, they are every one of them places
where Arthur brought war, and so only seven returned."
"Seven:
Taliesin, and who else?"
"Their
names come in another poem," said Aeron. "But those others were three
women and three men: Tanwen of Dyonas, and Ferdia son of Kenver, and Daronwy
the daughter of Anwas; the two sons of Geraint, Sgilti Lightfoot and Anghaud
Holdfast; and Elen Llydawg, Elen of the Hosts, she who was one of the greatest
generals Keltia ever had. Seven returned, and spoke no word of Arthur or his
fate; at least, they did not that we know of. But they founded the order of the
Dragon Kinship, in celebration of their fellowship and in memory of their Arthur.
They were great souls and true ones, and they went well on a fearful road. Yet
for all that, they have but little to do with our hunt. Taliesin alone has left
the trailmarks we must follow."
"But
where shall these marks lead us?"
"Ah,
now at last we come to it!" Aeron sat forward again, leaning over the book
in a posture almost bouncing with eagerness. "Here is how I do read it: It
is pieced all awry, as I said before, and so the first parts in sequence of
time come not first in the poem. Where Taliesin speaks of Caer Sidi— that means
Spiral Castle."
"The
Morimaruse again? Caer Sidi is also the name of an island stronghold on
Dyved."
"I
know; but that place had its name much later than this poem, most like even
took its name from the poem . . ."
"So,
the Morimaruse."
Aeron
nodded. "From above the plane of it, the Sea is a giant dust-spiral, a
galaxy in small. Now, Caer Wydyr—Glass Castle, where warriors stand upon the
walls and it is difficult to converse with the sentinel. That I think to be a
space-station, or perhaps a ship, deep within the Morimaruse. Soldiers would
man the walls of such a station, or the defenses of a ship; and a reflective
hull could well be described as glass-like. It would be hard to speak with the
watchman because he would not only speak a foreign tongue, but in
THE
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posture
of war he would surely refuse to respond to hails from an enemy starship."
"Very
clever. A ship sounds the more likely; if only for that surely the existence of
a space-station within the Sea would have been widely known to military
intelligence."
"Not
of necessity. Do not forget, all this was in a time before the raising of our
Curtain Wall, in a period of fierce wars in many galactic sectors, not just our
own little squabbles wkh the Coranians and Fomori. Intelligence-gathering might
well have been hampered by the fighting; any power could have built a station
in the Sea and managed to keep it secret from its enemies. Still, 1 think you
have the right of it here, and Taliesin does speak of another ship over against
Prydwen."
Morwen's
eyes sparked. "The flagship of the Coranian invaders, that Arthur lured
away from Keltia—"
"—and
dragged with him into the Morimaruse. Coming from the Battle of the Roads of
Camlann, he knew there was no way else to destroy the enemy command and keep
Keltia safe. So he engaged the alien ship with Prydwen and took both craft into
the Sea, not knowing if ever he would sail out again. That is when he sent his
famous message back to Keltia, telling all our people mat he would come again
when he was needed."
"And
then?"
Aeron
shrugged. "Who can say? Seven returned, that is all we have been given to
know. Though not, I think, all we are going to know . . . But there is so much
more here, Wenna, that I have not begun to uncipher: He speaks of a sword of
light, and the Cup of the King of the Dead; then later, of a sleeping spear and
a lidded eye. What are those but the four chief Treasures—Sword, Spear, Cup and
Stone—those very ones Gwyn has set me to seek? But here now, in the second
dwned, you can see much has been lost: 'In Caer Pedryvan, in the Isle of the
Strong Door, where twilight and black dark came together/Is not bright blood
the guest-drink offered?' That can only mean Fomor: 'twilight' and 'black dark'
signifying the Fomori and the Coranians, who made common cause against us in
Tory itself. 'Pedryvan' means 'four-cornered tower,' an old bardic usage for
'prison,' and the tradition is strong that Arthur went to Fomor—also Caer
Rigor—to free Keltic hostages captured by the Fomori in the raid on our trading
planet of Clero that was provocation to the war itself.
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He
could have done so only had he come safely through the Morimaruse, and on to
Fomor. That would explain, too, why Prydwen was three times her fullness."
"Because
the rescued prisoners made up those numbers." Morwen was beginning to
catch some of Aeron's excitement.
Aeron
noticed it. "Nay, Taoiseach," she cautioned with a laugh, "you
are to play anti-advocate for me; keep your remove yet a while, as loyal
opposition."
"As
Your Majesty will have it. Oh but Aeron, it does fit so pat together!"
"It
does, which is why we must take greater care than we might like in the glossing
of it. But after that, I can make out no more at present. Where, or what, might
be Ui'fm, or the horns of light, I know not."
Morwen
leaned back on the pillows and studied her friend's face. "1 am
wondering," she said after a while, "what is this doubt I sense from
you concerning the Treasures. And I mind me of something you did say back at
the very start of this flight, before even we had passed the Curtain
Wall."
"And
that?"
Morwen
drew a deep steadying breath against the storm she felt sure was about to break
over her head, and plunged in.
"You
said that this time it was not like Betiator; that it would not be vengefulness
to use the Treasures to save Keltia, or to win back the Copper Crown. If you
truly think this, then why do you have this doubt?"
"For
one who prides herself on being no sorceress," said Aeron, her voice
carefully casual, "you can manage a clever piece of kenning when you put
your mind to it... What is it you would know, Wenna? No gaudery on it; just let
you ask straight out."
"Well,
then, remembering how it was with you after Bellator—where you yourself did
admit you used your magic unlawfully to revenge—how can you be sure that your
using the Treasures against Jaun Akhera is not a sin of the same degree, and
will not bring down upon you a like punishment, or even a worse?"
Aeron's
eyes met hers full on, and Morwen flushed and looked away. "There is not
much could be more plainly put than that," said Aeron evenly. "Do you
think / have forgotten Bellator, Lochcarron? That I have noi thought of all
this long since, and more beside?"
"Aeron,
Bellator all but destroyed you. To give up your
life
for Keltia is one thing, and any of us would gladly do as much; but I will not
have you give up your soul for it. And if that is the choice, by all the gods I
will do whatever 1 must to stop you."
The
green eyes glinted. "Would you? Well, since I will do whatever I must to
achieve this errand, let us only hope you and I may never come to such a
contest." The eyebite faded, and Aeron's face softened. "Ah, Wenna,
you see how already things are twisted? But to answer your question, I do not
know. To use the Treasures against Jaun Akhera may well be a worse sin even
than Bellator, and it may also be that, in the end, I shall choose not to take
the advantage the Treasures would surely give me, over the Marbh-draoi or any
other enemy. But I will have that choice to be mine alone to make. My chiefest
task—and yours while you are with me—is to find the Treasures and bring them
home to Keltia. Once that is accomplished, it is another matter altogether, and
I will deal with it when I must, and not before."
Morwen
nodded, but did not look at her friend. Presently she turned a page of
Taliesin's book and pointed to the last verse of the poem.
"And
this?" she aske.d. "It seemed to me you liked not to read it. It is
not like the other dwnedau."
She had
thought only to divert Aeron's attention from the ground of their disagreement
to something less painful. To her astonishment, it looked almost as if Aeron
flinched as she glanced at the page; in any case, she did not answer Morwen for
several moments.
"Nay,"
she said then in a quick, controlled voice. "It is not; rather is it a
prophecy, and for that it gave me pause."
More
than pause, I think . . . "It speaks of a prison in the sea,
seemingly," said Morwen, pondering the words again as she spoke, "by
the malice of Pwyll and Pryderi, for one called Gweir. What ill can there be in
that?"
"Pwyll—latterly
the name is turned as Powell—and Pryderi are names traditional to heirs of the Dyvetian
ruling house; as you know, the present Prince and his son are called so."
"And
Gweir?"
Again
Aeron seemed to gather herself for speech. "Gweir Is an ancient short-form
of the name Gwydion."
Over
the past months, Rohan, Prince of Thomond, heir-presumptive to the Throne of
Scone, had spent nearly every
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waking
hour in the same place: the bridge of the Keltic starfleet's great flagship,
Firedrake. He left it only to sleep, and that briefly; his meals too were taken
there for the most part, usually standing and always hastily.
He
stood now near the viewport, watching the skirmish being fought off the cithog
side of the huge ship. Even as he watched, a brace of cursals harried the
Imperial convoy that Firedrake was pursuing, and a Keltic destroyer overtook
some slower-moving Coranian gunships, disintegrating a luckless straggler into
a billion flaming sparks. Rohan was surprised at the wave of fierce
satisfaction that swept over him, and thoroughly alarmed at the flavor of exultant
righteousness that it carried. By Lugh himself, he thought, but there will be
no more of that . , . Once rooted and growing, such an evil blossom would be
near impossible to prune away. His sister had learned the same lesson, but at
terrible cost; to herself still more than to others . . .
"Rohan?
Cousin—"
Rohan
spun around at the sound of his name and the surprise of the family
appellation, stared blankly for an instant at the young man who stood a few
feet away. Then he took two quick strides forward and enveloped the newcomer in
an enthusiastic hug.
"Shane!
You!"
Shane
Aoibhell returned the embrace. Like Rohan, he was a great-grandson of the
Ard-rian Aoife: Their grandfathers, and Desmond's father, Elham, had all been
brothers, though Shane's grandsire Revelin was the only one of the four sons of
Aoife who yet lived. Shane himself was a few years Rohan's senior, a few inches
shorter, but otherwise the two might have been brothers themselves rather than
second cousins; they possessed the same regular features, the same red-brown
hair and hazel eyes, though Shane's were flecked with gold where Rohan's shaded
to green. Of all the righ-domhna, Shane's family branch were the least frequent
visitors to their kinswoman Aeron's court, and he himself came least of all.
Not even the historic arrival of the Terran probe ship had bestirred him to
leave his own lands, and only Aeron's summons to him to take his seat on the
Privy Council had brought him to Tara, where he had not long remained; by
choice he lived a quiet country life on the planet Kernow with his parents and
his young sister, Tanaidhe, and his presence here now boded ill.
THE
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43
"Ah,
Shane, I can hardly believe it is you! It has been so long since you roused
yourself from Sawnas—'' Rohan held his cousin at arm's length, then hugged him
again. "You look very well. Come now to my cabin; you must eat, and rest
for a while, and we can talk privately there."
Shane
shook his head, following Rohan off the bridge into the turbolift. aware of the
curious glances cast their way by kerns and officers alike, all of them
wondering what was Shane's errand to his cousin, for only an urgent matter
would have brought him.
"Rest
must wait its time, and I am not hungry. My grandfather sends me, Rohan, and
the errand has urgency. He had words for Aeron's ear, and now he bids me say
them to you or to Gwydion . . . Sorry was I to hear of my uncle Elharn's
death," he added. "Rioghnach spoke of it to Tanai, and she told our
parents. Is there news of Aeron?"
"There
is not. Save for one brief coded transmission announcing their escape, we have
had no word from either my sister or Morwen since they fled from Tara."
Shane's
face darkened. "That is what my grandfather thought—feared, rather."
Rohan
touched a stud, and the lift doors hissed open. "Does Revelin think that
the Ard-rian was wrong to leave?"
Shane
smiled slightly, hearing the warning: Ard-rian, not Aeron. "Nay, not a bit
of it. In truth, he would have liked her to have fled far sooner than she did.
He thinks her conduct, in battle as well as after, was most irresponsible and
careless of her own safety, far too much so for a High Queen. Which may or may
not be true, but that is not why I have been sent." They had entered
Rohan's quarters on the main crew deck, and now Shane seated himself in a low
chair and leaned forward, face troubled. "You know that we hold, through
Findabair my mother, significant lordships on Gwynedd and Dyved? Well then, my
mother has heard from her rechtairs in both places certain very grave and very
alarming rumors. She spoke of these at once to Revelin and to my father, and so
I am sent to tell you."
"What
rumors?"
Shane
set aside the quaich of ale Rohan had poured for him. "Someone unknown has
been making very probing inquiries into the loyalties and attitudes of certain
of the more •powerful Kymric lords. Into their social and financial positions,
their warrior status and political affiliations and number
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of
fighters under arms—and into whether they might not be entirely averse to a
certain degree of collaboration with the Coranian."
Rohan
stared at his cousin, a wave of horror and disgust rising up that nearly
dizzied him.
"You
truly had not heard this?" Shane was saying. "Nay, I see that you had
not ... Well, I am glad, at least, that one of the family was the messenger to
bring this news. You will look into it?"
"I
should say so! I will wish to speak to those rechtairs of Findabair's, and also
I should like to contact Revelin. Who were the lords in question? I gather no
one was able to learn names?"
"Unfortunately,
that was the one thing my mother's retainers could not learn. And be sure that
if they could have, they would have; their families have been in service to
hers for generations, and their loyalties, at least, are beyond question."
"Aye
so." Rohan ran a hand through his hair. "It is the Marbh-draoi
himself, of course. It can be no other."
"His
position on Tara is so uneasy," ventured Shane. "So he looks for
collaborators on other planets?"
His
cousin nodded. "I should be interested to leam who it was that he has
approached. I can think of a few possibilities myself, though I like not to
think of it at all. But it was very well done, Shane, to come yourself; this
was a matter better not left to transmissions."
"Then
how will you contact my grandfather and the others? You yourself cannot be
spared from Firedrake, and I must return to my home—I would not leave my family
alone in such a time.'1
"Nay,
surely not; return now, but I may command you back in a time of greater need.
If I cannot go myself, though, I know who it is that I shall send." Rohan
punched up the bridge on the cabin transcom. "Rohan to Caradoc Llassar a
priority message to Desmond Aoibhell, at Giassary on Vannin."
Chapter
3
Camissa
hurried purposefully down the long bright corridor leading to Elathan's study.
She was dressed in blue silk girdled with silver, her black hair intricately
massed at $he back of her small head; her eyes were nearly the same color as
her gown. She nodded cordially, if a little shyly, at the many who drew
respectfully aside for her, some even essaying small bows, or quick bobs too
sketchy to be called curtsies; for though she was not yet Queen of Fomor, as
Elathan's betrothed she merited more courtesy than previously— for now her
affianced was King.
Knocking
on the study doors, she went in unannounced. Elathan, who had been sitting
brooding on the recently departed Imperial envoys, cheered up at once, and held
out a hand to her.
"You
took your time in coming," he complained with mock annoyance. "Your
mantlemaker, no doubt, takes precedence over your King?"
She
laughed and came to stand behind him, resting her chid on top of his head, her
arms around his neck.
"Today
she does, yes; it is she, not my King, who is sewing ten thousand pearls onto
my wedding-cloak—at His Majesty's own request, I might remind him."
"This
is true . . . Well, will it be ready for our wedding, then, this over-decorated
garment?"
"I
think so." Camissa sounded complacent. "There are yet ten full months
to the day; and sometimes 1 think ten minutes too long a time to wait."
She added, uncannily echoing his own earlier thought, "Could we not go
away for a few days, you and I, go south to the Mirregaith just ourselves? Belerion
will be lovely right about now; it is just •spring there—new flowers, soft
weather."
"That
would be lovely," he agreed, tempted anew. "And
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we
shall have many springs there, I promise. But for now, we must stay here in the
cold, snowy Arregaith, and entertain—or endure—our guests. Also, it is too soon
after—well, it is too soon."
Camissa
brushed her lips over the dark blond hair. "Ah, love, I know; too soon
after your father's death. But it is mostly for that I did wish to get you out
of Tory, to have some time away to—to heal a little. You have endured much
these past few weeks."
He
turned her hand over to kiss her palm. "That was a loving thought. But
private needs and sorrows must wait upon public duties—yours as well as mine.
We shall have to begin to learn that a little better for the future. And there
are so many offworlders here to pay their respects and present diplomatic
credentials. I have to receive them all."
"Spies,
most of them, and very tiresome,"
"Undoubtedly
spies, and exceedingly tiresome; but I must receive them all the same . . . How
is my mother?" he asked suddenly, twisting in his chair to look up at her.
"I have not seen her for some days, and she does not return my messages."
A
peculiar quiver passed over Camissa's face. "The Queen Basilea is still
overwrought by your father's death," she said. "She prefers you do
not see her until she is once again mistress of herself."
Elathan
looked alarmed. "I had not realized her grief had so affected her. Perhaps
I should go to her in any case—"
Camissa
threw out a hand, caught it instantly back again. "Nay, love, if you must
know: My lady Basilea does not grieve, at least not for that her husband is
dead."
"I
do not understand."
"Elathan,
she is not glad that Bres is slain, but neither does she weep for it. It is
that which so distresses her: the fact that it does not distress her."
There
was silence for a long moment. "I knew, of course," said Elathan
after a while, "that my parents had not been close of heart for many
years. Still, they were royal partners, sharing companions, parent-figures to
all of Fomor."
"And
as such does the Queen sincerely mourn him," said Camissa with conviction.
"But Bres the beloved is lamented by another."
"Thona!
Gods, I had forgotten all about her since the funeral—" Elathan rubbed the
big coronation ring upon his thumb; it was still so new as to not yet be part
of his hand.
All
these years he had carefully kept it secret from his mother that the Lady
Thona, Bres's legal concubine since before Elathan's birth, had been not merely
the tolerated mistress of his royal father but someone who stood to Elathan as
a much-loved aunt, or stepmother even, who gave him unfailingly and
unstintingly all the affection and indulgence and understanding that Basilea
could not, or would not, bestow upon him; and to whom he gave in return the
love and trust his own mother turned aside.
And,
for her part, Thona had put Elathan, son of the man she loved and his rightful
queen, above her own son, Talorcan. Though Bres, to please his lady, had made
Talorcan a legal heir, confirming his demiroyal status according to the Fomori
succession laws, so that he stood in line to the throne behind Elathan and
Rauni and their now-dead brother Tharic, Talorcan had grown up despising his
father and detesting his half-brother: hating Bres for not marrying the woman
he loved so faithfully, for tossing crumbs of favor to Talorcan as a begrudged
birthright; hating Elathan for being the right heir to the kingdom, for
stealing the affections of Thona from her own son.
"I
must go to Thona," said Elathan, ail thought of his mother vanished now,
and Camissa nodded understanding. She alone among the Queen's ladies knew of
the special relationship Elathan shared with his father's concubine. "I
have been so busy these past weeks—but that is no excuse at ail. I forgot her,
and I should not have."
"She
will understand."
"She
would, and a far worse lapse than that. But that is her special grace, and no
apology for me."
"Not
even for the King of Fomor?"
"The
King!" Then over the sudden blank surprise came die still more sudden
remembrance that he was the King of Fomor, and he threw her a rueful smile.
"Especially not for the King ... I will see you at dinner, lady." He
kissed her hand; she brushed her fingers lightly over his lips as if to capture
another, and curtsied as he left the room.
When
the door of his chamber was safely shut behind him, Talorcan motioned his
companions to proceed through to the inner rooms; once they were all safe
within he carefully 'secured doors and windows both.
That
done, he turned to his guests with a smile. "I will not
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waste
what time we have, my lords, in social ritual. I tell you straightway that 1
know of the message that you, Emen Gaitz, and you, Chamara, have carried
here—never mind how I know—from Alphor to my brother the King."
Emen
Gaitz, smiling gently, spread his hands and bowed. "Most assuredly you do,
my lord Talorcan; that is hardly a secret of state! We were privileged to
convey the condolences of the Imperial family to the kin and subjects of his
late Fomorian majesty Bres, and to present our diplomatic credentials to King
Elathan."
Talorcan's
eyes hooded briefly in exasperation. "Do I look like one of your tame
apes? The message I speak of is the one entrusted to you not by Strephon but by
his charming daughter the Princess Helior, on behalf of her son Jaun Akhera.
You besought my brother, in Helior's name, to reopen the hostilities against
the Kelts, as an assurance of friendship between him and Jaun Akhera."
"Even
if such a thing should be," said Chamara carefully, "I hope I do not
offend if I ask what concern is this of your lordship's?"
"None
at all, strictly speaking. Except that if one son of Bres has already declared
himself no friend to the Imperium, that is no reason to expect a matching
unfriendliness from the other."
A
little silence took the room. Emen Gaitz fingered the jewelled buttons of his
coat. "We took the liberty of studying you, my lord," he said then,
and his voice was subtly changed, "before we came to this planet. Your
personal history, your relationships with your father, and brother, all .such
things."
"How
foresighted the servants of the Plexari!"
"If
we wish still to remain their servants . . . But I think that the more accurate
woitl would be 'practical.' The Emperor Strephon likes to be prepared for all
possibilities however remote, and his daughter has naturally inherited his
carefulness."
Talorcan
laughed in reai amusement. "Naturally . . . Well, let me make things as
clear as I can, so that you may pass it all on to Her Serenity: There is no way
in all the hells that Elathan will ally with Jaun Akhera. He fought our father every
step of the way on joining the invasion of Keltia in the first instance, and
the first thing he did as king was order our armies home—as you know. There is
no way he will change his mind, and no one who can sway him to do so."
"The
Lady Camissa?"
"Hardly!
As far as politics go, there is not a pin's worth of difference between them.
Besides, her enthrallment is such that she would not sway him even if she
could. No, what my royal brother wants is friendship with Keltia, and
friendship with Keltia's queen."
Chamara
leaned forward, intent on the answer. "Do you believe, my lord, that this
theoretical and wished-for friendship could change into something
more—active?"
"Such
as military and political partnership? Nothing likelier. If Elathan does not stand
aside completely from this war, then he will join in again; and this time he
will be at Aeron's side as her ally, certainly not—as Jaun Akhera hopes—at her
throat as her enemy. If nothing else, you may be sure at least of that."
The two
Coranians exchanged glances, and Talorcan peeled a pear with great show of
unconcern.
"Would
he try then, do you think, to sway the rest of the Phalanx?" asked Emen
Gaitz.
Talorcan
nodded, spoke round the mouthful of pear. "Not only would he try, he would
be far more successful at leading those sheep than ever Bres was."
"Yet
it will be many weeks, perhaps months, before Elathan is confirmed as Archon of
the Phalanx. You know as well as anyone that quite possibly he may not be
confirmed at all: The position is hardly hereditary, many other princes covet
it and Elathan is full young for it."
"Maybe
so," said Talorcan, unimpressed. "But Fomorian kings have always had
the odds in their favor, to be Archon, and Elathan is well liked by the rulers
of many of the smaller systems." He dipped his fingers in a silver bowl of
rosewater and dried them on a silk cloth. "I do not ask you to decide
anything tonight, my lords. That would be premature in the extreme, not to
mention potentially dangerous. But if you should find, upon consultation with
each other and with the Princess Helior, that a guarantee of
alliance—contingent upon proper Imperial support, of course—from the Fomorian
king would be a thing worth having; and knowing that you will never get such a
guarantee from the one who at present occupies the throne . , . well, I ask you
to remember I am your servant, my lords, and my duty and respect to Her
Serenity. —No, I think it would be best if you were to leave
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this
way, by the garden-walks. Good night, and safe faring, to you both."
Alone
in his room, Talorcan allowed himself a wide and pleased grin. They would tell
Helior of his offer, and, he was sure, she would at once perceive the
possibilities, and accept. If she acted swiftly enough, he could be King of
Fomor within weeks. And the new King would require a suitable consort . . .
Talorcan's smile grew wider. Camissa would be Queen of Fomor, right enough;
but, if Talorcan had his wish and his way, her King would not be Elathan.
Outside,
in the dark gardens, the two figures passed quickly by, the sound and sight of
them covered by wind and misty rain. When they had gone, the gardens stood
empty again. Then a cloaked figure emerged from the little marble sum-merhouse,
stood a moment looking after them, then watched Talorcan latch the garden-doors
of his chamber after them and the shutters close off the lights from his room.
Within
the shadow of her cowl, Camissa's face was troubled. After a moment, herself a
wraith upon the wet mossy paths, she made her way back to the Queen's wing of
the palace and her own chambers. She had come out into the gardens in the rain
to ease her mind of doubts; and had found instead only more questions to vex
it.
But
next morning all seemed well, and her fears and doubts as insubstantial as the
mists of the night. Now there was only brightness, and the afternoon sunlight
lay in golden pools upon the velvet in Camissa's lap. It was her wedding dress,
in the traditional shaded blue worn by Fomori royal brides— palest water-ice at
the throat darkening through flaxflower to indigo at the hem—and now she was
putting gold wire stitches into the deep sapphire of the flowing train.
"And
so you see," she was saying, bending intently over the tiny golden flowers
she was embroidering, "I did not know quite what to do. I surely did not
wish to bring it to Elathan . . . But the Lord Talorcan is your son, after all;
and since I had no proof of anything, I thought it best—well, not best, but
most acceptable of all the things I might have done—to speak first to you. Was
I wrong to come here? If so, I am sorry," she finished hurriedly, and
lifted her face to meet Thona's sympathetic gaze.
Thona
shook her head, then put a comforting hand over
Camissa's,
squeezing briefly and with real affection, before returning to her own
stitching on another corner of the forty-foot train.
"Not
for me were you wrong, child." She was a handsome woman of late middle
age, with light eyes and clear skin and a dancer's carriage. Her gray hair,
unbound in the privacy of her chambers, was loose around her like a snowcloud,
fine and soft and thick, falling nearly to her feet.
"No,
Cami, you were not wrong," she repeated. "But what do you think my
son may have been up to?"
"Who
knows? Except maybe those ambassadors . . ." Camissa lifted her hands to
shrug; the velvet, freed, slithered down over her knees to the floor. She
hauled it up again, and wound the gold thread round her needle to stab the
cloth for another Sintran knot. "Beastly fiddly things . . . But they were
the Imperial ambassadors," she said, returning to her tale as if to
another thread of her embroidery. "I was not mistaken in that, and they
were surely in Talorcan's rooms, and most surely of all none of them wished it
known that any of them had been there."
"Perhaps
Talorcan merely wished to question them further on what they had said to the
King earlier."
Camissa
looked up, surprise and compassion in her face, for that was the first time she
had heard the Lady Thona call Bres's son and successor by the title that had
been her lover's. But the even-featured face was sweet and strong in its
repose, reflecting only her absorption with her sewing, and there had been no
catch in the low voice.
Truly,
Camissa mused, Bres's loyalty—indeed, his fidelity—to Thona had been
remarkable. She had been his contracted concubine since the day she had turned
eighteen; but, obedient to his parents' arrangements, Bres had wedded Basilea,
making her his queen. The Lady Thona, outwardly unruffled, had countered in her
own good time by producing Talorcan, a full year before Basilea gave Bres his
legitimate heir in Elathan. And in all the years since, living in the same
palace and in the same uneasy peace with Basilea, Thona had consistently turned
aside all the Queen's growing spite and jealousy— perhaps understandable
jealousy, thought Camissa loyally, for she liked Basilea, and had served her as
lady-in-waiting ever since her arrival at court—with the sweetness and
gentleness that had held Bres through a lifetime.
Yet
strangely it had always been Elathan, child of the
52
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woman
who hated her, who stood higher in Thona's heart than the child of her own
body, and why that should be so—Camissa pushed the needle once more through the
thickness of the velvet, stabbed her finger and swore mightily.
Thona
laughed. "Queens may think such things, but they may never, never speak
them; no, nor kings neither . . . Get it all said now while you still
may." She folded aside her section of the train, coming back to the
problem Camissa had laid, like the velvet, in her lap. "Well, it is true
my son is a meddler, and that he has been from a child; but he is not, I trust,
a traitor and a plotter. Not that I do not think he could be so, if he chose to
be, or were brought to it. You were wise to speak to me of this, and not to
tell Elathan; I shall watch, and you as well, but no more than that for now.
Things in this kingdom are far too unsettled for such dangerous rumors to set
afloat."
"Has
my lord been to see you yet, madam?" asked Camissa after a few minutes'
steady quiet stitching. "He told me that he would come."
"And
come he did." Thona's face lighted with such a smile that the younger
woman suddenly thought she understood, a little, why Elathan loved this lady
better than he loved his own mother. "And he was so gentle, and so very
kind ... 1 am to be allowed to remain in my own dear place"—she looked
around her, a small wave to indicate the beautifully furnished chambers—"by
his special grace and favor. He will make a fine king, that young lord of
yours. Bres, dearly though I loved him, could often be ... well, no
matter."
"Has
Elathan spoken to you of his wish for peace with
Keltia?"
"He
has, and I think I was never prouder of anyone in all my life, to hear him
speak so." Thona's countenance, bright enough before, suddenly blazed with
the strength of her loving pride. "The thought that that ancient grievance
might be put at last to rest, and that he could be the one to make that peace,
for himself as well as for Fomor—the joy of that thought fills my heart."
Camtssa
murmured hesitantly, "My lord told me that there had been a private cause
for the quarrel's beginning, some personal discord between his father and King
Fionnbarr of Keltia, though he did not say just what."
All the
brightness died in Thona's face. "I am not the one
THE
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53
to
speak of that," she said, softly but firmly. "Even Elathan does not
know the true tale ... If you wish to hear the truth of it, the only one still
alive who may rightly tell it is the Queen Basilea."
"The
Queen!" Of all the names Thona might have mentioned, that one Camissa had
never dreamed to hear, and her mind leaped giddily to impossible possibilities.
She glanced again at Thona, saw with utter confusion that Thona had risen from
her chair and was curtsying, head bent and hand to breast; and she turned round
in her own chair. She was out from under the blue velvet, and curtsying
herself, before she could even think about it.
Basilea,
Dowager Queen of Fomor—widow to Bres, rival to Thona, future mother-in-law to
Camissa—stood in the garden doorway, and on her face was no merry look.
When
word had been brought to her of her husband's death beneath the sword of the
Queen of Kelts, Basilea had received it in silence and stillness, only the
momentary lowering of her eyes giving evidence that she had even understood.
That regal control had not faltered, not even when—especially when—a fortnight
later, the battered remnants of the Fomori fleet had begun to limp home, the
flagship bearing both the dead King and the new King first among them.
Basilea
had met the shuttle at the landing-field, and first of all in Tory had done
reverence to her own son as he emerged from the craft. In the days that
followed, and the months those days had since become, she had played her part
as Queen-Dowager with dignity and dry eyes, at least for her people to see; but
even her ladies marvelled that she did not lay aside that queenly stoicism in
private, and allow herself to grieve.
But now
that composure seemed well and truly broken, as Basilea looked long and coldly
upon Thona and Camissa as they remained still dipped in court curtsies before
her, not daring to rise until she bade them.
"A
fine domestic scene, for the next Queen of Fomor . . . Oh, rise, the pair of
you, it makes my head ache to watch you." Basilea latched the door behind
her, and swept past Thona to the seat Camissa held for her. "So, my young
madam, you have come here for the quality of the needlework? Or are there other
reasons? Does my son know you are here?"
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Camissa
flushed, but spoke without nervousness. "Majesty, he knows—and he also
approves," she added, unable to forbear the taunt and the petty triumph.
She was meanly pleased to see Basilea briefly catch her lip between her teeth.
"The
Lady Camissa felt the need of an explanation," said Thona blandly,
"of the causes of the feud between his late majesty of Fomor and King
Fionnbarr of Keltia."
To
Camissa's astonishment, if there had been displeasure and animosity on
Basilea's face before, now there seemed to be guilt, and secretiveness, and,
most amazing of all, a kind of furtive fear, in the look that the Queen-Dowager
turned on the royal mistress.
"And
did you see fit, my lady, to enlighten her?"
Thona
shook her head, not looking at Basilea. Deliberately not looking at her,
thought Camissa wonderingly.
"If
there is need for the future Queen to know, then no doubt she will learn in
good time. If not, are past bitternesses not best left in the past?" Thona
raised her eyes to meet the Queen's, and what understandings, what history of
compromises and tradeoffs and emotional batterings over the years, went into
that glance Camissa could not begin to comprehend, and would have been
embarrassed to try.
But
Basilea seemed satisfied. "Indeed they are, madam. Take care, then, you
leave them there." With a swirl of skirts she was gone, before the other
two could move from their chairs.
After a
long silent moment, Camissa dared to look again at Thona. And again she was
astonished: On the older woman's face, as she gazed after Basilea, was an
expression of purest pity, and on her cheeks were slow tears.
Chapter
4
latest
figures, Akhi."
Sanchoniathon,
for no other had been willing to accept the task, stood holding out to his
brother a slice of clear crystal. It contained, as he had just announced, the
most recent information on the Imperial position on the planet Tara, and the
information was not good.
Jaun
Akhera, who had ignored both his brother's words and the preferred
computer-billet, raised his head at last, and, for all their closeness,
Sanchoniathon quailed just a little at the look in the golden eyes.
"Despite
your delaying tactics, yours and the good Hanno's, I have already seen them . .
. Sancho, what am I to do? I have redeployed our legions here on Tara—several
times, in fact; but we can barely manage to feed them properly. I have pulled
such fleet strength as we still have into a ring to defend this system—"
"And
it holds!"
"Oh
yes, it holds—but Rohan jabs through it as the fancy takes him, then scampers
away again before we can catch him."
"One
day he will overreach himself within our grasp, and we shall have him."
"Maybe
so. But until that hypothetical day, I seem to find myself lacking promising
alternatives."
Sanchoniathon
sighed. "Akhi, I do not know how to advise you. You have had counsel from
all of us over the past weeks."
"I
surely have; very little advice, one way or another, has not been given." Jaun
Akhera swung his chair sideways, to stare out at the sea beyond the windows.
"Well, I have made some inquiries in what I hope shall prove profitable
directions. Also I have thought of putting it about that if Aeron
55
56
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does
not return within a set span of days, or if, in her continued absence, Rohan
does not give over the fight, I shall make an end of Gwydion."
Sanchoniathon
stared at his brother's elegant profile. "Has your mind softened
completely?" he whispered, aghast. "Gwydion is the only bargaining
counter we have."
"We
have the City—"
"—which
its inhabitants have been quietly deserting, or had you not noticed how many
fewer Kelts are abroad in the streets of the Stonerows these past weeks? In
spite of curfews and patrols and everything else, they somehow keep finding
their way like ferrets through the City walls themselves."
"And
we have the planet itself, where all those folk you speak of have dispersed
themselves."
"You
know perfectly well," said Sanchoniathon with considerable heat,
"that Gwydion's value is more than people and planet together. I like the
idea not one bit, and surely it is a step we are very far from needing to take.
Just now you mentioned inquiries you had made; what of those?"
Jaun
Akhera's manner grew suddenly reticent. "I do not choose to say any more
of that just yet. As for the other, perhaps it is a step we need to take, to
force Aeron's hand."
"Even
if she is still within our reach, which we do not know, she will never respond
to simple threats and bullying."
"Not
if the threat were to herself, no, I agree that she would not; but neither will
she suffer the thought of her lord in peril . . . Well, perhaps you are right.
But, Sancho, if 1 must spend him to come at her, I will."
"I
mink," said Sanchoniathon with slow distinct vehemence, "that if you
bring harm upon Gwydion it will be the worst mistake you ever made, and lead
only to utter disaster in the end."
Jaun
Akhera looked up at him without lifting his head, and the skewed steady gaze soon
had Sanchoniathon fidgeting with discomfort. But he could not leave until he
was dismissed.
"You
know you are always free to speak your mind to me, my Sancho; and your advice
is, as always, well reasoned and most temperate. It is what I love you best for.
But I have had enough of moderation, though, and when I require further advice
of such a nature I shall ask it. Now leave me awhile."
The sun
dipped, and above his head the frescoes faded, but Jaun Akhera sat on alone in
the darkening room. In spite of what he had so blithely asserted to Sancho, he
knew in his
THE
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57
heart
that such a threat as he had promised was no more than a pointless boast. There
was no real reason, having spared Gwydion all these months, to put an end to
him now. Sancho was surely right, and Aeron long gone from Keltia, far -outside
the reach of blandishment and intimidation alike. No reason at all—save
vengeance, or pique, or the chance of providing an object lesson thereby for
other obstreperous Aoibhells, like Rohan, or Desmond, or ...
The
thought of Desmond reminded him of something he had heard, and he tapped out a
query-mode on the touchpad on the desk. Data filled the screen, and he paid it
close attention: Sarah O'Reilly, Lieutenant, FSN, attached as communications
officer to the probe ship FSS Sword; now known as Lady Sorcha ni Reille,
knighted by the Ard-rian and latterly serving as Aeron's personal squire;
rumored to be romantically involved with Prince Desmond Aoibhell, son to the
late Elharn . . .
Presently
Jaun Akhera sat back again, and now he was smiling. Perhaps he was not so
devoid of possibilities as he had thought. One Terran in Keltia—how hard could
she be to find?
"I
come if not as a friend, lord, then as an honest emissary," Sanchoniathon
was saying. "My brother is growing desperate; as a swordsman you know that
it is the opponent at bay who is the most dangerous, because he is the most
unpredictable, and has the least to lose."
Gwydion
watched his visitor with no apparent emotion. "What wouid you of me,
Prince Sanchoniathon?" he asked after a while. "As Keltia's First
Lord of War I must surely be in favor of anything that chips away at Jaun
Akhera's hold upon this kingdom. That has never been a secret. Am I to take it
that you think by warning me of your brother's difficulty, I might be made to
reconsider my attitudes? After all this time, do you read me so lightly?"
"No
... no, I had not thought that. But Akhi—but my brother has other plans."
"I
do not doubt it," said Gwydion. "What he is doing is not new—and it
will never be old." He rose, and Sanchoniathon realized that he was being
dismissed. "But I thank you for the warning all the same. You may think it
no compliment, tout you are more unlike your brother than you know."
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In the
long blue summer twilight of Vannin, Desmond and-O'Reilly walked hand in hand
along the shores of the sea-loch. Above them, the walls of the convent of
Glassary receded slowly behind a frieze of ancient chestnuts. The air was cool
for summer, now that the sun was low, and save for the lapping of the little
waves on the stony shingle, all was still.
O'Reilly
had spent the past few minutes in anything but stillness, weeping
uncontrollably, in total, no-longer-to-be-resisted capitulation to the
upheavals of the past four months: Desmond's presence, Desmond's absence, her
enforced stay in sanctuary, all the griefs of the war. But Desmond had only
listened patiently, evening her sobs with a comforting hand,' and had led her
down to walk by the edge of the water. The peace of the place and the strength
of the arm had worked their separate magics, and now O'Reilly was calm again.
"Better?"
"Much.
You are very patient to put up with me." "What, I!" She heard
the laughter in his voice, dared not look up. "Sari-fach," he said,
turning her to face him, "think a little, I ask you, about what you have
endured in the past quarter-year. Since Fionnasa, you have come to a foreign
place, near a thousand light-years from your own home; have been subjected, for
the first time in your life, to public curiosity, which is a burden even for
those born to it; helped discover a plot of treason to which your friend and
fellow officer Tindal was party; have seen your remaining colleagues return to
Earth without you, Tindal executed for his treachery, your captain who was your
dearest friend killed in battle and your new friend Aeron nearly killed as
well; have yourself been sent to yet another strange world for protection
against the Imperials who hunt you ... All this, and you make excuse to me for
a few tears?"
"Oh,
well, if you put it like that—" O'Reilly managed a shaky smile, and
Desmond's heart soared to see it. "One hates to be hysterical . . . But it
hasn't been too easy for you, either."
"Aye,
but at least this is my home, and the trouble not entirely unlooked-for. Had 1
been in your boots—sent as diplomatic officer to Earth, say, and things like to
your misfortunes had befallen me there—no smallest doubt but that I would be
weeping about it too." She smiled shyly up at him. "You have been so
kind and
THE
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59
patient,
ever since Tomnahara. I didn't think—I mean, they told me you were—"
"That
1 was not the easiest of folk to deal with? Well, that is true: It is hard for
me with strangers, and I think it is so with you also. Not that I mislike
making friends with new folk, but rather that I find it difficult. A few of my
family have that trouble, though mostly not."
O'Reilly
laughed. "So I've noticed. Is it because the Aoibhells are the royal
family, that they have such confidence?"
"That
is a part of it, but I think we are no more confident, as a family, than any
other of the old Names. The assurance you see is more a function of belonging
to a delineated, established group: the Clann, the Name. More that, I would
say, than any supposed royal dignity; for even the ruler of Keltia is but first
among equals in his or her own clann. Not all the Aoibhells are royal, you
know; but whether Ard-rian or sea-crofter, each clann member is a full and equal
partner in the clann's tradition and pride. It is a vertical distinction
between Names, not a horizontal one between ranks."
"Well,
it's all way beyond me," said O'Reilly. "Shall we go back now?"
"A
moment yet. I have a thing to say to you, Sorcha; you need not answer me at
once, but I wish to leave the thought with you while you are here with the
Ban-draoi and have peace and leisure to consider it fully." As he spoke,
he had let his arm fail away from her, and O'Reilly was paralyzed anew with insecurity.
But Desmond went on as if he had not noticed, so intent was he upon his own
thought. "We have grown close over the past months, and, if the idea does
not mislike you totally, I would ask you to consider if you would wed me."
O'Reilly,
who was by now almost ill with apprehension, stopped dead at the water's edge
and blurted out the first words that came into her head.
"I've
had other lovers, you know."
Desmond
threw back his head and laughed. "Well, of course you have. So have I, so
has every Kelt of marriageable age. That is no real reason; not even, I would
bet, on Earth."
"You'd
win that bet," she admitted sheepishly. "It was the only thing I
could think of." She looked out over the roughening water. "What I
really mean: I'm a foreigner here, a Terran, even if I am of Irish descent. You
are a member of the royal family, a prince of the blood: grandson of a queen,
60
Patricia
Kenneaty
nephew
of a king, cousin to the Queen that now rules. What's your family going to
say—what's Aeron going to say, to your-alliance with an outworlder of dubious
parentage?"
"Ah.
I thought it might be something like that." Desmond took her chin between
his fingers and turned her unwilling head until she faced him again. "Nay,
look at me, Sorcha ni Reille . . . True it is that Aeron as Ard-rfan must give
her fiant to any marriages of the righ-domhna, but why do you fear what she
will think, or do?"
"Desmond,
she's the Queen\"
"Also
is she your friend, who loves you dearly."
"Enough
to let me become a member of her family? I know how important family is to
Kelts, even had I not just, heard a lecture on clann pride."
"If
you wanted to marry Rohan, O'Reilly—Rohan who is at present heir-presumptive to
the Throne of Scone itself— Aeron would give hef loving blessing to you both,
though I rather think she would draw the line at Gwydion . . . You do not wish
to marry Rohan, do you?" he added anxiously.
O'Reilly
shook her head and leaned against him. "Oh no," she said in a soft
voice, her face aglow with joy and shy pride. "No, I surely do not . .
."
An hour
later he was gone again, not even staying for the nightmeal; there had come an
urgent communication from his ship—Rohan requiring his services for an errand
he could not speak of even to O'Reilly—and Desmond had returned hastily to his
orbiting destroyer, at the last moment putting his seal ring, with its device
of a black bull, on O'Reiily's hand.
So now
O'Reilly sat at one of the long tables that lined the four walls of the Great
Hall of the convent, eating and drinking with a fine abstraction and an
appetite to match. From the high table, Indec, with the sharp-eyed solicitude
of an Abbess-mother, noted her charge's reverie but did not interfere. If there
was a problem, let the lass come to her in her own time and way . . .
With a
start, O'Reilly realized that the conversation of her neighbors at table had
veered round to the endlessly interesting topic of Aeron. Not that it would
have been abstained from out of courtesy to O'Reilly: A few of the Abbess's
officers knew of Desmond's flying visits to the Terran-they were keeping in
sanctuary, but in the main the Prince had gone amazingly unnoticed, and the
Ban-draoi who was now
THE
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speaking—one
of the senior Sisters, living out a comfortable old age at Glassary—knew
nothing of O'Reilly's-various royal associations.
"All
very well to have a young and dramatic Queen, but the folk like better to see
family life at Court."
O'Reilly
leaped into it without even drawing breath. "What could be more family than
six brothers and sisters, and God knows how many aunts and uncles and
cousins?"
"Oh
aye, but they look for Aeron to produce an heir of her own; though of course
the succession is more than assured, especially now with the baby prince just
born to Eiluned and Kieran."
In
spite of her annoyance, O'Reilly smiled at the thought of the baby, born a
fortnight ago on Caledon, to Aeron's brother Kieran and his wife, Eiluned of
Garioch. They had only just heard the naming-announcement, though the baby's
saining had been held a week ago: Conmaol Diolach, which meant in the Gaeloch
something like "avenging wolf-warrior." What a thing to saddle the
poor little weevil with . . .
"Oh,
I don't know," she said mildly enough. "I expect there is plenty of
time for that. Anyway, she has wedded Prince Gwydion, so that he will be
King."
Bronwen,
a young novice who had been listening to the conversation with a mocking
half-smile on her face, now looked openly derisive. "So she has! The
Prince of Don is no doubt a great and noble lord, but he is not an easy person,
as was her first consort, the Prince Roderick. Now mat was a bonny lord and a
merry one, and the folk loved him dearly." "I have not heard that
they do not love Gwydion," said O'Reilly, feeling a certain grim irritation
beginning to build. "They respect him more than they love him, I think,
and certainly they fear his might as a sorcerer," offered another Sister,
in an attempt to defuse the sudden tension that had gripped the table in
O'Reilly's immediate vicinity. "And that may well be unfair—but they will
come to love him in time as they do love Aeron."
"Ah,
Aeron!" Bronwen laughed contemptuously. "Now we come to it—a queen
who brought calamity upon her own people by defying the advice of her
counselors, then could not stay to mend where she had marred. A brave defiance,
surely!"
"She
defied Jaun Akhera bravely enough upon the walls of
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Caerdroia,
and before that at Rath na Ri'ogh. I was there, and I saw it."
"Oh,
aye, she can be hard enough when she wishes; no, doubt she looked very noble
and splendid and above it all— like some queen of the Sidhe paying a visit to
the kitchen-middens."
O'Reilly
suppressed a strong wish to stick Bronwen with the table-sgian. "She did
as she thought best."
"She
always does. And while she does it, no mortal and few Immortals can tell her a
thing she does not want to hear. But all that family are stuffed full of
arrogance; from the first days of Keltia, the Aoibhells have been afflicted
with the traha, that overweening pride. Look at Fionnbarr, and Aoife before
him, though Lasairian did much as Gwyneira bade him, or so at least it has been
commonly held. For the truth of it is that not a soul but told them to go no
roads with gallain, to stay behind the Wall; but no, they would not hear, and
see now what has come of it. Ard-righ or Ard-rian, the Aoibhells are pigheads
to meddle with the stranger." "The present one isn't!" snapped
O'Reilly. "Well, and is she not? See where her traha has brought her: a
price on her head and the scaffold ready waiting in the Great Square if she
dares return, exile gods know where if she dares not."
O'Reilly
could hear no more without outraging the sanctity of the house with mayhem, so
she stood up, bowed with barely controlled courtesy to Indec and stalked from
the hall. Ah, hellfire! she thought unhappily, kicking at the risers as she
went up the stone staircase to her rooms. The traha . . . maybe Bron was right
after all. Certainly she seemed to have history on her side: There was
Fionnbarr's mysterious quarrel with Bres, pigheaded enough, that had cost
everyone so dear in the end; years before that, Aoife's high-handedness against
just about the entire known universe; much further back, Lachlan Aoibhell's
genuinely pigheaded civil war, which had cost him his life and which in time
had taken the lives of all four of his children as well; and now Aeron, who had
heedlessly—perhaps even needlessly—risked her own life to avenge dead kin and a
dying friend . . .
O'Reilly
flopped on her bed, toes prising off her boots, her right hand toying with the
necklace she never took off that had been a welcome-gift to Keltia from Aeron
herself: a circle of golden shields enamelled with the Ard-n'an's own badge of
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63
a sword
impaling the Copper Crown, her motto beneath in tiny letters of gold: "My
Sword Against the Thunder."
Her
eyes fell upon the ring, massive and reaching to the knuckle, on the midfinger
of her other hand: Desmond's signet. O'Reiliy began to smile, then the smile
broadened to a grin and that became half-helpless laughter.
"Some
family for a nice Terran girl to be marrying into."
When
Sanchoniathon, puzzled and troubled both, conveyed the request of Powell Prince
of Dyved for audience with the Imperial Heir, Jaun Akhera laughed quietly to
himself and agreed at once.
He had
rather thought that his inquiries in that quarter would bear quick fruit. It
had been the Princess Arianeira, of all people, who had first mentioned
Powell's name to Jaun Akhera as a future ally, once Keltia had been secured as
an Imperial vassal state under the Princess's rule. All that had changed, of
course, but Jaun Akhera had not forgotten; so that when he felt himself forced
at last to seek Keltic collaborators, Powell's was the first name that had come
to mind.
To the
casual considerer Powell would not have seemed a likely candidate for treason,
but then neither had Arianeira . . . Jaun Akhera rehearsed what he knew of his
possible confederate. Powell was lord of Dyved, Ruling Prince of the second
most important planet in the Kymric system. More than that, he had been
foster-brother to Gwydion's father, Arawn ap Kenver, and after Arawn's death
twelve years since, Powell had thought to act as advisor to the Gwyneddan's
widow and children.
But the
bond had not held, apparently: Gwydion, now Ruling Prince of Gwynedd at the age
of thirty, had been already too forceful on his own road to tolerate the
interference of an older man, and relations had fallen off rapidly between the
two ruling houses.
Or so,
at least, Jaun Akhera had heard. He turned his mind from the tangled family
affairs of the Gwyneddan royal house, and once more to Powell. Here in Aeron's
own study, with Gwydion a prisoner in a tower not very far away, Jaun Akhera
now awaited, with eagerness and curiosity in equal parts, the coming of the
Dyvetian prince, remembering now that Powell had a son, Pryderi, much of an age
with Jaun Akhera himself, who in the inbred and involved Keltic fash-
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ion had
been a boyhood companion of both Gwydion and the dead Roderick Prince of Scots,
Aeron's first consort.
He
stretched catlike with anticipation. Perhaps this Pryderi would accompany his
father: On balance Jaun Akhera rather hoped so; hoped too that they might get
on together—it wouid be pleasant to have another friend in this terrible place.
Again he allowed himself to wonder at the motives that had brought Powell to
acceptance of the Imperial invitation. Whatever1 reasons Powell had for
choosing collaboration, though, Jaun Akhera would learn them soon enough.
"May
we enter, lord, to put the chamber to rights?"
Gwydion
barely glanced at the two servitors in palace livery who stood in the doorway
of Aeron's bedchamber.
"As
you will."
The
Imperial guards on duty withdrew to stand beyond the door, well out of range of
dust and ion-besom. For a few minutes there was silence in the room, as the
servitors busied themselves with tidying the clutter and sweeping the broom
nozzles over the stone floors. Then the womanservant approached the bed, her
arms full of fresh linens, and Gwydion withdrew to allow her to work.
He was
just turning away when a low voice froze him into wary, and astonished,
immobility.
"We
are here to put more to rights than Aeron's rooms, Gwydion."
He knew
the voice at once, and it took all his control not to betray his joyful
amazement. But he did not even look at her when he was sufficiently master of
himself again to speak.
"See
that you clean the stonework in the pool-room before you leave; you did not so
last time, and it has grown slippery to the foot." But his bardic
finger-speech said very different.
Sabia?!
Is this truly you?
"Indeed,
lord, I will see to it." Oh, it is, Gwydion, and that over there doing so
feat a job with the besoms is Grelun. We put afith-fath upon ourselves that is
no magic at all: Who would see Dragon and Fian, and your friends, in the livery
of palace servants?
Grelun
and Sabia ... In Gwydion's most sanguine fantasies he had never imagined so
fair and fine a chance, or one more to his liking: Grelun, his sword-arm
lieutenant, Sum-moner to the Dragon Kinship; and Sabia ni Dalaigh, First-rank
Fian, and, after Morwen, Aeron's closest and most loyal
THE
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65
friend.
If I have these two with me, what might not be managed? In spite of himself,
Gwydion's smile broke like the sun; though, mindful of the nearby guards, he
quickly composed his features once more to a mask of bored command.
"And,
you over there, the casements too need cleaning; they are all salted from the
recent storms."
Grelun
bowed and went obediently to the windows, and Gwydion turned again to Sabia,
risking a swift glance at her face, reassured somewhat by what he saw there:
strength, resolve, vivid intelligence, even a spark of love of the danger.
M'anam
don sleibh, I am glad to see you two; but my gods, Sabia, the peril you put
yourselves in—
No time
for that. We came only to get you out, my friend. There are more than just we
two in it, and we would all dare far more than the Marbh-draoi to see you safe.
We have a plan—a desperate one, but the best that we could manage. Listen, now
. . .
THE
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67
Chapter
5
The
moment he laid eyes on Powel! of Dyved, Jaun Akhera knew beyond question that
here was a man he could trust. If that seemed an odd thing to think of a
traitor— well, Jaun Akhera had been betrayed by his own tools before now.
Though he neither spoke of it himself nor allowed those closest to him to
mention it, the memory of the Princess Arianeira's untimely repentance was
vivid in his heart; but this man, it was plain to be seen, would harbor no such
quicksilver remorses. Once decided, decided he would stay—no recriminations or
recantations for him. And it would appear that the Prince of Dyved had indeed
decided: not so much for Jaun Akhera, perhaps, as against Keltia, and against
his fugitive Queen, and against his captive foster-nephew. His reasons for so
doing—well, those were, presumably, what he now came here to disclose.
AH this
passed through Jaun Akhera's conscious mind in an eyeblink, as he watched
Powell cross the room. The lord of Dyved was not a tall man, though he carried
himself like one, with a compact, powerful build that on anyone less obviously
athletic would have been described as stocky. His hair, worn shorter than was
usual for a Kelt, was iron-gray, streaked and patched with the black-brown it
had been in his youth; his eyes still kept their measured darkness. Pacing
behind him, his son Pryderi resembled him hardly at all, favoring instead his mother,
Aloi'da, with curling gold-brown hair and biue-green eyes, skin tanned to the
collarbone and the true Keltic paleness showing at the neck-edge of the silk
tunic.
Jaun
Akhera rose to greet them, giving Powell the straight-armed shoulder-grip used
throughout the Imperium.
"Well
met at last, Prince of Dyved." He nodded past him to Pryderi, who bowed in
return courtesy but did not speak.
66
"And
my lord Pryderi . . . Will you join me in some refreshment?"
"I
had your message, Aiphor," said Powell bluntly, seating himself before the
ornate gold desk and gesturing Pryderi to stand behind his chair. "I
considered it, and discussed it with my son, and then came here to Tara. A
thing somewhat tricky in the manage, what with the fleets between here and my homeworld;
but, as you see, I have come."
"You
seemed to need little time for considering." Jaun Akhera passed a gold
platter of sweetmeats to Powell, who speared several with his sgian and ate
them neatly off the point of the knife.
"Truly.
You had done the same in my place, I doubt not; your ruler fled, your
Throneworld occupied, your chief warlord hostage. 1 saw no future there."
"And
yet," said Jaun Akhera smoothly, "and yet I hear that Gwydion Prince
of Don is lawful kin to you, your foster-brother's eldest son. I have been told
to the point of weariness that such a bond is sacrosanct among your folk; how
is it that it seems not to hold here?"
Powell
gave a short unamused laugh. "Goleor of reasons," he said, wiping
fingers and mouth and knifeblade all on the same silk napkin. "Well, now.
When Gwydion's father, Arawn, broke his neck out hunting, Gwydion was confirmed
at once as Ruling Prince of Gwynedd, as was his right, and no one expressed
either opposition or doubt. True it was he was very young for it—only just
thirty—but he had reached his full majority at twenty-seven and did not have to
suffer the guidance of a regent. As his father's foster-brother, I took
precedence in his family over his next nearest male kin, who happened to be his
grandfather's brothers. Gwenedour, his mother, for some reason took violent
exception to this, though it is perfectly clear in law, and she knew it as well
as any. Any road, she set her face against me, and she passed her aversion on
to her sons. Gwydion, though he listened with great politeness to everything I
said, paid no attention whatsoever, and went his own gait entirely in the end,
to do exactly as he pleased."
"How
well I know that," said Jaun Akhera. "Even so, lord, howsoever much
this may have rankled, it is surely of itself not enough to bring you over to
me,"
The
shrewd dark eyes turned slowly upon Jaun Akhera, narrowing as they studied him.
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"Surely
il is not ... I choose to throw in with you because I see no way Aeron will
ever get her throne back again, t doubt she will even return to Keltia, doubt
even if she still lives. And so, believing all this, 1 deemed best that 1
should be one of the first to accept—how shall I put it?—the new order."
Jaun
Akhera's face registered quick surprise at such blunt-ness, and a kind of
appreciation also, which modulated almost immediately into his usual pleasant
expression, and he smiled.
"You
are practical, Dyved; not, I think, a typical Keltic trait."
"Say
rather a realist."
"Well,
no matter the semantics; in any event you seem to have grasped the situation,
and for that I thank you. May I say you are almost alone among your people in
so doing—"
"Not
for long, 1 think."
Pryderi
stirred restlessly behind his father's chair, and Jaun Akhera's eyes went to
him at once.
"You
would speak, Lord Pryderi? Feel free to do so."
"With
all respect, Highness"—Pryderi's mouth quirked at the corners—"though
usually such disclaimer is only preface to genuine disrespect ... Is it that
you think my father is not entirely straightforward in his dealings with you?
It seems to me you misdoubt his honesty."
"Never
that. But perhaps it is—a little—that I am not completely convinced of the
strength of his new convictions. And—-a little—that i think there has been here
some selective editing of the truth, or at least of the facts. For instance,
the facts concerning the Princess Gwenedour's sudden aversion to your
lordship's company after the death of her husband. I have heard that, just
possibly, she might have found your attempts at consolation a
little—overzealous."
Powell
gave a bark of laughter. "Ah, I should have known better," he said,
still laughing. "Well seen, lord, and well put—and not even Gwydion knows
those particular facts: Gwenedour never explained to him the reason for her
sudden frost. He'd surely have called me out if she had done—and very likely
he'd have won, and you would today be lacking a good" supporter. ... But
part of that realism we spoke of earlier is an honest appraisal of one's own
position, and that, Highness, we surely share. You need me, Jaun Akhera, to
consolidate your hold on what parts of Keltia you currently
THE
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69
control,
and to expand, as is doubtless your desire, to control more of it. And in that,
Dyved could be a useful base from which to move out to the rest of Kymry ... As
for my part, I need you to consolidate my position in a changed and conquered
and Aeron-less Keltia. The Ruling Princes of the Six Nations are, in law and in
practice, sub-kings under the High Kingship of Tara; how can we maintain that
rulership without one at Turusachan to rule us all? Whether that ojie be you,
or Aeron, or whoever, makes no differ to Dyved. That is not treason, as I see
it, but expediency."
"Let
us call it so, at any rate." Jaun Akhera's mouth smiled, though his eyes
did not, and he rose from his chair. "I have had my wings singed once by a
Keltic—abettor, as you will have heard. You must forgive my caution, and
understand how I must pick my footing with care."
Powell
nodded. "I understand very well; my niece Arianeira was ever at the mercy
of her emotions, whatever she may have liked to believe."
Jaun
Akhera, who had visibly started at the mention of the Princess's name,
recovered himself with a strange smile. "1 had forgotten she too was of
your kin."
"Aye,
well, kin only by fosterage—but a changeful habit is no trait of mine. [ am
your man, my lord, if you will have me." Powell stood up, holding out his
right hand, and Jaun Akhera grasped it eagerly between both of his.
"And
you,. Caradigion?" he asked, his glance going to Pryderi.
Powell*s
heir struck fist to shoulder. "I am my father's to command, Prince of
Alphor. If he is yours, then I am yours through him."
"Good—very
good. Now, Dyved, your advice on a matter. There have been two notable stones
in my boot some months now, and I would attend to them before I am lamed
altogether.''
Powell
smiled in perfect understanding. "We speak of Gwydion and Rohan, do we
not?" he said. "Well then, let us see what may be done to ease your
step."
"Have
you read this?"
Rohan
raised his eyes from the message that had been received by Firedrake's signals
room only moments before, and which had been thought by the bards who took the
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transmission
to be important enough and sensitive enough for the High Admiral himself to
bring it to the Prince.
"I
have, atniarna," said Caradoc Liassar, his face grave. "As did the
bards who decoded it, of course. But no one else . has yet seen it, or heard
its import. I came straight here."
"That
is well," said Rohan grimly. "Come with me now to my cabin, and let
my cousin Desmond be summoned, and Captain Chynoweth, and Donal mac Avera, and
any others you think good. Shane too, if he is arrived from Kernow. We have
heavy matters to speak of."
"Will
you meet him, then?" asked Desmond.
In the
small conference room adjoining Rohan's chambers were gathered some dozen
people, all those whom .Caradoc Liassar had called there, and at Desmond's
words all eyes turned to the Prince.
"Aye,
I will." Rohan fingered the message tablet again. It contained a
communication from the Marbh-draoi himself— Jaun Akhera, Imperial Heir, mortal
enemy, occupier of Caerdroia, jailer of Gwydion—asking for a temporary truce
and parley between himself and Rohan as acting monarch of Keltia.
"It
is almost certainly only a ploy: some delaying tactic, or stratagem to learn
our strength; but if it accomplishes naught else for us perhaps it might serve
to give us news of Gwydion and how he is faring," Rohan added.
"Though I would give much to know what, or who, put this idea in the
Coranian's head at this time; I'll lay odds he never thought of it on his own.
Also there is, however unlikely, the chance that he may genuinely wish to come
to terms. He and his folk must surely be feeling the pinch of hunger by
now."
"Aye,
well," said Gwennan Chynoweth, the Firedrake's' captain, "thank gods
most of those who live in the City managed to get safely away out of it, so
that they are not starving along with him."
The
others nodded in somber agreement. Even the Imperial legions had not been able
to hah the slow stealthy exodus of Kelts from Caerdroia. Like blood from a
secret wound, they had ebbed quietly away by night, week after week, until now
the City stood almost empty of all save Imperial troops. The Coranians had
indulged themselves in some half-hearted looting, but by now, in dead of
winter, food was of more desperate importance to them than gold or coin or
jewels.
THE
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71
That
scarcity was thanks to the work of the strike-and-run skirmishers, Fian
irregulars for the most part, who had remained on Tara to harry the Imperial
supply lines, swooping down from their hidden bases high up in the valleys of
the Loom.
"They
did well to destroy me granaries and other foodstocks before they left,"
said Denzil Cameron. Now Rohan's chief aide* he and his brother Struan had been
two of Aeron's top generals in the fight for Tara. "Though we shall have
much to do after the war is over to get the stores back up again according to
law."
"Worry
about the laws when we must," said Rohan. "What concerns me most now
is Gwydion. Is there no way we can get him out? Fedelma? What say you?"
Fedelma
m Garra, another high-ranking Fian general, shrugged slim shoulders, and cast a
guilty glance across the table at her commander, Donal mac Avera.
"We
had reports, Rohan," she said reluctantly, "that some few of us
stayed in the City itself.''
"
"Us1! What "us1 is this?" Rohan's eyes raked the room with all
the laser sharpness of his sister's. "Have you all gone mute? Mac Avera!
Answer me!"
"Athiarna?"
Rohan
spoke with barely controlled patience. "Donal, what coil is this? Who has
remained in the City?"
The
Fianna captain-general drew his fingers over his mustache. "Well now,"
he said. "When Aeron gave the order for the n'gh-domhna and the war
leaders to flee Tara, the Fianna and the Dragon Kin liked not to leave her and
Gwydion and Morwen entirely under the power of the Marbh-draoi. So, some of
us—stayed."
"Against
the order of the Ard-rian?"
Donal
mac Avera was unrepentant. "Aye so."
"Who?"
"Of
those we know for certain, Grelun and Sabia," said Denzil Cameron.
"Also my brother Struan, and young Helwen Drummond."
"Helwen!"
Rohan was appalled. "She's a child! A schoolmate of my sister
Fionnuala!"
"She
is young, to be sure," said mac Avera composedly. "But she is one of
the most accomplished Dragons to come along in many years. Grelun is not
Gwydion's Summoner and chief lieutenant for nothing, and Sabia has both long friend-
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THE
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73
ship
with Aeron and much experience as a Fian to qualify her for this exploit. I
need not speak of Struan's valor to this company . . . My sorrow to have defied
Aeron's command, Rohan, but the fact remains lhat now we have four of our
own—and our best—inside Turusachan with Gwydion."
"I
have a small feeling, mac Avera," said Rohan, struggling vainly to
suppress a smile, "that this was thought of long before the City fell, and
steps taken to assure it when the time came."
"Ah,
you would win that wager, athiama!"
"Then
an escape could indeed be carried out?"
Mac
Avera leaned back in his chair, trying to interpret Rohan's tone and mind and
wishes.
"Anything
is of course possible, Rohan. As to likely, or hopeful, or even advisable—those
are hawks of quite another feather.''
"But
you mean to try."
"Certainly
we will try," said Fedelma. "And if Arianeira had not gotten Aeron
and Morwen sate away, we would have, effected that escape as well."
"Am
1 to take it that you ail knew about this? That folk had disobeyed Aeron, and
remained?" asked Rohan faintly, almost beyond surprise by now. How had
they dared; and how in all the hells had they managed to keep it secret . . .
"Oh
aye," said Gwennan. "Well, most of us did. It was not a matter we
wished to burden Aeron with, she having things of far graver import upon her
mind back then."
Rohan
laughed. "Nay, of course it was not ... And Gwydion? You have a stratagem
for his escape all devised, 1 shouldn't wonder—some desperately neat-handed
plan or other?"
"Goleor
of plans," said mac Avera happily, seeing that the storm was averted.
"When they deem the time is favorable, they wii! choose their best; only
then will they make themselves known to Gwydion."
"Chriesta
tighearna! Dona), the danger—"
Mac
Avera waved it away. "Oh, danger, surely. No more danger than Gwydion has
managed to live with for the past months. Where within the Bawn is there a
place where danger is not, these days? Are we not in danger, here in Firedrake?
Is Aeron not in danger, and Morwen with her, out there gods know where?
Besides, those who remained in Caerdroia are all of them warriors, Dragon or
Fian or both, and all most
readily
chose to do so. Indeed, we had many more volunteers than were needed; I have
heard of no one who held back the offer."
As if
that justified everything . . . Rohan shook his head but did not speak. Across
the table, Shane's face was dark with foreboding.
"It
will march, Rohan," offered Fedelma. "You shall see."
"I
hope so," muttered Desmond.
"Well,"
said Rohan with sudden resolution, "we can do nothing to help them from
here. But perhaps if Jaun Akhera is thinking about a meeting with me, he will
have less attention to spare for matters closer to hand. If" that betters
the odds for Grelun and the others, 1 would gladly parley with Jaun Akhera for
no more reason than that."
"We
accept, then?" That was Shane, who had listened in silence this long time.
Rohan
nodded. "Aye, and you shall be my second, with Fedelma and Cameron.
Arrange it with Jaun Akhera's agents; no doubt he will name his brother
Sanchoniathon, his creature Garallaz and some other Coranian. Let it be fixed
for some mutually acceptable area of space on the borders of the Throneworld
system; he will not wish to venture too far from the only secure position he
has, and we do not wish to creep too far within his jaws. Tell me what he
offers in reply."
When
all had left the room save Shane and Desmond, Rohan sighed and stretched and
smiled. "How is it with O'Reilly?"
Desmond's
grim countenance lightened. "Very well, considering."
"Considering
what?"
"That
she is fairly jigging with frustration—earth-nuts on a hot peel are nothing to
it—at being forced to remain safe at Glassary while the rest of us adventure to
our hearts' content."
"Would
you wish to bring her aboard Firedrake^ She is a skilled communications
officer, and could be very useful; and if it would make you both less
fretful—"
Desmond
shook his head, though a little reluctantly. "Nay, she is better off
remaining with the Sisters. At least I can be sure she is out of danger there,
and not overly unhappy. Indec tells me she has even begun to learn a little
magic."
"What
a surprise for Aeron, when she returns," said Rohan, laughing.
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**I
have more of a surprise for Aeron than that: I have asked Sorcha to wed me, and
she has accepted."
Shane.
who had not met O'Reilly during his brief sojourn at Caerdroia and who had only
the barest idea of whom his kinsmen were speaking, thought he had never seen
Rohari look so surprised, or so delighted.
"That
is fair news indeed, and Aeron will surely think no
less."
Desmond
looked steadily at him. ** She will return, Rohan.
Never
doubt it."
**I
know that, cousin. But in the meantime—" Rohan stood up, and so did the
other two. "Tell Gwennan that her curragh goes now to Droma. We may wait
upon the Marbh-draoi's word, but that is no reason to lean upon him the less
lightly while we do so."
Chapter
6
Tinao
was feeding the white birds that lived in the chori-gardens when the door to
her chamber swung open behind her.
"Serenity!"
Much surprised, Tinao give the Emperor's daughter the deep obeisance due her
rank as princess and her position as Jaun Akhera's mother.
"Rise,
child." Helior laid a light hand on Tinao's bent dark head, then, with
much the same gesture, stroked the soft plumage of one of the tame birds, and
the creature raised its head-tuft in pleasure at the touch.
From
under lowered lashes, Tinao studied the Princess's slim straight-backed figure,
the nervous fingers, the elegantly rigid shoulders below the golden collar.
"May
I offer you the hospitality of the household, madam? Fruit, sweetmeats,
something cool to drink?"
Helior
shook her head, the dark hair moving like water over her shoulders.
"Nothing, I thank you. I wish to talk to you. Sit by me."
Tinao
obeyed at once, crossing the room with sinuous grace; gathering her stiff silk
skirts beneath her, she dropped onto an ivory stool at Helior's feet.
But the
Princess did not speak at once, watching closely the lovely kitten:face lowered
with such demureness.
"There
has been word from my sons," she remarked at last, almost casually, and
was interested to note the sharp fearing attention Tinao at once accorded her.
"Not
bad news, please Auset."
"Not
bad, though not good either; but it is hard enough to get news of any kind out
of Keltia, so 1 am grateful for whatever may come . . . Sancho has been leading
raids into the hills near the Keltic capital, to burn out resisters and their
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hiding-places.
It seems he was slightly injured on his last-foray."
Tinao
kept her face carefully empty of the sickening fear that jabbed hot irons from
within. "Madam, you said the news was of both your sons?"
"So
1 did." AH at once Helior wearied of tormenting the girl. "Do not
fear, Jaun Akhera is well. He remains in the City, in no better—but no
worse—case than before."
Tinao's
eyes fluttered briefly closed in relief so great she came near to collapsing.
She glanced up at Helior, who was again petting the white bird.
"Then
he does not ride out as does my lord his brother, in his own person against the
Kelts?"
"He
does not." Helior met the dark eyes turned so imploringly up to hers.
"You will have heard, as who has not in this whispering-gallery of a
palace, that my Imperial father has refused to send my son any further
assistance: no troops, no fleets, no funds."
"Madam,
I had heard."
"And?"
"It
is not for me to question the wisdom of my Emperor, though it seems hard."
"Nor
is it for you to evade the questions of your Emperor's daughter. Do you truly
love my son, daughter of Tenjin?"
A blush
suffused Tinao's honey-gold skin. "Serenity, I do; not just for that he is
Imperial Heir and shall one day come to be Emperor, but for that he is—"
"For
that he is Akhi," said Helior, but she was smiling. "I, as his
mother, am of course interested to know how you do see your own future with
him. Since he has been officially named etcheko-primu and my father's successor,
he must one day take a wife worthy of so exalted a. rank. Not that your own
bloodlines are not ancient and noble ones, of course, but perhaps not quite
what might be required of a future empress."
Tinao's
curved ivory nail-shields dug briefly and violently into her palms, leaving
little red crescents in the soft skin, but her face remained serene.
"That
may well be, madam; but the Cabiri emperors since our very beginnings have also
in their wisdom taken co-wives to suit their hearts ... as did Your Serenity's
own father."
Well, I
asked for that! thought Helior. But in truth she was glad to know that the girl
could both think when challenged
THE
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77
and
snap when threatened. Both talents would be extremely useful in a secondary
wife ...
"Well
said, and I ask your pardon. So, you wish no more than to be my son's left-hand
consort, giving place—for all the Imperium to see—to his right-hand
Empress?"
"It
is as honorable a rank, if not perhaps so public a one. So long as his Empress
gave place to me for him to see, what matter if she shares his throne, if I
share his bed? My heirs would be just as lawful as hers—but I think I know my
lord well enough to say that my heirs would be his only heirs, and I the only
one to share his nights."
"Nicely
argued," said Hehor. She brushed a gentle finger over Tinao's cheek, then
stood up, and Tinao rose and fell again in another curtsy. "You have been
open and honest with me, child; I like that well, and I expected no less from
the lady my son has chosen to love. So well do I like it that I shall make you
a promise. We shall speak again quite soon, you and I, for there is a thing you
may help me in—a thing to be done for Akhi—and, in return for your help in
that, I will perform what is needed to see you as my daughter-of-love."
She looked down at Tinao with an affection she had not shown before. "I
should like to see my son wed to good political advantage, that is only
sensible. But equally I should like to see him take a wife for himself. My
father did suggest that the Keltic war could be brought to swift and happy
conclusion if Jaun Akhera would wed the Keltic queen"— Helior felt rather
than saw Tinao's uncontrollable movement of revulsion and denial, added
smoothly, "though I would sooner see him bed a harpy as that one ... We
have spoken enough for now. I will send for you."
Daughter-of-love,
thought Tinao when the Princess had gone. A title reserved for co-wives, not
principal consorts. In all truthfulness, though, she had never had any
particular wish to be Empress, even had her birth-rank permitted such a
possibility, and she was as alive to the sense of such matters as was Helior
herself. What the Princess had all but promised was perfectly acceptable to
Tinao—more than acceptable— and she hugged herself with pure happiness, hands
running up her arms inside the big square gold-embroidered sleeves of her
tekka.
A wave
of sudden loathing knifed across her mood. So Strephon had suggested Akhi wed
Aeron Aoibhell . . . She is
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fair
enough, I suppose, and a queen besides, but I would see both of them dead and
bleeding at my feet first . . .
"Oh,
Akhi," she breathed aloud, and one of the white birds ruffled its feathers
at the sound of her voice. "Take care, I pray you; take care."
The
Marro sliced outward through the Throneworld system the same way she had
entered it all those weeks before. Indeed, the flagship's commanders had dared
take no other route: For alt their efforts, the Imperials had still not managed
to break the bardic military codes that would have enabled them to read the
mine-maps for this sector of the Bawn; and already on this supposedly peaceful
voyage to parley several escort ships had been lost. Hyperspace was likewise
denied them, as it had been on the original voyage of invasion, and so the sail
to the agreed-upon coordinates, above the plane of the system, was taking the
Coranians longer than it had the Kelts, who were free to sail as they pleased.
And it
had pleased Rohan to take his shortest way there; so that when the Marro came
at last to the meeting-place, Firedrake was before her. The Keltic ship lay
like a great golden dragon couchant in a lair of stars; but a dragon that lay
with all its eyes open and watchful, and if it could have lashed its barbed
tail, it would have.
"I
hate that ship," said Sanchoniathon, staring balefully at it through the
viewport on the bridge's port side.
"I
am myself not overfond of it," agreed his brother, fastening his collar
around his throat and slinging on a pleated cloak over his space-armor.
"With luck, or the favor of heaven, we may not be obliged to look at it
very much longer."
Sanchoniathon
shrugged, then, as the words registered, turned a horror-filled glance on Jaun
Akhera.
"Akhi,
you have not got some treachery toward, have you?"
"What,
against the Firedrake! Certainly not; no, Sancho, nor against Rohan neither.
There would be no point, and precious little percentage. I meant only—well, no
matter what 1 meant. Where is Gwydion?"
"Waiting
under guard in the main landing-bay. We will go by shuttle to a derelict
space-station that cannot have been sabotaged in advance by either the Kelts or
ourselves. Garallaz and I have arranged the thing with Shane Aoibhell and the
Fian
captain Denzil Camerdn. The station has been scanned, transgraphed, macrowaved
and strobe-probed, and to the best of our knowledge it is safe."
Jaun
Akhera smiled at his brother. "If you say it, it is so."
"I
like it not," said Hanno, who stood with the princes on the bridge.
"You
have said that before."
"And
I say it again. Is it truly the best arrangement we could make?"
"Yes,
Captain-General, it is!" snapped Jaun Akhera, and instantly regretted the
lapse in control; he was as apprehensive as the rest of them, perhaps even more
so, but his rule was never to let it show. "Come," he said, and now
his usual mask of poise was back in place. "Let us call upon Rohan."
The
small space-station, little more than a bruidean or travellers' halt for ships
bound to and from Tara, showed everywhere the scars of recent and terrible
attack—smashed viewports like spider-stars, huge beams cracked and blackened by
laser fire—but the atmosphere was intact and breathable, the gravity strll
functioning.
Jaun
Akhera stepped out of the flexible umbilical and through the airlock into what
had once been a lavishly appointed reception area. He was followed by Gwydion,
moving with his customary unhurried stride. Sanchoniathon had remained on board
the Marro; accompanying Jaun Akhera as seconds were Garallaz, who once before
had served him as emissary to the Kelts, a vassal lord called Hurcamendi, and
Inguari, a grizzled general who had been close friend and comrade-in-arms to
Jaun Akhera's late father, the overreaching Phano.
In the
center of the adjoining room was a round table, its surface reasonably free of
debris. Jaun Akhera swept the dust off a chair with the hem of his cloak and
seated himself, motioning Gwydion into the chair on his left.
A very
few minutes later, there was a hollow heavy thud, and the entire station seemed
to shudder a little. All knew well what it was: Rohan's shuttle had docked.
He came
through the same door the Coranian party had used, nodded once to Jaun Akhera.
His gaze moving on, Rohan hesitated almost imperceptibly at the sight of
Gwydion, whom he had not expected to see, then took a seat across the
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table
from Jaun Akhera. Shane and Denzil flanked him—• Desmond, like Sanchoniathon,
had remained on the flagship to command in case of treachery—and Fedelma ni
Garra faced Inguari at the door.
"Well
met. Prince of Thomond." said Jaun Akhera easily. He accepted Rohan's
equally brief return civilities, studying the Prince with careful attention,
for they had never before met in all the months of fighting. During the
invasion of Tara, Rohan had been aboard the Firedrake serving with his
great-uncle Elharn, and had had no part in the fall of Caerdroia or what came
after.
Obviously
an Aoibhell, thought Jaun Akhera, though he bears only the most superficial
resemblance to his sister;, well, physically, at least. . . Jaun Akhera let his
head incline slightly to the left.
"Only
by means of a threat to the remaining people of Caerdroia, Rohan, do you behold
His Highness of Gwynedd so biddable."
Rohan
glanced sharply at Gwydion, who returned the look impassively, his face giving
no message that any there could read. Except, perhaps—
"So
I see," said Rohan after a while, as one who had indeed received
plain-worded tidings.
Had he?
Jaun Akhera wondered. The Kelts and the Coranians both had common ancestry from
Atland—root cause of the long, long hatred—and one of the talents both races
had inherited from that far-past time on Earth was the gift of telepathy. Not
words, as such, but rather the conveyance from mind to mind of image and mood
and feeling and emotion; a sense-picture rather than worded thought, though
those who were trained to it could not only transmit words but hold
conversations. And Gwydion and Rohan had been close; friends, members of each
other's family, since boyhood, easier for them, no doubt, to read each other's
thought than a stranger would find it. But if those two had managed to exchange
a message . . .
Jaun
Akhera put it aside, turned to the matter at hand. "I suggested this meeting,
Rohan, to discuss the possibility of our coming to terms. In spite of your best
efforts, your fight is at a standstill. And, in spite of all our best
efforts"—he threw Rohan a smile full of charm—"so is mine. I thought
perhaps we might be able to come to some sort of political
THE
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81
settlement
beneficial to us both, without regard to the current, or future, fortunes of
battle."
Rohan
leaned back in his chair, its metal frame creaking faintly as his weight
shifted. On the edge of his vision, he was aware of the scowl on Garallaz'
face, the small smile on Gwydion's.
"I
cannot see how," he said politely. "Any conditions you might suggest
would have to be accepted by Aeron as Ard-rian, and that is of course hardly
possible now."
"Or
by Your Highness, as acting sovereign," suggested Garallaz eagerly.
Rohan
affected innocent astonishment. "There seems to be some slight
misapprehension here. I am not acting sovereign. Did you truly not know?"
Jaun
Akhera felt as if he had taken a step that was not there. "Let us play no
games, Rohan," he snapped, concealing a rising terrible suspicion.
"You are heir-designate of Keltia, Tanist by Aeron's own decree. If you
are not lord by law in Aeron's absence, who then is?"
Rohan
let his gaze slide to Jaun Akhera's left. "He sits beside you."
"You?"
Gwydion
bowed slightly. "I. I thought surely you knew."
"Instruct
me, then!"
"You
were informed, I think," said Rohan, "that Aeron and Gwydion had been
set handfast to each other?—Aye, so we thought. Well then, in the absence of
further ceremony, our succession law holds that pledge binding. Gwydion has
been, in fact and in law, King-Consort of Keltia since the day you
invaded." Rohan allowed himself a quick malicious grin that flashed over
his face and was gone before Jaun Akhera saw it. "A long way to come,
maybe, to learn this."
"Oh,
be not disingenuous with me, Aoibhell!" Turning to Gwydion: "You
might have made mention of this sooner, Gwynedd. Back at Turusachan, say, and
so spared both of us a tiresome trip. So it is you I should be speaking to,
then, regarding terms of accommodation?"
Gwydion
drew a hand across his bearded chin. "It is, but even I could accept
nothing that would not require confirmation by the Ard-rian of Keltia. And to
draw her back here to accept those terms, you would first have to lift the
sentence imposed on her and Morwen, and to release me, and to raise the siege
of Tara, and to convey all this information to her,
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wherever
she might be, and get her to believe that you truly meant it. Even then, very
like she would refuse. Doubtless she has plans of her own."
"Spare
me your irony, Gwydion. We both know full well that Aeron would return in a
minute if you called her, and that she would honor any bargain you and I
succeeded in striking."
"Not
if I bade her refuse." Gwydion smiled, for the room had gone very still.
"I can do so, Jaun Akhera; and, Rohan, forgive me but I would do so ...
And Aeron would hear me; and hearing, she would obey. Be very sure of
that."
In
spite of his anger, Jaun Akhera could not forbear a choke of laughter.
"'Obey'! AeronT"
Gwydion
nodded composedly. "It happens not often, I admit, but even Aeron can be
commanded in good time; commanded even against her own inclinations and wishes,
by one she trusts. Believe that she wouid obey such a word; believe still more
that I would give it."
The
silence was broken presently by Rohan. "Before we leave this place. Prince
of Alphor—for leave we soon must, and I doubt that we shall meet again—I would
give you a word of cautioning. Your intrigues are not the secret you think
them. I advise you to put no trust in untried horses; very often on such beasts
the saddle slips round at the first hard gallop, for they have blown out their
girths, and the rider will be off."
"I
do not wish to speak in riddles," said Jaun Akhera coldly, though he was
inwardly appalled. Did these Kelts know, everything, then, that passed even in
his secret councils?
"Very
well so, if you have it ... We have had word of your intrigue with certain
Kymric lords, whose names I will not defame by mention here: that you have
sought their treasonous collaboration." Rohan carefully kept his eyes away
from Gwydion as he spoke. This was the information he had so hoped to be able—somehow—to
convey to his friend, the only point and purpose, as far as Rohan was
concerned, of this whole travesty of a parley . . . Though, in spite of
Desmond's best efforts, he had no more proof now than when Shane had first
brought him the news, still Rohan.believed, as he had from the start, that the
rumors were pure truth; and daring a quick glance at Gwydion he saw that his
friend thought so too.
Jaun
Akhera, after that first terrible sinking moment, had
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83
recovered
himself. Rohan's professed reluctance to name names argued less a desire not to
dishonor lords of Keltia than an ignorance of such lords' identities. Powell
and Pryderi had not been discovered just yet, and perhaps all was not in ruins
after all. But he would speak sharply to the Dyvetians upon his return: This
farcery had been all at Powell's urging, and no mistake but that Rohan had
benefited far more from it than had Jaun Akhera . . .
"That
is a damnable lie. Prince of Thomond," he said, voice clear and precise.
"1 came here not to be insulted with unproven tales of subornation and
subversion, but in honest proffer of a peaceful settlement between us. Though I
have heard." he added with sudden spite, "that many of the folk of
Tara have come to believe that Aeron will never return to Keltia."
"That
I will never believe," said Gwydion; he spoke lightly, but his eyes had
darkened to storm-color. "She shall return, and in her return is your
downfall."
"That
the event shall prove." Jaun Akhera turned again to Rohan. To his
surprise, the Keltic prince was smiling. "This amuses you, Rohan?"
Rohan
nodded, and let his grin widen. "You seem to have little luck with the
Aoibhells in parley, Prince of Alphor. I was but thinking of Rath na Ri'ogh,
where you and Aeron had so mutually instructive an exchange . . . But since we
speak of things unpleasant, I daresay I need not remind you, Jaun Akhera, of
your starving garrisons in the City, or the patrols sent out to forage in the
farmlands of Strath Mor who do not return, or those who do return but only in
small bloody pieces, or the dwindling numbers of the ship-tally of your armada.
Nay, 1 think you know these figures quite as well as do I. But let that stand
as my final word and offer to you, and you may pass it back, if you can, to
your so politic grandsir: It shall only grow worse for you. And when Aeron
returns— well, my sister can speak for herself, and she will, and sooner than
you think."
The
silence this time was long and charged; at the door, Fedelma tapped her fingers
upon the hilt of her glaive, and Inguari looking back at her never moved a
muscle.
Then
Jaun Akhera: "That may be. But plainly you and I have no more to say to
each other. Except that I give you a word of caution in turn: Remember, Rohan,
that Gwydion comes back to Caerdroia with me ... When our ships are
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both
beyond the truce-radius from this place, all will pertain as before, and 1 for
one would have it no other way. Aoibhell, Cameron, I bid you farewell. We shall
not meet again."
Rohan
was on his feet. "Gwydion—"
But his
friend's gray glance crossed his in warning, as steel crosses naked steel in
salute. Then Gwydion was gone from the room, and his captors with him.
As
their shuttle raced back to the Firedrake, Shane, piloting the little craft,
swore quietly and continuously and evilly to himself. Rohan, in the chair
beside him, threw his kinsman an amused look.
"1
am sure 1 am every bit as vexed as you, cousin, but truly you expected nothing
else?"
"Nay,
nothing else! And nothing less either!"
"Well,
perhaps you would have handled things differently."
"Aye
so! And I would have begun by smearing the Marro across the stars like flaming
clouds!"
Rohan
was not surprised. "And Gwydion with it?"
"I
love him dearly, Rohan, but he would be the first one to urge that course upon
us, and you know it."
"I
do, and that is why we shall not."
"Rohan—"
"No
more, Shane! I am in no mood for a family brangle!"
Such a
likeness to Aeron in a temper came down over Rohan in that moment that Shane,
who had indeed been eager for words, bit back a grin and turned his full
attention to the controls.
"Still—"
said Rohan, after a few minutes of silent consideration, "you are not far
wrong. We cannot leave him any longer under the hand of the Coranian. I fear
what Jaun Akhera may do, either in anger or in vengeance, now that he is full
aware of Gwydion's true importance in the kingdom, and that we ourselves are
aware of his attempts to suborn our own princes. I think that time mac Avera
spoke of is come."
"That
is a thing good to hear," said Shane. "Bat as you yourself did say,
Rohan, it was a very long way to come to hear it."
Chapter
7
lone
again in her cabin, Aeron rubbed her palm absently .over the worn leather
binding of Taliesin's book. So frail a blade this, that she must wield against
catastrophe; so small a hope to stake such greater hopes upon. She permitted
herself a moment of doubt that she would never, for all their loving bond, have
allowed Morwen to see. What if she had been wrong, what if she had in her
boundless arrogance and overbearing presumption misread what was written,
misinterpreted the words of guidance that had been given her? The traha had
ever been the tragic flaw of the Aoibhells, but was it not hubris beyond even
the traha smugly to think herself immune to it?
It was
true enough that the King of the Shining Folk himself, Gwyn the son of Nudd,
had sent her on this road, telling Gwydion to bid her remember the lost
Treasures of Keltia, and Ptydwen Arthur's ship. Still and all, that did not
mean that the Treasures were on board Prydwen, or that she was free to use them
even should she find them: She had merely assumed and decided, in her pure
conceit, that such had been Gwyn's meaning.
Not
that anyone else was like to have a better idea than the King of the Sidhe of
the Treasures' whereabouts, or their very existence. No trace had been found of
them in Keltia in all the fifteen centuries since Arthur had gone away forever,
and since Taliesin, Arthur's friend and Morgan's lover, had written his great
works.
"
'Except seven, none returned from Caer Coronach . . .' " Caer Coronach:
Castle Death-song. Taliesin had been among those seven, the only ones of all
Arthur's sluagh to survive that last voyage to see Keltia again. None of them
had afterward spoken any word of the latter end of Arthur and his company and
his ship; they had resumed their own lives,
85
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Patricia
Kennedy
returning
home to their kin and their duties, joining together only once again, to found
the Dragon Kinship. As for Taliesin himself, he lived with Morgan until the day
she died, and then he cloistered himself in Seren Beirdd and began to write, in
praise and in memory of Arthur and Arthur's sister, and he wrote of nothing and
no one else until his own life's end. Words of singing lightning: histories of
Arthur; accounts of Edeym and the Theocracy; the great Life of Morgan, who was
even then known as Morgan Magistra, and who was now, fifteen hundred years
later, beloved and besought in prayer as St. Morgan of the Pale; and finally,
at the end of that long life, Taliesin's work of greatest mystery, Preithi
Annuvin— The Spoils of Annwn—known in the Gaeloch as The Harrying of Hell.
And it
was straight for that hell that Aeron and Morwen now were heading . . . Aeron
took the tittle book between her hands, rested her chin upon its gilded top
edge. Despite all her plausible words to Wenna earlier, she had more doubts
about the Tightness of her quest than she was at present prepared to admit even
to herself—especially to herself. It was right to seek the Treasures, Gwyn
would not have sent her after them otherwise; but he had not ratified the
corollary of that quest: that, having found the Treasures, Aeron should then
have license to turn them as weapons against Jaun Akhera. Nay, that she alone
had decided, in her righteousness or in her traha she did not know: and she
could as readily «ndecide, if so she chose. But the finding, surely, was what
mattered most.
From
out of the air came a sudden surge of rightness and reassurance that swirled
around her like an eddy of summer wind, a knowledge that she was following
precisely the path that had been put down for her, and her lips parted in an
incredulous smile at the strength and joy of the feeling. All at once she was
filled with the proud certainty that not only would she and Morwen survive this
journey and fulfill their errand, but also they would return to Keltia, and
return in triumph too, no matter the snares and traps and springes that lay in
the road. Their path was sure. They had only to walk it.
Suddenly
ravenous, Aeron took a warm pastai from the wall-hearth and ate it much too
quickly, barely savoring its taste, aware of it as fuel rather than food;
sipped at a steaming cup of shakla to follow. Unbidden, her thought leaped
light-
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
87
years:
to where the Sword was on course for Earth, its passengers wrapped in the
blanket of coldsleep; her sister Fionnuala, her friend Straloch, her new
friends Hathaway and Mikhaiiova. She had grown very fond of those two Terrans,
though she had been closer to O'Reilly, and closest of all to Theo . . .
At the
thought of Haruko she smiled, though her eyes had gone suspiciously bright.
Perhaps, as he had wished with his last breath, he was already reborn as a
Kelt; maybe even as a member of her own family—Kieran and Eiluned's baby was
due about now, perhaps already here. For a moment she entertained the idea of
herself as the reborn Haruko's aunt. . .
Her
thought flipped yet again, to the Protectorates. Her cousin Kerensa had been
hastily dispatched there when the Imperials first invaded, to remind those
governments of the terms of their treaties with Keltia and to gather what help
she could. It would have taken some time to contact all the Protectorate homeworlds,
and there would not be much help forthcoming; but even a little was better than
none, and with luck all casts would roll out together: help from Earth with
Straloch—or rather, the promise of help, for a promise was all she had asked
for; help from the Protectorates with Kerensa; and the help she herself had
gone to seek, from wherever she must go to find it.
"
'Thrice the freight of Fairface were we that went with Arthur . . .* "
"Aeron?"
Morwen's voice over the transcom was strangely flat. "I think you are
needed up here."
Aeron
was in the command cabin not a score of seconds later. "What is it?"
Morwen
nodded out the front viewports. Ahead of them lay their first certain
destination: the Morimaruse, the giant electromagnetic maelstrom that was the
terror of this sector. There were others like it scattered throughout the
galaxy, though none so vast or so violent, and the Morimaruse had an evil
reputation that its fellows likewise did not share. It was a galactic graveyard
for unwary or unlucky starships, and for their crews also: a slow rolling mass
of dustclouds laced with flashes of sullen incandescence, a score of
light-years edge to edge, its eddies of swirling dust and planet fragments
troubled incessantly by soundless stellar concussions, like the summer
lightning that is seen but not heard.
Patricia
Kennealy
THE
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89
Aeron's
mouth tightened briefly, but she made no other sign and took her place at
Retaliatory controls.
"It
will be well, you shall see." She spoke as much to herself as to Morwen.
"Arthur went into it without a guide and without a choice, and he came
safe out again. We have both, and we will come safe out as well,"
Despite
her optimism, it took all of Aeron's considerable skills as a pilot to bring
them to a place where she thought it least perilous to enter the Morimaruse.
According to tradition, Arthur had last been seen heading toward the sea from
the direction of the great space battle at the Roads of Camlann. Aeron had
therefore calculated his most likely trajectory from that place, and it was
this course they had been following all these weeks. But if her skill had
brought them there, it was now her daring that was demanded . . .
"Well,
then." She and Morwen exchanged a swift look, and then they were into the
Morimaruse.
It was
as if they had crossed an inchoate boundary into a universe of dust; ail
navigational sensors were blanked out as the stars went dead around them,
hidden by the thickness of the roiling clouds. They sailed blind for a time;
but then, the deeper they went, the more often they began to cross the thin
winding lanes of clear space between the sea's spiral arms, and Aeron quickly
learned to orient herself by the brief glimpses of the heavens above and below
the plane of the clouds.
"Three
times the fullness of Prydwen were we that went on sea," murmured Morwen,
looking straight ahead, and Aeron felt an echo, warm and cheering, of that
peace that had earlier visited her in her cabin.
"If
you are right about the poeta, Aeron, we should soon come to the first of the
caers."
"If
I am right."
The
ship bounced alarmingly as the space around it was rocked by a nearby
explosion, and Aeron fought to bring the craft back under control.
"This
is a place where stars are bom; it seems they are conceived in as much
turbulence as humans."
"And
in as much beauty also—look there." Morwen pointed out the deosil port, to
where, unguessable distances away, an eddy of the spiral had begun to coalesce,
falling in upon itself, drawing in closer and finer to glow in the dusty dark.
Its contraction had made a clearing about itself, and the light
L
of the
nascent star bloomed faint pulsing radiance, like the tinna-galach that danced
at night on the marshes of Gwenn-Estrad.
The
clouds swallowed up the light behind them as Retaliator plunged deeper into the
void. They had been going many hours now, for in there they dared travel only
at sublight speeds. The clouds around them grew thicker than ever, and far up
ahead an astrostatic storm was raging.
Morwen
regarded it expressionlessly. "Do we go into that?"
"Gods,
I do hope not." Aeron's face was showing the strain, physical as weli as
mental, of holding Retaliator to her course; it was no easy line that she had
taken, and even the knowledge that she was following Arthur afforded her just
now little comfort, and no peace of mind.
"Will
you take something to eat or drink? You cannot go on so.'
"I
dare not just yet; later, perhaps."
"Aeron,
before very much longer you will fall over at the helm."
"Then
fetch me some appropriate drug to make sure that I do not! Dubh-cosac will do,
or that hellbrew Slaine concocts of water-elm and slan-lus ... Do it!" she
snapped as Morwen hesitated, though never glancing away from the screens.
"And do not think to slip me a draught of soporific either; if 1 fail
asleep now we will—"
Her
voice broke off. Morwen's head snapped round to her, then her gaze followed
Aeron's out the front port.
All
around them the clouds had thinned without warning. Retaliator was nosing now
through the last veils, dust like blowing smoke. Beyond, there was open
darkness, with stars above and below, a clearing in the shifting clouds that
stretched .many star-miles ahead of them, like the eye of a terrene storm.
Aeron
had forgotten her fatigue, and was pushing the ship forward as fast as she
dared.
"This
is surely the place," she said, voice hushed. "And we perhaps the
first humans to come here since Arthur himself."
Morwen
was as entranced, peering ahead into the spangled blackness, then down at the
sensor boards.
"/$
it the same place, do you think? Will not the clouds have shifted over the
years?"
90 Patricia Kenneafy
Aeron
finished setting the long-distance sensors to pick up any trace of solid
artifact, and shook her head.
"Fifteen
centuries is the briefest instant inside such a thing .as the Morimaruse; it
moves all at once around its own axis, and it will not have changed overmuch in
so short a time. As for its being the right place—we must find that out as we
do go." She arched her back and shoulders in an aching stretch, and gave
Morwen a tired, but happy, smile. "I could eat now."
In the
deeps of the Morimaruse, Retaiiator hung motionless on the edge of the Eye, as
they had come to call the eerie lacuna amid the endless dust. Worn out by the
effort of getting them thus far, Aeron had finally acceded to Morwen's
pleadings and the demands of her own body; she had eaten and drunk, and now she
was deep asleep. Morwen had stayed on watch a while, then had done the same,
leaving the. ship on automatic, hove-to and space-anchored in the void.
Waking
suddenly to the sensation of ship-motion beneath her, Morwen rolled over and up
off the couch. A quick disbelieving glance at the chronodiais set beside the
door nearly fourteen hours since she had fallen asleep. Coming into the command
cabin, she saw Aeron back at the helm. AH the strain of the previous day was
gone from her face, and the green eyes were beryl-bright with excitement.
"Look,
Wenna," she said without prologue. "The sensors found this in the
night."
Morwen
leaned over Aeron's shoulder to read the screens. Plainly, something was out
there . . . "What is it, then?"
"Something
too small and lacking in density for a planetary body, though very large for a
ship."
"Prydwen
was large enough—nay, the Coranian flagship!"
"So
I think. Or else some derelict, dragged in by the tides."
"So
massive a craft as that would never have foundered like a curragh. However it
came in here, it came by design."
"Ah.
but whose design?"
"There
is only one way I know to find out."
Aeron
smiled. "That is what I was so longing to hear you say ... Set your
chair-restraints on full."
Distances
were deceptive in the Eye. They came upon the mystery ship long before they
expected to, and Aeron at once
THE
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91
sent
Retaiiator into a sweeping reconnaissance circle around the giant hulk.
Coranian,
and no question; the lines and armaments bespoke her provenance without a
doubt. In her prime, she must have been lovely indeed. She was not lovely now:
Ugly black scorches scarred her flanks, jagged furrows plowed across the
once-sleek hull plating, and parts of her life-support enginery had been shot
clean away.
Morwen
had seen something. "Move us closer." Aeron obeyed; Retaiiator,
responsive as always, rose up from beneath the foreign ship like a dolphin
nosing in inquisitively beside a torpid whale. Then she saw what Morwen had
seen: On the outer hull below the bridge housing, half-burned away by long-ago
lasers, the Coranian ship's name was blazoned in cheiofused paint. She had been
called the Marro.
Aeron
pulled herself carefully along, hand over hand, through the snaking attacher
tube that extended from Retaiiator to link the two ships. Both she and Morwen,
who followed after, were encased in skiaths, the close-fming
pressuresuit-forcefield worn in hard vacuum, for they could not be sure of
finding atmosphere or gravity inside the Coranian ship.
But for
the moment, mere entry was the difficulty: The outer doorseals of this earlier
Marro were rusted and pitted with the wash of a millennium and a half of
interstellar dust tides.
Coming
up to the spacedoors, Aeron ran her fingers along the edge of the airlock
frame. Fused solid, or so it seemed: If she could not find the touchplate she
would have to cut through the door, or even through the hull itself, with the
small laser handsaw; and even if she did find the mechanism, there was no
guarantee it was still operational.
Morwen
caromed gently into her. "Over on the right." Within the confines of
the skiath, her voice rang thin and metallic in Aeron's ear.
Aeron
laid a gloved hand in the palm-shaped hollow, almost invisible under the rough
patina of rust, and put arm-strength behind it. After a long moment, there was
a grinding vibration, and then, inch by slow inch, the spacedoors moved aside.
They
stepped through onto the Coranian vessel. Morwen glanced down at her
belt-probes: They had been right to rely on the skiaths, for the atmosphere was
exhausted of oxygen,
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and
there could well be viruses or other plagues that the probes could not detect.
But the gravity was intact, and that meant the ship's power-train was
functional: a good sign.
As they
walked cautiously along the wide companion ways, they saw all around them vivid
evidences of the last moments of the flagship's crew; and what they saw
affected them deeply. Morwen, who had never thought to feel for any Coranian
anything but cold loathing, found herself moved to pity by the sight of these
lost ones, their poor dried bodies still as death had found them, either in the
privacy of their cabins, alone, or sitting in the common areas with small
groups of their comrades. They had not been cowards, either. Knowing themselves
doomed, soon to be waterless and food-less and airless, lost beyond hope in the
Morimaruse, they had to a man chosen a swifter way home. Coming upon them so,
in the final attitudes of their lives, their Keltic foes of fifteen hundred
years later paid silent, and ungrudging, tribute to that last quiet courage.
Picking
their way like cats through the rusted rubble, they came at length to the
bridge. Here, at the ship's heart and head, all seemed at first glance oddly
untouched by disaster; uniformed crew still at their posts, lights still
blinking—after fifteen centuries!—upon the consoles, and, in the center of the
command deck, the captain himself still in his chair. But as they came closer,
the illusion shattered, revealing the dry leathered skins, the clawed hands of
a thousand years and more of mummification.
Aeron
had been as unexpectedly touched as Morwen by the sight of the Coranian dead;
had been moved enough, indeed, to place a silent blessing upon the ship and
those who had sailed her—could not harm, might yet help—and now she felt almost
as if she had violated some long-protected tomb, some sad hallow sealed away
for eons against the tears of time. Years had gone by outside, the stars
themselves had shifted in their places, but here these had remained. Though
they had been enemies, they had been brave ones; their valor in the end needed
neither prayers nor tears of hers to ratify their passing. Yet her logic did
not unblur her vision for many moments . . .
Presently
she reached out to touch Morwen's shoulder. "The captain will have left
some record, surely," she said. "Look among the wallbanks, and 1 will
search the command console."
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93
She
found it almost at once: a thickish crystal rectangle, hand-sized, its interior
milky with the data that had been inscribed into the lattice of its molecular
structure.
"We
must try to run it here," suggested Morwen. "Re-taliator has no
facilities compatible to such an antique."
Though
she was no computer expert, and would herself have been the first to admit it,
Morwen was certainly correct on that count: In the fifteen centuries since this
system was new, computer science had evolved almost beyond belief— Keltic
computers were capable of original thought, and could be communicated with by
telepathy—and by present-day standards the Coranian crystal was hopelessly
old-fashioned.
"We
can try," said Aeron doubtfully. She inserted the crystal block into a
likely-looking slot in the console beside the captain's chair. There was
silence, then the lights dimmed briefly as the long-idle relays came back
on-line.
Upon
the main viewscreen, a flickering picture was suddenly projected, and they
whirled in alarm, hands to weapons, at the unexpected motion, then relaxed a
little sheepishly. Though blank in places, for the crystal lattice that held it
had deteriorated over the years, the picture was remarkably clear, and they
unconsciously straightened to hear the last words of the man who had been
Arthur's last Coranian enemy.
He was
tall, even though he sat in his command chair for the making of the taped
record—even as he still did: black of hair and eye, with the golden skin of a
native of Alphor, his face strong-boned and pleasant to look upon. Proud he
appeared, and intelligent; calm in surrender, yet not altogether resigned to
calm acceptance of the fate he had elected for himself and for his crew; yet
not broken by it either; and Aeron found herself wishing that she might have
known him in life, and in friendship. Then, over the transcom link, his voice
came down to them across the ages.
"I,
Jaun-Zuria, son of Errazill and Isaura, Lord of Vidassos, captain of this
Imperial ship Marro, leave these words for those to come by them who may. If
you are friend, that is good. If you are enemy, that is also good, for my folk
and I shall soon be past all such distinctions alike. But, foe or friend, I
would ask whoever hears my words to spare, of your honor, a thought or a prayer
to our gods and your own." ("Already spared," murmured Aeron,
and Morwen's eyes closed briefly in compassion, for the Coranian's voice had
cracked in pleading.)
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But it
continued at once in calmness. "We came into thi§ most evil place by no
means unwilling. It was the Marro that led the great armada against the kingdom
of Keltia and its Wizard-king, Arthur of Arvon. It was he, in his ship Prydwen,
who locked with us—each dragging the other into this dust-hell, two lions with
their fangs fastened in each other's throat. Yet he broke loose at the
last"—the voice betrayed bitterness, and Aeron's fingers clawed into Morwen's
forearm— "and he escaped, leaving us too crippled to crawl home to lair.
We could not even get a message out through the dust, to cry a rescue; and he
knew this would be our fate. So, rather than wait to die parched and choking in
the dark, we have elected to take our own lives. We shall not destroy the ship,
but leave her, and us within, as a marker and a sign, and perhaps in time we
shall be found, and so not perish utterly from the memory of the world."
For the
briefest moment, the calm expression shattered, and all the anguish showed
clear: for his ship, for his crew, for the homeworld he would never see again,
for gods knew what family and friends he had left behind, who would watch for
his homecoming in vain—pain and defeat, anger and sorrow, but not for himself,
and not one atom of fear. Then the mask was back in place.
"Let
you know we did our best. If you are Coranian, you will see that; if you are
Kelt, you will have felt it. There is little more I can say, or wish to. But
whether it be to you a matter of vengeance or triumph, let you know that Arthur
did not escape unscathed. He was a worthy enemy, whatever else he might have
been, and we know only that he has gone on to find his own fate at Fomor. As
for you—the choice is yours. Follow him, or follow us."
The
screen went dark, and the transcom was suddenly silent. In the great stillness
Aeron spoke to the empty screen, spoke across the widening chasm as the
centuries rushed back between them, to the empty shell in the chair beside that
had housed so brave a soul; spoke as she had spoken to the dead Haruko, and to
the dead Roderick, and to her dead parents, the confident and beautiful
assurance of the Keltic death-ceremonial.
"Bydd
i ti ddychwelyd." 'There shall be a returning for thee' . . . She turned
to Morwen with a face that shone like the sunrise. "Then let us follow
Arthur,"
Chapter
8
f f
TJardon, Ambassador, but there is a ship approaching on
MT the
starboard bow."
Haco
Grex, first Terran ambassador to Keltia, put down his antique silver eating
utensils, wiped his lips with a napkin and reached over, with a sigh of regret
for the perfectly cooked meal, to activate the transcom.
"Identify."
"Ensign
Alessio, sir."
"The
ship. Ensign."
"Oh.
Sorry, sir." The voice sounded as if its owner were biting the insides of
her cheeks in mortification; then, surprise succeeding the embarrassment,
"It seems to be one of ours, sir."
"Ours!"
"Getting
a reading—the diplomatic probe ship Sword, sir; Admiralty registry number
7568-DGW Theo Haruko, captain."
Grex
drew an elegant finger over the neatly trimmed gray beard he had allowed
himself to cultivate for this assignment. Among the welter of thoughts that
were flooding his brain, one fact stood out with blazing clarity: The Sword was
the ship that had found Keltia. The ship mat had made first contact, only a few
months ago, with the Kelts, a race of terranic origin three thousand years ago;
and that contact was •the reason Grex was now on his way to the Keltic
throneworld of Tara, and the court of Aeron Queen of Kelts. But why the Sword
was here, more than halfway out from Keltia and apparently on an Earth heading,
he could not imagine. All his old military instincts were suddenly alive and
prickling. / don't think I like this much—they shouldn't have left before I got
there, and they weren't called home either, or the Admiralty would have told me
. . .
"Send
them a wake-up call, if they haven't already gotten
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one
from their ship—they'll have been in coldsleep for a couple of months by now,
and they'll need some time to acclimate," he said presently. "And
match their trajectory to bring us to rendezvous point." Before he went
any farther on his way to Keltia, he was going to get a very much better idea
of how things in fact stood there. After a moment's thought, he pressed a
button, and the young officer who served him as aide entered the cabin from the
office suite next door.
"Excellency?"
"Tell
the consuls that I wish to see them."
The
aide looked surprised. "Is there a problem, sir?"
"Not
that I know of."
When
the officer had gone, Grex returned to his dinner, nibbling absently at the
excellent baked fish. Well, if there was a problem, the sooner his two chief
subordinates knew about it the better. He had chosen them himself, for the
particular needs of this extraordinary mission; good, solid, dependable, loyal
people, with a high degree of perception and just the right amount of flair,
whom he intended to push for all they were worth in the weeks ahead.
But no
harder than he intended to push himself, of course: He had been a diplomatist
forty years now, serving as and where the governments in power had seen fit to
send him. On Earth, the planetary diplomatic corps had evolved over the
centuries into a service unit largely independent of partisan politics, and
Grex's talents had been universally prized no matter who had chanced to be head
of state. Unlike most other top-level officers, Grex had come to his position
out of an unusual combination of circumstances and experience: academics—he had
been chancellor of a great university— and the military, in which he had begun
his career, rising to be one of the youngest ressaldar-generais in history.
Though he had not come up through the ranks from a young embassy officer as had
most of his peers, Grex had the wit and the confidence to surround himself with
polished professionals, and he was afraid of neither title nor talent. Witness
his personal choice of consuls for the Keltia assignment, for instance; and he
had also been a major designer of the probe ship program, in which his old
friend Theo Haruko had apparently played so historic a part. Grex smiled; he
would have to tell Theo so when he saw him; there was probably even a major
decoration in it for the Sword's captain . . .
For the
moment, though, there was little to do but wait.
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97
Grex
braced involuntarily, and unnecessarily, as he felt the ship beginning to
throttle back, dropping down again into space-normal for the rendezvous; then
the sensation of drag vanished as the stabilizers compensated. Well, the crew
of the Sword still had to wake up; and whatever trouble they were bringing, or
fleeing, could wait till then. He would have time, after all, to finish his
fish.
On
pretext of taking the evening air, Gwydion stood on the turret walk outside
Aeron's rooms. Behind him, in the solar, Sabia and Grelun were again at their
sham drudgery—and their deadly mission, for their errand to him this time was
already achieved. As they had brushed past each other only a few minutes ago,
Grelun had given him a message in bardic dichtal: The escape attempt would be
tonight, in the owl-time hour past midnight.
Gwydion
moved a few yards along the parapet, followed by two watchful guards, and sat
down on Aeron's little stone bench. As Sabia had admitted, the plan was
desperate enough, even for a desperate situation: Under cover of a Fian
berserker raid on the front gates of Turusachan, Gwydion and his rescuers would
escape down the face of the perpendicular cliffs that overhung the sea below
Caerdroia on the west. There they would be met by others aiding the escape, but
more than that Grelun had not said; out of concern either for time or security,
Gwydion did not know.
So he
conducted himself according to his usual custom: bathed, and read, and ate his
nightmeal under the eyes of his guards; and when the summons came at last, he
was deep asleep, for once unplagued by dreams. He woke suddenly and completely,
to the touch of another's mind on his.
Sabia,
clad in the camouflage black of the Fianna, stood by the bed. Two dead guards
lay in the doorway where they had fallen, and as Gwydion hastily dressed,
arming himself with the weapons Sabia had brought, he could see the bodies of
more Imperials beyond the door.
Faint
to his ears came the sounds of sudden battle: Out at the palace gates, the raid
had begun. He half-turned to it, but Sabia's eyes flashed him clear warning,
and he followed her out onto the turret walk. As he emerged into the windy
dark, three friends came out of the shadows, to greet him with the small grave
smiles of feelings that ran too deep for easy mirth: Grelun, Struan Cameron,
Helwen Drummond.
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He
returned their smiles, clasped forearms briefly and silently with Struan, then
laid a detaining hand on Sabia's shoulder.
"There
is a thing or two I must fetch; a moment only."
Before
she could protest, he was up the outside stair to Aeron's chamber of magic.
Crossing the slate floor, he knelt respectfully to those who watched over that
place, then closed his hand over the emerald ring, its stone the size of a
kestrel's egg, that was the Great Seal of Keltia. Aeron had set it there,
arcanely protected, before fleeing Caerdroia on the first leg of her desperate
journey beyond the Curtain Wall. He slipped it now onto the smailfinger of his
left hand—no rings on your sword-hand, came, inevitably, the old Fian dictum as
he did so, and he might yet have to fight before the night was over—and picked
up from the altar the other thing that had rested there: the small hom of old
gold, coelbren characters etched around the bell, that he had received from the
hand of Gwyn himself. Fixing the horn to his belt in a pouch of waterproof
leather, he closed the bronze doors behind him and rejoined the others at the
base of the stairs.
Sabia
was in a fret of impatience. "I know what you went for, Gwydion," she
said in a voice taut with tension, as the four slipped silently down the outer
stairs and into the gardens. "But no more delays. We are waited for
below."
She led
them expertly through the garden-maze, gliding like a footless ghost through
the dark, straight to the cliffs that rose up sheer out of the sea more than
half a lai below. Suddenly she dropped from sight, as if she had vanished into
some pocket in the air itself, and Gwydion, though he knew where she had
disappeared to, could not suppress a spasm of vertigo: Aeron could stroll about
unconcerned on the lip of a precipice, but Gwydion was one of those who had an
active horror of heights, and he had dreaded this moment from the moment he had
heard of the plan. But there was nothing else for it. He took a deep breath,
touched Aeron's Dragon medallion that hung against his chest, then followed
Sabia over the edge of the cliff.
A
rough-cut, narrow path snaked its way down the face of the rock, slippery with
salt and sea-wrack flung up by the giant waves that came to their long
journey's end against those coasts; it was this uncertain and perilous path
that Struan and Sabia had argued for as their best way oift of Turusachan. But
tonight the waves were quiet, only a whisper
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99
reaching
Gwydion's ears from below. From above—well, there was as yet no cry upon their
trail, so perhaps their flight was still to be discovered. // the Coranians are
too busy at the palace gates . . . Gwydion's mouth tightened at the thought of
the Fians and Dragons dying even now to cover his escape, but he could do
nothing for them: nothing save to get himself safe away, such was the only thing
they asked of him.
Heart
pounding with the exertion of the long downward scramble, Gwydion leaned for a
moment against a rocky outcrop; then a dim form came into view below him, and
he tensed at once, every muscle prepared for attack.
He
relaxed again almost as swiftly: The figure before him was a merrow, as Helwen,
on the way down, had told him it would be. Of middle height, the merrow was in
shape like to a human, though slimmer and shorter and lighter of build; but
that was where the resemblance ceased. Its skin glowed red as a ruby even in
the faint light of the Criosanna, and the coarse, stiff, mane-like hair was the
green of sea-foam over sand, or the green of the great kelp-fans that sway like
ferns in the tida! swings. And the eyes—the eyes like the inside of an
oyster-shell, iridescent as nacre, filled with all the mystery of the wild
waters.
The
eyes met and held his. "Quickly, lord," said the creature, and its
voice too was clear and wild. "The tide is almost at the full."
Gwydion
leaped down to join—him? "As quick as I can ... I am Gwydion ap
Arawn," he added.
The
sea-being smiled with piercing sweetness, and the pearl-eyes flashed whorls of
color in the dark. "I know, and I am called Cumara."
'Hound
of the Sea' . . . "My thanks, Cumara, for the risks you and your folk take
for me."
The
merrow waved one graceful web-fingered hand. "Are not the Moruadha Kelts
as much as any others? We are something limited in warfare, save in a
sea-fight, but at the least we can serve the Ard-rian—and the new King—in this.
Also we liked not the Marbh-draoi's overtures to us, that he thought we could
be bent to do evil, at his bidding, against Aeron."
Gwydion
chose his footing with care, and pitched his voice with urgency. "The
Marbh-draoi has tried to suborn the merrows?"
Cumara
nodded. "He sent emissaries to Kernow to speak
too
Patricia
Kenneaty
to our
chief, and it would not surprise me to learn that he had tried a like tactic
with the Sluagh-ron: to set both our races against humans. But Faruane, he who
is Morar-mhara among our folk, sent the Coranian camurs about their business.
The Three Peoples are not so easily divided."
Gwydion
was silent again, though now with more than merely the strain of the descent.
Rohan's information had been correct, then; or at least some of it, since Jaun
Akhera had apparently attempted the merrows and the silkies. Aye, he thought,
and who else might he not have attempted? Worse, with whom might he have
succeeded?
He
turned his head to look behind him on the path for Grelun and the others, and
the movement probably saved his life, for a laser bolt flashed past him not a
foot from his head, drilling a neat smoking hole through a granite boulder.
"They
come hard after," called Cumara from a little way below. "We must
dive from here."
Gwydion
felt chilled with more than just the cold spray that beat up from beneath. Even
though Cumara and his companions had assured the humans of assistance, they
were still several hundred feet up the ciiffside. He peered cautiously over the
rocklip into the darkness. By straining his nightsight, he could just make out
the motion of the water below: seas quiet but regular, tons of water smashing
rhythmically into me stone.
"A
long way down."
"Not
for merrows," said Cumara cheerfully. "Nor for you, while you are in
our charge. But no human could survive such a dive unaided." He pointed to
a place a score of yards below them, where waited a few more of his race.
"We will manage all."
"I
could shapeshift, and put such a change upon the others as well—"
"Nay,
you would not know how to manage in a form like to ours, and there is no time
for it anyway. Look, the pursuit is more than halfway down . . . Stay you as
you are, Gwydion, it will be very well."
A
flurry of laser bolts turned the air bright blue around them, and Cumara tugged
at Gwydion's arm.
"Now!"
Gwydion
closed his eyes and launched himself outward. Almost simultaneously two
gleaming dark red bodies were beside him in the air. With a swift practiced
move, one fitted
THE
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101
a red
cowl over Gwydion's face even as they fell, and then they speared the water.
To
Gwydion's astonishment, he found that, deep under the cold black sea, he was
not drowned; the red cowl-like thing appeared to be a sort of artificial gill,
a selectively permeable membrane that enabled him to breathe and see and hear
as a marine creature. Through the inky water, other shapes appeared to be
moving nearby; as his human sight, outraged at first, grew accustomed to this
new vision, he could see by the faint phosphor glow of underwater his
companions, cowled and attended by merrows even as he himself, all swimming
slowly along the foot of the cliffs, down along the coast to the southwest.
Ten
miles down the coast from Caerdroia, they staggered up out of the surf at last,
on the soft yielding sand of a beach on the lee shore of a tiny island. ,
Gwydion,
coughing and gasping for air, stumbled across the beach up to the thick warm
sea-grass of the machair that ran down to the edge of the sand. Here he collapsed,
hearing through a great ringing in his ears the sounds of the others coming to
shore. We sound like a herd of sea-pigs, he thought, and noise carries so by
water . . . I hope no one is near enough to hear. But his muscles that had been
shrieking with the strain of the long swim were already beginning to quiet
themselves in the warmth of the sand and shaggy grass, and he could not—would
not—have moved if Jaun Akhera himself had come marching up the beach.
As if
he had sensed Gwydion's concern, Cumara flopped bonelessly beside him, earning
the other's bitter envy: The gruelling swim had troubled the merrow not at all,
and he looked as fresh as a flower.
"This
place is safe entirely," said Cumara. "It is Morrich-mor, Sea-plain,
an old dancing-ground of our folk, and no one else comes here. But where would
you go now?"
"Off-planet,
if 1 can manage it." Even the simple effort of speech cost Gwydion more
breath than he had to spare; as for his new-found freedom, he knew it in his
mind, but the knowledge had yet to come real to the rest of him.
Cumara
looked doubtful. "We would be of little help there." he said.
"Though we could get you to the Kyles of Ra easily enough. It is said that
some of the Fianna and Dragon Kin are there in hiding, but I do not know the
truth of
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Patricia
Kennealv
that
word. Even with the help of the current, it would be two days' swim at the
least; more, for that you are unused to it."
Two
days . . . Gwydion wanted only to burrow into the sea-grass and sleep for a
week, but—
"Aye,
then," he said, dragging himself to a sitting position. "Let us begin
at once, though. If we rest here too long we will not be able to—"
He
broke off. Cumara, beside him, was staring out to sea with wonder in his look.
Gwydion was on his feet at once, his eyes following the direction of the
merrow's gaze, all his weariness vanished in the face of new and possible
peril.
Something
was coming toward them over the wave-tops, gliding across the face of the
waters with the same serene power with which the Firedrake moved across the
stars. It glowed like phosphor in the dark, and it left a trail of dancing fire
behind it, and it made not the smallest whisper of sound.
"What
craft is that?" asked Helwen Drummond. Slim and shivering in her wet black
camouflage suit, she had come up to stand with Gwydion and the merrow.
Gwydion
shook his head. "I know not, lass." His eyes were fixed on the
unknown vessel. She must have a shallow draught indeed, to come so far inshore
. . . Then the shock of it ran over him like seawater, though colder far than
the water had been: The ship had crossed the shoals, and the breaker line, and
now was coming at them straight over the sands, and she was made ail of
crystal.
Helwen
took a step backward that brought her up against Gwydion, and he put a
comforting arm around her shoulders, though he never took his gaze from the
ship. And still the craft came on, in an eerie silence and the same faint
water-elf glow, until she sailed the machair itself, coming smoothly to a halt not
ten yards away above the waving sea-grass.
"This
is a fell thing," said Cumara. "Some druidry or fith-fath, no proper
ship at all. Where is her captain, her crew?"
Gwydion
lifted his hand a little, and Cumara was silent. Then, upon the railed deck of
the glittering ship, a tall figure moved out of the shadow of the mast—a mast
to which no sail did cling. Stepping to the high carved prow, the stranger
threw back the hood of his red cloak.
"Well
met, kinsman!"
The
voice was no less well remembered by Gwydion than the face: Allyn son of Midna,
that lord of the Sidhe who had
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103
been
guide to the Prince of Don in the deeps of Dun Aengus, who had spoken for him
before the throne of Gwyn son of Nudd, King of the Shining Folk, what time
Gwydion had had a perilous errand to that king, in the days before Caerdroia
fell . . .
"You!"
The astonished laughter and recognition in Gwydion's own voice and face caused
the others to turn and stare. But he was already running to the ship's side, a
smile upon his face such as none of them had seen from him for long.
"Allyn
Midna's son," he said, looking up at the Sidhe lord, "I had not
looked to see one of your folk in such a place; or indeed in any place apart
from your duns."
"We
live not always in our palaces, King of Keltia.** Allyn's fair face was alight
with gaiety. "Any road, I have been bidden by Gwyn to bring you this ship
in your need. It is Manaan's own, and is named Aonnbarr—Wavesweeper— and as you
see, it can sail both sea and stone. It will take you and your company to the
Kyles of Ra, or anywhere else you may wish to go on the face of the planet.' *
He beckoned to the others. "Come now; Wavesweeper longs to be gone."
They
vaulted aboard, some more willingly than others, but Gwydion first of all. Then
Allyn laid his hand lightly upon the mast—there was no helm that any could see,
nor any rudder either—and the ship stirred beneath them, gliding back down to
the sea.
All
that night Aonnbarr skimmed the waves soundlessly south westward, holding her
course to the Kyles of Ra with no more guide or conning than that one touch of
Allyn's hand. Gwydion stood with the Sidhe lord in the bows; the others, human
and merrow alike, clustered together amidships, seeking physical warmth as much
as psychic comfort, for the wind that streamed over the prow was strong and
cold, and the strange light like cloudy ice that rose up from the deck beneath
their feet was unsettling. Even the merrows were ill at ease aboard the crystal
ship: The Shining One known as Manaan Sea-lord was a demigod to the Moruadha,
ruler of tides, Wavewalker and Stormbringer; the white-capped waves of a choppy
sea were his horses, in harness to his silver sea-chariot; to know that he had
sent his own ship to save them was a thing almost passing belief.
As gray
dawn began to break over gray ocean, and the Spearhead faded in the growing
light, Aonnbarr raised the most northerly of the scattered islands that made up
the Kyles
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of Ra.
That region was as much sea with land between as land with sea between, as if
some fist from heaven had in time past smote the earth, shattering it into a
million patchwork pieces of gray and green and brown that the silver sea had
stitched together.
Aonnbarr
slackened her pace, and Allyn turned to Gwydion. "I must leave you here,
kinsman/' he said; his face, vivid still, was graver now in the morning light.
"Manaan's ship is not a craft to be seen by everyone; he has done much in
granting you its use, and he calls it back now to its haven. And I too am
called back; but we shall meet soon again—has it not been promised?" He
held out his hand, and without an instant's hesitation, and with many words of
thanks, Gwydion clasped Allyn's forearm with his own.
Now
Aonnbarr moved up the beach and rode over the low grassy hillocks of the little
islet. She hovered briefly, as a well-trained horse will stand for its rider to
dismount at leisure, and her passengers jumped to the ground; then she sailed
on across the hills and vanished into the morning mist.
They
watched her go, then turned thoughtfully away. Gwydion rubbed a hand over his
face, for he felt on the point of collapse, and spoke to Cumara.
"Once
more I would ask you to be our friend at need. You heard rightly, as you told
me earlier: Some of the Dragon Kin and the Fianna have indeed gone to ground
here in the Kyles, and Prince Declan, the Ard-rian's brother, leads them. Can
he be found, and we brought to him?"
The
merrow nodded, awe still shining deep behind the mother-of-pearl eyes. "Leave
it to us, lord," he said. "If he is in these waters, we shall find
him."
Cumara
proved as good as his word, and before nightfall, Gwydion and Declan were
embracing each other in the surf that edged a grim granite-fanged island some
way to the south. Beyond hope, the merrows had succeeded in locating Declan and
his warriors in their hidden stronghold. Still more miraculously, they had
managed to convince the prince of their incredible tale, so that he had given
them a lonna and strong boatmen to ferry the exhausted humans the last little
distance.
Reeling
up the rocky shingle, sun red in the west behind him, Gwydion was nearly
knocked off his feet by the surge of a powerful breaker, then nearly knocked
over again as Declan,
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105
knee-deep
in the swirling water, swept him up in an exuberant embrace.
"Braud!
Brother! The sea-folk told us you had escaped; even so, I hardly dared
hope—" Declan's delight, unbounded at seeing his brother-in-law, redoubled
as he saw and recognized the others. "Ah, Cameron! Sabia, Grelun—is that
young Helwen?—well met, all of you. Cumara, my debt to you, as I said before,
and my duty to the Morar-mhara Faruane. My sister will thank you herself, in
good time."
"She
will," said Cumara confidently. "How could it be otherwise?"
"It
would have been very much otherwise without your help and your folk's in
this," said Gwydion. "I owe a debt of my own for life and freedom
both to the Moruadha, and I shall not forget it."
"There
is no debt," said the merrow. "Did not Manaan Sea-lord save us all
alike? Only drive out the Marbh-draoi, Gwydion, and bring Aeron home again.
Shall you still go off-planet, then?"
Gwydion
nodded, and even that small motion set him swaying on his feet, so weary was he
by now with his long flight.
"I
will try to get to Gwynedd, to raise my own troops there and bring them back to
Tara."
Declan
shot him a sideways glance. "To Gwynedd? Is that wise?"
"Maybe
not wise, but surely necessary . . . Though not for a few days yet, please
gods. I would rest a little before I go."
"And
that will start now." Declan put an arm around his
friend
for support, gesturing the boatman to draw up the
lonna
into the concealment of a nearby beach-cave, and then
-the
little party went up into the island's interior, where in the
hidden
stronghold waited many to welcome them.
But
behind them, in the last red light across the waves, the merrows, their bodies
like fire in the slanting glow, slipped once more into the sea and were gone.
Haco
Grex was seated at the round table in his quarters. The debris of dinner had
been cleared away and replaced by neat sheafs of reports by the time his two
consuls came in to join him. They greeted him with personal warmth and
professional curiosity, and took their seats at his right and left at the
table.
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He
studied them covertly as they read the reports he had already seen. He knew
them both well, of course: Thomas de Valadon, the junior of the two, was tall,
blond and athletic, possessed of the blunt imperiousness of the aristocrat or
the spoiled brat—both of which he was. But he was also a scholar, and the scion
of a family that had made a profession of diplomacy for a thousand years, and a
good deal had apparently rubbed off on him through mere exposure.
His
other consul—Grex flushed scarlet as she glanced up at him and down again at
her papers, but he did not stop watching her. In that one darkly trenchant
glance, Deonora Maronchuk had probably catalogued the entire situation; such
was the scope of her talent as a psychic alienist.
And
Mother of God, thought Grex, nof without piety, how I can use that talent now
... He rattled his own papers, and the other two looked up at him, eyes wide.
"Have
you read enough for us to discuss mis?"
Deonora
glanced quickly at Thomas, then nodded. "I was sorry to learn of Captain
Haruko's death," she began. "I know he was a dear friend of yours . .
. From all that I have heard, and from what I read in Admiralty records, he was
an exceptional officer. Certainly he died nobly enough."
Grex
nodded, face impassive. He had wept when he read of Theo's death, though that
was not for his consuls or the rest of his staff to know, and he had forced
himself to put his grief aside for a more appropriate time. Theo would have
understood that, and that was all that mattered.
"Did
you speak to the surviving members of the mission?" he asked, looking down
at his notes for the names. "Lieutenant Warren Hathaway and Ensign Amende
Mikhailova?"
"We
both did," said Valadon. "An extraordinary tale they had to tell,
Grex, and some parts of it extraordinarily unpleasant. The part played by the
late Lieutenant Hugh Tindal, for instance: disgraceful behavior. The Admiralty
will have a good deal to say about that."
"No
doubt," said Grex dryly. "What do you make of their report on
Keltia?"
Deonora
shrugged, pushing back dark bangs. "A stable civilization," she
offered. "Quirky, but stable. Extremely sophisticated as to technology and
weapons, sociologically solid, and very wealthy indeed. Their outworld trade is
varied and substantial, and we should be able to deal with them quite
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profitably.
I'm no judge of military matters, but I should think they'd make a formidable
ally—or enemy."
"And
their ruler? This Queen Aeron?"
"I
would say she has already proved herself a friend to us," said Valadon.
"Did she not get herself into a war simply by trying to make
alliance?"
"Well,
yes and no. There's a lot more going on there than just that . . . What did
Mikhailova and Hathaway have to say about her?"
"They
were very impressed with her," said Deonora. "Possibly because
Captain Haruko had come to be her close friend, and they themselves were also
close to her. And the other lieutenant, Sarah O'Reilly, actually chose to stay
there in Keltia—clean against regulations, though it seems Queen Aeron did
submit a request to the Admiralty to have both her and Captain Haruko seconded
there."
"Haven't
you talked to the Keltic ambassadors, Grex?" asked Thomas, surprised.
"They've been waiting to be summoned aboard the Argo."
"1
know." Grex stood up, and though he was not the tallest person in that
room he was the most commanding. "Shall we go and meet them?"
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109
Chapter
9
The
crash, when it came, was not a bad one, but it was jarring. Morwen
redistributed herself painfully in her blastchair—her impact into the restraint
field had all but cut off her air—and threw Aeron an evil look.
"Was
that the soft landing you promised? Then gods spare me from a real jolt."
"My
sorrow for the uncivil ride; Retaliator seldom sets down so roughly. Did the
shuttle crash where we plotted its course?"
Morwen
checked some readouts on her console, nodded with satisfaction. "And so
completely and ruinously that no one will ever be able to tell that we were not
aboard it. That was not such a bad idea, to divert them on a false trail,
though if ever we have need of the shuttle we shall be in sore shift
indeed."
"Well,
the left hand goes not into the right gauntlet ... So this then is Fomor. Let
us get out and have a look at it."
The
sail to Fomor from the Morimaruse had not been entirely without incident. They
had approached the enemy planet unchallenged, but once within the outmost
moon's orbit they had been picked up by ground installations. Several patrol
ships had been sent after them, and only Retaliator's enormous speed and
maneuverability, and Aeron's piloting skills, had allowed them to evade the
pursuit. Aeron had thought to take them down into subspace, as she had done once
before in need, but Morwen balked at the idea, thinking it far too risky, and
unnecessary besides. _
And
most likely Wenna had been right, thought Aeron, unsealing the door and casting
carefully around with every sense at full stretch. / was lucky once to have
sailed sub-space; two times would have been to press it hard.
They
emerged into a wide field full of wiry salt-scrub that
108
faded
into morning mist. The smell of the sea was heavy in the summer air, and the
scent of nearby pines. Morwen looked around her. breathing deeply and
delightedly.
"It
smells like Duneidyn! This is a fine place—even though it be on Fomor . . .
What are you doing?"
Aeron
had pulled their packs—heavier now with gold count-as and Fomori garb—from the
ship, vanished the door and was now setting a control in the ship's nose.
"Come;
we must be at least a few score feet away."
From
the edge of the scrub-pine wood they watched as the air around Retaliator
suddenly brightened as if from within and began to dance. Only a moment; then
the ship was gone, and the little twisted pines seemed to grow where she had
stood.
"Name
of Dana—what did you do?"
"The
ship must be hidden while we are gone from her; therefore did I put the tirr
upon her. It is a thing Rhain and Elharn worked up between them, a kind of
cloaking effect; no other ship in our starfleet has it, not even Firedrake. It
can be useful enough at need."
"I
would say so! Will it hold, though you are not here to keep it active?"
Aeron
nodded, shouldering her pack. "It is sorcery, Wenna," she said with a
smile. "Welt, mostly so. But it will hold until I turn it off. There is a
beacon in the ship's hull keyed to IJthfaens that I have placed in each of our
packs, and using those we can find the ship again without having to run up slap
against her. Though of course if someone else should chance to run up against
her, the game is well and truly up. ... But this area seems deserted enough to
take that chance."
Morwen
picked up her own pack and looked around. They had set down in large part where
they had been forced to, pursued by the Fomori cutters, and not by choice or
policy of their own. Only chance and luck—neither of which Aeron believed in,
thought Morwen with exasperation—had sited their landing place here in the southern
hemisphere, in a clement, uninhabited region perhaps ten leagues from a sizable
city. They would head there; indeed, there was no other place they could go.
But Mighty Mother, I do not love the idea, and I can sense disaster not far
distant . . .
"Well,
Taoiseach?" Standing a few yards off, Aeron was smiling at her.
"Shall we slog?"
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Alone
in the black darkness, Morwen halted, suddenly unsure. She could hear surf
rushing up a stony shore, now distant, now uncomfortably near. The sea-wind on
her face was welcome after the closeness of the woods in which she had been
wandering, but there was a daunting sense of something enormous close by, out
there where black sky swagged seamlessly into black ocean. It was as if a lid
had been set down over the world, like the cover on a dish of meat, and out
there at the edge of sight the world came to an end in a cloudy wall. Then
there came at her, out of the darkness, a line of deeper darkness, a movement
that she could best see from the corner of her eye. It rolled smoothly toward
her, then edged itself with white: the breaker line. She was closer to the
water than she had thought.
AH at
once Morwen was paralyzed with causeless terror: the true Panic that can drop
from nowhere upon those caught out alone in the wild, the unreasoning primitive
terror of the waste places. Something big and elemental and very much not for
mortals was close by, somewhere out in that breathing seamless dark: the sea
itself, recharging its power in the night.
But at
least she knew now which way it was she must go, to get back to even the
doubtful safety of the forest, and she turned her back on the unseen ocean. It
was one of the bravest things she had ever done outside the heat of battle, to
walk away so with her back to the water; but she forced herself to one step
after another, and not to run, and presently she came again to the edge of the
woods.
IfAeron—
But she
broke off that thought at once, with the speed and finality of a heel coming
down on a dry stick, though it would have to be fairly faced, and sooner rather
than later. The moon came out from behind the clouds as she struck a wide
smooth path through the trees. This region showed all empty of folk to our
scanners—who would make a path here through such desolate woods, and to what
purpose?
It was
warmer under the eaves of the forest, after the cold wind that had come
blasting off the water, and as Morwen walked deeper in, rain began to drip from
the leaves, pattering on the forest floor: the only sound in all that midnight
wood, a hushed and private sound, soft and comforting, while above and outside
the storm renewed its rage.
After
an hour's march she came to a rocky outcrop out of
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the
wind's eye. She was exhausted by now, drenched and hungry, depressed beyond
belief; and there was not even a cave or cleft in the rockface in which she
could find shelter as she had hoped, to sleep in some poor safety through the
remainder of the night.
Morwen
stood irresolutely in the middle of the clearing. No longer could she put off
acknowledging the calamity that had weighed all day upon her: When the storm
had begun, some ten hours ago, she and Aeron had lost each other in the wood.
They
had been following a rough heading toward the city they had noted on their way
in, thirty miles to the west of where they had hidden Retaliator; had taken
refuge under the trees as the cyclonic fierceness of the storm had come
crashing down upon them. It had been the kind of storm the Kelts called cam-anfa,
"crooked storm"—a black funnel of devastation, and winds no other
kind of tempest could match: soon over, but deadly while it lasted, and they
had been helpless beneath it.
Staggering
through the lashing underbrush in the blinding rain that had followed in the
funnel's wake, Morwen had realized with sudden horror that Aeron was not with
her. She had hunted for hours in the aftermath of the storm, but had found no
trace of her friend. At last, her frantic fear for Aeron dulled into something
very near hopelessness, she had reluctantly resumed her course for the city, or
as near as she could make it. Presumably Aeron would be doing the same: if she
was still alive, and if she was able.
Morwen
leaned heavily against the trunk of a giant leathertree, then slid slowly and
deliberately down the shiny wet bark to the tangle of roots just above the
moss. She was giving up. She was finished and she knew it and she did not care
one crossic. She was lost and cold and tired, and Aeron was probably dead or
captured, or at the very least just as lost and helpless as she; and this was
the end of everything.
All at
once she felt perversely cheerful. Even the thought of her husband and daughter
could not turn her will to survival; Fergus and Arwenna would do perfectly well
without her, Clann Douglas and the royal family would see to that. The image of
her dead brother Roderick drifted before her fading sight. / must greet him
from Aeron, unless she is with him before me ...
Wrapping
her cloak around her, blond braids inside the sodden hood, she settled herself
with her back to the tree-
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trunk
and her face to the wind. Presently she smiled, and her eyes fluttered closed
and her thought pulled away into the, citadel of her spirit.
So she
never heard the rustlings, and she never felt the feather-soft fingers upon her
face, never heard the tiny concerned whispers. And when the forest came alive
around her, she was not awake to see it.
Many
miies away, on the other side of the forest, Aeron sat in the concealment of a
fernbrake at the top of a little hill, looking warily down at the walled city.
Large enough to be a district or provincial capital, it was Zennor, the town
she and Morwen had been making for when they became separated in the storm two
days ago. Aeron closed her eyes in sudden pain: She had searched for her friend
when the storm's fury had abated, and found no sign of her. In the Ban-draoi
way, she had turned the negative thought on itself, though it had cost her much
to do so, repeating it to herself like a rann: Morwen was well and safe, she
was on her way back to, Retaliator. she would wait there for Aeron's return.
/ may
say it, and I may pray it; but do I believe it? She shifted her position among
the ferns, taking care not to let herself be seen against the sky. Be that as
it must, she would return to the ship herself, as soon as she had the
information she so desperately needed. This town would surely have libraries
and other information centers, though how she might come by access to those she
had not the smallest idea. But that was another fret for another time . . .
She
cast a professional eye over the obstacles to her even getting into the city at
all. There was a castle on the high place at the city's center; what looked to
be a fane or temple of some sort; a cluster of governmental-seeming buildings
bordering a central square; and what was certainly a garrison of some strength.
The city's fortifications were impressive even to an eye accustomed to the hundred-yard-thick
walls of Caerdroia; and she had long since noted the complement of wall-guards
and gate-guards—and their patrol patterns.
At last
she sat back on her heels to consider her options. It would be impossible to
slip into the city clandestinely; not only were there the guards, but there
would be devices as well, maybe droids or even trained beasts. Yet enter she
must; she had food for no more than another two or three days at most, and her
clothing, though Fomorian, was unsuit-
able
for the local ctimate. Cloaked and hooded, she should be able to get through
the main gates unremarked, if she was extremely careful and spoke only as was
needful. There had been a steady stream of people, afoot and ahorse and in ail
manner of vehicle, through the gates in both directions ever since sunrise; not
hard to lose herself in the midst of such.
Well,
nothing wagered, nothing won . . .
Luck
was with her through the Zennor gates; no one took any notice of her at all.
Once within, she melted into the throngs of idle pedestrians that crowded the
streets, then began to walk with casual purpose toward the central market
square. In a very few minutes she was in possession of suitable clothing that,
though of good quality and workmanship, gave no overt indications of wealth or
rank; the mercer who sold her the garb accepted her gold trading tablets
incuriously, weighing them out and giving her proper Fomorian coin in return.
In a
clean comfortable room at a small inn off the main square. Aeron changed into
the new clothing: the loose trousers, drawn in at the ankles and tucked into
soft leather boots, the billowing short chiton favored by Fomori women of all
stations, and the long rectangular maphorion or head-veil that could be drawn
at need across her face; her own cloak would serve well enough for outer
garment. She would not pass for Fomori herself, of course—red hair and pale
skin were uncommon on this world, and her height too was beyond the usual—but
that did not concern her overmuch. This place seemed not unaccustomed to
offworld visitors, many of whom adopted native dress on a new planet, as a
courtesy, or for convenience, or simply out of love of dressing up. Any road,
the more she appeared as everyone else, the better it would be for her; also
the looseness of the clothing would conceal the glaive that hung at her hip.
She had hesitated before making the decision to wear the laser sword—no citizen
she had yet seen had carried a weapon of any sort, except of course the
guards—but to go about unarmed would be madness, and in the end she had buckled
the sword-belt around her waist under the chiton.
She sat
now cross-legged upon the bed, eating some of the food the inn servant had
brought up for her: cold meat, a thick hot stew of seafood and vegetables, a
small gold cheese, bread and fruit and butter and honey. For drink there was
what she had asked for: plain fresh water. She drank half the
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jug and
leaned back against the wooden bedstead, feeling the" wind that sprang up
at sunset blow in at the windows and across her face.
For the
first time in the four days since she had landed on Fomor Aeron allowed despair
to take her. She was alone here, in perhaps the greatest danger of her life,
danger that was growing worse every hour, possibly already identified and
hunted even now; Morwen was just as alone, in just as much peril, injured or
perhaps even dead; and she had no idea in the worlds of how to accomplish her
quest. If Arthur had come to Fomor, as the Coranian captain had claimed, he
might have gone anywhere on the planet. His errand had been to rescue captive
Kelts, and—if one could trust Taliesin's account—he had succeeded in so doing.
Doubtless there would be records of such an event, but she had not yet worked
out a. way to come at them. On Fomor, learning was jealously guarded by the
learned; the masses, with few exceptions, were not encouraged in study.
Strangers were not encouraged
at all.
Aeron
sighed and activated the farviewer screen, hoping to see something of use to
her, fearing to see an alert on herself or Morwen. She could do no more
tonight, save to fret herself into the dubhachas—that evil mood known to its
victims as the "Keltic blacks"—over Morwen's plight and her own;
better it would be to get as much rest as she could, while she could. Tomorrow
would begin in earnest the search for Arthur.
Even
so, her thought went out into the night to Morwen, wherever she might be, and
farther still: to Gwydion and to Rohan and to all those others she had left so
very far behind her.
Disaster
did not overtake her until her third day in Zennor. Perhaps the folk at the inn
had gossiped overmuch, perhaps someone in authority had grown curious about the
tall veiled offworlder with the gold currency-counters making inquiries about
library access, perhaps even some alarm had been set off in some data bourse by
the inquiries themselves; but that afternoon Aeron heard what she had dreaded
to hear ever since her arrival on the planet: the step of soldiers behind her,
and the brusque command to halt.
Even
then she tried to brazen it out, naming to face the captain of the four-man
patrol and speaking in Lakhaz as fluent and colloquial as if that speech had
been her native
tongue.
But he twitched aside her maphorion, his face hardening at the sight of the
fair skin and green eyes, though after a few questions he permitted her to go
on her way.
She
fled straight back to the inn and the comparative safety of her room, locking
the door behind her and leaning back against it, her heart racing. She had
never been safe here, of course, but now she would have to get out of the city
as soon as she could; this very night if possible. Or perhaps it would be wiser
to leave this inn, where they had surely traced her, and go elsewhere, even
stay in the streets all night, and slip out the gates in the morning? Her
thoughts spun round like a wheel-brooch, and she could find no footing for her
fears.
She was
lying on her bed. indecisive, nerve-taut, her right hand on the hilt of her glaive
concealed under the pillow, when a soft knock came at the door. It was no doubt
only the servant with her nightmeal; but— Her grip closed upon her sword-hilt.
"Enter."
The
door opened silently and a uniformed man stepped swiftly inside, his blastgun
levelled at her before she could move. After a small tense pause, she took her
hand from her sword and flipped the pillow off the bed, so that the weapon lay
in plain view.
"Greeting
to Your Keltic Majesty," said the intruder. He stepped forward into the
light, and Aeron sat up with a gasp of recognition. It was Borvos, the captain
who, back on Tara, had allowed her and Morwen to ride unpursued through the
Pass of the Arrows, on their way to Keverango and escape.
She
laughed, shaking her head. "And to you. Captain Borvos. May I offer you
this—" She extended the glaive to him. hilt first, and he took it with a
formal bow. His bearing was much as it had been on Tara: briskly military,
though now his brown hair was half-hidden under a crested helm, and he was clad
not in battle-dress but in a quilted breastplate of gilded leather and a soft
padded tunic beneath it.
"I
am sorry to see Your Majesty in such straits."
"I
am sorrier to be the object of your pity . . . But what do you do here,
Captain? I thought you attached to King Elathan's guard."
*'And
so I am," said Borvos, dropping into a' chair and setting aside both gun
and sword. "Promoted Commander, in fact. But my wife's brother is military
governor of this district, and when he had word of an alien starship—Keltic by
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her
configuration and Retaliator by her looks—crash-landing; in his territory, and
traces of fugitives heading in this direction, he very naturally contacted me
about it. And I—very naturally—mentioned it to the King."
"Who—just
as naturally—sent you here to look for Aeron Aoibhell."
Borvos
nodded, smiling. "A long way from Bwlch-y-Saethau, Aeron . . . Well, the
King wishes to greet you in person, and I am to escort you to Tory. There is a
further escort waiting outside," he added, "in the event you chose
not to accept His Majesty's invitation all so readily."
"Yes,
1 am sure there is." Aeron sounded amused. "So you had heard only
rumors, then, that I was here, and here alone?"
He
nodded again. "Though no one knew for sure; we have not found Retaliator,
and that wrecked shuttle was a clever piece of work to set us off your
track."
"It
would seem, not clever enough."
"No,
well, perhaps not; but you did not come here alone, surely?"
But
Aeron remained silent, and after a moment Borvos laughed and questioned her no
more.
She was
lodged for the night in the castle on the city's high place, in a tower room so
palatial as to be a royal guestchamber rather than a cell for a prisoner. But
the windows that overlooked the city were paned with vitriglass—the same
crystalline substance used in the viewports of starships—and the double doors
were fashioned of a metal only a little less hard than findruinna. Aeron had
expected nothing less by way of security measures, and something very much
worse by way of quarters, so on the whole she was grateful.
Still,
captivity however gilded was captivity all the same—as Gwydion had also
learned—and her mind was busy with what the morning might bring. By now Elathan
had surely been informed of her presence on his throneworld, and Borvos, who
was no fool, would certainly have passed on his suspicions as to Morwen's being
at large on Fomor as well. After all, he was himself the one who had made
possible their escape from Tara; he would assume that they had continued their
flight together, and he would be correct in that assumption. But the longer she
could keep Morwen's presence a
THE
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117
secret,
or at the least uncertain, the longer Morwen would remain safe and free—given
that she was stil! alive to be so.
Oh,
Wenna, stay away, she thought desperately, leaning her forehead against the icy
vitriglass. Do not come looking for me; get back to the ship and get off the
planet, do not tarry for me . . ,
She
turned from the window, noting the spy-eye set in plain view above the door.
Borvos was taking no chances; there would be no chivalrous gestures this time.
The situation was utterly altered: This was his homeworld, he a servant of his
King; and Aeron, queen though she be, was not only an unauthorized offworlder
but the chiefest enemy of Fomor, destroyer of Bellator and slayer of Bres.
No, the
only mystery remaining was what Elathan had planned for her. And that she would
know, will she or nill she, in a few hours' time. To fret about it beforetime
was less than stupid, more than futile; she would rest instead.
Someone
had brought her pack from the room at the inn; with imperial disregard for
whoever might be watching at the spy-eye, she stripped off her Fomori disguise
and dressed once more as a Kelt. Feeling strangely happier, she lay down upon
the bed, and forgot her fears and hopes alike.
THE
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119
Chapter
10
Elathan
was sitting with Camissa in the conservatory, discussing plans for their
wedding—though in truth the plans had long since been forgotten, and the two
were rather talking idly and intimately, laughing softly together—when his
sister, Rauni, came hurrying into the big glass-walled room. Her golden hair
was tousled as always, but her face was uncharacteristically somber.
Giving
the briefest, most distracted of greetings to Camissa, with whom she was on the
best of terms, Rauni knelt beside Elathan's ehair to whisper urgently into his
ear. To her astonishment, he did not appear at all surprised, but nodded, and
withdrawing his hand from his lady's, got lazily to his feet.
"Who
told you this?"
"Treic,"
said Rauni, staring at her brother's calm face. "Borvos sent him on ahead
from the landing-field. He—Treic— had neither eaten nor slept, otherwise he
would have come to report to you himself. So 1 sent him to do both, and told
him I would bring you the news."
"Good.
Tell Borvos, when he comes, to conduct her to the Small Presence Chamber. I
will come directly."
When
Rauni had gone again, Camissa reached forward and gave a pointed tug to
Elathan's sleeve.
"
'Her'?"
He
started at the sound of her voice; in the mass of speculations roused by his
sister's message, he had completely forgotten Camissa's presence.
"Her
indeed: Aeron Aoibhell."
"The
Keltic queen! What of her?"
"She
has elected to pay us a visit, it seems. I did not tell you, but there were
reports that Retaliator had been seen to land here, and I sent Borvos south to
the Mirregaith to look into it. Late last night he informed me that he had
captured
118
her in
Zennor. He is bringing her now to Tory; the aircar has just landed." He
shook his head in bewilderment. "But why, with all the galaxy to flee
into, and safer places by far, does she choose to come here—''
"But
you knew she had escaped from Jaun Akhera."
"Yes,
and Morwen Douglas with her—Borvos^told me when we came back from Tara of his
part in their escape. He was so honorable about it, thinking I would at the
very least banish him." Elathan laughed, recalling his officer's speech.
"He was astounded when 1 promoted him to commander of my guard because of
it ... But to come here herself! She must be mad; or else she had some plan in
mind."
"A
plan that miscarried."
"Has
it? Has it really?" He held out a hand to her, and she rose obediently,
twining her fingers with his. "Well, we'll know soon enough. Come; I would
have the future Queen of Fomor meet the present Queen of Kelts."
She is
so tall! was Camissa's first thought, as she and Elathan entered the private
presence chamber used for receiving friends and family, where Aeron now waited
under heavy guard. So tall, and with all that pretty hair; and in spite of her
travel-stained clothing, she looked much more like a royal guest on a state
visit than a friendless prisoner . . .
Elathan
crossed the room to stand within a pace of Aeron, who had been watching him
with wary amusement ever since his entrance. Neither of them paid the slightest
attention to the others in the chamber.
"So
it is you."
Aeron
inclined her head. "Your Grace of Fomor."
"Why
are you here, Aeron?"
Her
laugh was soft and full of irony, as at a private desperate jest. "To look
for someone."
"Is
Morwen with you?"
"Elathan,"
she said, still smiling, "I am very tired, and very hungry, and I have
been dragged a very long way in a very uncomfortable craft with some very dour
folk for company. May I be shut up now? I have no intention of answering your
questions if you keep me standing here all night."
They
had spoken quietly, to be heard by each other alone. Now he looked for a long
moment into the clear green eyes six inches below his own, then nodded.
"Conduct
the Queen of Kelts to her chambers, and see that
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she has
all that is necessary to her comfort. I will join her there presently."
Aeron
smiled again, but said no other word, and went out with Borvos and the guards.
Alone in the chamber, Elathan stared after her, unmoving, unseeing even, until
Camissa came up beside him.
"So
that is the Hammer of the Stars." She used the epithet deliberately; it
had been given to Aeron by the Fomori in the aftermath of Bellator, and not out
of admiration. It gave her some satisfaction to see Elathan flush and turn
away.
"1
suppose she is that, all right," he agreed after a moment. "The same
one the Coranians call the She-wolf of Keltia; and no whelp of Fionnbarr's
litter is more dangerous."
"And
you will keep her here?"
"Certainly
I will keep her here, until I find out why she came to Fomor and what she
planned to do here and where she was headed afterwards. But as a guest, not as
a prisoner."
"And
what then—for this guestT'
Elathan's
glance flew to her face; there had been a strange note in her voice that had
sounded like jealousy, though that seemed hardly possible. He was amazed to see
that the waspish snap had been genuine: A tiny flame of hurt and
posses-siveness flickered in Camissa's dark-blue eyes.
"Cami,
surely you do not think—"
"I
do not know, Your Grace, what I should think." She tried to pull away from
him, but he caught her and drew her to him, and held her until she stood, rigid
with protest, and gave over her struggle to escape.
"My
love, I have told you my dream of friendship with Aeron and with Keltia; what
better time than now for it to begin?"
"She
killed your own father."
Elathan
spun her to face him, rare anger showing now in his eyes. "Yes, and my
father killed her father, and many others besides. We shall never have an end
to it if we do not make one now. You and I have spoken of this before; I
thought you of all people surely understood. You cannot wish this to go on
forever?"
"I
don't know," she said in a low, troubled voice. "I do not know."
He
pulled her close again, and ihis time she did not struggle but clung to him as
if he were her last hope of escape from a burning land.
"Then
trust me, Cami; only trust me, for J think 1 do."
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121
The
chambers to which Aeron had been escorted were even more luxurious than the
ones she had occupied the previous night in Zennor. When the doors closed after
her guards, she ran a quick glance over the room, more out of habit than in any
real hope of escape. There will be no way out of here but Elathan's way . . .
She
went to the windows that looked down a thousand feet over Tory, and after a
moment put out a fingertip to touch the pane. Immediately the finger went cold
and numb in the grip of the forcefield that guarded the window, and she smiled
and turned back to the room.
An
elaborate meal had been set out for her on silver dishes, but she did not touch
it, and instead placed a deep-cushioned chair so that she could see the sky
through the arched casements. Seating herself, she closed her eyes and composed
herself to pray.
When
Aeron prayed in earnest, she called as the High Atlandeans had done upon the
Shepherd of Heaven, Artzan Janco, that god who is above the gods. For surely no
lesser deity can aid me here . . . She felt the peace take hold upon her,
sending her spirit into that familiar fugue state of prayer, a moment almost of
dissolution, curiously caught out of time and place and body.
She was
called back into herself by the sound of the door opening behind her. Without
turning her head, she spoke to the one who had entered.
"Greeting
to you, Elathan."
Elathan
grinned involuntarily with appreciation of the gambit and dropped into the
facing chair.
"And
to you, Aeron," he said easily. "Though a trick like mat would surely
get you burned for witchery among some of the more superstitious of my people
... I see you have not, despite your claim of hunger, either eaten or drunk; do
you fear death in the cup?"
For
answer she picked up a gold goblet from the table, filled it with wine from a
gold decanter and drank it down in one swallow.
"Ought
1 to fear it?" she asked mockingly. "I think not; nor on the plate
either. 1 will eat a little later, when we have talked."
"Did
you rest well, at least, last night in Zennor Castle?"
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THE
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123
"Very
wel! indeed: the best rest I have yet had on your world. We slept rough enough
before that."
His
brows arched a little. " 'We'?"
"We
the Queen of Kelts," she said smoothly. But that was not what she had
meant, and she was annoyed with herself for the slip, knowing that he had
caught it,
"Whatever."
He appeared to lose interest in her evasion. "What were you doing in
Zennor? I would not have thought that, having come here at all, you would risk
venturing within walls."
"I
had no choice; as I told you, I was looking for something."
"What
thing?"
"Knowledge."
"A
misfortunate looking."
Aeron
shrugged, and picking up a purple-skinned fruit from the dish on the table bit
into it.
"As
you say. It ended in my being brought here; misfortune enough."
"Yet
surely your art would not fail you, even on a foreign world? You could have put
a—fith-fath, 1 think you call it—upon yourself, and so avoided the chance of
being recognized and captured."
"I
could have done," conceded Aeron. "But real magic demands care and
strength; it is not that you wave your fingers and it is accomplished. The laws
that rule magic are different on different worlds; what works in Keltia might
work to the opposite on Fomor, or might not work at all. Nor can one sustain
two spells at a time, unless they are small pishogues or cantrips. How if while
I was wearing a fith-fath I had sudden need of another, greater magic? Besides,
any reasonably competent sorcerer—even a Fomori one—can see through any
ordinary glamourie in an eyeblink. To cast an illusion that is itself proof
against magic, or to work a change that is change and not mere phantasm, takes
time and effort indeed. I had not the time, and dared not risk the
effort."
"Lucky
for me, then." Elathan was silent a while, watching her openly. Aware of
his scrutiny, Aeron continued calmly eating her fruit: People had been looking
at her since the day she was born; she had long since inured herself to stares.
Eiathan
envied her that ease. Though he too had all his life been the subject of public
curiosity, he had never been able to
grow
accustomed to it, and even now, even as King, he still grew uncomfortable at
the thought of eyetracks upon him . . .
"What
do you think must happen now?"
Aeron
looked genuinely surprised. "Surely there is no uncertainty about that? I
had assumed that if I should be caught, either would I be made an end of right
here or else be packed off to Strephon like a stray parcel, to be used as a
counter against Jaun Akhera's safety on Tara. Are there other
possibilities?"
He drew
his glance away from hers with an effort, stared down at the marble floor.
"You will not be aware of this, but my late father and I did not agree on
many matters of high policy. That matter upon which we differed most violently
was his policy toward Keltia and the House of Aoibhell."
"And
so?"
"And
so I did my best to change his mind about joining Jaun Akhera in the invasion.
He did not listen, of course, and many people—my half-brother Talorcan among
them— condemned me for my wishes." He leaned forward in his chair, eyes
fixed now on her face. "But now I am King of Fomor, and I may make my
policy to fit my wishes. And my wish above all other wishes is truce and
friendship between Keltia and Fomor; between House AoibhelJ and House
Corserine; between Aeron and Elathan."
More
than Aeron's eyes had been watching Elathan while he spoke: Ever since his
first words about the differences he had had with Bres, she had been kenning
him closely, and she had realized almost immediately that he spoke the truth.
"You
mean this," she said softly, incredulously. "You are serious."
"I
do. I am. And you?"
Aeron
laughed, throwing her hands outward with a shrug. "I am confounded. After
all that has been, can such a thing be?"
"If
you and I choose to make it be. In the end it will be up to Your Keltic
Majesty. I have said what I would do, and I have spoken of it, even, to my
councillors."
"By
the gods, did you! And what did they have to say?"
"They
were not precisely delighted with the prospect, for various reasons; but they
could not deny the logic and the merit of it, and in the end they came to
agree. There has been hatred long enough between our Houses; I would be a
friend to
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THE
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125
the
Aoibhell, yet how can I, if the Aoibhell will not meet me halfway?"
Aeron
held herself to utter stillness. Well, and was he not right? Had it not gone on
long enough, and too long? So many had died so hard for it down the years: his
father, her father; her mother and her lord and her friends; her first Terran
friend, Haruko; Elathan's younger brother, Tharic, dead among the other
thousands on Bellator; Bres's elder brother Budic, almost forgotten now, who
should have been King of Fomor and who had instead perished under the guns of
her great-uncle Elham's warships, in an out-Wall clash when Aeron and Elathan
had been years yet unborn; and Elharn too had died for it in his turn . . .
"Long
past time," she said softly. But still some small hard knot in her soul
held fast to the old distrust, Would she, could she, truly hold out her hand to
Fomor in friendship? Or, for all her pretensions to enlightenment, was she
merely just another marauder-monarch, a vengeful royal brigand no whit better
than Bres or Jaun Akhera? She had flattered herself that it would be Aeron of
Keltia who should lead her kingdom back into the world beyond the Pale; yet it
had been Elathan of Fomor—Fomor!—who had had the vision and the courage to make
the first proffer of peace. Ail her instincts were bidding her trust and
accept, she knew Gwydion himself would bid her do so; yet still—
"Ah
well, perhaps 1 am not yet so farsighted as yourself," she heard herself
saying, the old defensive bite back in her voice. "Or even as I might like
to think . . . But then, now I mind me of it, no more are you; I was informed
by a Fomori prisoner on Tara that scarce had I slain your father than you had
sworn further vengeance—the first thing you did as king— upon me and upon
Keltia."
He
smiled gently, shaking his head. "That is not true, Aeron. There was no
oath, no swearing, no wish for revenge. The first thing 1 did as king was order
my armies home, for that I wished to fight no more with Keltia or with you.
Jaun Akhera himself heard me give the order; he would attest to it, for he was
furious with me for doing so. If we reckon it purely loss for loss, you have
suffered more at Fomor's hands than I at Keltia's, and have therefore the more
to forgive; but I have believed that the more enlightened the spirit the more
that can be forgiven."
"Very
flattering, for all it sounds much too much like the
leaching
of the Christers for my taste. But have you forgiven— or
forgotten—Bellator?" It was she who smiled now, though the smile was
glacial. "Nay, Elathan, I think 1 must remain your 'guest.' That
other—well, that other is beyond me."
"I
do not accept that answer," he said, rising to leave. "And to prove
my faith, I tell you now that you are no prisoner, but truly a guest. You will
be neither guarded nor spied upon; you will be free of the palace and the city;
your weapons shall be returned to you. I shall give orders that you receive
whatever help you require to find whatever you came here to learn, and Morwen
Douglas—I know, I know, she was never even with you—shall be found and brought
here in safety also. I would have you believe that I am your friend, and I
would have that friendship returned. Think on it."
Aeron
looked up into the earnest dark eyes and away again. "It seems I shall
have time for little else."
Of all
those in Elathan's confidence as to his intentions toward the Keltic queen,
only Talorcan had gone so far as to do somewhat on his own about them. Although
he had had no further direct contact with the Coranian operatives since that
brief meeting after his brother's coronation, he had busied himself over the
past weeks with making sure of his arrangements- on Fomor and with the Phalanx
and with Helior; now that Aeron Aoibhell had so obligingly entered the picture,
he began to put his plans into action.
Like
all the rest of the kingdom by now, Talorcan had heard that Aeron had been found
in the south and had been brought to the capital. So much, and no more, was the
general knowledge. And, tike all the others in the palace, the first Talorcan
saw of her, despite his best efforts, was that night at dinner.
Elathan
had ordered a state banquet, a thing unusual for him; still more unusual, he
had kept his guests waiting on his arrival a full fifteen minutes.
When at
last he arrived in the banqueting hall, the company at the long table rose as
one. and as one they caught back their astonishment with civilized little
gasps, for on Elathan's arm was Aeron.
She
looks singularly good for a prisoner, thought Camissa with dismay renewed,
watching Aeron take the guest-place of honor on Elathan's right at table. The
Keltic queen was attired in Fomorian fashion, in draped and cross-girdled silk
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the
color of topaz, and topazes sparkled at ears and wrists and throat. Her hair
was drawn smoothly into one thick plait bound round her head like a coronet
and, once seated, she gave a gracious half-bow to the silent table.
"My
lords and ladies," said Elathan, face solemn though his eyes held a look
of amusement that was almost defiance, "1 have the honor to present Her
Majesty Aeron Queen of Kelts, who is to be our guest here in Tory for as long
as it pleases her to be. Shall we dine now?"
Talorcan
had slipped away after dinner all unnoticed, while die others, more obedient
than he to palace etiquette, remained in the state drawing-room, watching
Elathan and Aeron with varying degrees of interest and horror. But Talorcan had
muffled himself in a dark cloak over his splendid red silk feast-garb, and left
the palace by a side gate, moving quickly through the empty streets.
After
perhaps a half-hour, he came to a small house in the maze of wynds that huddled
like a nest of snakes at the foot of the castle rock. The house, neat and
well-kept, showed no lights at its tightly shuttered windows; but Talorcan
knocked once, twice, then bared his palm to a scanner. There came a whirr and a
click, and the door-gates slid aside for him.
Within,
he headed confidently, as one who had been there often before, to an upstairs
room away from the street; its windows opened onto a garden tucked under the
huge buttresses of rock that, a thousand feet above, were crowned by the
palace. The room seemed deliberately chosen, even as the house itself, for
security's sake: Facing into the cliff as it did, it could not be overlooked
from above, nor from any of its neighbors in the little wynd.
Talorcan
carefully snibbed the door behind him, and within the chamber's softly lighted
confines, a dozen men rose to their feet at his entrance. Nodding to them to
resume their seats, he took his own accustomed place at the round table that
filled most of the center of the room; all in silence. AH their movements had
the feel of habit, as if this dark stealth were something they had practiced
often before, and would again; and when at last Talorcan spoke this was
confirmed,
"Any
difficulties getting here tonight?"
A small
ripple of denial ran round the table: shaken heads, low negative murmurs. None
had been followed, and these were all men who would surely know it if they had.
THE
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127
"Good."
Talorcan leaned his hands upon the table in front of him, his lean face
suffused with urgency. "I am quite sure that by now all of you have heard
of Aeron Aoibhell's arrival on this planet, and of Elathan's avowed intentions
toward her."
"We've
heard, all right," said the man who seemed to be senior and spokesman
among them, one Dargato by name. He was a well-known general, as were a number
of the others; men of power and command and influence in the armies and
starfleets of Fomor; and, because wars need money to fuel them, a merchant
prince or two; but all of them without exception disaffected and disgusted to
the point of this present treason with Elathan and his policy toward Keltia.
They had mistrusted it when he was yet only Crown Prince; now that he had
become King, they actively detested it, and they had resolved, all of them, to
do somewhat about it. So that Talorcan, choosing tools for his deadly purposes
with deadlier care, had found in them a ready weapon to his hand; and they for
their part had found in him the point that they had needed for their own treasonous
lance.
"When
you told us Elathan wished alliance and friendship with Keltia," continued
Dargato, "we—to be frank, my lord—found it almost impossible to believe,
what with Bres dead barely hours and that at the hand of Keltia's queen. But we
had heard such talk from others, long before; and since then we have of course
come to see for ourselves the truth of it. For now Aeron Aoibhell is here at
Tory, as Elathan's honored guest, no prisoner at all, even though she came here
as an unlawful fugitive."
Talorcan
studied the fine-grained wood under his topping fingers. "Incredible, is
it not ... We are fortunate only in that so far Aeron herself has apparently
proved reluctant to accept Elathan's overtures of friendship. You can see that
she longs to do so, but she is still mistrustful, and it will take her some
time to decide what her course will be."
"What
will she decide in the end, do you think?" asked a bearded blond man from
across the table.
"Oh,
no question but that she will make peace with my brother."
"How
if she does not live long enough to make that peace?" asked one of the
other commanders. "Assassination has art ancient history as a political
tool."
"And
Fomor would take the blame for her death," said
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Talorcan.
"Have you thought what Prince Gwydion would do, once he heard of it? Or
her brother Rohan? Bellator would be a happy memory by comparison . . ,
No," he continued, "this way is best for us. The deeper Elathan goes
in friendship with Keltia, the easier it will be to unseat him from his throne.
Aeron's coming has given us a lever without price. More than that: Afterwards,
she will make a useful consideration in any arrangement we might wish to effect
with Strephon, say, or even with Gwydion, should he succeed in taking Keltia
back from Jaun Akhera; the which she would not if she were dead."
"If
she allies with Elathan before we can strike, we shall be hard put to it to
break them."
"Then
we strike before that can happen, and strike hard. Can we do so?" Talorcan
shot suddenly at the blond man who had spoken earlier.
"We
have strength to topple Elathan, certainly," he replied; he was Salenn,
who had been one of Bres's chief war-leaders in the fighting on Tara. "So
long as it comes as a surprise to him, I say we shall manage handily. Those in
this room command loyal troops, and sufficient ones, and—most crucial of
all—unquestioningly obedient ones. Overthrowing your brother, lord, and putting
you in his place is more than possible."
"But?"
"But
we shall need that promised aid from the disaffected Phalanx leaders, and, most
especially, from the Imperium, to keep you there. What says the Princess
Helior?"
Talorcan
smiled for the first time since his arrival. "All that is well in hand. In
fact. Her Serenity herself shall arrange things with those Phalanx lords you
speak of, Salenn. And, of course, after she has helped us, then we shall help
her—as was the bargain. We need not worry on that account: She will keep her
promise to us to save her son's position . . . and his life."
"I
am glad to hear it," said Dargato bluntly, and there was a bass
counterpoint of agreement. "We joined your plan, my lord, because we as
generals of Fomor liked not to see our King making common cause with our enemy.
To ally peacefully was not what we had it in mind to do to the murderer of your
father. If Aeron is not to be killed, then she must be used to the utmost as a
means against Elathan; if Elathan cannot be dissuaded from this course of
appeasement—as it
THE
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129
seems
that he cannot—then he must be removed, and you as the only other male heir
must be installed in his place. This is what all we here are prepared to
do—what we have sworn to do."
Talorcan
nodded gravely. "And put your lives and ranks and futures in peril to do
so . . . None knows this better than I, my friends, for 1 have likewise pledged
mine to you. Go carefully home."
Chapter
11
On
board the Argo, the Terran ambassador and his two consuls waited in the gallery
of the shuttle bay for the craft carrying their Keltic counterparts from the
Sword to finish docking maneuvers.
"Hathaway
and Mikhailova are with them," remarked Valadon, and his chief nodded,
eyes on the shuttle settling to the deck in the grip of the tractor fields.
Beside him, Deonora stood still as a statue, but, Grex well knew, with every
sense alert to the scene.
The big
spacedoors closed ponderously; air flooded the bay and doorseals opened all
over the hangar. Grex crossed the floor to stand a little distance from the
shuttle's main hatch, Valadon and Deonora flanking him a few steps behind.
The
hatchway opened, and first out were Hathaway and Mikhailova, in formal uniform.
Saluting Grex, they took up positions of attention, facing inward, on either
side of the door. After a moment, a very young, very pretty woman emerged and
looked around her; then, seeing Grex and the others waiting, she smiled and
came forward. Right behind her was a man, much older, much taller, his rawboned
frame alert for any suspicious movement, keen pale eyes in a gaunt face
searching the demeanor of the Terrans. His bearing held authority, and
wariness, and a great paternal protectiveness toward the girl who had preceded
him off the ship.
They
were followed by a tall black-clad man who carried himself like a warrior, and
another man all in dark blue, whose face reflected cool interest and a kind of
detached, almost critical amusement.
Grex
stepped forward. "The greetings of Earth to you and to Keltia," he
said. "I am Haco Grex, Ambassador to the Court of Aeron Queen of
Kelts."
The
crag-featured man bowed in return. "Gavin, Earl of
130
THE
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131
Straloch,"
he said. "Sent by Her Majesty as envoy to Earth. May I present Your
Excellency to Her Highness the Princess Fionnuala."
Grex
kissed the slim outstretched hand, but said no word. It was for royalty to
speak first, even to ambassadors.
Apparently
Fionnuala remembered this only belatedly. "It is my privilege to bring you
the greetings of my sister the Ard-rfan of Keltia," she said, blushing slightly,
men breaking into a delightful smile that melted into almost a giggle. "I
pray you forgive me, my lord Grex; 1 am not at all practiced at this sort of
thing."
Grex
smiled in return; princess she might be, but Aeron's sister looked no more than
a charming child.
"And
no more do you need to be. Your Highness. May I present my consuls, Sieur
Thomas de Valadon"—Valadon bowed over Fionnuala's hand with even more
panache than Grex—"and Mistress and Doctor Deonora Maronchuk."
Deonora curtsied briefly, and Fionnuala smiled at them both, a little
uncertainly. "Now that we have met at last," continued Grex, "I
wonder if perhaps we might not begin our talks at once. I know I am not
mistaken that the last word we had from Queen Aeron was that she would send no
embassy to Earth until we ourselves had arrived at Caerdroia."
Straloch's
face was grim. "Things have rather altered themselves since then, lord.
You already know most of it, but by all means let us speak without delay."
The
room Grex conducted them to was a richly appointed one, a long boat-shaped
table in the center and computer-pads inlaid at each place. Grex seated
Fionnuala on his right and Straloch on his left; Valadon and Deonora took their
own places a little way down the table, with the other two Kelts— Morgan
Cairbre and Emrys Penmarc'h, as Grex had by now learned; one was a bard, the
other a Dragon, and both of them were certainly spies—and Hathaway and
Mikhailova still farther along. The only others present were the Argons
captain, Grex's secretary and his personal aide.
Straloch
had given the Terrans a terse, unemotional account of the events that had
struck Keltia since the arrival of the Sword, an account that was at certain
points corroborated by Mikhailova or Hathaway or both. Grex had made no sign or
reaction to the tale of betrayal and invasion and treachery and desperate
exile, but he had begun to flick his seal ring
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around
and around on his finger, as he always did in moments of stress. Beyond
Straloch he could see Deonora; she was in her functioning mode as psychic
alienist, and she was recording mnemonically every nuance of word and voice and
expression for later recall—she would not participate in the discussion lest it
prejudice her observations.
Grex
cut his glance to the other side, past Fionnuaia's red-blond head and lovely
lowered profile. Valadon was watching Straloch with an expression of entirely
reserved judgment, as if he were perfectly prepared to accept or reject with
equal aplomb anything the Kelt might say.
"So
Queen Aeron and the First Minister have fled, and Prince Gwydion is hostage,
and Jaun Akhera controls your throneworld." Grex drew his fingers over his
silver beard. "None of that is good news, of course; yet your military
position seems otherwise satisfactory."
"It
seems so," said Straloch carefully. "But you understand, lord, that
we have ourselves only just heard all this. Aeron sent us off in the Sword not
three hours after the breaking of the Curtain Wall, and it was not until we
came out of hypersleep, and were able to review the various transmissions that
had reached us while we slept, that we learned of what has happened in Keltia
since we left. The last report in the combanks was that our fleets had cleared
the Imperials out of all systems save Tara and Kymry. Jaun Akhera himself seems
confined to the Throneworld, and Rohan, the Ard-rian's brother and heir, who
leads the main fleet, is strong enough to keep them there."
"Buying
time for your queen's return," remarked Valadon. "Just where has she
wandered off to, anyway?"
Fionnuaia's
head snapped up at that, and the cool violet eyes flashed with something of
Aeron's own fire.
"My
sister the Ard-rian—" she began with considerable heat, then stopped as
Straloch, across from her, cleared his throat softly. "Very well. 1 am
reminded that you as ambassador, my ford Grex, and these your officers as well*
have the right and the need to know . . . Aeron has gone in search of
certain—weapons; weapons that she hopes shall carry the day for us when she
brings them back again to Keltia. Morwen Douglas, our Taoiseach, is with her on
this errand; and Gwydion himself saw to it that they fled. So, at least, we
have been informed."
She
dropped her head, struggling for self-control. Fionnuala
had
wakened from coldsleep only a few hours since, to be told of the peril into
which her sister and Morwen had gone, the peril in which Gwydion remained, the
treachery wrought by Arianeira that had caused that peril and the treachery against
Jaun Akhera that had atoned for it. Though it was plain that the true Aoibhell
steel was there in full measure, as it was with her brothers and sisters,
Fionnuala was not yet of an age and experience easily to mask her feelings, and
no one at that table thought any the less of her for it. Grex, who had himself
wept for his friend Theo not very long before, now kept sympathetic silence
until she had once again mastered herself.
"Highness,"
he said then, "and my lord Straloch, what do you ask of us? You know that
no formal treaty has been concluded—far from it—but intent both legal and
binding has been declared by your Queen and our Prime Minister, and that is a
bond certainly sufficient to enable you to call upon pur help in this matter.
Shall I send a message to Earth to mobilize a force?" From the tail of his
eye, he saw.Valadon's start of surprise, instantly checked.
Straloch
glanced across the table to Cairbre and Penmarc'h. The two Kelts spoke no word
aloud, but even Grex could sense the wordless negatives sent back to the Earl.
"I
thank you for that offer," said Straloch. "But I think it best held
in reserve; Aeron wishes it so, for one thing, and there may well be a time
coming when it will be needed more sorely than now. For the moment, I put it to
you that .we remain here, and confer upon the terms of the treaty."
"That
is acceptable," said Grex, rising and offering Straloch his hand. After a
momentary hesitation, the Kelt grasped it in both of his, and Fionnuala did
likewise in turn.
After
the Kelts had gone, escorted by the other Terrans to new and far more
comfortable quarters aboard the embassy ship itself, Grex slid his glance over
to Deonora, who sat very still, palms flat upon the table before her.
"First
assessment, consul?"
"They
have not told us everything."
Valadon
snorted. "Of course they haven't! Did you think they would,
straightway?"
"No,
Thomas, of course I didn't," she returned peaceably. "But there is a
good deal more to this war, and to this queen, and to her quarrel with Bres and
Strephon, than we have yet heard."
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"And
just how long do you think it'll take them to tell us?" asked Valadon.
Grex
turned a cool stare on him. "After three thousand years,1' he said,
"I think a few weeks more or less will make extremely little difference
one way or another. And I also think that, in the end, they will tell us
everything. AH we have to do is wait. And time, for the moment anyway, is on
our side."
Deonora's
smile was a little bitter. "It is surely not on theirs."
"You
are determined, then, to do this?"
The
Abbess Indec studied O'Reilly's face with eyes.that saw much more than surface
images; but her own face showed only doubt and loving concern for the girl who
stood so tensely before her.
The
Terran nodded. "If I cannot find Desmond or Rohan," she said, "I
promise I shall come back here to Glassary, and you will hear no more
complaints. But, Mother, I must go. There has been no news for weeks, just
rumor; and terrible rumor at that."
Indec
looked still more apprehensive. Rumor had indeed been fearful: that Gwydion had
escaped from Caerdroia by diving off the cliffs and had died in the attempt,
that Rohan had killed Jaun Akhera, or that Jaun Akhera had killed Rohan, or
that both had killed each other in a parley over terms of surrender; and other
tales worse still. And now O'Reilly chafed to leave the safety of sanctuary to
go out to see for herself.
"You
are lawfully my charge," said Indec in a thoughtful tone. "By the
Ard-rian's own order."
O'Reilly
fidgeted under the steady gaze. "Well, yes, I suppose that's sort of
true."
"And
she will be very angry with me when she finds out that I allowed you to leave
here—as will Prince Desmond."
O'Reilly
cast away all pretense of pride. "Abbess-mother, I must see him! It has
been so long . . . Please, give me your blessing, and then let me go. If you
don't, I'll steal a ship and sneak off-planet first chance I get; but I would
so much rather go with your good will."
Indec
laughed unwillingly. "That is no way to plead your case, lass, but to get
yourself locked in your room." Once again she searched the thin eager
face, the hazel eyes fixed so
THE
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135
imploringly
on hers, then glanced down at the heavy seal ring on O'Reilly's hand, with
Desmond's device of the black bull. "Ah well," she said with a sigh.
"Aeron will simply have to understand."
That
night, having made her farewells to the Sisters and received Indec's blessing,
O'Reilly sat herself down in the cockpit of a small singleship belonging to the
convent. She ran her hands appreciatively over the controls: It was such a long
time since she had been in a ship, and this one was particularly fine . . .
Indec had in fact seen to it that O'Reilly was provided with the best and
safest ship that could be obtained on such short notice—the thinking being that
if the girl must go, at least she should go in the greatest safety that could
be managed. The craft, though small, looked very fast, and carried
combat-weight shields and gun consoles that would have sufficed to arm a ship
twice the size.
O'Reilly
activated the autohelm, and launch data began to flow across the screens. Easy
enough to get off Vannin; the problem was where she would go once she was
off-planet. Desmond would undoubtedly be on board Firedrake with Rohan; but she
did not even in her most optimistic mood think she could manage to locate the
flagship within the enormous stellar reaches of the Bawn. If she found
Firedrake at all, it would be by luck—or dan—alone.
She
called to mind Indec's recounting of the rumor that Gwydion had succeeded in
escaping from Caerdroia. With the exceptions of Desmond and Aeron herself,
there was no one else in all Keltia with whom O'Reilly would feel safer. She
did not for an instant believe that he had been killed in the escape attempt;
lesser folk, maybe, but not Gwydion. And where would be the most logical, most
secure place for the Prince of Don to go upon his escape?
Oniy
one answer to that. . . With a smile, O'Reilly punched into the astrogational
computer the coordinates for the planet Gwynedd.
Little
news more had come to Alphor in the weeks following the Emperor's confrontation
with his daughter. Strephon had held fast to his policy that Jaun Akhera should
receive no more help than he had to hand already; Helior, too proud and too
angry to ask again, had kept to herself and made plans of
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her
own. And when at last she felt herself ready to act upon those plans, she
approached an unlikely associate indeed . . .
in the
room behind the grillework windows, Tinao stared at Helior, unable—and
unwilling—to believe she had heard correctly.
"To
set aside your Imperial father?" the girl whispered at last. "Madam,
you cannot mean to do this!"
Helior's
amber eyes glowed feral yellow. "I would do much more than that to ensure
that my son gets the help he needs—and deserves." She paused a moment.
"Do you recall the visit last month of the king of Felire?"
Tinao
nodded, now totally bewildered by the rapid shifts of subject and emphasis.
"Well,"
continued Helior, "my father knew it not—for all his much-vaunted network
of spies—but Laharan of Felire came to Escal-dun at my bidding. And before he
went home again, he and I came to an understanding. You may have heard that several
of the Phalanx overlords have been, to say the least, something foot-slow in
the confirmation of Elathan of Fomor as Archon of the Phalanx in his father's
place, and Felire is leader of those."
"I
did hear."
"So.
Laharan and I compacted that, if I as Regent for my son were to help the
Phalanx—or at least that part of the Phalanx that answers to Felire and his
friends—put down Elathan in favor of his half-brother Taiorcan, which plot is
already well under way on Fomor, they would then help me to aid Jaun Akhera in
Keltia. It seems a reasonable bargain, all things considered—and believe me
when 1 say I have considered ail things; and most especially now that Elathan
seems to have embarked upon friendship with Aeron Aoibhell."
Tinao
chose her words carefully. "But to do this thing, madam, you would first
have to be Imperial Regent. Your father would have to be—removed."
"He
would have to be killed," said Helior bluntly. "There would be no
other safe way. I should need help in such an undertaking: help I could trust
completely, from someone who shares my goals and plans and hopes. My
father," she added, with a vicious twist to the word, "is failing of
his judgment in his age. If he will not choose to help his own chosen heir in
need, then he must be swept away."
"And
you ask me to help you do this."
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137
"If
you love my son as you say, why would you not wish .to?"
Tinao
turned away, pressing her gold-tipped fingers to her lips. To kill the
Emperor—a fearful deed for any Coranian, no matter the motivation: regicide.
But for Helior, not merely regicide but patricide as well . . .
"It
is all for Akhi's sake," said Helior, her voice soft now as hydromel in
the shadows of the room. "Does that not make it something easier to
contemplate: a thing that would also make it easier for you yourself to
become—well, for your relationship with my son to take on, let us say, more
regularized overtones. As Regent and Empress-Mother, I would be able to make
certain demands of my son; demands which he would be by no means reluctant to
meet . . . once he had learned what you had done for him. Perhaps the
crown-matrimonial is not out of the question after all."
The
persuasion in the cool little voice was almost irresistible; but Tinao did not
see the flushed face and glittering gold eyes—if she had, she might well have
fled and would surely have hesitated—nor the intensity with which the Princess
focused on her, as if willing the girl to obey.
"I
will do as you bid me. Serenity," said Tinao at last, turning around to
give Helior an elegant subsidence of a curtsy, head bent and hands clasped in
front of her. "But for Akhi only, not for the promise of gain for
myself."
Heltor
smiled down at her. "I swear by all our gods you shall not regret
it."
When
the Princess had gone, exultant in her victory, Tinao curled up in the window
seat and stared out at the willows that lined the riverbank behind the marble
quays. The sun slid down the sky, the blue afternoon shadows lengthened, and
still she did not move.
"Young
mistress?"
Tinao
looked up at the sound of the well-known voice, then smiled and stretched
herself. In the door stood a figure that would have been alarming indeed, were
not the face so cheerful—and so loved by her.
"Indarrak!
I did not summon you?"
"You
did not. But I saw the Princess Helior leave some time ago; and when you did
not come out, or ring for me, I thought to see if all was well with you."
He came
forward into the room: a giant of a man, bald save
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for the
carefully tended braid at the crown of his head; powerfully built, clad in the
immaculate pleated yellow linen worn by male servants of free rank within the
Imperial palace.
"What
is it, innaga? Tell me and be easy."
Tinao
felt as she had felt so often as a little girl: tiny, frightened, unable to
influence her own immediate world with anything other than her small fists and
her budding mind. She had been an unhappy child, living in the Imperial
compound with her parents, Coranian nobility in attendance on Strephon and the
late Empress Azaco. Sensitive, moody, creative, she had been often alone and
always lonely—part of the bond she had with Jaun Akhera came from that, their
childhoods had been much alike—and the giant eunuch who had cared for her and
her brother had filled all the functions of a loving parent; far oftener, and
far better, than had her true parents. She was suddenly sullen, though he knew
well it had nothing to do with him.
"I
do not wish to drag you into this as well," she said in a small tight
voice.
Indarrak
looked surprised. "If you are in it, child, then already I am in it. Can
you think I would stand by and let you entangle yourself in such plans as our
Princess's?"
She
gave him a long level look. "And what would you know of Her Serenity's
plans?"
"Only
that, whatever they are, there is little serene about them; she is not the one
for that. Their direction is not hard to fathom: Her interest is her son's
interests. And his are yours, and yours are mine. And my interest above all
others is to see you happy, and it appears you will only be so with that young
lord of yours. So he too then becomes my interest—"
"I
will never be his empress."
"That
remains to be seen. 1 did not think you wished to; but if Helior can help you
to what you wish, then I will do my utmost to help her to that which she does
wish. Now tell me,"
Since
Gwydion's escape, few had dared go unsummoned into Jaun Akhera's presence; and
those whom he himself sent for went before him shaking more than somewhat in
their boots. When the news had first been brought to him that Gwydion had
managed to spirit himself away seemingly before their very eyes, Jaun Akhera
had been possessed of such a fury as none of his companions had ever seen
before; and
THE
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139
all the
more terrifying for that it was so cold. They would have far preferred shouts
and curses and thrown crockery and even blows to this controlled icy blaze.
Only to
Sanchoniathon did he allow himself the luxury of an emotional unburdening. Ever
since their childhood, Jaun Akhera had always turned to his younger brother;
and, later, Tinao: the only ones to cheer or soothe or buffer him; the only
ones who loved him; the only ones who did not fear him; and he turned to his
younger brother now.
"How?
How, Sancho? Tel! me that! It should not have been possible, yet there it is.
Oh, the She-wolf has found herself a fit mate in that one. Bres damned him for
a sorcer-ous cozener, and / laughed . . . Yet it cannot have been by sorcery,
for surely I would have known—"
"Simply
a very clever plan, then; engineered and executed from within the palace
itself?" Sanchoniathon had seldom felt so helpless, and the suggestion was
one of desperation.
But his
brother halted in his pacing as if a rope had been flung round him from behind.
"He
would certainly have had help. But whose? Just as certainly, whoever helped him
is not here now, any more than Gwydion is." He returned to his seat behind
Aeron's desk, his face a little calmer. "Where would he make for, do you
think?"
Sanchoniathon
sank with some relief into his usual chair, swung one leg over the upholstered
arm. "Gwynedd? No, of course not; much too obvious, much too
dangerous."
"Yet
Gwynedd is the base of his personal power: household troops, wealth, folk
unswervingly loyal to him, places he could hide in for years in safety . .
." Jaun Akhera sat back, fingers steepled under his chin; then a look of
hushed certainty lighted his hawk's face. "Dyved. He will go to
Dyved."
"But
that is Powell's princedom—"
"And
Powell was Gwydion's father's foster-brother; and so, according to the Kelts'
own tiresome custom, he is Gwydion's nearest male kin. No less is he a prince
near as powerful as Gwydion himself, with access to all those things I just now
mentioned. As a hunted fugitive, to whom else could Gwydion turn?" The
certainty became smiling satisfaction. "And to whom else will Powell turn
when Gwydion does so—but to me. And who else is on Dyved as our liaison to
Powell but Kynon ap Accolon—''
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"You
managed that very well, Akhi."
Jaun
Akhera caught the note of veiled disapproval. "So? You have some
difficulty with that. Prince Sanchoniathon?"
Before
the Keltic campaign, Sanchoniathon would have been, not fearful, but reluctant
to speak so to his brother; but in the past months he had begun to emerge from
Jaun Akhera's eclipsing shadow, to stand in his own light, according to his own
lights, and now he did not hesitate to voice his criticism, or respond to the
implicit challenge.
"Yes,
I do! I liked it not at all when you attempted to suborn the merrows, Akhi, and
the seai-fotk with them; and I liked it still less when you began to play at
tossing sops to such Kelts as were treasonous enough, and greedy enough, to
snap them up."
"Yes,
so you said at the time." Jaun Akhera was silent a moment. "Well, I
cannot say 1 am sorry, Sancho, for I am not. I would do far more, and far
worse, to put down Aeron."
"If
she still lives,"
"Oh,
she lives, right enough. This matter between us is not yet settled. She will
not permit herself the low road until it is."
Chapter
12
Aeron
had been at Tory for nearly a fortnight. Despite the best efforts of many
searchers, no trace had been found of Morwen, though even yet Aeron maintained
the fiction that she had come to Fomor alone and uncompanioned. For still there
was the considerable chance that everything Elathan had said and sworn and
promised was a lie: that as soon as he had both of them securely to hand, he
would turn right about and kill them, or sell them, to Strephon, or devise for
them some other fate equally unpleasant. For herself Aeron could do nothing,
and cared less than nothing; but if there was stilt a chance for Morwen, then
by the gods she should have it, and Aeron would do nothing to jeopardize that
chance for her friend.
Then
again, there was the equally considerable possibility that Elathan did not lie,
that he meant all he had so convincingly warranted: to be her friend, and
Keltia's ally; to put an end to the enmity between her House and his. And she
wanted desperately to believe him; and yet, and yet ...
They
had fallen into the pleasant habit of spending the late afternoons in Aeron's
chambers, for easy discussions over wine or the fragrant steaming brown brew
called by Haruko's people chai—she remembered how proudly and formally he had
served it to her, many times, at Turusachan, in an ancient and elegant ceremony
as stylized as a dance.
That
afternoon Elathan had been less than unfailing of his patience, and Aeron did
not blame him, for she was in a mood to be as perverse as even she could be;
and at last his temper had snapped.
"My
gods, Aeron, but you are a pest of hell! How if I did, then, what everyone from
my Prime Minister to my bootmaker is begging me to do, and put an end to you
right here on Fomor?"
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She
shrugged, and poured another cup of the comforting chai. "Then gods save
the Ard-righ Rohan."
Elathan,
in his irritation, could not forbear the taunt. "Say if he is dead, and
the rest of your brothers and sisters with him?"
"Then
the election could turn up anyone from a King Revelin or King Deian to a Queen
Melangell or Queen Slaine." She laughed, struck by the idea. "You'd
be much worse off with Queen Slaine than with Queen Aeron, I promise you. My
cousin Slaine, dearly though I love her, is far less reasonable than I."
Having
heard some campfire tales about Slaine of Ralland, only daughter of Elharn
Ironbrow, Elathan believed it. Still—
"My
advisors have pressed me hard," he said slowly, "and with most
excellent arguments, to hand you over to Strephon. Either as surety for Jaun
Akhera, or for pure vengeance's sake; and your sentence to the block still
stands."
Aeron
shrugged again. "My death, however pleasing Jaun Akhera might find it,
would bring him peace of mind both brief and small, and mean very little in the
end. As I have said, there are first of all my five brothers and sisters, each
one of them fully capable of ruling Keltia to his detriment. After them come
some very warlike aunts and uncles and a great many bellicose cousins. All of
whom would avenge me upon Jaun Akhera—and upon you—until the gaurans come home.
I think you would tarry long before you would choose to pull that down upon
your head. But any road it makes no differ, for no soul in all of Abred goes
out five minutes before the time its dan has^ set it . . ."
He
glanced up, caught by a strange change in her voice; it had lacked its usual
bright brittle edge of mockery and defen-siveness, had sounded all at once
wistful, reflective, very young. She was not looking at him now, but out at the
golden afternoon. All her guards seemed down: She had lost that look of
strength-in-reserve that was her usual mask, and suddenly seemed far too
fragile to be the adversary that deeds and rumor had made her. As if for the
first time, he saw how delicate her frame was; for all her height and strength,
he could snap the bones of her wrists with little effort.
And.
thinking all this, Elathan was astonished by the wish, the urge, even, to
protect her that came over him. Despite his personal inclinations, she was
still held to be the sworn enemy of his people and his House. To most of those
people,
THE
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143
and
most of that House, there was but one tHing that should content the King of
Fomor where the Queen of Kelts was concerned. Instead, there was this troubling
new feeling . . .
But was
it in truth so new after all? He turned his mind back to Rath na Riogh, in
memory seeing Aeron again for the first time, on a cold sunlit morning, sitting
her black horse in the midst of her friends, her hair like fire down the back
of her purple cloak—
She had
turned, and was watching him—had been for some moments—with a kind of alert
half-smile upon her face, as if she knew his thought. But she had been remembering,
too: her shock at seeing Elathan upon that same morning, that same place upon
the plain. She had not known him then by sight, and when her friend Dafydd
Drummond had told her who he was, she had been surprised and unaccountably
resentful: so beautiful a face—dark blond hair, features as hard and proud and
sculptured as Gwydion's—and her undisputed enemy, the son of her parents'
killer.
Neither
of them could ever remember afterward which of them took the first step toward
the other, who first pulled the other into the embrace that suddenly seemed so
inevitable to both, whose mouth first came down upon whose.
When
they parted at last, Elathan stared down into Aeron's face. She seemed as
shocked as he, the green eyes veiled with puzzlement.
"Where
did that come from?" he heard himself asking, his voice unsteady with the
very attempt to keep it even.
She
looked up straight into his eyes, seeing her own astonishment reflected there.
"I
did not mean for that to happen," she said, "though I thought it not
unlikely that it might."
"Did
you indeed!"
"Oh,
come, you knew it just as well yourself! How could it not, and how could there
be any more to it than that?"
He
moved deliberately away from her. "Explain it to me, then."
Aeron
gave a little shrug, the gesture more in her face than in her shoulders.
"Curiosity. Tension. Testing. Confusion. An attraction we both felt, I
think, since that morning at Rath na Riogh. I certainly felt it—Morwen noticed,
and maybe others did too—and the fact that you felt it seems to have been
common knowledge among your army."
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145
He did
not trouble to deny it. "It could have been more," he said after a
while.
"Easily,"
she answered, her voice as frank and bare of artifice as his had been.
"Had other things been other wise ... But it will not—not now, not ever
that way, and if we forgot that just now, two others there are who are surer,
and who will not forget. But maybe this was no bad thing: It has freed us, I
think, to go on."
"To
what?"
"What
this has been all about: to be friends or adversaries. That choice can be
delayed no longer."
Elathan
came back the little distance. "I have made that choice already, Aeron;
and you know what I chose."
Her
eyes changed, fell, and when she raised them to his again they glittered tike
emeralds; not with the hot battle-light that so often ignited them, but with a
sparkling overlay of unshed tears.
"Then
I choose likewise," she said, breathing a laugh that was more shiver than
mirth. "Though it ended rather differently the last time I faced a king of
Fomor."
"—who
had himself once faced another ruler of Kelts . . . Nay, Aeron, all that is
done with now. Let it be." He kissed her fingers with the grace of a
courtier, and she closed her hand around his.
"Mar
a bha, mar a tha," she murmured. 'As it was, as it is'— words from the
Keltic funeral rite; appropriate for the death of the old way. "Welt
then," she said, and felt the past swing closed behind her, "Fomor
and Keltia have much to say to each other that has never been said before. Let
us make, at least, a beginning."
Night
again, a night of tow heavy cloud and sullen wind. In the peaked-roof house
below the castle rock, Talorcan called to order the last meeting of the
conspirators before their move was made.
An
undercurrent of excitement was almost palpable, thrumming like a musical note
just below, or just above, the level of human hearing; but the men in that
upper room were too disciplined to permit it to affect their mood or their minds.
Talorcan
too was aware of it, as he took his usual place and glanced around at the faces
turned expectantly toward him.
"As
some of you already know," he began, "this will be the last time we
shall meet here. When next we are all
assembled,
it shall be in the throneroom itself, and we shall be there by right of
conquest." , •
"Is
it so, then?" asked one of the junior generals. "You have heard from
Helior?"
Talorcan
nodded. "She has engineered a pact with our Phalanx colleague Laharan of
Felire—and he acting on behalf of a sufficient number of other Phalanx worlds
to suit us— that will provide us with back-up troops and arms from Imperium and
Phalanx both. In return, of course, for the promise of our future support of
Jaun Akhera, once Elathan is removed—which promise we were pleased to give Her
Serenity. Dargato, what report have you?"
"Troops
loyal to us are even now moving into key positions around the city. There will
be a good deal of resistance, of course, but on balance Elathan will have no real
chance. Say the word, my prince, and by dawn I shall be calling you my
king."
Talorcan
smiled. "In two days' time that word shall be said. Until then, my
lords—and my friends."
"Until
then," came the eager response. But Talorcan was gone.
Camissa
paused outside the door of Aeron's chambers and raised a hand as if to knock;
then, angry at her own timidity, she straightened to a more regal posture and
flung wide the door.
Aeron,
as usual at that hour, was reading in a chair near the windows. Though her eyes
had lifted briefly when the door opened, she gave no other sign that she had
even noticed Camissa's presence.
"Good
day," said Camissa. when the silence had grown ridiculous—but a little
uncertainly all the same. Should she say 'Majesty'? But Aeron, queen though she
was, was not queen here . . . Still, to call her 'Aeron,' as Elathan did in
private, seemed not only curt but dangerously familiar; to call her nothing,
the least rude of the choices.
"And
to you, Lady Camissa," said Aeron, immediately closing her book. "Is
there somewhat I may do for you?"
Camissa
flushed scarlet, then paled again; then it came out all in one rush, her voice
sounding hurt and childlike even to her own ears.
"What
is my lord Elathan to you, madam, and you to him?"
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"Ah.
I wondered when you should come to ask me that. Let us walk a little and
discuss it." In silence they went out through the tall doors into the
gardens. It was an afternoon of golden sunlight and strong winds: Spring was by
now well entrenched in Tory, though the trees and shrubs were as yet only a
thought more green than brown.
"Well,
there is nothing between Elathan and me, Camissa," said Aeron then.
"That 1 say before the Goddess. But I cannot say that there has not been
something."
In the
blind wave of feeling that swamped her then—pain and fear and anger and
jealousy all mi\ed—Camissa still managed to keep her voice cool and her face
calm.
"So
it was the truth I have been told. Truth, even though it came from—"
"From
Talorcan? I would wager much that Elathan told you first himself." Aeron
reached out and caught Camissa's hand in hers. "I swear by that by which
my people swear," she said slowly and distinctly, "as Queen of Kelts
to Queen of Fomor, that there is now nothing, nor has there been, nor shall
there be, between Elathan and myself; save only what there was." She
released the younger woman's hand and absently rubbed the bare place on her
midfinger where she was used to wear the Great Seal of Keltia; then, realizing
what she did, she laced her fingers deliberately together in front of her.
"True
it is we were drawn somewhat to each other," she continued. "As I
doubt not he himself has told you; and true also that we permitted ourselves to
act somewhat upon that attraction. But that is all there was, and all there was
ever meant to be."
"You
said just now you found each other attractive." Camissa's voice, small and
strangled', came from a few yards away, where she had retreated so that Aeron
should not see her face.
"Aye,
but both of us also saw why that should have been: for curiosity, for
strangeness, for the strain of the situation; for sympathy's sake, even. But we
saw even more swiftly than that why more should never be: for you, and for
Gwydion; and for the sake of what is between you and Elathan, and between my
lord and me. That was the end of it right then. No more."
"But
Talorcan said—"
"Oh
aye, I can well imagine what he said: suggestions that
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
147
Elathan's
hope of alliance with Keltia had more to it than politics only." Camissa's
silence confirmed it. and Aeron nodded grimly. "I thought as much . . .
But you must also know how much it is in Talorcan's interest to cast a shadow
between the King of Fomor and his future queen. That it should be my shadow he
strives to cast works still more to his interest."
Camissa
had composed herself, and now came round to stand before Aeron, bewilderment
plain in her eyes. "Why would that be?"
"Why,
for that Talorcan wishes to prevent friendship between Fomor and Keltia, for
one; and wishes also to have you to his own lady, not wife to his
brother." Aeron had spoken matter-of-factly, but seeing the shock and
revulsion on the other's face, she asked more gently, "You had known that,
surely?"
Camissa
dropped her head, then nodded. "I had hoped not to have to know it; and
had desperately hoped that no other knew."
"I
think that all the palace must know it," said Aeron, still gently.
"Most certainly Elathan does."
"No,
he must not! He cannot! If he did, surely he would have—''
"This
can make but little differ. What matter now if Talorcan casts his eyes on you
in vain?"
Camissa
looked troubled. "I do not know," she said after a long pause.
"Except I feel, somehow, some way, he is planning something—to do my lord
a mischief. And if he can do so through me . . ."
She met
Aeron's sympathetic gaze full on, with a warm, incredulous shock of feeling.
Suddenly—she could not say how, and doubted the other could either—between one
breath and the next Aeron had become a friend. Camissa felt it beyond any
doubt, and she saw that Aeron felt it too-.
"Forgive
me, Aeron. I am sorry that I spoke so, and felt so. If I had thought a little
more, and felt a little less—"
"Nay,
my sorrow that I gave you cause."
The
moment was all: They sat on together, relaxed now, wearied by the intensity of
the emotion-freighted moment they had shared; but their silence now was also
shared, a peaceful companionate silence that overset all barriers of strain and
doubt.
"What
shall you do now?"
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"I
must find Morwen," said Aeron. She glanced sideways and laughed at the
expression on Camissa's face. "Aye, I know; not even to Elathan did I
admit that Morwen had come with me on this voyage. But she did, and she was
lost when we were parted in a storm, and I have been filled with fear for her
ever since."
"If
she were injured, she would have been taken to a healing-house," said
Camissa encouragingly. "We should have had word of her long ago, even if
the news were not good."
"And
if she is dead, or lost in the great forest? Would word have come of her
then?" Camissa did not answer, and after a moment Aeron gave her an
apologetic smile. "Nay, it is no fault of Fomor's; only mine, for that 1
brought her with me on what may well be a doomed quest and a fool's errand. She
is well enough, I can feel it."
Camissa
looked a question, then lowered her eyes, feeling suddenly shy—prying,
almost—in this new-born fragile friendship.
"Then
you shall find her, Aeron, and soon."
Aeron
smiled again, this time in gratitude as shy as Camissa's reticence had been.
"Do
you know, I believe that you are right . . . But the sun has gone, and that is
a cold wind. Let us go back in."
The
coup was struck in darkness. The first Elathan knew of it was the sound of
bitter fighting outside his chambers, the shouts of his guards and the clash of
several different sorts of weapons. He was still fully dressed, not yet having
retired for the night, and he was reaching to arm himself when the doors burst
open and Talorcan's minions streamed into the room.
He was
dragged down the corridor to a windowless strongroom and flung inside. When his
head cleared, he. saw that the person kneeling beside him was Camissa.
"Are
you all right, Cami?" He tried to sit up, but the movement drew a black
star-sparked curtain over his sight.
She
nodded, fury fighting with tears on her face, and carefully helped him to a
sitting position.
"They
took us all in the dark." She gestured to the far comer of the room, where
Basilea huddled, seemingly in shock, her arms around her daughter-Rauni.
Before
Elathan could speak again, the door opened and Aeron was shoved unceremoniously
through. She was clad in the Keltic garb in which she had arrived at Tory; the
garments
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THRONE OF SCONE
149
were
torn and disarrayed, as though she had resisted her assailants.
"They
were too many," she said as if in apology. "What place is this?"
She was taking quick inventory of the room, noting Basilea, Rauni and Camissa
almost cursorily.
"An
old strongroom," said Elathan. "There is no way out."
She
seemed almost cheerful. "There is always a way out. We have only to
wait."
Elathan
stretched his long legs out in front of him and leaned back against the wall.
"Well,
now that we seem to have the leisure for it," he said, "perhaps you
might like to tell us all, Aeron, exactly what happened on Tara after I left,
and why you came to Fomor, and who it was came with you—Morwen, I believe— and
what you were planning to do next."
Aeron's
mouth curved in a slow smile. "That may take long."
"Ah
well, to pass the time, then."
Aeron's
tale had gotten Retaliator to the space off Fomor when a soft noise came at the
door. In fluid unison she and Elathan, no word spoken, leaped to stand each
side of the entrance. Another furtive scratching, then the door opened. Aeron,
who had moved instinctively to strike, found her upraised arm caught from
behind by Camissa. She did not know the woman with the long gray-silver braid
who entered, but Elathan embraced her, and Camissa exclaimed with joy to see
her.
"The
Lady Thona," said Basilea in Aeron's ear—the first words she had uttered
since their imprisonment in the vault— and Aeron nodded.
Thona
cast a quick anxious glance at each of them. "You are ail well?—Good, you must
come quickly. Borvos has arranged an escape for us."
She
continued to speak as they readied themselves for flight. "It must be now,
while things are still in turmoil within the palace. Your troops, Elathan, are
giving fierce resistance, more than apparently was counted on. But they cannot
hold out much longer, and Borvos—''
"Do
not trust her, my son!" snapped Basilea. "It is her son who has made
this treason."
For the
first time in his life, Elathan turned on his mother
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in
anger. "Not only do I trust her, mother, but you shall trust her, and
thank her and ask her pardon should we all come safely through this . . .
Madam"—this to Thona—"we are deep in your debt whether we escape or
no. Where to?"
"There
is an aircar standing ready on the tower pad in the southern wing; the rebels
led by—my son have not taken that area. Borvos and two of his officers hold the
lift to the tower roof. If we can reach the courtyard, we are safe."
"Unarmed?"
That was Aeron.
Thona
shook her head. "At the foot of the stairs—I gathered up all the weapons I
could find. Quickly now, there is very little time."
The
pursuit caught up with them coming across the courtyard, the only exposed part
of their flight. Through an archway in the tower's base-court, Borvos waved
frantically for them to hasten; he had seen, as so far they had not, the
soldiers pounding grimly after.
Aeron,
who had taken upon herself the position of rearguard, glanced behind her and
turned at the bend of the corridor.
"Get
them into the lift, Elathan. I will delay these a little."
"Not
alone you will not."
Aeron
smiled, but did not take her eyes from the archway where the pursuing troopers
would have to show themselves.
"None
of this is ever alone—did you not know? Besides, they will use their swords,
not blastguns, for fear of the bolts flying wild in so tight a space."
Elathan,
about to protest again, bit back his words. Well, he thought, a little
bitterly, who better than she with a sword? He saw in her eyes that she had
read his thought.
She
chose not to remark on it, but flexed her wrist instead, looking with interest
at the interlaced steel ribbons that formed the hilt of her sword.
"Never
have I fought with such a blade as this; it is hiked like a withy-basket."
"And
therefore do we call it a basket-hilt."
She
laughed. "Very logical. We shall see what may be done with it. Elathan, I
beg you, get them away now; and do you not return yourself, either. Easierfor
me if the only one I must ward is myself . . . Send the lift down again for me
and I will come directly."
He
hesitated, then hurried to obey. But after bundling the four women into the
lift manned by Borvos's officer Treic, he
heard
the sound of combat behind him; and as soon as the lift had rocketed up to the
landing pad, he raced back to Aeron.
When
Elathan came round the corner of the tower, Talorcan, with five or six of his
guards behind him. stood in the center of the archway facing Aeron. She had
apparently slain two guards already, for they lay between her and Talorcan, and
they did not move.
She
dared not glance at Elathan as he came up beside her, but she allowed her
annoyance to show.
"I
told you not to come back for me."
"The
King of Fomor still commands in his own palace; or is that no longer so?
Talorcan? What do you say?"
"You
may give order, my brother, to your heart's content. But who will obey you? You
heard the siege lasers—the walls are breached. My forces hold the palace and
the city; very soon now, the planet. And I hold the throne." Talorcan
spared a contemptuous glance for Aeron. "And all by grace of the Queen of
Kelts; it is your alliance and friendship with her that killed our father that
has undone you. Wi|l you now let her fight for you as well?"
Elathan
stepped forward in unthinking anger, but Aeron moved to bar his path.
"Stand
away, Elathan; you will not shed your family's blood if ! can hinder it. As for
you, Talorcan—I have killed one king of Fomor, as you have just reminded us. I
would think less than nothing of killing his successor's usurper."
"In
unhappy time, Aeron, draw you a sword." Talorcan leaped forward
unexpectedly, aiming a vicious two-handed swipe at the pair who stood in his
way. Aeron raised her own weapon to counter the blow, and the sparks flew blue
where the metal met.
But if
his late father fires had been some match against Aeron, Talorcan was none, and
in four passes she had disarmed him and laid open his cheek. She had raised her
blade for a killing lunge, but inexplicably she hesitated: and in that moment
of hesitation an explosion rocked the tower—a direct hit from the siege lasers
outside the walls, sending smoke and stonedust billowing along the corridor.
Half-concussed,
unable to see through the thick smoke, Aeron felt Elathan pull her away and
down the hall to the lift. All but choking on the dust, they emerged seconds
later on the landing-pad a few yards from the hovering aircar. Borvos
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dashed
forward to grab Aeron, his officer Ralia caught Elathan, and together they
half-dragged, half-carried them into the ship.
"My
gods, Elathan, we thought you'd never get here!" Borvos, so far unstrung
with relief and the terror that had gone before it as to forget his formality
in his love for his King, slammed the doorseals behind them as Treic lifted off
the tower at full throttle.
Even as
the craft became airborne, the tower crumbled away beneath, as a second, and
greater, explosion disintegrated it into dust and flame and roar.
Chapter
13
Gwydion
had remained with Declan and his Fians on the island in the Kyles of Ra for
nearly a month, recovering his spirits and his strength. Then he had left
detailed messages for such kin and friends and officers as Declan might chance
to find or who might make their way to him, and taking one of the precious
starships he had headed out for Kymry.
In so
small a ship, the trip took longer than he was used to—Retaliator, or his own
ship Seren-alarch, "Star-swan," would have made nothing of the
distance—but Gwydion was giad of the time thus afforded him for thought. Once
safe in hyperspace, he put the ship on autohelm and, for the first time in.
months, dropped all of the guards he had so rigorously maintained.
His
chiefest problem at the moment was the matter of an immediate destination.
Gwynedd, of course, was his first thought, and his heart yearned for it, and
for his mother and brother, whose fates he had not yet been able to learn; but
he put the temptation firmly aside. Jaun Akhera would have ordered to Gwyneddan
space every ship he could reasonably, or unreasonably, spare, in hopes of
intercepting his escaped prisoner: in which case a nest of piasts would be a
safer place by far for Gwynedd's prince than his own planet.
Or he
could try to find Firecirake, and Rohan; but that might take long, and this
ship had neither range nor resources for a prolonged sail. Caledon, where
Aeron's brother Kieran dwelled at Inver, and where Rioghnach and Niall and many
others had fled to. was still farther beyond his reach.
But
there was one place, closer by many star-miles, where Gwydion could count on
help and friends and shelter. He had not been there for many years; but then he
remembered his rights of fosterage, and his doubts vanished.
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With
confidence he keyed a sequence into the autohelm. Dyved it is, then: Caer
Carrig Cennan.
Far
away. O'Reilly too was sailing blind, hoping for a safe harbor. Her first
instinct had been to seek Desmond, but she had quickly realized the
impossibility of such a quest. So she had headed for Gwynedd, having heard like
everyone else the rumor of Gwydion's escape from Caerdroia, and thinking that
even if he did not himself go to Gwynedd, his brother Elved was there, and many
others loyal to their Prince, who would, she hoped, welcome one both he and
Aeron had honored with the name of friend.
Gwynedd
was a flat silver disk below her when she called the inboard computers into
play. Gwydion's seat of Cast Dathyl was only a half-hour's sailing time to the
north oilier orbital entry position, and she used the minutes of the descent to
rehearse what she should say, for Gwydion was sure to be cross with her for not
having stayed in sanctuary as Aeron had ordered.
When
the ship touched down at last, O'Reilly emerged onto the landing-field into
small rain from an overcast sky. In the mist and drizzle, she could see nothing
to identify the place for her, and she peered uncertainly through the gloom.
This has to be Caer Dathyl, she thought fiercely, the coordinates all checked
out—
Then
she whirled around, as a squad of cloaked Fians came toward her over the wet
paved surface of the field. She sagged a little with relief: Fians would surely
know Desmond— probably they were in Elved's service—and she herself was wearing
Fian brown . . .
Her
smile turned quickly to a puzzled frown as senses that the Ban-draoi had
sharpened came into play. That man who stood off to one side . . . There was
something very familiar about him, and very nasty; and the way he hid his right
arm beneath his cloak—
O'Reilly
turned to flee back to the ship, but they had cut her off neatly and
efficiently, and she stood unmoving as the man in the cloak came forward. As he
drew his shrunken and withered arm from the cloak's concealment, she knew him
without a doubt, and all her hopelessness showed on her face.
"Lieutenant
O'Reilly," said--Kynon ap Accolon pleasantly, "welcome to
Gwynedd."
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155
"It
was no easy victory," he informed her a little later, sitting at his ease
in a lavishly appointed tent below the walls of the enormous gray stone citadel
of Caer Dathyl. "Elved is almost as talented in war as his detestable
brother."
"I'm
surprised to hear you call it victory," said O'Reilly, glancing around.
"It seems to me you haven't won until you've broken the defenses or taken
Elved. It certainly looked like siege—or rather, standoff—to me. And where is
Elved, anyway? In the castle? No? Ah; somewhere else, perhaps?"
Kynon
bridled at the, sarcasm in her voice, though her face bore only the most
innocent of inquiring expressions. "You Earthers know little of our manner
of making war."
"No
doubt that would explain it," agreed O'Reilly mockingly. "But tell
me, how did you end up here? The last I heard of you was that the Cremave had
taken exception to your little fable about Arianeira and who had led whom into
treason, and that Aeron had banished you as daer-fudir. But here you are."
Kynon
scowled at the mention of the Cremave, and his right hand twitched inside the
specially tailored pouched pocket where it rested against his chest.
"Aye,
and where is sheT' he snapped. "But to satisfy your curiosity . . . Jaun
Akhera himself appointed me here as his personal lieutenant—in reward for my
services—and as liaison to the lords of Dyved."
"Very
nice for you, I'm sure. But I'm afraid I won't be of much help to you."
"You
think not?" Kynon leaned back in the chair, studying her. "Jaun
Akhera has offered a reward for you: not so high as that which he would give
for Aeron or Gwydion or Morwen, of course, but an extremely respectable sum all
the same. 1 know not what use he might have for you, but that is no concern of
mine."
O'Reilly
pushed her fear out of her mind. "You will send me to Tara?"
After a
moment he shook his head. "Not just yet. My immediate masters have already
ordered that you be sent first to them. Later on, it may well be that they will
decide to pack you over to Jaun Akhera, but that is for them to say."
"Who
might these masters of yours be?"
"The
Prince of Dyved, my lord Powell; and his son Pryderi, who is lord of
Caradigion." He made a question of it, but O'Reilly shook her head
blankly. "Ah well, they know you;
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and you
will come to know them well enough before long. They will be pleased to see
you, and pleased still more with me for having found you. Shall we go
then?"
O'Reilly
stood up and straightened her cloak. "Where to?"
"To
Poweli and Pryderi; where else?"
"Gwydion!"
Pryderi stood in the Great Hall of CaerCarrig Cennan, eyes fixed on the man who
now approached him.
"Long
time since Caer Artos, Pryderi." Gwydion grasped the other man by the arms
in salute. After the briefest of hesitations, Pryderi returned the clasp of
friendship, and, weary as he was, Gwydion did not notice the infinitesimal
reluctance.
"Long
time indeed, my old friend. How came you here? All Keltia thought you a
prisoner in Turusachan under the Marbh-A draoi's hand; when you called just now
for permission to land, I could not believe it was truly you."
"Myself,
right enough; though up until four weeks or so ago I was indeed Jaun Akhera's
unwilling guest." Fatigue overcame him, and he put a hand on the back of a
chair to steady himself. "But may the tale wait until 1 have eaten, and
perhaps rested awhile? I did not think to have to remind a friend of the rules
of hospitality."
Again
the tiny hesitation, and again Gwydion did not see; then a bright smile, and
Pryderi's arm was flung across Gwydion's shoulders.
"And
nor did I ever think to need such reminding! Come, Gwynedd; you shall bathe and
eat and rest as is proper, and later we shall talk, you and I, and my father
when he is home from the hunt."
"You
are certain he suspects nothing?" Poweli flung 1iis cloak onto a bench by
the wall and advanced upon Pryderi, who raised a hand and shook his head in
exasperated denial.
"Nay,
he has no thoughts of betrayal; why should he have? He came here for sanctuary,
to his own boyhood friend and his father's foster-brother." s
"If
I remember aright, his own sister gave hinvexcellent reason to suspect any kin-bonds,
be they of blood or of fostering." Poweli was stripping off his everyday
tunic as he spoke, changing into clothing more appropriate for a feast.
"As for Arawn, he has been dead these twelve years, and in
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all
that time neither of his sons has consulted me thrice on matters either state
or personal."
"Aye,
well, what of Elved? If he gets wind of our plan for his brother—"
"He
will do what? Gwynedd was badly hit by the Imperial fleets, and Caer Dathyl is
still under siege—a siege led, I need not remind you, by our faithful servant
Kynon. Elved has at present far too much in hand to trouble himself with vague
rumors of Gwydion's whereabouts."
"And
the Terran woman, Sorcha ni Reille?"
"Most
completely uncooperative. I have had Kynon take her to Caer Sidi; let her cool
her heels, and her temper, in Carcair awhile. That prison has loosened the
tongues of even the most resolutely silent; sea and isolation often have that
effect. Very like, it will see Gwydion too as a guest, before long."
Pryderi
looked startled. "Gwydion in Carcair? You do not mean to send him to Jaun
Akhera? Such an act would assure the Coranian of your good faith beyond all
possible doubt; the only thing to gain greater favor would be to turn over
Aeron herself.''
"I
have not said Gwydion will not be returning to Caerdroia," replied Poweli,
buckling a jewelled belt around his hips- and fixing a formal dirk upon the
hanger. "Only that he will be remaining here on Dyved for a time—until
such an hour as I think it most to our advantage to return him. But let us not
keep him waiting."
When
Gwydion came down from the guestchamber, all was ready for the nightmeal in the
Great Hall. Though Rohan's warning had not been forgotten, just now it was not
at the forefront of his awareness: Poweli and Pryderi were friends and family,
why should he suspect those two? Later he would wonder that he had had no
smallest inkling of what was to follow, but just now he sensed only friendship
and sympathy surrounding him; and when he entered the hall, the two Dyvetian
lords rose eagerly to greet him.
"Ah,
Gwydion! My sorrow I was not here to meet you when you came, but glad am I to
see you safe!" Poweli embraced him, then held him away at arm's length.
"You have grown to favor your father, lad ... But come; let us eat and
talk." Taking the seat at the head of the long table, he
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gestured
Gwydion to the chair upon his left against the wall, and Pryderi took his usual
place at his father's right.
Over
the meal, Gwydion recounted to them the events leading to the siege of
Caerdroia and the city's fall, Aeron's flight with Morwen, his own escape and
his present desperate need to make contact with Rohan. And all through the
meal, Powell smiled and listened, nodded and smiled, keeping his guest's
winecup filled and his ale mether unemptied.
The
wine and ale together must have muddled his weary senses, and his memories of
boyhood trust lowered his guard, for only too late did Gwydion see in the faces
of his hosts a shadow-reflection of their intent. As his othersight confirmed
the treachery, he rose so swiftly that his chair was knocked over backward, but
the wall behind him opened silently and secretly, and eight of Powell's guards
were already through^ into the room; warrior though he was, Gwydion was soon
overmastered.
*'My
sorrow, Gwynedd, that it must be so." Powell's face, for one vivid
instant, registered real regret; then it fled, withered beneath Gwydion's
blazing gray stare.
"I
see it was true, then, what Rohan had heard from Shane: that certain
opportunistic Keltic lords had treasonously sold themselves to the Marbh-draoi.
Never in a million lifetimes, though, would I have dreamt that Powell of Dyved
could be among those."
"Who
knows what he would do, given the choices? Recall you how your own sister
chose? Even you, Gwydion, might have done as I have done, did you stand in my
place."
"1
think not!" Gwydion, calmer now, though no whit less angry, caught
Powell's gaze and held it. "1 make no boasts or threats, Powell, of future
vengeance; but I call you to remember that you have betrayed a guest under your
roof, and he of your own fostering. You, Dyved, and you also, Caradigion, have
shattered the law of the coire ainsec; for which transgression, if harm be
meant to a guest, the punishment is death. For the past love that was between
us, fcnd between you and my father, I hope that I may not be called upon to be
the means of your punishment; but I confess I shall not mind overmuch if so \
am."
Powell's
face had remained unchanged through Gwydion's speech, though Pryderi had gone
very white. Then Powell: "Dan shall decide that. Prince of Gwynedd. In the
meantime,
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159
you
shall lodge under another roof than this one, where you will have the company
of someone very well known to you."
"Who,
then?" asked Gwydion, as possibilities each more dreadful than the last
volleyed through his mind.
But
Powel! only smiled, and motioned the guards to take him from the room.
Aboard
the Firedrake, the officers' common-room was filled with people, in and out of
uniform, all in various stages of disarray and disorientation. Among them,
Desmond stood apart, his hands hugging his arms under his cloak, and none
troubled his silence with ill-timed questions. Across the room, a haunted-eyed
Fergus was being urgently talked to by Gwennan Chynoweth, with Aeron's
soul-healer cousin, Melangell, hovering nearby.
There
came a stir at the door, and Rohan hurried in, clad only in trews and a hastily
donned cloak. In all that throng, he saw but one person.
"Desmond—"
Desmond
broke then from his glassy stillness, and every eye was on him as he slowly
crossed the room. Halting before Rohan, he bowed deeply before his cousin and
friend.
"Ard-righ,"
he said then, in a voice that sounded as if the word were dragged from him
under torture, and around the room ran a sharp intake of breath, as at a sudden
blow. "My sorrow to announce to you the reported death of the Ard-rian
Aeron in an escape attempt on the planet of Fomor. Morwen Douglas, Taoiseach of
Keltia—I am sorry, Fergus—and Elathan, King of Fomor, among others, are said to
have perished also."
Then in
that worst of all evil moments Rohan laughed. "They are none of them dead,
Desmond, not one; and this is the best word we have had in many weeks."
"Rohan,
we had certain word of it."
"From
Fomor? Oh, come! Since what time have we accepted any word from there as truth?
Did they tell me stone was hard 1 would use a rock for pillow."
There
was a rustling among his hearers as his words—and above all, his cheerful
everyday attitude—began to work upon their own doubts. Desmond saw it
happening, felt it in himself.
"Well,
the word conies—through several mouths, I admit— from Talorcan, now calling
himself King of Fomor in the
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THE
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stead
of his brother Elathan. He says that Aeron landed in secret on Fomor; instead
of executing her out of hand, Elathan rather sought her friendship and an
alliance with Keltia. Claiming he but followed the wishes of the Fomorian
people, Talorcan then overthrew his brother by means of a coup backed by
certain disaffected military elements—and, no doubt, with covert Imperial
support. He now claims the Iron Crown for his, by right, as Bres's only remaining
male heir, so the Princess Rauni's rights, too, have been set at naught. Any
road, Elathan fled Tory with Aeron, Morwen and some others; and—again according
to Talorcan—they were all killed when their ship was fired upon and
destroyed."
Rohan
shook his head impatiently. "Lies all, and now I am certain of it. They
may have gone to Fomor, right enough, but I'll wager any stake you choose and
give odds beside thaK they succeeded in that escape. Elathan too, most like;
and Talorcan is no more King of Fomor than I am King of Kelts."
' Then
you will not accept the Ard-righachtas?''
"Not
only do I not accept it, but I do not accept even the mandate to rule in
Aeron's absence. I may be Tanist; but while Aeron lives the only king in Keltia
is Gwydion. And that I uphold, until such time as we might have proof
incontrovertible that the reality is—is other wise."
Desmond's
face showed despair renewed. "There is news of him too, Rohan—and of
O'Reilly."
O'Reilly
lounged unhappily on the low couch recessed into the stone wall of her cell. By
her own tally, she had been stuck here in this godawful prison-castle for a
fortnight—a standard two weeks of her own estimation, since she had no idea
what a local week was; since she had no idea what planet she was on.
Kynon
had brought her here from Gwynedd, to this little island—Caer Sidi, she had
been let to know—and then others had escorted her to this castle that stood, an
island unto itself, in the cold sea to the north, linked to the larger island
only-by a single causeway covered completely by water, save for a few minutes a
day at low tide.
She
kicked listlessly at the thick woven blankets piled at the couch's foot. So
far, at least, she had not been ill-treated in the slightest. There had been a
few sessions of almost perfunctory questioning, but not the smallest hint of
physical
abuse,
not the whisper of a hint of a threat. It was all very strange. Her training
had of course included many strategies to cope with just this sort of
situation, but she could not summon up the energy to try any of them. Maybe
that's just exactly what they want, she thought idly: to drive her mad by
inaction. !f so, it was certainly working; all she wanted to do was just lie
around and watch the patterns of the sunblink off the sea, reflecting on the
plain stone of the ceiling.
But
faces kept getting in the way: Rohan's, cheerful under his rumpled red-brown
thatch; Desmond's—oh God, Desmond—that impossibly black hair and those
impossibly blue eyes; Aeron's, so pale that one could see the veins running
blue under the white skin; Gwydion's, eyes gray as the winter sea beyond the
windows, lowered as he played the harp ...
So real
were their faces that almost O'Reilly could smell Aeron's sea-rose perfume,
almost could hear that crystal shower of notes from the little gold telyn under
Gwydion's hands—
With
one electrified move O'Reilly sat up, so fast that she hit her head on the
couch's overhang. That was no fantasy: The sound of the harp still poured in at
her window, and surely there was only one person anywhere who played like that
. . . Rubbing her forehead where it had cracked against the stone, O'Reilly
pressed herself along the restraint-field mat guarded the window and called
softly across the little courtyard.
"Gwydion?"
At once
the music ceased. She tried again, a little more desperately. "Gwydion,
it's me, O'Reilly—it's Sorcha."
The
harp began again, and she collapsed against the wall in defeat. Then she
stiffened with amazement, for it seemed to her that now there was a voice in
the music; yet no voice spoke, and she realized that the voice was within her
mind, and the voice was Gwydion's own.
"It
is you, Sorcha; I was afraid to try, lest it be some trick. Nay"—the
thought came swiftly as she began to speak— "say nothing. I have but
little time for this before they sense it. Powell and Pryderi—I went to them
for help, but they betrayed me; they have sold themselves to Jaun Akhera. But
how came you here? Think it to me, and I will know."
O'Reilly
closed her eyes and concentrated, and in a moment Gwydion's mind-voice spoke
again.
"So,
Kynon still lives ..." The texture of his thought
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suddenly
altered. "I must leave you now. But I will speak with you again, and soon;
we shall make a plan, you and I." No sound came now from any quarter, and
O'Reilly, still leaning against the wall in staggered disbelief, wondered if
the whole thing had not been an illusion. Certainly it had had all the flavor
of hallucination ... But in the night, as she lay awake on her bed, watching
the moonlight on the floor and pondering the day's events, she heard the harp
again.
Chapter
14
TT 71th
Borvos at the controls, the aircar shot away from Vr the palace, streaking like
a meteor low over Tory, then arrowing upwards and out over the surrounding
mountains, its flight so swift and unexpected that Talorcan's watchposts were
taken by surprise, too laggard and too lax even to track its passing.
In the
passenger cabin, there was silence taut as an overstrung bow. Elathan was
staring out the viewport beside his blastchair, and even Camissa did not
intrude upon his mood. On the cabin's other side, Aeron slumped back into the
high curved contour of her chair, her eyes closed and her hands resting on the
seat's padded arms. She had distanced herself in a light trance, to try to
regain some degree of calm after the stresses of the escape, which calm her
instincts told her would be soon and sorely needed; but she retained enough
everyday awareness to hear what passed around her.
The
silence was broken at last by Basilea. "Where do we go to now?"
Elathan
never took his gaze from the planet below him. "Ask rather the Queen of
Kelts."
Aeron
spoke without opening her eyes. "My ship is hidden near the town where
Borvos found me. With the help of the gods, Morwen, who came here with me, is
by now safely back there. Retaliator can overmatch any craft Talorcan might
send against her; and she can carry more passengers away from Fomor than she
did bring to it." She paused a moment to take mental tally: with Morwen
and herself, ten people. That would make a not inconsiderable freight even for
Retaliator, but she knew the ship could easily manage it.
"A
generous offer, lady," said Borvos, who had come into the cabin while she
was speaking. "And indeed we had expected as much, from you. but other
arrangements have
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been
made. Only the King shall go with you, by your courtesy; for he will now be
hunted as hard on this world as were you on yours when Jaun Akhera took
Caerdroia. The rest of us will remain here, in a place that has been prepared
against just such a need."
Thona
seemed to stiffen in her seat. "Then you knew my son was planning
treason?"
"Never,"
said Borvos fervently. "But enough of us noticed enough things to make us
nervous, and we thought to arrange a safe retreat for the King and his near kin
if some emergency should arise. Unfortunately, the emergency came on before we
were ready to repulse it. But, with Treic and Ralia, I had at least secured a
refuge for us with the duhfn."
"The
duhin!" Elathan was startled out of his study. "Ttiey do not concern
themselves with the affairs of men." /
A
strange wistfulness flickered over Aeron's face. "Once before have I heard
that claimed," she said, so softly as to be speaking more to herself than
to the rest of them. "It proved not so upon my own world, and it is in my
mind that it will be not so here as well."
"Oh
Borvos, do you think they will really hide us?" asked Camissa, as she sat
with one arm around Rauni's shoulders; Elathan's young sister had said not ten
words in all the hours since Talorcan's guards had thrown her into the
strongroom prison with the others, and only Camissa seemed able to give her any
comfort.
"It
is the only hope we have," he said evenly. "But yes, I think they
will help as they have promised." He turned to re-enter the command cabin.
"One word more: We have a long flight ahead of us, for I dare not take a
more direct route to the southern forests than the one we travel at present,
and even so we are sure to pick up some pursuit sooner or later. May I suggest
to Your Majesties and your ladyships that you get some rest while you can; if
you can. I will see that you are awakened in good time to ready yourselves for
the march." Saluting Elathan, he closed the door after him.
Aeron
stretched palug-like, one limb at a time, and-sat up straight. The tensions
that had been rising in the cabin ever since the predawn departure from Tory
were beginning to reach an unimaginable intensity, as complex and interfretted
a lattice as any piece of Keltic knotwork. And, as with the knotwork, each
strand could be followed under and above and around and behind the others,
without break or flaw in the
THE
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165
pattern:
tension as palpable as a blow, and as dangerous. Without doubt the explosion,
when it came at last, would be of a nature and a magnitude none of them would
soon forget; or, possibly, forgive. Sleep would be the quickest and easiest way
out of it, though a coward's way, and even so she longed all the same to take
it; but there was another thing needed more urgently to be done—
She
slid from her chair and crossed the aisle to the seat beside Elathan. She knew
precisely how he felt at this moment, as no one else in that cabin, in all of
Fomor, could know: She too had had to flee her throne to save her life. That it
was for them both but a temporary abdication—for she refused to consider any
other possibility, and knew he felt the same—made it no jot easier. She put a
hand on his arm in sympathy, but he pulled away from the light touch.
"What
then?" she asked. "Do you think / do not know? Say it out and do not
fear."
"You
know already," he muttered, deeply angry: with himself, Aeron knew, not
with her. "And know it better than anyone: A king should not shy from
adversity like some half-broke colt."
"Well,
and neither should he intemperately invite it," returned Aeron.
"Discretion and caution are no bad underpinning for a crown."
Elathan
burst out laughing in spite of •• nself, and felt better at once. '"You
say this? I am sorry to laugh, lady, but since what 'time has Aeron Aoibhell
grown such a model of queenly restraint?"
Aeron
had the grace to blush. "I confess I am myself but half-broke to royal
harness; though perhaps I have learned somewhat of moderation in the past
weeks, however against my will. All the same, that is nothing to do with
this."
"Oh,
is it not! Come, Aeron; I invite you to consider your activities since leaving
Tara—which I think we have still not gotten to the bottom of—and then I defy
you to speak to me of discretion and of caution. Was it for those you spared
Talorcan's life, back there in the tower passage?"
She
shook her head. "For lack of time, rather, to do the job properly . . .
Nay, that is not true either: I hesitated for that he is still your brother,
and I for one have seen enough of kin-slaughter."
"Yes,
I thought that might be it. But in spite of everything, I cannot say I am sorry
you did not kill him."
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"You
knew how he hated you, and that he plotted to have Camissa for his own queen,
after your overthrow?"
"Oh
yes," said Elathan simply. "I knew."
"You
knew!" Camissa rose in her seat behind them, a tide of dismay washing over
her, feeling hurt and deceived. "And it made no difference?"
"A
very great difference. Had he attempted openly to take either my crown or my
lady I should have put an end to him with my own bare hands. And no hesitation
for kinship's sake would have held me back. But for all that, he is my father's
son and Thona's, and to take his life . . . Even you, Aeron, forgave Gwydion's
sister her treasons. With cause as great as yours, should my clemency be any
less?"
"As
to my actions, you do not know the half of the reasons for them." /
He
turned in his seat to face her full on. "That is true: I do not. And
before 1 commit myself beyond my ability to pull back"—and here his eyes
grew cold indeed—"I must ask you a thing. Tell us, Aeron, of
Bellator."
It
seemed that this time the silence in the cabin would never break. Even Thona
and Basilea, who had been maintaining all this while between them a tacit
truce, glanced at each other in shared apprehension. Camissa had nearly nerved
herself to say something, anydiing, when Aeron spoke at last.
"Bellator
was a lesson and a warning. For me, Fomor: not for you nor your father nor even
yet your folk. You paid for your ambush, for that you violated all laws of safe
and free passage in high space; but I too paid—paid so that I might team—and
the price of that learning is not yet full-reckoned.''
"And
did you learn?"
Aeron
nodded slowly. "Oh aye."
"But
how?" Camissa burst out. She was feeling torn two ways at least: It had
been only a few days since she and Aeron had come to find each other as
friends, and now already this fragile new relationship was being put severely
to the test. Yet, try as she might, Camissa could not reconcile the woman she
had come to know and like and even begin to admire with the creature who had,
alone and unbelievably, killed without mercy a Fomorian planet. "How could
you do it? Not how might you bring yourself to do it—that 1 think I can
understand—but how could such a thing even be done, how did you—"
"How!"
repeated Aeron bitterly. "How was the least of it.
THE
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167
But
true it is that you must know. A spell, then; a spelt that never is taught, but
that all the same is often learned: by the overcurious or the overconfident or
the overvengeful. It is a simple thing—though no simple matter—for a sorcerer,
any adept of the Ban-draoi or the Dragons or the Druids, even a Cabiri ... I
couid teach it to any of you here. It has any number of uses. It has even been
used on me: My foster-sister Arianeira used it to break the Curtain Wall and
let the Imperial armadas into the Bawn of Keltia." She stretched out her
left arm, and suddenly the air in the cabin had gone freezing cold. "Reach
out, then; your arm is many thousands of star-miles long, your hand a glove of
light with the power of a sun. Close your fingers around that which you would destroy—an
eggshell in a mailed fist—then pull back your hand, and the heart of the planet
comes with it. Feel how easily it is done. I could do it now, with the world
that lies below us."
Camissa
felt as if a handful of her guts had been ripped out through the unbroken skin
of her belly, and her face must have been as gray as she saw Elathan's to be.
Beside her, Rauni was trembling like a puppy against her arm.
Then
Aeron released them as abruptly as she had seized them, and the unearthly cold
was gone, and her face softened as she looked at each of them in turn.
"But
I would not do it," she said. "Not ever again, not though the fate of
Keltia, or Fomor, or the galaxy itself, rode upon my choice. I do not ask you
to accept my word; but I give it all the same. You wanted to know, and I have
told you."
And now
we know, thought Camissa. She forced herself to speech. "That was a hard
thing for you; harder for you to say, I think, than for us to hear. But I am
glad we have been told, and I for one will take that word of yours."
Aeron,
who had been sitting with head bent, hair hiding her face, looked up at the
Fomorian woman; then gratitude and surprise came over her countenance, and she
turned hastily away as her control started to slip.
But
that had been only one strand of the knotwork . . . Queen Basiiea had risen
from her chair, and was standing now beside Thona.
"There
are some other matters of equal difficulty that must be spoken of, and this is
the time for those also."
She
looked down at Thona, then, with tremendous preci-
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Patricia
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THE
THRONE OF SCONE
169
sion
and a rigid control, dipped and rose again in a court curtsy before her rival.
"My
everlasting thanks to you, my lady, for the lives of my son and my daughter and
my daughter-to-be, and for my life too, that you saw fit to save at the cost of
incurring your own son's hatred. There may never be love between us—after all
that has been, I do not know if that ever can be; but surely there might no
longer be open warfare?"
At
Basilea's first words, Thona's fine eyes had filled with tears, and now they
spilled down her cheek. "Majesty," she began, "madam, there is
no need to speak of this."
Basilea
shook her head. "I have not yet said all that I must say . . . You wished
to know, Aeron, why Bres hated your father so? Camissa, I know you too did
wonder; well, now ail of you shall hear." /
"No,
she shall not, nor any of us!" That was Thona, fierce and quick and oddly
protective. "Basilea, I say you will not speak of it."
"If
the Queen of Kelts can find the courage to speak of Bellator, then surely the
Queen of Fomor can find strength likewise to speak of Canaster." Her voice
wavered on the name.
Thona's
expression showed only pity. "There is no need to torture yourself
further—what you have done already, in thanking me, is more than enough. You
said yourself some past things are best left in the past. Leave it now."
"If
I choose the pain, it is my choice; and this truth has long been owed its
hour." Basilea paused by Aeron's chair, then reached down to brush a
gentle finger over the younger woman's cheek. "How fair you are, child;
such a look of your father to you."
Aeron
had gone stone-pale and stone-hard at Basilea's touch and the mention of her
father alike. "In such affection was my father held by your late lord,
Majesty, that in the end both of them died of it."
The
clear dark eyes that Elathan had inherited met hers steadily. "And did you
never ask yourself, Aeron, what the cause was of that feud? Yes, I am certain
that you did. Well, it is not a pleasant tale. Elathan, Rauni, I am sorry you
must hear this, and hear it now, but the sooner it is told the better for all.
My lord Bres did hate Fionnbarr of Keltia because Fionnbarr and I, together,
betrayed him. It was long before you, Aeron, or you, Elathan, were even born;
before Fionnbarr
wedded
Emer, before he had even met her. A very long time ago—even before I had wedded
Bres."
She
dared a quick fearing glance at her son's frozen face, at Aeron's white drawn
expression, for each of them had seen at once where Basilea's words were
leading.
"Yes,
we were lovers then on Ganaster, your father and I, Aeron," she went on,
in a voice of iron utterly at odds with the emotion of the words. "And
Bres found us out. A strange thought, is it not, and a supreme irony: that had
things fallen out only a little differently, you two might have been brother
and sister."
As
Basilea spoke, a hammer had begun to pound slow blows somewhere deep within
Aeron's head; at every stroke,
- her
whole body seemed to resonate with a pain she could not yet feel. Somehow this
is a thing I have long known: why Tr' does she trouble me now, with this ... It
seemed a thing they §;/ had all known, without knowing they knew it: a thing
that :% had needed only to be put into words, and the words were the ;f>.
least of it. But Elathan said nothing, and looked at no one; "£•• Rauni
huddled closer to Camissa; and Aeron, when at last
H Basilea ceased to speak and looked
tentatively at her for
•j.
reaction or reply, kept her own voice cool and neutral, form-";' ing her
words with care around the hammering in her head.
"Even
given this tale is true, Bres carried his great hatred down the years, pulling
Fomor, and the Phalanx, and in the end the Imperium, into the feud with him.
There must have been more to it than this alone."
*•:• "There was," said Thona.
"Princes' squabbles, political vendettas ... In brief, there was a dispute
between Bres and your father, Aeron, over a planetary system each kingdom
claimed under the terms of a treaty made by the High Queen Aoife many years
before. Probably neither kingdom had the right to annex it, but that does not
matter now. Against all advice, even that of his own father King Budic, Bres
conducted the case before the Justiciary on Ganaster, and his betrothed was
with him." She glanced up at Basilea's haunted face, and faltered. But the
Queen nodded once, and with a sigh Thona continued. "Fionnbarr won,
embarrassing Bres ;. before Budic, and before Fionnbarr's father the High King
;' Lasairian and the Phalanx overlords and even Strephon's
-'.s
father, the Emperor Errazill-jauna who died the following .#' year. Bres never
forgave Fionnbarr for it. But even so, that ";> was not the true ground
of Bres's hatred."
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"No,"
said Aeron. "The cause of that was other where . . . Did you love my
father, madam?" she snapped suddenly at Basilea, in a voice that was no
longer either cool or neutral, a voice like a tiger's leap.
Basilea
flinched at the violence implicit in that voice, as had many others before her,
but she answered at once. -
"I
did, Aeron. From the first moment 1 saw him on Ganaster, at the time Thona
spoke of; I loved him, and "he me. I did not know then that he was heir to
Keltia, not until after; no more did he know 1 was affianced of Bres. We did
not need to know sach things, though when at last we came to learn the truth of
it, it was the death of our time together. Even then he asked me to leave Bres
and come with him, that he would make me Queen of Keltia, but I lacked the
courage, and after that he did not ask again. Then he met Emer, and chose her
for his queen; I knew he loved her dearly and had put me from his mind. But I
loved him on Ganaster, and I loved him when I stood with Bres to be married,
and gods forgive me but I love him still."
"And
Bres? What of your royal husband?"
"Over
the years I came to respect him," said Basilea in a steady voice.
"And to admire him as a king. I gave him three excellent and beautiful
children, and I lived with him as a loyal wife and queen and partner, sharing
his throne and his duties. But never did I love him, and he knew it. And in
part to punish me for it, he kept to Thona for all the worlds to see . . . You
spoke before of prices paid, Aeron; well, this is the price that I have paid,
down all the years, for that time on Ganaster. And until four years ago, I
counted the cost well spent. Then Bres attacked the embassy ship—What do you
imagine I felt then, when I heard that Fionnbarr was dead, and Emer, and your
Roderick and all those others? That too was part of the price for what we had
done; Fionnbarr paid, and I paid, and now Bres loo has paid."
"A
very great pity, Queen Basilea, that the last crossic of that price has not yet
been counted out." Aeron's voice had the cold curl of An-Lasca, the
Whip-wind itself, to-it now. "True it is that I myself exacted from Bres
that price you speak of, as eraic for my kin; but 1 have paid a price of my own
to this rechtair vengeance, and so now has your son. And your son as well,
Thona, will be made to pay dearly in days not so far off now, for his share in
this debt; be very sure of that. My compliments to Basilea: Few women of
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171
Fomor,
or indeed anywhere else, can have exacted so great a fee for their
favors."
"Aeron—"
began Thona.
"Nay,
madam, leave off—though it must be said. Lady Thona, that you were loyat indeed
to your Queen. All these years you kept her secret, better than many friends
might have done, and you all the time her detested rival ... For that"—
here the coldness became freezing flame, and even Elathan, who was scarcely
less angry than she, flinched at it—"for that, Bres set kingdom against
kingdom, held hatred alive for decades, took enmity to his marriage-bed, turned
the Phalanx against Keltia, allied with the Imperium for sheer malice's sake.
For that, he bloodied his hands with treacherous murder, caused me to use my
art in vengeance, himself died under my sword and came within a blade's
thickness of compassing my own death. And in the end his acts did cause his
rightful heir to be overthrown and hunted into exile by his other son. I do
not—cannot—hold my own father free of blame in this, but when 1 see where love
may lead I begin to lose hope."
"Love?"
asked Elathan. "Would you call it so?"
Aeron
looked over at him for one unguarded moment, and for all his own pain, his
heart nearly failed him at what he saw in her face.
"I
must, else I must call it—well, no matter. It is long over, and 1 must put it
aside as others have done before me. But I mind me of first causes, and also of
a thing Gwydion said to me once ..."
Without
another glance at any of them, Aeron turned to the window, setting her back to
them and her face to the cloudy dark.
Chapter
15
Zt
remained so in the cabin for some hours: Aeron wearing cold anger like a cloak;
Elathan in a state of mind only a little less turbulent than hers; Camissa and
Rauni huddled together, the dark head of the one drooping as she dozed/the
other curled up on the seat beside her, as neatly asleep as a golden kitten;
Thona and Basilea, each consumed with her own thoughts and hurts and memories,
and those were the same thoughts and hurts and memories.
But it
was Aeron and Elathan who had been wounded deepest by Basilea's confession; and
all understood, themselves not least, that they were best left alone just now,
to allow to work the alchemy of reason upon emotion.
In
Elathan at least, that process was already well advanced. In the first moments
of his shock, he had felt much the same feelings as had Aeron: rage—at Bres, at
Fionnbarr, at Basilea; revulsion that such a feud had been permitted to grow so
monstrously; revulsion too that it had had so base an origin. But men, little
by little, his reason began to prevail, and his temper cooled, and he stole a
quick glance across at Aeron. Her face was still rigorously averted, so that
all he could see was a veil of coppery hair, but even with her back turned her
posture seemed eloquent of fury.
He
sighed and looked once more out the viewport, though by now it was night again
and nothing could be seen of the surface of his Throneworld far below. He could
perfectly well understand her anger and pain, for he shared most of it: her
father, his mother—it seemed almost beyond comprehension, and still more so
than that, the answer Bres had made to the problem. Inappropriate, the
alienists would say, for Bres to have responded so. But he had, and in so doing
he had changed galactic history and altered the course of many lives; not least
of those his own heir's. Yet how can I blame either
172
THE
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173
of
them, when I myself entertained much the same feeling— however briefly—for
Fionnbarr's daughter . . .
And
then there was Thona. Elathan almost groaned aloud at the thought of her. In
the heat and hurry of escape, her sacrifice had gone unnoticed and
unappreciated: In electing to free them from their prison she had set her own
son against her, she had chosen Elathan over Talorcan, as she had done so often
before, letting love override the claim of birth. And this time Talorcan would
never forgive, thought Elathan, neither her nor me . . .
But
such emotion cannot long endure at such a pitch: By the time the cabin door
opened once again, to admit Ralia—an officer of Elathan's guard who had been
assigned months before to protect Camissa—the mood in the cabin had moderated
to something more bearable of intensity, though no less deeply felt.
Even
Ralia sensed it; she paused beside Elathan's chair, spoke tersely and swiftly,
then vanished back forward with an air of intense relief. Elathan rubbed his
tired eyes and swung about in his chair.
"We
shall be landing in a few moments: Borvos tells us to use the restraint fields
on our chairs." He suited action to words, and the others followed his
example, Aeron last of all.
The
aircar landed without incident; outside it was full dark, and as they were
making ready for the march, Borvos and his two officers came to assist them.
"As
near as we can make it," he said to Elathan, "this is within ten
miles of where the Queen of Kelts is thought to have landed her ship. There
would be more accurate information, but the Queen hid the craft too well for us
to find it."
"Aye,
well, let us hope that / can find it." They turned in surprise, for the
voice was Aeron's. She had spoken no word for hours, not since Basilea's
disclosure, and had spent the time since in a mood compounded of rage,
heartsickness and her struggles to master both, or either: For in truth she did
not know with whom she was angriest—Bres, Basilea, her father or herself.
Though 1 am a fine one to judge, she thought bitterly. Fionnbarr and Basilea,
or Aeron and Elathan—was there any difference at all; and if there was, was
that difference only in degree, and not in kind? True, she and Elathan had
acted only minimally on what they had felt, had recognized it and rejected it
as their parents had not done; but that
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she had
felt it at all now made up a not inconsiderable part of her inner turmoil, and
it had taken much to quell it.
But she
had succeeded so far in that now a kind of blank weariness was all she felt,
and, rising from her seat, she ran an indifferent look over the others who now
watched her so closely. In her new mood, their unease seemed to her almost
comic. But what do they expect me to do? she thought. To rail at the choices of
the past was a fairly futile exercise; one wove the best and most serviceable
cloak one could from what threads one had to hand. What wool had been sheared
to spin those threads was no choice of one's own; onty the pattern, the weave
and weight itself . . . and even that was dictated by dan, by the ever-changing
weather of one's fate.
"I
have means of locating Retaliator, of course," |she added aloud. "But
there is a tirr—an unlight, a cloaking effect—over it, and that is always
chancy."
"And
Morwen?" asked Elathan.
Aeron
let a moment pass. "She will have found her way back to the ship by
now."
"And
if she has not?"
"Question
me less. King of Fomor, and furnish me instead with a few more answers! We are
still upon your throneworld!" Aeron saw Rauni shrink back against the
cabin wall, and was instantly remorseful. "I am sorry to snap, but you
press me so, Elathan . . . Are there no folk who live in the forest, that she
might have taken refuge with?"
"None
to speak of," said Elathan, slinging a pack onto his shoulders and helping
Camissa with hers. "Save for the duhin; and, no matter the arrangements
made by Borvos, they fear humans, i doubt if they would come to the aid of a
stranger lost in the wood."
His
head jerked sharply upwards, as a sudden sound came to his keen ear, and a new
wariness crossed his face. Aeron's gaze met his in shared concern, for she too
had identified the sound: the muffled whine of pursuing aircars, flying low.
Two
hours later, Borvos allowed them to rest briefly from their strenuous
nightmarch in a little clearing, its floor plush with moss, bisected by a
chattering stream. Aeron lay down beside its banks and scooped up clear water
in both hands to drink, then lowered her flushed face into the welcome
coolness. Beside her, Rauni sank cross-legged into the ferns, a
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175
little
timid still, but the warmth of Aeron's smile gave her heart.
"I
have a sister of my own who is about your age," said Aeron as if in
explanation. "And I wonder where she is now . . . please gods, in a better
place than are we."
Rauni
bent to drink from the stream, holding her blond plaits away from the water.
"Do you think they can track us here?"
Aeron
shook her head. "Not by night, not from the air, even their nightsight
devices would be thwarted, for there are many beasts in the wood, and we should
look much the same as they on any scanner's board. But certainly they have
followed us thus far, to where we set down in the aircar, and I fear it will go
hard with us if we have not found Retaliator before the sun is well up; or, if
not that, then at least some place of shelter to wait out the sun again, for we
dare not travel by day. Whatever, we must not linger overlong in one place . .
. How does your mother?" added Aeron in a lower voice. "And the Lady
Thona?"
Rauni
turned her head away from the others, and spoke as low. "Not very well.
They make a brave effort, but they are not accustomed to such activity."
"No
more, I think, are you, alanna . . . Well, perhaps Borvos can find us a place
to spend the daylight hours. Where is your brother?"
Elathan
was sitting alone on the other side of the clearing, one hand trailing in the
waters of the stream. He greeted Aeron with a tired smile; there seemed to be
peace again between them, and as if by tacit consent each avoided mention of
the day's revelations. -
"No
ground pursuit?"
"None
that I can detect," she said. "Still, Treic and 1 have covered our trail
as best we can. When day comes they might put land-trackers, or hounds even,
upon our traces. It cannot be far now to Retaliator, and my lithfaen seems in
good order, but to—" She broke off, flinging up a warning hand to the
others.
Her
caution proved unnecessary. With a sigh and a smile, Borvos stood up, palms
turned outwards and empty, and spoke to the rustling wood around them in a
soft-voiced bubbling language.
And he
was answered from the trees. His weary and bewildered charges thought at first
by the trees, and in their ex-
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hausted
stupor they could have accepted even that. But then the underbrush parted, and
they saw who it was that had spoken.
Aeron
woke to cool golden dawnlight and a strange rushing sound like many waters.
After a moment, she realized that the rushing sibilance was not water but wind
through the branches of trees in full leaf, and that the shelter she lay in was
woven of living saplings. She turned her memory back to bring her to this
place: There had been a long dark march in the night behind unseen guides, then
welcome warmth, and food, and sleep. She sat up cautiously. Beyond her, Rauni
lay curled up under the same tight nubby blankets that swathed Aeron; on her
other side slept Elathan and Camissa. The rest of the lirfle party lay on the
far side of the leaf-thatched shelter; all were deep asleep.
Sensing
someone's attention on her, Aeron snapped her head round to the doorway. Within
the woven curtain, hazy in the morning sun, stood three figures, one a little
in advance of the others. She stared at them in wonder, for these were the
duhfn, and she had barely glimpsed them the night before.
Small
they were, of only the stature of a ten years* child among the Kelts, and
delicately built, with six thin elegant fingers, two of them thumbs, on each
hand; they were green-skinned like the tiny jade-colored treesnake, with hair
of a darker green, and no visible ears. Their clothing, what there was of it,
appeared to be woven of the same slubbed fiber as the blankets; they were
clothed in treestuff. They wore no shoes or boots, and the six toes on each
foot were prehensile; but where their eyes should have been was only the same
feathery fur that covered the rest of their bodies.
"You
cannot see!" she gasped unthinkingly, with the tactless bluntness of a
child, then apologized at once. "My sorrow to speak so—I will be less rude
when I am less weary."
The
foremost figure smiled; or rather, the feeling that emanated from it was the
feeling of a smiie, though far more than any smiie of the mouth could ever be.
It spoke to her then, and its voice was strangely tuneful, as if a stream were
to speak; her ear caught the rhythms of the bubbling language Borvos had used
in the clearing in the night.
"It
is true that the duhfn have not eyes as you do know diem; but we see well
enough even so. You, lady: You are
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177
tall
and slender, and crowned with red like a rowan-tree in autumn, and you have the
knowledge of the trees. What tree is your own? Think us the picture of it, and
say its name, and we shall know if you say true."
"Saille,"
she breathed in the Gaeloch, the picture already forming in her mind: the
gray-green bark of the furrowed trunk, the silvery sword-edged leaves.
"Ah,
you have the willow-wisdom: wide-spreading, firm-rooted, sheltering many,
yielding in time of great storms. Nor are you a stranger to speech without
speaking, or Sight that needs not eyes. And there is one beside you—he is not
here in the body, but I see him all the same—your lord, I think. Very tall he
is, and straight as an ash-spear, with a hand to draw music from the singing
wood. What tree is to him?"
"Derwyth,"
said Aeron, still softly, and the strength of the oak hi her mind stiffened her
back.
"The
Door-tree of the Universe; oak and willow, a good combination—strength with
flexibility. A fated pairing, to make one soul of two. This is strong
magic." The wild thing came forward, and Aeron sat very still. "I am
called Ta-vecher," it said. "These my brothers are Cho-runya and
Vi-khansa. You are welcome to the home of the duhfn."
Aeron
bowed with as much dignity as the blankets and her disarray allowed. "I am
called Aeron," she said. "But you will have known that already."
A wave
of amusement rippled from the duhin. "That and more," said the one
called Vi-khansa. "We have given you our help, as was agreed, for the sake
of our King; but also we have been harboring another stranger for some days
now— someone that you, Aeron, williw glad to see again."
The
curtains at the door rustled in the rising breeze; a hand caught them back,
and, against all hope or logic, Morwen stepped inside.
Aeron
was across the room in one move, hugging her, laughing and weeping and cursing
and talking, and Morwen was doing all those same things back, and now the
others had sat up, wakened by the sound of reunion.
Over
the morning meal, tales were exchanged. Morwen listened with horror and
fascination to Aeron and Elathan, but when pressed to recount her own
adventures, only shrugged.
"Little
enough to tell," she said through a mouthful of cheese and bread.
"When the cam-anfa had passed over, Aeron, I looked long and hard for you,
but I could not find
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you in
the wood. I wandered in the forest until nearly dawn, and then I lay down both
hoping and expecting never to wake up again on this side of this life. But when
I opened my eyes, these were all around me." She indicated the duhm.
"They took me to a village of theirs not far from here, and fed me, and
made me supremely comfortable, and gave me such news as they could. But they
had heard no word of you, Aeron, not until Borvos came here a week ago to make
his final arrangements for sanctuary. They did not tell him that I was here,
but he told the duhin chiefs that things were unsettled in Tory, and like to
grow more so, and looked not good for Elathan; and then he spoke of Aeron, and
of her friend that went missing. Ta-vecher passed all this on to me, and
that"—«he shrugged again, this time smiling— "is all my tale. I came
here only just now with some folk from the village I have been staying
in—At-valki and Ni-laro, a few others."
Aeron
shook her head. "So all this time you have been living in this fair place,
with these most wonderful folk, while I have been shut up in Tory fretting for
your safety." The smile on her face belied the mock severity. "Fergus
would have committed regicide and kin-slaughter both upon me, had I returned to
Keltia without you."
"And
if we speak of returning—" Morwen paused.
"Oh,
we have no secrets here any longer," said Aeron. "Elathan comes with
us on Retaliator. The others remain with theduhin, until such time as we return
from our errand."
"But
why did you come to Fomor at all?" asked Ta-vecher. "An enemy planet,
and you in flight for your lives—"
"We
came here because Arthur came here. He was King of Kelts long ago, and fought
the Fomori, among many others. He was known to offworlders—and to us too,
after, for the device he bore—as the Red Dragon."
"The
Red Dragon!" said Elathan, as astonished as the others of his countrymen.
"Why did you not say so sooner? Everyone on Fomor has heard tales of him;
how he "outfoxed the Vellamians, and stole a march on our own King
Nanteos, and courted the warrior-queen of the Yamazai; and many more tales
besides. But he did not remain here very long, Aeron; only long enough to make
a rescue of the fewscore Kelts we had taken in the raid on Gero. He freed them,
and then he was gone, and they with him."
She
nodded. "This we know, though little more. Any road, we seek the wreck of
his flagship Prydwen; on board that
THE
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179
ship,
we hope to find the Thirteen Treasures, vanished from Keltia these fifteen
hundred years."
"What
are these Treasures?" asked Rauni.
"No
one knows for certain," admitted Morwen. "There have been goleor of
lists in song and story; many of the Treasures may well be mythical, or even
mystical. It is said they were thirteen in number, but tallies vary as to what
they were: such .things as a halter that could tame even a falair; a dagger
that could draw blood from the wind; a chariot that could run on land or sea; a
cloak of invisibility; a drinking-horn and food-wallet that could never be
emptied no matter how many were given to eat and drink; and other things beside.
But a!! accounts agree on four objects most sacred of all: a sword of light
that can cut through any substance no matter how thick; a spear that never
fails to find and destroy its target; a cauldron that can heal any wound and
even death itself; and a stone that can bring death for a mile round to any who
look upon it unprotected. These are said to have come with the Danaans of old
when they fled Atland and came to Ireland, from the holy cities—or they might
have been planets— Falias, Findias, Murias and Gorias."
No one
spoke for a little, then Camissa looked up. "How do you know that these
things—if they exist—are on the ship you seek?"
"We
do not know," said Aeron. "Gwydion was merely bidden to tell me to
seek for Prydwen and the lost Treasures, and I decided that this should be my
path. I may well be mistaken; but without that word I should certainly have
remained on Tara."
"Where
by now—just as certainly—you would be dead at Jaun Akhera's hand, you and
Gwydion and Morwen all three," said Elathan. "And, for you would not
then have come to Fomor, I and my kin likewise at Talorcan's. I owe a debt to
whoever gave Gwydion that word. When we come to Tara I shall thank that one
myself."
Aeron
gave him a long thoughtful look, but said nothing.
"But
where shall you go now? Children?" Thona had understood little of the
conversation, but had been fretting silently over the immediate future of the
three who would not be remaining.
"I
do not know, lady," answered Morwen. "The words we were following led
us here, and no farther. Unless Aeron
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has
managed to glean some new knowledge from the poem in her time since?"
"1
have not, though not for lack of trying; I had much leisure at Tory for
scholarship."
Basilea,
silent all this while, spoke up suddenly, as an old, half-forgotten tale that
had been tugging at her memory came clear at last.
"This
Arthur—whom we call the Red Dragon—he went on, did he not, Aeron, to his final
resting place?"
"He
did: a land called Afallinn."
"I
know, 1 have heard some of your hero-tales—but that is its name among its own
folk. Offworlders know that place.as Kholco." /
Aeron
sat up so violently that she scattered the crockery on the low table.
"Kholco! That is the volcano planet—is it close by?"
"Not
far," said Borvos. "But it is a terrible place. The only ones who
live there are the Salamandri, the Firefolk. It is not a world for
humans."
"But
humans could survive there?"
"For
a time, in the more stable areas. It is said that the Salamandri themselves dwell
in the very fire-mountains. You did not know of this?"
Aeron
shook her head, her mind plainly racing- "All know in Keltia that Arthur's
long home was in the island Afallinn, but 1 would guess that if any ever knew
at all that such place was a planet, the knowledge was lost with the raising of
the Curtain Wall. Not even the bards have a record that Afallinn is Kholco. I
am grateful to the Queen Basilea; this information has surely saved us time and
trouble, and may save us all in the end."
"No
thanks owed to me," said Basilea quietly. "It was Fionnbarr who first
told to me those tales; only long afterwards did I learn that the two places
were in truth the^same. You will go there?"
"I
must, and at once," said Aeron, looking not at her but at Elathan. "For
I give my promise that, if we come to find the Treasures, they go first to
Fomor to win back Elathan's throne for him, before we take them home to Keltia
to regain my own." She placed her hand over her heart in pledge of the
oath, and Elathan inclined his head in acknowledgment and acceptance.
"And
I go with you," he reminded her. "As we agreed."
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181
"If
he, then I," said Camissa a little defiantly, as if she feared Aeron would
deny her the journey, and leave her behind with the others among the duhfn.
But
Aeron only gave her a level look, then nodded assent; and Camissa was too
surprised at the ease with which she had apparently obtained permission—and too
grateful that it had been given—to pursue any reasons.
"We
will leave for Retaliator tonight," said Aeron then, "when it is dark
enough for safety. In the meantime—" She rose from the low table.
"Elathan, I know you have business of state to settle with Borvos and with
your mother and sister; I leave you to it. As for myself—she smiled down at the
duhin still seated upon the cushions—"I shall speak with Ta-vecher and his
kin, if it is their pleasure, concerning the knowledge of the trees."
Chapter
16
sent
for me, father?" Helior entered the fountain-room, her slippered feet silent
on the marble floor, and made the sketchiest of obeisances before approaching
the Emperor's chair.
"That
I did," said Strephon after a rather long pause. He looked up at her with
an unreadable expression, then down at a computer billet that rested in his
lap. "There has been some news."
Helior
kept herself to utter stillness, only her hands clenching and unclenching in
the silken folds of her skirts betraying her effort.
"Has
there?"
Strephon
began to laugh—a convulsive silent chuckle—and his voice was a purr. "Oh,
very good! A most convincing display of disinterest—I'd not have thought you
had it in you . . . Well, it seems that apparently I have loyal servants in
occupied Keltia after all, who are capable of getting a simple message to me in
spite of the Kelts' best efforts to the contrary."
"My
son—"
The
purr became a throbbing snarl. "Your son, madam, seems more and more
incapable, however simple the task! I wonder now that 1 ever thought him able
to win me Keltia, let alone fill my throne after me." He flung the billet
at Fier; she made no move to catch it, and it fell to lie half-concealed by the
hem of her skirt. "Not only could he not keep Aeron Aoibhell safely
imprisoned in a fallen and garrisoned city, he could not even manage to hold on
to the one valuable hostage he was left with—the Prince of Gwynedd, or, as I
suppose I must now call him, the King-consort of Keltia."
"Gwydion
has escaped?"
"He
has. Is Jaun Akhera deaf and blind as well as careless,
182
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183
to let
his only bargaining asset stroll out of Turusachan, and not lift a finger to
prevent it?"
Helior
flushed. "From what I have heard of Gwydion—"
Strephon
cut her off with a wave of his hand. "Yes, yes, no doubt. Still, the fact
remains that your son had him and now he has lost him."
Heiior's
fingers tightened until the jewelled nail-tips drew blood from the ball of her
thumb. "May I ask how this message came to you? I had thought
communications into and out of Keltia were mostly jammed by the Kelts."
"Ah,
now that was clever. A smallship broke through the blockade and got far enough
outside the Curtain Wall long enough to get a message off to me. They were
detected by the Kelts, of course, and destroyed, but the transmission was
already safely sent."
There
was silence in the room for a few moments, broken only by the plashing of the
fountain.
Then
Helior: "What will you do now?"
Again
Strephon paused before he answered. "I have thought much on this," he
said then, and a tide of dread lapped around her at the implicit pity in his
tone. "I warned you this might happen . . . My only recourse now is to
remove Jaun Akhera as my heir-designate. I entrusted him with the most
critical, delicate and desperate military operation we have ever undertaken, and
he has made of it only a shambles. The gains he did make now crumble daily
under his fingers, but his grasp on Keltia was a feeble one from the first.
Doubtless he was overmatched against Aeron after all ... Since 1 had informed
him before he left that he would get no further assistance from me, I can
hardly use that now as either threat or punishment. So this is my only
alternative, and 1 do not choose it lightly, or willingly, or gladly. But
according to our law the heirship, the etcheko-primu, is mine to bestow as I
please. Any Coranian has this right, the head of any house, be he Emperor or
goatherd; and 1 truly thought I had chosen well." He looked up at her.
"I am sorry, Helya, that it must be so."
Helior
bowed her head, keeping her face carefully empty of what she was feeling.
"I understand and accept, my father, though you know as well as I how
little I like it ... Well, give you good night, then. Perhaps the morning will
bring better news, or new counsel." She bent over him, brushed a cool kiss
on the seamed cheek and was gone.
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Strephon
stared after her. That was never like her, to take such a blow as that so
mildly and so calmly. His fingers moved mechanically, stroking the long fur of
the iittle dog he held in his lap. Helior had coveted the Imperial heirship for
Jaun Akhera too long and too fiercely to allow it to be snatched away now; she
had even relinquished her own rights and expectations in the succession to be
the surer of the coronet, and the greater crown to come, for her eldest. She
would not now sit tamely by and watch the prize go to another—one of her
brother's neckless brood, it would have to be, for Sanchoniathon, loya! to
perhaps a fault, would never accept the heirship over his elder brother. No,
Helior would not allow Akhi to be so dispossessed and displaced; she would
sooner kill him, Strephon, first.
And
that being so . . . Strephon set the little dog carefully on the floor and
leaned back in his chair. Well, flesh of his flesh though she be, that he could
not run the risk of. Since Helior could no longer be trusted to put her
father's life above all other values, she herself could no longer be trusted to
live.
Strephon
permitted himself a pang of remorse at the decision. The woman was, after al!,
his own and only daughter; she had been his dead wife's pet. But even Azaco
would have understood Imperial necessity as it applied here. It was a pity to
have to decide so, but pity mattered not a whit: If he allowed pity to hold
back his hand, Helior would surely strike him down first.
"A
pity all the same," he said aloud, and snapped his fingers for the little
dog to come to him.
When
the summons came from the Princess Helior, delivered by an impassive
maidservant, Tinao did not obey at once, but nodded a mechanical acceptance and
some words of reply. Though she did not know what in her panic she had said, it
must have made at least some sense, for the servant bowed and went away again.
Tinao
sat staring into the mirror of her dressing-table, seeing not even her own
exquisite reflection. Something must have happened, then, something fairly
terrible, for the Princess had few reasons to send for her son's mistress ...
If it had been something to do with Jaun Akhera, by now the news would have
been all over the palace. Therefore it must be the other thing: Helior was
ready to move against her father the
THE
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185
Emperor,
for the sake of her son the Emperor's heir; and now she summoned Tinao to
fulfill her promise.
So it
begins, thought Tinao, fresh panic rising at the imminence of the thing. And I
gave my word to her that I would aid her. I cannot withdraw now even if I
would. Death to break that word, and perhaps death as well to keep it . . .
With bleak resolve, she pinned up her streaming hair and left the room.
Since
the interview with her father in his fountain-room," Helior had not been
idle, neither of thought nor of deed. Plans had been made, messages sent far
afield—to Talorcan, to Laharan, to other planets and other places where favors
were owed her and deference due. It had not been easy, as she had known it
would not be, to decide upon her father's death as her only sure way of keeping
the Cabiri Throne for Jaun Akhera. But she was not only her father's daughter
but her son's mother: Once that death had been determined upon, it remained
only to find the best and the easiest way to accomplish it. Strephon was wary
with years and nature, and more than a few overreachers—her own late husband
among them—had tried in years past to achieve what she sought now. They had
tried, and they had failed, and they had perished very painfully for it.
/ must
not fail, she thought passionately, fingering the gold collar at her throat.
For Akhi's sake I must nor. . . .
But
plots take time to arrange, for suspicion must be avoided and traces concealed,
and some weeks passed uneventfully by in the palace at Escal-dun before any
move was made.
For all
that time, Helior had been the very model of a dutiful daughter. Though she was
careful not to overstep her habit and so rouse her father's suspicions,
nevertheless she was equally careful to be seen with him by others in the
palace as often as might be, and never in anything other than a merry or a
loving mood. She walked a fine line and she walked it well, for when at last
the night came that she had staked all upon, Strephon was not expecting it.
Which
was not to say that he had become careless, lulled or gulled into fatuity or
trust by Helior's machinations; nor had he repented of his own intentions
toward her. It was only that—well, he was old, and he was tired, and it was
surpris-
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tngly
pleasant to sit with his daughter of an evening, and with his old friend
Tenjin's pretty child, the one Akhi was so fond of; and listen to them sing, or
play the cithere, or let them beat him in a game of senet for stakes of a
bracelet or a biscuit ... It was a habit they had fallen into during the months
that Akhi and Sancho had been away at the war; nothing new there, and so
nothing to suspect.
So when
the guards outside the anteroom to hisychambers admitted Helior that warm
spring night, accompanied as usual by Tinao and that eunuch who was never far
from her side, Strephon did not think to think ill of it. That that lack of
thought might perhaps prove fatal, never even crossed his mind.
It had,
however, crossed the minds of some others. Earlier that night, there had been a
scene in Tinao's rooms . . .
"I
cannot do it! I cannot do as she asks!" Tinao, face blotched with tears,
black hair ragged where her fingers had torn in distraction at its smooth
coils, looked wildly up at Indarrak. "I thought i could, for Akhi's sake,
and so I promised. But it is impossible, 'Darrak, and what shall I do
now?"
'Darrak,
he thought. She has not called me that since she was a child; but she is still
a child, and no child should be made to play such odious games . . .
"What
has she asked, innaga?"
Tinao
laughed, a silvery note of hysteria in the usually sweet sound. "What has
she not! I have just spent three hours with her—three hours of unbearably
complicated plots to do with powders in rings and potions in wines; there was
even some talk of a retro-poison to be baked into the breadcrumbs he feeds to
his goldfish!"
"Which
will she attempt?"
"She
had not decided when I left her," said Tinao with a tired shrug.
"Neither the means nor the time has yet been fixed on; though not for any
daughterly softening of heart, I can assure you. She grows colder and harder
and more like Strephon every hour—almost I cannot believe that Akhi is her
son."
Indarrak
had lowered his eyes and kept his face a noncommittal mask. Not for all the
worlds would he have insulted Tinao by saying so, but she was probably the only
person in the Imperium ever to call Jaun Akhera's heredity into question—
THE
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187
particularly
his maternal antecedents: So patently was he his mother's son, and she her
father's daughter, that sometimes it took one's breath away to watch them all
together.
Yet it
hurt him to think that his young mistress needed to think of putting her hand
to the same Imperial muck . . . "Do not worry," he said at last.
"You will not have to obey Helior's command. You will not disobey her
either, but you will not need to do anything you do not wish to. Trust
me."
Tinao looked
up at him through long dark lashes that tears had spiked together. "You
have said that ever since I was a little girl—Trust me.' "
"And
you did."
"And
I did, and was never once sorry for it."
"Then
do so still. You will not be sorry now either. Ready yourself to go to the
Princess; it is nearly time for her to make her nightly visit to her father,
and he will expect you there as usual."
Always
that voice and that face had meant security and love and trust for her;
inconceivable that it should now be otherwise . . . Presently Tinao began to
repair the damages done to her hair and eye-paint, and Indarrak withdrew to
wait upon her finishing.
"See,
father, Tinao is here to play for you." Helior took her customary place on
one of the silk-draped couches that ringed the carp-pool, reclining on one bare
elbow, the fingers of her other hand trailing in the cool waters of the
fountain. A few hungry carp came up, nibbling at her fingers for their usual
breadcrumb meal, and she repressed a shudder and the sudden mad longing to bat
them out of the water, like a bear seeking his supper.
She
threw a glance across the pool at her father. He seems old tonight, she
thought. Older, and tired, and, yes, bored with things. Perhaps it was boredom
at the root of creation: the real force behind the universe, the true face of
entropy, the natural state of existence; and all deeds that ever were done were
only vain struggles to not be bored . . . She saw her father's gaze begin to
swing around to her, and she forced herself to stare idly at the glittering
fall of the fountain's waters amid the exotic water-plants. The sound of
Tinao's little cithere mingled with the noise of the failing water, and Helior
tried to relax. Another dull domestic evening, the Imperial family at home—but
another cornerstone in the edi-
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THE
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189
fice of
normalcy she was constructing brick by dull laborious brick, so that some night
soon, one night neither dull nor normal . . .
With a
shock colder than the iced drink she sipped, Helior felt Strephon's attention
upon her; he looked neither old nor tired, and most assuredly he did not look
the least bit bored. The citrine eyes were blazing, and triumph was scrawled
across the furrowed face. \
"So,
I have caught you out at last, my daughter . . . No, do not trouble to deny it;
I knew you should grow careless sooner or later. You hid your thoughts well all
these weeks; almost I believed—well, no matter now what I believed. But the
Plexari have long been skilled at reading each other's thought: You are my
child, I am your father; how could we not know what the other is thinking? But
I will tell you all the same: You planned to kill me to secure the crown—my
crown—for Jaun Akhera, and J planned to kill you before you could do so. The
question now is, who has been the swifter to plan—and to act?"
But
before Helior could draw breath to answer him, before the denial that
would-never have convinced the stupidest slave in the palace was even formed in
her frantic brain, Indarrak had moved from his place along the wall—implacable,
huge, silent, strong. Indarrak, who had come tonight as attendant to Tinao
according to his custom and duty; who had stood in the shadows, again as was
his custom, noticed by Strephon no more than a piece of furniture; Indarrak,
who now plucked the Cabiri Emperor from his golden chair;
who—expression-lessly, silently, without even the sound of a splash to alert
the guards beyond the doors—pitched the old man down into the tiled carp-pool,
and, with all his giant's strength, held him under the surface of the water.
The
carp fled in panic from the billowing white linen, the thrashing limbs; then
suddenly there was no more movement, no more bubbles rising from below, and
Indarrak'S glance came up to meet Helior's in perfect understanding.
"That's
finished, then," he said.
And
still Tinao sat frozen upon her pillow, her fingers continuing to pick out the
Emperor Strephon's favorite melody, like some ghastly and inappropriate dirge,
upon the little cithere.
Helior
swung her gold-slippered feet to the floor and padded around the pool's
circumference. No question but that it
was
finished: Her father's body floated face down, limp and lifeless, among the
lilies and water-acanth and bright-striped amylle. Better sure than sorry . . .
She arched one slim leg over the pool's rim, and with the point of one of the
gold slippers gave Strephon's floating form a vigorous shove. The body bobbed
gently in the water, and Helior turned away in satisfaction.
"You
have done well, Indarrak," she said then. "Superbly well, and I shall
not forget it. Tinao, do not stop your playing, my dear. We must all remain
here a while longer; toe thing must seem to be an accident when the servants
come to my father at his usual time of retiring." She laughed, a fittle
feverishly, and her eyes glittered in the low light. "Though tonight he
has retired perhaps a little earlier than he might have wished to—"
"A
good story to tell the guards and the servants, Serenity," suggested Indarrak.
"That the Emperor wishes not to be disturbed until morning: it will buy us
a little more time."
"Yes—yes,
that is well thought of. I shall give orders to die guards when we leave. It is
even true enough, in a way."
"There
will be questions," said Indarrak, as one who states a simple fact.
"Certainly
there will be questions. But who shall dare ask them of the Princess-Regent,
mother of the new Emperor?" Helior's face assumed a mocking sorrow.
"A tragic accident, was it not? In attending to the feeding of his fishy
pets, my father slipped on the marble floor and fell into the pool, hitting his
head and drowning. Alas that no one attended him at the time, else he might
have been saved; though by merest chance and ill luck, his loving daughter and
his heir's consort and her loyal servant had all left him only moments before.
A sad story; but it has happened before, to oid and careless folk far less
lofty than emperors, and it will happen again ... as accidents do."
"I
am sorry, madam," said Tinao in a low voice; a string snapped then on her
cithere, and she started at the sound.
"Sorry!
For what? Your Indarrak has spared me a most disagreeable task." Helior
looked at Indarrak, who was now looming protectively behind Tinao. "I know
your long loyalty to Tinao-andere, Indarrak, and I will see to it that my son
knows it too. You shall have for reward anything the House of Plexari can give.
Only name it; it is yours."
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But the
eunuch shook his head. "Reward enough, if my young mistress and her lord
be happy together."
"Well,
they shall be, now," said Helior with emphasis. "In the morning I
take order that my son gets the aid he has been so long denied. In his name I
will rally the levies and call up armies and fleets alike. Before the month is
out—say, by the time the late Emperor Strephon is lying in the splendid tomb in
the Valley of Kings that his grieving daughtV shall build for him—those fleets
shall be in Keltia. But long before that, Akhi shall know that he is
Emperor."
"How
can he know?" asked Tinao, wondering. "Keltia is both besieged and
blockaded; no message gets in or out."
"That's
the least of my problems. Ways will surely be found after tonight, now that the
old lion no longer lies in my path."
"One
reward I would ask of you, Serenity." Indarrak, having carefully rubbed
dry his bare wet legs and mopped the water from the floor, now bowed
ponderously before Helior. "That I might go with the fleet to Keltia? I
should like to strike a true blow for the new Emperor."
"No
blow could ever be better struck than the one you struck tonight. But I grant
this happily, and more reward to come. What is more, I myself shall go to
Keltia."
"Oh,
and I too!" Tinao rose from the pillows, the cithere forgotten in one
hand. "Please—I have not seen him for so long."
Helior
did not answer immediately, and Tinao began to panic at the implied refusal.
Then the Princess smiled, and lifted the girl's chin with one gold-tipped
finger.
"Nor
has he seen you," she said. "Though how he could forget such a sight
. . . Well, perhaps a closer sight might put the thought of Aeron Aotbhell back
into proper perspective for our Akhi. However he may think of her, he thinks of
her too much, and I want her out of his mind altogether But first steps first,
and we must leave now with caution." She began to move toward the doors,
raising her voice so that the guards might hear, her tone clear and merry.
"I shall do as you bid, my father, and command the servants that you wish
not to be disturbed. Good night and a sound sleep to you."
She
passed through the little anteroom with Tinao and Indarrak behind her. and the
golden doors closed after them. Within, in the tiled pool in the center of the
empty room, the golden fish swam unconcernedly about.
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
191
"I
confess, Straloch, I found your story astonishing, and a good deal more complex
than I imagined."
"Or
than you could have imagined?" Straloch allowed himself a small smile and
relaxed in his chair. He had dined that night as the guest of Haco Grex; there
had been no others present at table, which was not usually the case—the Kelts
had dined with the Terrans almost every night of the weeks they had spent in
link, and invariably the guest list had been more extensive, drawn from the
ship's officers and embassy staff personnel aboard the Argo. To exclude the
Princess Fionnuala, particularly, was unheard of. Perhaps there was some
special thing that the Earth ambassador wished to discuss in private with the
Keltic ambassador?
It
seemed that there was. "Her Highness and the others will join us
later," said Grex casually. "It was only that 1 wanted some time for
us to speak of matters among ourselves alone."
"Aye
so?"
"The
Princess Fionnuala—"
"—is
the ceremonial head of this embassage," said Straloch carefully. "But
the Ard-rian Aeron has commissioned me her negotiator-general, invested with
all due and royal authority to bargain as might be needful."
"And
what is your Ard-rian's idea of what may be needful?"
Straloch's
rare smile warmed his craggy features. "For now? Earth's promise only, as
I said to you in our first discussion. Later, maybe, that promise might be
called in."
"Military
assistance, then. That is certainly possible, and within the bounds my Prime
Minister has set—although, as you have said, it might not be needed. From what
you have told me, your forces managed to beat off the combined power of the
Imperium and the Fomori; cleared their fleets—after a surprise attack, too—out
of all your star systems save two, and even those two you keep for the most
part blockaded. What help could we give you? Surely you will regain Tara in a
very little time, once the Queen has returned."
"Gods
willing," said Straloch. "But Aeron has given me very specific
instructions, and I must obey her commands."
"She
has already agreed to a protocol of intent, and I anticipated working out the
terms of a treaty with her myself. Those are in fact my own instructions from
the Prime Minister and the Council of Worlds."
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"And
so you would have done," said Straloch, "had not Jaun Akhera and Bres
of Fomor altered the arrangement . . . No, what Aeron wishes now from Earth is
only that you wait and watch; she has her own plan, as has been
explained."
"Yes,
so you said." Grex tilted the cut-glass decanter: an antique, as priceless
as the port it contained. "These Treasures she has gone to seek—I think
you also said that the Queen did not know where they might be, or even n they
existed? Well, let us for discussion's sake assume they do exist, and she does
in fact find them and bring them safely back to Keitia. What can she do with
them then?"
"More
than even she thinks, very like. They are magic things, and I am no Druid to
call down the moon or bid the sun stand still."
Grex
frowned slightly. Magic: a fairly imponderable factor. He himself was no
materialist to belittle or reject such things— mind-powers had been developed
too long, and demonstrated too convincingly too often, for there to be many
scoffers left—but to stake an interstellar kingdom on so ephemeral a weapon
seemed, to say the least, quixotic.
"A
hard thing to prove," he heard himself say after a while.
"Or
to disprove. It is more than magic, though, Grex. It is our own particular
science, the knowledge that raised the Hanging Dance—Stonehenge—and the Great
Pyramids and many other great works beside. Those works still stand upon your
world; they were made once, and then never again; the secrets of their raising
were lost to you forever, and for all these centuries you Terrans have wondered
why. The answer is that we took the knowledge with us when we left Earth; it
was our heritage from Atland, given to the Keltoi of Earth by their Danaan
ancestors—and to the Coranians also, my sorrow to say, by their own Atlandean
forebears, the Telchines. We—and they—have expanded and refined that knowledge
many times since. The Treasures Aeron seeks are part of it, and if Aeron says
that they will serve her purposes, then believe that it is so."
"I
do believe it," said Deonora, after Grex had run the tapes of the talk
with Straloch for his consuls to comment upon. "He so clearly does not
approve, yet he shows utter conviction. Oh, she is a clever one, that Queen.
She knew that someone like Straloch would plead her case far better
THE
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193
than
someone who was more in sympathy with her methods. I look forward to meeting
her."
"Thomas?"
Thomas
de Valadon yawned. "Either way, it costs us extremely little," he
remarked. "He says his Queen does not ask for military aid at this time;
no problem there, we issue a statement of solidarity—Keitia has Earth's full
sympathy and support. If she fails in her bid with these sorcerous toys of
hers, and asks for our help in more concrete terms, most likely it will already
be too late for any help of ours to do her any good; and we issue a sad,
shocked statement deploring the Imperium's aggression and annexation of Keitia.
No problem there either. After all, Grex, it is only politics."
True
enough, thought Grex, appalled at his consul's brutal pragmatism, but only too
well aware that Valadon, however cynical, was unfortunately correct in his
assessment.
"Well,"
he said, "draft something for me to send home, then, and notify the
captain to resume course. Only"—he turned in the doorway—"inform him also
that it need not be full speed ahead."
"To
Keitia?" asked Deonora.
"Where
else? Oh, and the Sword will come with us. There is no point in their going on
to Earth while the war's outcome is still in doubt."
But as
Grex walked down the passageway toward his own quarters, he found himself
ashamed of his hope that, whatever was about to befall Keitia, Terra would get
there too late to be able to do much about it. / don't even know them, he
thought, but I do know they deserve better than that.
Chapter
17
T Tnder
Aeron's hand, Retaliator had fled Fomor like a %*J spurred falair. They had
been chased all across the system by ships of Talorcan's thai had been lying in
wait for them, but the pursuit had been little match for either Retaliator or
her pilot: Though heavily fired upon, Aeron had returned not a single round in
defense, relying instead on evasive action, and had winked her ship into the
safety of hyperspace the instant it was possible to do so.
Then
she had left Morwen to ensure that they had indeed gotten safe away, and gone
to the ship's common-room to relax a little; she had been nearly four hours at
the controls, under fire and pursuit, and she was exhausted.
She was
sitting on the upholstered bench by the room's main port, chin resting on her
folded arms, staring out at the unfamiliar stars, when Elathan came in behind
her.
"Crossic
for them," he offered.
"My
thoughts? They are worth not half so much."
"Not
true, Aeron, for I know very well you are thinking of Gwydion. Would you set so
low a valuation on him?"
"The
half of my kingdom would not be price enough." She spoke lightly, as had
Elathan, but he saw the solemnity of the feeling that lay behind the jest.
"He
was alive and well when we left Fomor," he volunteered, feeling helpless that
he could not give more substantial reassurance, knowing how he himself must
feel if Cami had not been safe only a few cabins away but back in Fomor as a
hostage. "1 had word only a short time ago from the Imperial ambassadors
posted to Tory that Jaun Akhera still held Caerdroia and that Gwydion was still
prisoner there— prisoner, but safe, Aeron; that must be some comfort."
"Better
comfort 1 would think it to hear of his escape."
"Could
he escape?"
194
THE
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195
Aeron
gave a short laugh. "From Turusachan? Guarded night and day by the
Marbh-draoi's minions? Not likely! By force of arms it would be impossible, and
by magic also impossible. Trickery would be his only hope, and even then he
would not be able to manage it alone. He would need at least some help—and help
will not be thick upon the ground."
"Perhaps
the palace folk—?"
"I
ordered them out of the City with the troops. As for the folk of Caerdroia
themselves, I should think very few remain, and those who do probably cooperate
to save themselves; or so at least I hope." She turned to stare once more
out the port. "Gwydion stayed to keep Keltia for me, and tricked me into
flight; sooner would I have fled with him into exile, or stayed with him in
prison, or stood with him on the scaffold. Where would not have mattered, so
long as we had been together." She cast him a sidewise glance. "Is
that not why Camissa came with you? She could have stayed in Tory in pomp and
safety as queen to your usurping brother; but she accompanied you into peril,
for love, and for faith in your return."
"And
in yours," he said smiling. "She is very impressed by you and
Morwen."
Aeron
looked away, acutely embarrassed. "That's as may be," she muttered.
"But 1 still think she had been better left like the others with the
duhin."
"Yes,
she wondered quite a lot about that: why you so readily let her come— Not, of
course," he added quickly, "that we are arguing the decision. But we
both expected a good deal more resistance than you gave."
"No
mystery there," said Aeron. "I but thought of how I had felt, having
to leave Gwydion behind. In spite of the danger for her, I did not wish to be
the cause of such pain for another.''
Elathan
sat down across from her and cast desperately about for a change of subject,
for he saw that Aeron was very near to tears.
"This
planet we sail to—what will it be like?"
"Kholco?
Harsh beyond belief. I have been studying tapes—" Grateful for the
diversion, she touched a button on a nearby panel, and the wallscreen filled
with viewfc of a blasted world: obsidian plains, rivers of frozen stone, giant
conical mountains robed in smoke and crowned with fire; on that world no green
thing grew. In a silence more eloquent than
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speech,
Aeron switched off the screen and looked inquiringly at her companion.
"What
like are these Salamandri?" he asked at length.
"Reptiloids,
who by all accounts can live in the fire itself, as Borvos tofd us. But by
preference they dwell on the slopes near the active volcanic ranges, where they
mine all manner of rare earths and metals for offworld trading. We—tht Kelts—
have even dealt with them in the past, or so the oata-tapes say: long centuries
before the raising of the Curtain Wall. I did not know that. Perhaps, if they
remember, that link of old may serve us now."
"And
if not?"
Aeron
shrugged. "They are a neutral planet, protected by treaty but unaligned
and unarmed. All they can do is forbid us the search."
"And
if they do?"
"Are
all kings of Fomor so full of questions? Chriesta tighearna! If they do—well,
if they do, then we will think of something else. Now let me consider in peace
a little while more. Go and plague Morwen."
When
Elathan had left, very pleased with himself for teasing his friend a little
from her somber mood, Aeron rose from her seat, and going to the viewport
slowly drew her fingertips over the vitriglass pane. Over there—in the far top
corner of the window—there lay Keltia. Her fingers paused, pressed harder to
the glass as her heart reached out to the stars she knew so well and could not
even see. Easier it would be to see the back of my own head . . . oh, Gwydion .
. .
She
began dispassionately to review the events of the past months, herself sitting
in judgment upon herself, and the verdict of the Queen's hearing-court was
severe. She would not be surprised, when she returned to Keltia (if she
returned to Keltia) if the Kelts should vote to depose her for cause. She had
half-expected it after Bellator: They would not have been to blame, then, had
they refused to sanction her as Ard-rian. But they had been in shock as deep
and grief as devastating as her own, and her actions had seemed to them good
and right, the only answer that honor could have made to Fomor.
And now
she had taken that same Fomor by the hand in friendship. Nay. not the same; for
then it was Bres, and now it is Elathan . . . Aeron laughed aloud, and the
laughter had the brittle edge of derangement to it. Well, the Kelts would
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simply
have to accept it, as would the Fomori; and she and Elathan were the only ones
who could teach them.
The
planet below them grew larger as Aeron brought Retaliator in to land. Kholco,
the volcano planet, was a place unsealed for men. Though most of the tales told
of it were not tme—the seas did not boil there, for the simplf reason that
there were no more seas, only dry oceans of wnat had once been liquid rock—it
was a place both bleak and dramatic. They flew for hours over flat plains and
broken hill country, ash deserts and smoking chemical lakes; and all the time
they saw never a sign of life, and nothing grew in all that waste.
At last
Aeron set down in a place the data-tapes had .indicated, near the edge of a
great lava plain that rose gradually to a ring of encircling mountains, their
rose-red peaks as sharp as knives. For all the seeming desolation, though, it
was indeed a place where people dwelt, for by the time the travellers emerged
from the ship, a crowd of perhaps a hundred had gathered to meet them.
Standing
forward of the other two, Aeron and Elathan undertook to speak for their party.
Though the Salamandri were a technological race, they were not themselves
spacefarers; neither were they inclined to warfare, and on all the planet there
was not so much as a sword or spear or blastgun. The visitors had therefore
laid aside their own weapons, and they stood before the Salamandri now unarmed.
Aeron
regarded the Firefolk with open interest. They were an ophidian race of
middling height, in build something like to the merrows of Keltia, though
thicker and less attenuated-looking, with an aura of strength and iron
endurance—both of which they would surely stand in need of, living as they did
on so harsh a world. For on Kholco, evolution had taken a different turning:
Here it had been the reptile races, best equipped for the savage environment,
that evolved to intelligence; and the weaker mammalian species—what few of them
there were—that remained mere beasts. But the Salamandri were dominant: Their
features were humanoid, though adapted, with nostrils and ears that could be
sealed against the omnipresent volcanic dust, and a thin inner eyelid to
protect their sight. Their skin was scaled and leathery, ranging in color from
silver-blue to almost black; the humans would later learn that skin color among
the Salamandri varied ac-
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cording
to the region each tribe inhabited: lava plain, ash hills, high desert.
The one
who seemed pre-eminent among them stepped out from the rest and bowed to his
visitors stiffly from the waist.
"Welcome,
friends from far." The voice was sibilant and strangely high-pitched, but
the tongue was fluent Englic.
Aeron
answered in the same language. "And greeting to you, my masters. We seek
in peace and ask your help/I am called Aeron." She pushed back her hood,
so that her hair fell down around her, gleaming golden-red in the dusty light,
and tensed suddenly as a ripple of consternation passed over the Salamandri.
Their
chief silenced them with a curious gesture, and turned again to Aeron.
"And I am Sargus," he said. "Father to those of our folk who
dwell here on the Morann. If I can help you, I will."
"I
do not know, lord, if you can," replied Aeron. "But I thank you
whether so or no. The others who are with me on this errand—" Swiftly she
introduced Morwen, Elathan and Camissa, and Sargus saluted each with the same
grave courtesy.
"Where
would you go on our world?" asked Sargus at last. "We are seldom
visited by outworlders these days, but when they do come, they have as a rule a
definite destination in mind."
"That
is just our trouble," answered Elathan. "We do not know where we must
go, only what we are looking for—and whom."
Sargus
exchanged a quick glance with members of his company. "And what—or
whom—might that be?"
Eiathan
shook his head and gestured toward Aeron. "This lady began the search, and
she must tell you what there is to tell."
Sargus
and Aeron contemplated each other for a long moment. "Then perhaps she had
best do so," he said. "But in more comfort than here. Can you all
manage riding-beasts? —Good; then come with us to the Ras of Salhi. We will
speak there of this errand of yours, and of how it may work upon the
Salamandri."
He
turned his back on them and began to walk toward the diff-face, and after a
moment's hesitation they followed.
In the
shadows of the lava bluffs stood a number of small horses, riderless, their
wide reins thrown over their heads and dragging on the ground; the beasts were
trained to stand thus for many minutes, waiting on their masters.
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Morwen,
whose racing stables were famous all over Keltia, exclaimed with delight, for
she had never seen such a breed before. The horses of the Salamandri were small
compared to the big-boned chargers of the Kelts, with slim elegant legs heavily
feathered above the hoofs; they carried delicately modelled heads on powerful
necks, their manes fell past the points of their shoulders and their arched
tails swept the ground.
"They
are stronger than they look," said Sargus, noting her attention. "And
bred to the weathers of this world—even as ourselves. Mount and ride."
He
marked the ease with which his alien guests swung into the high-cantled
saddles—horsemen born, he thought, all of them—and moved his own beast out. The
rest of the company fell into line behind him, six of his own folk bringing up
the rear.
Aeron
spent a few minutes learning the paces of her horse, then sent him into the
long rolling trot, so easy to sit to, and came up beside Sargus.
"Where
do we ride to?"
He pointed
ahead to a low dark line on the horizon. "To the Ras of Salhi, as I have
said. It is perhaps half a day's ride. That is our chief settlement in these
regions, so near to the—" He fell silent, and would say no more.
So near
to the what? Aeron stood in the round leather stirrups and looked out across
the plain. Streaked gray and brown and ocher, marbled sands hard and waterless
stretched for miles, shading to scarlet as the ground lifted to the
needle-sharp red mountains that ringed the horizon. Off to one side in that far
range stood a peak so huge and fair of form that she could not stop staring at
it.
"That
volcano—" she began, then faltered, disconcerted, as the same low dismayed
muttering as before went up from the Salamandri nearby. Sargus glanced at her
from around the edge of his hood.
"!
think it best if we do not speak of such just yet," he said, and his voice
if not hostile was certainly not cordial.
Aeron
bowed her head and moved her horse out a few lengths from Sargus's side. The
others had not heard the exchange, but they marked the attitude, and rode for
the most part alone and in silence.
Toward
midday, they came to a seemingly endless lava plain, glassy black ropes and
swirls and lacings as if spilt
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from
some drunken giant's pudding-ladle. Black grit stung their cheeks and crunched
in their teeth and blurred their eyes to tears. They pulled their cowls up over
their noses and mouths; already they were finding it hard to breathe in the hot
rising wind.
"Not
long now," said a Saiamand with satisfaction, to Elathan who rode beside
him. "Soon home." f
Elathan
looked around him with disbelief. The lands before the lava came had been the
bed of a vanished oc.ean; even now, the low brown hills with their scrubby
brush and twisted trees—the only vegetation he had yet seen—seemed not to
belong under heaven, and Elathan could not imagine how long it had been since
they had drunk rain.
"It
rains seldom in these parts," said Sargus, who seemed to possess an
uncanny ability to read alien thought. "There are but two seasons here:
short, cold and wet; and long, hot and dry. I know not which an outworlder
would deem worse."
On his
other side, Aeron drooped forward along the neck of her horse. Though there
seemed to be no lack of water in the capacious saddle pockets, she was
afflicted with an intolerable thirst, and the waves of heat rippling up from
the lava ground struck her like whips in the face. Her skin burned where the
sun could reach it, though beneath the hooded cloak she shivered as with fever.
Sargus
saw this too, and cursed to himself. Not clever to have brought them this way,
though he had done so in the interests of speed; but it was scarcely the first
time offworlders from a place of cool northern mists had been nearly grilled
alive beneath the fierce Kholcan sun. All four strangers were suffering cruelly
from the dryness and heat, but the two Kelts seemed afflicted most, and worst.
"Only
hold on until we reach those cliffs," he said encouragingly. "That is
our home, the Ras of Salhi, and there will be coolness and shade and all the
water you could wish."
By the
time the cliffs threw their welcome shade over the riders, the four visitors
were so ill of the heat and dust that the Salamandri had to help them down from
their horses. Sargus gave quiet commands, and more of his folk came out from
the great cavern-gate set into the cliff, two to each stranger, helping them up
the sloping path that led back into the mountain's hollow depths.
"Take
these to the guest-place, as quick as you can," he
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201
said,
himself half-carrying Camissa. "Wrap them in water-blankets and see that
they stay quiet until the sun is fully down."
In the
air-cooled dimness within the rock, Aeron felt the burning tightness leave her
skin, and she had only to lift a hand to find another keeve of cold water
standing ready. As the light withdrew from the high window, and cool violet
twilight took its place, she sat up, feeling her old self again, and saw with a
smile that the others looked equally restored.
Before
any of them thought of sending word, Sargus came in, followed by others of his
folk bearing enormous copper trays laden with food.
Greeting
each of his guests by name, he gestured them to join him upon the pillows and
carpets, in Salamandri fashion, and the trays were set down in the midst of the
circle of pillows.
"How
is it with you, now?"
"We
were feeling forspent indeed," said Morwen. "But no more."
"You
were sun-touched; it is a common ill for offworlders. I am sorry to have had to
subject you to it, but I thought to bring you here by the quickest and shortest
way, and dared not wait for nightfall."
"What
need of haste?" asked Elathan, setting down an empty waterbowl; it was
refilled before he had taken his hand from it. "And if there was such
need, why ride? Our ship could have brought us all both quicker and
easier."
"That,
I fear, would not have been permitted," said Sargus; and though they could
not read his expression, they sensed concealment. "No ship may come into
this country, not now."
But
Aeron had caught a faint note of something else. " 'Not now,' you say; was
there once a ship that came to this place?"
Unlidded
silver eyes were turned upon her, not Sargus's only but those of every Saiamand
in the room, and it took all Aeron's training to endure those stabbing alien
glances. She decided to risk all on one throw.
"I
think there was a ship," she went on boldly. "I think a ship from the
outworld came here many lives ago, and I think it is here even now. What say
you, Sargus? Is this not true?"
No
mistaking the reaction this time: not the low muttering she had evoked from the
Firefolk twice already that day, but a
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full-throated
accusing shout. The Salamandri, save for Sargus, had all leaped to their feet
and were staring hard at Aeron. She rose more slowly to her own feet, indulging
herself in one passionate regret that they had come unarmed, and" fell
almost instinctively into a Fianna combat posture, the one used "for
random hazard," when the one attacked does not know from what quarter
attack will come.
Sargus
barked a command to his people in their own tongue; still whispering menacingly
among themselves, they melted away into the shadows. He himself had not stirred
from his own place upon the pillows, and now he indicated that Aeron should
resume her seat beside him.
"Sit,
lady. When you have heard, you will know why you have so alarmed my folk. Sit;
1 cannot talk to you when you loom above me like a fire-mount."
Aeron hesitated,
then obeyed, setting one leg behind the other and folding herself down upon the
carpets like a roosting heron. "Tell us, then, if you can, and what you
may. Better it will be for all of us if all is known."
The
Salamand chieftain nodded. "I think so too. Well, this ship you seem to
know of, it came indeed to Kholco, and it landed not far from here—though it
came from a long way away before that, and you would know from where better
than I. It set down upon the Holy Mountain, the Firehorn—" Again there
came angry hisses from the shadows, and he waved his people to stillness with
the odd chopping gesture he had used before. "Indeed, it landed in the
fire itself. But it did not burn, and it did not melt; and after much
discussion we pulled it from the fire and brought it to a secret resting-place,
where it remains to this day."
"Did
you look inside, to see if any folk yet lived?'*
"We
knew from our scans that all aboard were dead," said Sargus. "But
those who took the ship from the fire opened it up to be certain of it. You
understand that all this happened many hundreds of years ago . . . But they
found none alive within, and they were grieved to find it so, for the warriors
of the stranger ship looked brave and high of heart, and their leader highest
and bravest of all." He paused, for Aeron had drawn herself up, with a
look of desperate urgency on her face. "No, they had not suffered; they
had not died of the fire, nor of the crash either, but were dead when they came
to it. They looked asleep; in fact, those who first entered the ship thought
they were asleep, not dead at all. But there is
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203
more."
Now it was Sargus who drew himself up, his silver eyes fixed on Aeron's green
ones. "There is a price set on the knowledge you seek, and before I may
give you that knowledge, that price must be paid: to me, and to my folk, and to
those that will come after. It is no price of coin or bartering, but one of
courage and faith. Will you do so?"
Morwen
cut in swiftly. "That shall be seen when the price is told!"
He
ignored her, still watching Aeron. " 'Let he who is a leader be a
bridge'—so it is said among my people, and so it shall be proved. Which of you,
then; for it is you and you"—he nodded in turn to Aeron and
Elathan—"who are bridges to your folk, not so? Which of you?"
"1,"
said Aeron, before Elathan could speak. "Any of us, if heart should count
for all. But I for that this journey of seeking had origin in my need, and so
the risk rightly must fall upon myself." She lifted a hand to silence the
protests of her companions. "Nay, my lions, gainsay me not. This is the
Gabha-Bheil, the trial by Beli. It is what I have come here for; not to venture
it now were vain indeed." She turned again to Sargus. "When?"
"Tonight?"
She
nodded. "No more delay; the swifter it is done, the swifter I shall
know."
When
Sargus had gone from the chamber, and the rest of his folk with him, Morwen
turned on her friend and Queen, and Elathan and Camissa were not slow behind
her.
"My
soul to the mountain. Aeron, and all my kin's with it! Sometimes I think
Straloch has the right of it, and you are every bit as thrawn as he would have
you! Or is it just that your brain was cooked too long in the sun today? You do
not even know what is this trial he speaks of—"
Aeron
let them scold, calmly sipping all the while at still another waterbowl—it
seemed that never again could she drink her fill. Then she lay back on the
pillows and looked up at the rock-hewn ceiling not many feet above their heads.
"It
matters not at all what is the trial," she said quietly. "Whatever it
is, it must be met, and mine it is to meet it. Any road, I do not wish to speak
another word of it now. I want to rest for a little, and you should do the
same. They will come for us when they are ready."
Chapter
18
Jt was
full dark when Aeron stepped out of the mountain-cave's high door, to stand
beside her friends under the great blue vault of the Kholcan sky. No moon
circled that world, so that the stars held sway unchallenged in the dark. A
cool breeze fingered her hair, and stirred the embroidered sleeves of the black
robe she had been given to wear.
Sargus,
coming up to them, bowed formally, then led them in silence down a path like a
long flight of wide and shallow steps, its uneven length lighted by alum
torches stuck into the ground at regular intervals. As they walked, they could
see in the torchlight that the path was lined by Salamandri robed and hooded,
four and five deep in places. Elathan reached for Camissa's hand, squeezed it briefly
to give her encouragement; her answering clasp drove his coronation ring into
his fingers.
After
perhaps five minutes' walk, they came to an open place, where a glow rose up as
if from many torches, or a great lowe or giant quartz-hearth. They could sense
tremendous heat not far away; every now and again the ground trembled beneath
their feet, and there came a faiflt far-off rumble.
Sargus
halted where the path came to an end, and turning to Aeron he drew her forward;
the others came cautiously after.
They
were standing on the lip of what appeared at first glance to be a river,
rolling slow and dark in its own wide channel. Then their perspective shifted,
and they realized, with a jolt of sickening horror, that it was no river but a
stream of lava, many feet across and near as many thick, a flume of molten
stone running between banks of harder stone. It moved slowly along the edges,
eddying and backing much as a true stream might do; in its center there seemed
to be
204
THE
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205
swifter
currents, tidestrings where the blazing stone raced like water under a thin
crackling crust.
Morwen
was seized with ambiguous dread. "Aeron—"
"What
is this place, Sargus?"
"It
is our holy place, the Kasulathra, our place of testing here at the Ras of
Salhi. It is said that only truth can live in flame, and whoso would speak the
truth and be believed must be willing to put it to the fire. The folk have been
told that you claim a right to the knowledge we spoke of earlier, and now they
demand that you prove that right. For you see it is not your doom alone, and
this is the price of your quest."
"This
is reasonable," said Aeron at once. "I accept."
"Will
you not wait one moment, Aeron!" snapped Elathan in a savage undertone,
then aloud to Sargus: "If we refuse to allow this?"
"Then
all your lives are forfeit," said Sargus. "That is the penalty for
sacrilege and blasphemy,"
"And
if I fail?" asked Aeron, though already she knew the answer.
But
Sargus said nothing.
"What
is permitted to me?" she asked after a while. "What means may I use;
what is it, exactly, that is asked of me?"
"You
must walk the fire," said Sargus. "Our priests will do so first, to
show that it can be done, and that there is no trickery about it. Then you must
do the same, if you can. If you succeed, you will earn the answers that you
seek. If you fail—"
"Aye
so." Aeron was silent a moment. "What of magic?"
The
Salamand studied her face. "You may call upon whatever power you wish,
your gods' or your own, if you think your magic may obtain here or your gods
will hear you. That is certainly lawful. But do not forget that we have here
gods—and magic—of our own, and I do not know how such a calling would be
received." As Aeron seemed lost in her own thought, Sargus bowed and stepped
away. "When the priests have crossed to the other side of the fire, then
you must make your own crossing. The flame shall determine of the truth."
One by
one, five priests, their hoods pulled low over their eyes, came to the edge of
the lava stream, poured plain water over their bare feet, and then, in single
file, moved smoothly across the ghastly river to the stone ledge at the far
side.
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When
all were assembled, they thrust their hands inside their wide sleeves and
settled expectantly into a posture of waiting judgment. |
Aeron
stared until her sight blurred to tears with the heat rising offihe molten
stone. No haste, she told herself. Those priests will wait forever . . . The
fact that the priests had successfully crossed the fire-river gave her no
smallest mind's-ease: had not Borvos said that the Salamandri could actually
live in the flame? If so, then merely strolling across it were no great
hardship for them; but it might be rather different for a human. But then she
turned to her friends, and what she saw in their faces made her heart shake
within her: hopefulness, fear, concern—all overlaid with a blind confident
terrifying trust that she could, and would, succeed in this ordeal. Ah gods,
would I were myself so sure . . .
She
stepped forward to the edge of the channel. A few feet away from her, the
stream of lava was dark and clinkered on its surface; it certainly looked solid
enough to support her weight, and indeed had already borne up the five priests,
who weighed far more. All across its width ran streaks and cracks through which
glowed white liquid fire, like seawater ebbing down the strand where a wave has
broken. Yet this was not water but a river of rock, come straight and bubbling
up from Earth-heart.
She
would have to do it, and now, before she lost her courage altogether. Another
ftor-comlainn; but I had sooner face ten Bresses as face that flame . . . She
was, like everyone else, already barefoot in the holy place, and now she bent
down and poured warm water over her feet to ritually cleanse them, as the
priests had done. But the water served only to purify, and would give
absolutely no protection to her crossing the fire. Do it now, (hen; no more
tarrying.
Aeron
lifted her arms in the Ban-draoi attitude of prayer, her othersight turning
inward, then out on a rising plane. Immediately she sensed the presence of a
Power, to whom all other powers were subject in this place. Yet she could also
sense that it was not totally alien, nor was it inimical to her presence. The
touch of its huge immortal attention was upon her; she had plucked the sleeve
of deity, and now that deity was turning to see who it was that had called.
She
felt as a child that has tugged its mother's skirts and is now abashed at its
own temerity, to trouble that vast eternal being. And that was maybe no bad
comparison, for this
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207
goddess
of the Salamandri was herself also the Mother; though in a strange and alien
garb, surely even so She would recognize Her servant—
Those who
watched so closely saw Aeron's face, flushed till now with the heat of the
lava, go pearl-pale, and then a look of real awe mounted like a tide into her
face. She laid fist to heart in salute, and spoke words in a tongue no one knew
to One whom she alone could see.
"She
is afraid after all," muttered Illach. a kinsman of Sargus who stood
beside him. "She will fail as I have predicted."
"Not
she. Look now." Sargus leaned forward, and Morwen who stood oil his other
side caught her lip between her teeth.
Aeron
had lowered her arms now, holding them sloping downwards, extended from very
straight shoulders, wrists slightly lowered in an attitude of unconscious
elegance. Her posture was that of a dancer, perfectly balanced within herself,
and her expression was that of a swordsman, alert for the slightest flaw in
enemy defenses. Her fingers were spread wide apart, and blue fire flickered
from tip to tip.
"That
is no magic of the Salamandri," said Illach, voice touched with reluctant
admiration.
"No
. . . who was it, do you think, that she spoke to?"
"How
can we know? She might have called upon the Dark Ones to help her; aye, Sargus,
they would have been pleased to interfere."
Sargus
glanced at him contemptuously. "Since when have the Dark Ones held any sway
here? Well you know whose place this is, and She keeps it well defended. If the
outworid witch has power here, it is by Her consent. Now watch and be silent,
and see the truth."
That
last injunction was strictly unnecessary: In all the vast throng, none had
taken his eyes from the scene before them. And now Aeron, moving slowly and
stiffly, as if she walked in dreams or deep water, came to the edge of the
lava.
She
never hesitated but set her bare foot down upon the molten stone as if it had
been cold marble. Her foot showed unearthly white against the shifting colors
of the lava, and it left a clear print behind when she lifted it to take the
next step, and the next and the next and the next after that, all in the same
stately stride.
Elathan
caught a long shuddering breath. The soles Aeron exposed as she moved across
the face of the lava were
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unblistered,
unhurried, as healthy and whole as they had ever been.
And
still that dreadful pacing continued, ceremonioup and terrible. They knew they
were witnessing something magical; but Aeron moved on, steadily, deliberately,
unaware of the many watchers, her eyes fixed on something a few yards in front
of her that those watchers could not see.
Reaching
the far bank, she stepped back onto firm rocky ground where the priests awaited
her. Stilt exalted, still half-entranced, she smiled at them from al! the
divine distance of her remove, and as one they threw themselves to the ground
before her.
That
broke her distance; she looked around helplessly. Such prostrations were
unknown in Keltia, and the idea disturbed her peace. She was rescued by Sargus,
who had crossed the lava stream by an arching bridge, and who now gently shooed
the priests away.
"Look
at your feet."
Fighting
reluctance, Aeron obeyed. But except for a dusting of fine black ash, almost
invisible, and a few tiny pieces of gritstone clinging to the arches of her
feet, nothing marred the smooth skin.
Then
Morwen and Elathan and Camissa were upon her, gleeful and triumphant, all
talking at once. More practically, they had brought her boots with them, and
now she sat on a rock spur to pull them on. Reaction had set in, and she was
feeling drained in body—though, paradoxically, unbelievably elated by the
experience. As for her feet, there was not even a tenderness or soreness to
them. She rubbed her hands over her face and looked up at Sargus. who stood
beside her, his slate-colored face, so alien, so vividly concerned.
"Do
you always prove your guests with such an antic? Small wonder then that the
Firefolk have so few visitors." But her smile showed no sting was housed
in the words, and he smiled in answer.
"Not
always; but any who came on such an errand as yours would have been so tested.
It is a matter far graver and deeper than you know."
"Is
it permitted to ask of this?"
Sargus
nodded. "That you earned when you walked upon the fire."
"Did
you see what happened?" she asked, pitching her
THE
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209
voice
away from those who pressed around them. "Did you see what I did
see?"
"This
night, no; but I felt it, and ! can guess—and other times, even, I have been
fortunate enough and favored enough to have seen. Did She speak to you?"
Aeron
nodded, eyes hazy with memory and wonder. Then the green eyes suddenly sharpened
into focus again. "She said—Well, She did not say, just so; rather did She
look, and somehow I did know. First of all She did promise me I would not be
burned by the flame; and then—"
But
Sargus suddenly grave laid light fingers upon her lips, so that she was silent.
"Speak not of it here," he said. "As I have promised, you have
won by this night's work the right to know all, and your companions with you.
But not here, and not now. In the morning. In the morning you shall know."
But
when morning came, Sargus was not to be found. After a light breakfast, Aeron
and the others were conducted by respectfully silent Salamandri to the cavern
entrance, where their horses stood saddled and bridled, each with laden
panniers; and still no word was spoken.
After a
swift-paced journey of perhaps an hour, guided by Firefolk outriders, they came
to a place where the land fell sharply away before them. On the far side of the
broad defile thus formed, the terrain began to climb again, rising in the
distance to the range of mountains Aeron had noted the previous day.
In the
shadow of the cliff wall, Sargus stood waiting for them, and when they rode up,
he bowed in greeting and gestured that they should dismount. "We must go
on foot from here." But where it was that they were going, or how kmg it
would take to get there, he did not say.
After
they had taken the packs from the saddles and shouldered them securely, Sargus
led them up a narrow valley that cut through to the other side of the great
ridge, its uneven floor choked with fallen rocks and drifts of dust. The valley
debouched at its far end onto a vista unparalleled: Across the hard dry plain
of the Morann, low cinder hills ringed the giant volcano that they had seen on
their ride to the Ras of Salhi. Today it was in eruption, a towering pillar of
cloud rising from its cratered peak.
Sargus
pointed. "That is where we are going."
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"To
the volcano?" exclaimed Camissa. "But why? Surely it is not
safe."
But
Aeron and Morwen exchanged swift glances, and their thought was the same
thought: This was what they had gome to Kholco to find. *
"Not
to the peak itself," Sargus was saying reassuringly to Camissa. "But
close enough; though the mountain has played a part of its own in this
matter."
"What
is it called?" asked Elathan, shading his eyes against the glare and
shimmer of the sun on the arid plain.
Though
he made no move of the body, Sargus's whole being seemed to reach outward to
the burning peak.
"That
is the Firehorn," he said then. "Mount Terror."
Hours
later, the little party plodded wearily to the crest of a low volcanic ridge
that rose out of the dust of the plain iike the back of a whale. Grateful for
the halt however brief, the offworlders flung themselves to the stony ground,
to find what ease and coolness they could. Elathan poured a cup of water for
Camissa, who was tired but whose cheerful spirits had not flagged all day.
Leaning against a rock nearby and eating some of the provisions the pack had
contained, Morwen closed her eyes and blessed the comparative chill that the
cloud had brought to the lands beneath.
Aeron
sat cross-legged a little apart from the rest, strangely drawn by the huge
volcano. For miles they had seen it as they walked, half-slipping,
half-limping, behind Sargus as he picked his path unerringly through the
black-glass desolation.
From
this angle, the volcano had a massive outline: Its great shoulders rose some
ten thousand feet in two tumbled levels, the central perfect cone rearing
itself up another three thousand. AH of it was dwarfed by the colossal biUow of
flame-shot cloud pouring upward from its summit. They were near enough now to
see the scoriae streams that crept down tile mountain's torn flank. The
eruption had begun last night, Sargus had told them; indeed, the tremors
heralding its onset had been those felt as Aeron came to face her firewalk—and
among the Salamandri, the feeling, again as Sargus had told them, was that the
two events were not unrelated.
Be that
as it may, thought Aeron, Arthur came here once; and if he, once or still, so
now I . . .
Morwen
had come up beside her, eyes on the same awesome sight. "Mount
Terror—"
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211
"We
are intruders here," said Aeron. "This is where worlds begin. This is
Earth-soul and Fire-heart, the Forge of Heaven, the Goddess's Anvil. We look
upon the flame that is Forever.''
They
watched in silence as the mountain tore itself apart with a new convulsion,
opening a gaping earth split. Fire hung like mist in the air, fire ran like
water over the ground, fire danced yelling in the mountain's throat. The ground
shuddered continuously, and across the miles of air came a low growl as of
prisoned thunder.
After a
while, Morwen touched her friend's shoulder. "Aeron, come away."
Aeron
shook her head. "It will not harm us," she said, still staring rapt
across the rifted valley.
"Come,"
said Sargus, and his word unlike Morwen's was command. "The time is now
that you have waited for."
The
ridge they followed now led them up onto the slopes of an extinct crater, dead
and elder twin to the laboring Terror. High up the gentle swell of the
mountain's side, a great cleft yawned upon darkness. Yet not entirely darkness:
As she climbed steadily nearer, Aeron could discern a glow from within, not
that of flame but a luminous werelight that somehow reminded her of something,
she could not say just what . . . She turned to look over her shoulder at the
glowing Firehorn, and then she understood.
"The
horns of light," she breathed, and in front of her Morwen stiffened.
" 'Before the portals of Uffem, the horns of light shall burn . . .'
Sargus, when did this mountain last give fire?"
He did
not slow in his stride, but they heard the changed note in his voice: a
teacher's pleasure at a clever pupil's reading of some obscure text.
"When
the ship you seek came to this world, both this mountain and its sister blazed
like beacons to light all the Morann. Then the fire died here in Scarva, and
now only the Firehorn is still alight, though that but seldom. But you are
right, Aeron: This is the place your poet named Uffern, and we are here."
They
followed Sargus in at the mouth of the cavern: An underground vault vast in
area, its soaring ceilings were lighted by a steady phosphorescence coming off
the rock
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formations
that rose from the floor and reached downward from the roof.
"You
have won the right to enter for yourself and your friends, Aeron," said
Sargus then. "You will find in this place that which you have lost."
"Arthur?"
asked Morwen, her voice quick and questioning. "Is Arthur here?"
But
Sargus, his eyes fixed on Aeron, made no answer. Then Camissa, who had run
ahead a little in her eagerness, turned and called, her clear voice echoing
hollowly m the huge stone spaces.
"Aeron?
Aeron, come and see. There are pictures on the walls."
She
looked where Camissa was pointing, and could not keep back a gasp. Upon the
living rock of the cavern walls, where the stone had been melted and made
smooth, prepared like a canvas for the artist's hand, pictures were carved and
colored, in wide panels like tapestries of stone. Strange beasts and stranger
people—if people they couid in truth be called— scenes of mystery and unknown
import, all lighted by the weird glow of phosphorescence. But the panel Camissa
stood before—
"How
came this here?" Aeron heard herself asking. "Sargus? How can this
be?" She drew her fingertips wonderingly over the carved and inlaid stone:
a picture of the Ras of Salhi, and the Kasulathra, and the river of fire she
had walked only the night before. On one side of the painted river stood a
figure she somehow knew represented Arthur; and on the other—
"It
is I," she said in a small voice. "But I do not understand."
Sargus
traced reverently the image of a woman all in black whose red hair fell around
her to her knees, like the fires of Terror itself; above whose head hung a
crescent and ring of stars; beneath whose feet was a cross-quartered circle:
Keltic signs, Ban-draoi signs, signs that no Salamand could hope to know . . .
And,
farther along the cave wall, scenes of utter and inconceivable devastation:
walls of fire, tides of lava, the planet itself cracking open along its seams
like an overripe fruit . . .
"This
is what She told me of, last night, when I was
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213
crossing
the fire," whispered Aeron, and Sargus bent his head.
"What
more did She let you to know?"
"She
showed me that my coming was as the herald of the End for all the
Firefolk," said Aeron with some difficulty. "That your people must
now prepare for—" She used a word in the tongue of the Salamandri that she
did not know even as she spoke it. "Is it so? Was 1 told aright?"
"You
were, and that is why when you first stepped from your ship and greeted us, my
folk were so dismayed to see you. Not because you were an unexpected
offworlder, but because you were the living image of this"—he touched the
stone again—"and the second sign of our ending."
"Sargus—"
"Do
not grieve for us, Aeron. We have long known that it must come, and we welcome
it."
"Aye,
but though Kholco must die, surely the Salamandri need not die with it? There
are goleor of other worlds you might go to—uninhabited ones that you could mold
to suit your needs and likings—green and clement planets, where you would not
have to live as dwellers in the dust."
"That
is true enough; but you see that we were made to fit this world, in spirit no
less than in body. Its fate and ours are linked, and when time comes for it to
change its life, then so too shall we. Think of it, if it frets you less, as
transformation, not as ending. But I need hardly teach you how death is no
ending: Did you not tell me only last night of the beliefs of your people, and
the faith they put in fate—dan, you called it. Well, this then is the d£n of
the Saiamandri. You are a forerunner of our end, but you are not the cause.
Neither blame nor shame in it."
When
she did not answer, he smiled and put a hand under her elbow to lead her
forward, and after an instant's resistance she allowed herself to be led.
Beyond
the anteroom cavern, the stalactite roof, running down to meet the floor,
opened upon a much vaster cavern, the far walls of which were lost in darkness.
The entire center of the mountain was hollow as a gourd. Hollow it might be,
Aeron saw at once, but it was far from empty: In the center of the wide smooth
floor stood a starship.
Bigger
it was than Retaliaior, though still less big than some craft: a long, lean
ship, graceful of line and scarred with
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battle,
its hull of dark green metal eerily lighted by the phosphor-lie hen growing on
the cavern walls.
Aeron
never knew afterwards how long it was that she stood there, unable to accept
the moment now that it had come at last: the implications, the depth and
breadth and scope of it. This, then, was the end of her searching; and whatever
that ship might hold, it held her dan, and the dan of ail Keltia beside . . .
"How
did you ever get it here?" That was Elathan, trying to master his awe with
pragmatism; he and the other twoNiad come up quietly behind Aeron and Sargus as
they stood,
"Not
easily," admitted the Salamand. "As I told you last night, it crashed
upon the Firehorn, many cordoan of ori ago—hundreds and hundreds of years, in
your reckoning. We believe, judging by eyewitness accounts and records of such
things as speed in air and trajectory and changes of course, that it crashed
not by accident, but was deliberately flown into the Firehom by its pilot, on a
course he did not live to see completed. We had already determined that none
lived within, so we did not rush to pull it from its resting place; and when,
eventually, we did, we brought it here. As to the pictures on the outer walls
of this cavern, they were made later, after the ship was placed as you now see
it; for models we used things that had been seen within it, the one time it was
opened, and also things that were shown to us by other means . . . We touched
nothing and no one," he added. "All is as it was, and your kinsmen
have slept in peace."
But
Aeron was no longer listening. She had walked forward, as one in the grip of
the mightiest of magics, and stopped now before the ship's main door. Prydwen .
. . She reached out a trembling hand to touch the green metal hull, her thought
veering back to the Coranian ship, that first Marro, as remote and alone in the
Morimaruse as was Prydwen here, each in its last littlest harbor, each
sheltering its gallant ghosts: Prydwen moored in earth and fire, as the Marro
was moored amid darkness and stars.
Elathan
touched her arm, and she started violently. "Will you go in now, Aeron? As
Sargus says, this is what you have been seeking."
She
lifted haunted eyes to search his face. "Have I been seeking?" she
asked quietly. "Or rather have I been sought?"
"I
do not know the answer to that," he said as quietly. "In
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THRONE OF SCONE
215
the
end, is there so great a difference? Is
there even a difference at all?"
Aeron's
eyes shuttered briefly, as if a lamp had gone out behind them. "Nay,"
she said then. "Very like no difference that would make a difference; and
perhaps the seeking was the true test, and not the finding ... Let us all go
in, King of Fomor. This is all our seeking."
Chapter
19
\
Elathan
and Camissa stood very close together, watching as Aeron vanished within the
ancient hulk. It has been almost too strange, he thought: Aeron's coming to
Fomor in the first instance, and the friendship that had been so delicately
wrought between them, and then the hammer-blow of Talorcan's betrayal and
usurpation—all the things and more beside that had combined to bring them to
this place. He knew very well what Aeron hoped to find here, and he understood
the desperation that had sent her on such a search, understood even what she
must be feeling at this moment, for the Red Dragon was as much a legend on
Fomor as On Tara. But what now? There is surely more to this quest than mere
discovery ... He felt Camissa's hand pulling at his, knew that she had spoken
to him and he had not responded.
"Aeron
is calling us," she said, and gave another tug to his hand. "Did you
not hear?"
When
they came up to her, Aeron was standing a few yards inside the door of the dead
ship. She had found the light-board, and now a dim green glow illuminated the
long corridor that opened up behind her. She said nothing, bflt gathered them
all together with her eyes and moved carefully along the passageway, her boots
stirring up dust as she went.
She
headed first for the command cabin, remembering how it had been aboard the
Marro—Jaun-Zuria, dead in his captain's chair—and thinking that perhaps Arthur
would have done likewise. But when she stepped through onto the bridge, she saw
in the low green light that the room was empty, and she turned away again.
"In
the cabins, then?" asked Morwen, voice hushed.
Indeed,
in the cabins: As they moved through the corridors, what they glimpsed beyond
several half-open doors gave
216
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
217
evidence
of how those of Prydwen had bestowed themselves at the last; and behind those
doors that had not sprung ajar over the centuries it was much the same.
Within
the cabins, they lay upon blast-couches and improvised pallets, like warriors
in a royal barrow-mound or chambered tomb, their hands still folded around the
hilts of their weapons, tores still gleaming dully at their throats, heraldic
devices on their shields and cloaks and tunics still decipherable even now.
Without tears Morwen beheld several who bore the black Douglas lion, and Aeron
the wolf's head of Aoibhell, and nor was the gold-antlered stag of Gwynedd's
princes absent from that place.
Yet
still after many minutes' searching they had not found the one they sought, and
also dreaded to find; not until they came upon a chamber opening off an alcove
somewhat removed from the others, to deosil and aft of the ship. Two guards
still sat flanking its door, their backs set against the metal wall, eternally
vigilant against who now knew what looked-for enemy; their hands still gripped
the hills of their naked swords.
Aeron
halted, putting out her hand to Morwen, whose return clutch was painful in its
pressure. This was the end of their search, here, behind that door, the answer
to a question that Keltia had asked for fifteen centuries. She had only to step
through for all to be made known. Even so, it took more than a few moments for
her to gather herself to pass between the seated guards, to put her hand to the
door-stud; there came a faint whine of metal moving over metal, and then the
cabin stood open before her.
It was
larger than she would have thought to find on a starship of that era: a chamber
of perhaps a score of feet on a side, its ceiling of quilted metal some ten
feet above the black solenized floor. No dust lay in here—the room had been
sealed too well for that—but the ubiquitous green lights burned here too, and
their glow fell upon the low couch, and on the man who lay there.
Tall he
had been, Aeron saw, taller even than Gwydion: his hair and beard a chestnut
brown streaked with gray; strong bones and square hands, though the fingers
were unexpectedly graceful—hands for harp and sword and pen alike; and though
the lids were decently closed, Aeron knew that the eyes behind them had been
dark as peatwater.
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But the
face astonished her. Death had not diminished, nor had the centuries taken
away; and whatever torment of body or of spirit may have attended this man's
going out, it had not marked his countenance, for he had not allowed it to do
so. Strong was that face, and wise, and gentle, and implacable, and somehow merry,
as if he knew something more true than he would tell. Aeron moved forward as if
drawn by the hand, and when she reached the bedside she went instinctively and
unselfconsciously to one knee.
"Hail
King of Kelts," she whispered, and, taking Arthur\s hand in both of hers,
kissed it in the age-old gesture of fealty. She glanced up at the others, saw
Morwen's face streaming, though her features were fixed as iron; Elathan's,
pity and respect both alike upon it, and she could not tell which was meant for
her and which for Arthur; Camissa's, open with all the sweetness of her nature;
beyond them, Sargus's, and almost it seemed that she could decipher the alien
countenance a little, and that he too was not unmoved.
She
rose and stood looking down at the dead king, aware as if from a great distance
of the others quietly quitting the chamber, leaving her alone with Arthur. It
seemed that she could stand there forever, that this was the centerpoint of all
her days, the still spiral's core, from which spun off like a triskele in all
directions the rest of her life and Keltia's together.
She had
thought she would be focusing on Arthur only. Instead, she found her mind
turning inexorably back to that time three years ago, that time standing out
from Bellator when time had stood still for her then as it did now, when she
had knelt beside another dead King of Kelts upon another dead ship. Memories
came crowding back like hungry ghosts, and she reached blindly behind her for
the cabin wall, leaned back against it as her senses reeled, present and
doubled past becoming all one, and all pain . . .
Ah,
better it had been if they had been blasted to atoms, bright particles to dance
through frozen space forever. But that had not been the way of it. Upon Rohan's
giving her the ghastly tidings, she had left Caerdroia without a word, had
taken her ship and gone straight to the place of the disaster. She had walked
upon the crippled embassy ship, had seen the broken bodies of her parents lying
in each other's arms; the poor twisted shells of the crew, the other members of
the
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
219
diplomatic
party—all of whom she had known and many of whom had been friends.
And
then, worse still, the destroyer that bobbed disabled a few score lai away.
Rhodri dead with the others upon the bridge, his bright hair dulled with dust
and blood. She had knelt beside his body, her face a mask, her eyes wide and
dry and stony as bones, no tears, no visible emotion even; and that too had
become part of the legend. But that had not been it at all. She had not wept
because tears were ridiculously not enough for what she was feeling; in the
white-hot heart of grief, that motionless blaze at the core of her being, a
fury was forming that would destroy a world.
She had
put her grief by then, choosing instead to nourish her vengeance; then later
there had been very nearly madness and death, and no time to mourn but only to
try to survive, and even that only by grace of her cousin Melangell's devoted
efforts. But all of it came back upon her now, no longer to be denied; and now
she did not put it by but let it break over her, throwing wide the gates of her
soul to let it in. And, alone in the cabin, just Aeron and Arthur together, she
dropped slowly to her knees, and, burying her face in the King's cloak, she
began to weep; wept now for all those times she had not dared to weep: for
Rhodri, for Fionnbarr and Emer, for Elharn, for Theo, for Arthur himself . . .
When
she could cry no more, Aeron rocked back onto her heels and stood up again,
brushing tear-dampened hair off her face, unspeakably weary but incalculably
glad. A kingdom's long search had been ended here, but also a woman's long
burden had been lifted, and both by Arthur's hand.
Emerging
again into the corridor, she saw the others standing a little way away. They
looked relieved to see her, if somewhat subdued, and Elathan gave her an
unsmiling glance that was like a handclasp of support and affectionate
approval.
"It
is well then, Aeron?" asked Morwen, who had sensed something of her friend's
feeling, and had been the one to shepherd the others from the cabin, to leave
Aeron alone with the dead king.
"It
is extremely well."
"We
have been all through the rest of the ship," said Sargus. "And
everywhere it is as we saw earlier, your folk all peacefully asleep in their
cabins. They do not seem to have suffered."
"They
did not," said Elathan. "We found a log of sorts in
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the
command cabin. They came here because at first they hoped to find materials
with which to repair their battle damage; but before they e^en reached the
planet, they realized they were finished and could never make it home; The
ship's first officer, one Bedwyr, reports in the log that they managed to get
seven of their number—all they could save in their only operable lifeboat—off
on a pretext, and then they deliberately sent the ship into the volcano's
heart. They were dead by the time that happened, of course."
"
'Three times the fullness of Prydwen were we that ^ent with Arthur,' "
murmured Morwen. " 'Except seven, none returned from Caer Coronach'—AH
that way through so much, only to end here, even though they be with
Arthur."
"Better
to sleep in Arthur's bosom here in Afallinn than to rest in the Valley of
Kings." Aeron found that she could not convey in words or even in kenning
what she had felt back there in the cabin; it had been too much hers for her to
share. A matter for princes as well as for people, she thought, for am I not
Queen of Kelts but by Arthur's grace?
"There
is a thing we must do now," she said presently. "Little enough do I
like to do it, now that I have seen; but it is that for which we came
here."
"The
Treasures," said Camissa, and Aeron nodded.
"They
are within, in a chest at the bed's foot; I sensed them as soon as I entered
the ship."
Yet
when she knelt at last in front of the ancient iron-oak chest, her hands
resting lightly upon its carved top, Aeron was gripped by a paralyzing
reluctance to raise the lid. It was not that she felt unworthy to do so, or
that her action would profane that which lay within, for she knew she was both
cleansed for it and bidden to it; but rather it was that very sense of
inevitability which daunted her, a feeling of being moved by dan and not by
will, as one piece in a great game of fidchell that had been laid out upon a
cosmic board long before she had been born in any life; and too, a sulky
ridiculous resentment at being so used. She shook off rebelliousness and
reluctance alike. These within, however sacred, are still but tools to my hand;
and I a tool to—whose? And if it isfidchell, better to be a queen than a pawn .
. . She took a deep breath and lifted the lid of the chest.
Within,
thick folds of some stiff and metallic fabric covered the contents. Forcing
herself to a fine semblance of outward tranquillity, Aeron turned back the
fabric with a hand
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
221
that
shook only a little. Beneath the cloth, a glittering tangle of objects lay
exposed, shining in the room's green light with all the glamour of the Sidhe.
"The
Thirteen Treasures," breathed Morwen.
Aeron's
face had an expression upon it before which the others, even Sargus, looked
away. Then she stretched her hands, as if in blessing, over the jumble within
the chest, seeing shapes now: a sword-blade jutting out at an angle, a round
bowl or quaich wrapped in a dusty mantle, other things she could not as yet
discern.
"With
these," said Aeron, in a voice not even Morwen had ever heard her use
before, "with these the Danaans won Ireland, and Brendan won Tara, and
Arthur won Keltia back again for us all."
She
closed her hand over the hilt of the sword, feeling it leap to the touch,
vibrating beneath her fingers as she drew it slowly clear of the chest. It was
a broadsword, long and heavy, of the kind used in Keltia since the earliest
days. Its hilt was two intertwined serpents: In the mouth of the golden one was
an emerald, in the silver's a clear rock crystal. Their eyes were rubies, and
each scale of them was separately etched. A plain leather scabbard, worn with
age and use, concealed the blade, but Aeron did not draw the sword from die
sheath.
She
smiled at the surprise on their faces. "This is Fragarach, the Retaliator
for which my ship was named. It is the sword of light Taliesin speaks of; to
draw it now, in curiosity only and not in need, were death for all. It will be
needed dearly enough later on." She set it carefully aside, looked up the
length of the couch at the King's face. Nay, she thought, with a feeling that
was the inner equivalent of a smile, you do not begrudge me your weapons, my
lord; for it is your dan as much as it is my own: mine to come, yours to wait
till that I came; and also it is Elathan's, and Sargus's, and I cannot say how
many others'; all bound alike into a sword-knot that has been a thousand years
and more in the making . . . She reached again into the chest and removed a
long, thin object, perhaps as long as a tall man was high, tightly wrapped in
folds of silver silk.
"And
that?" asked Camissa.
"The
Spear Birgha." Aeron couid feel the power in it; it tugged at her hands
like a horse at the bit, straining to be away and about its work. "It is
said that never has it missed
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its
mark nor failed to slay. It kindles fire from the air with the speed of its
flight, and when it strikes home in righteousness, it roars."
Elathan
felt the small hairs on his nape suddenly stand on end. When Aeron had first
confided in him of her search for the sacred things of her people, he had
acquiesced in her hunt, for he had no better plan of his own and of force must
go along with hers; but also because it had seemed no bad idea, and too, she
had taken oath that his throne would be won back by those Treasures, even
before her own. Ann he had believed her, and still did. But this had grown now
to something so far beyond anything he had ever anticipated, consciously or no
... Beside him, Camissa made a little flinching movement and a small sound, and
he put an arm around her, feeling her fear. / too, my love, he thought grimly,
and, I would bet, for all her confidence, even Aeron.
Aeron,
had she been aware of Elathan's mental wager, would not have taken it for any
coin: She was afraid, and did not deceive herself about it, though she took
care to conceal it from the others. Even so, Wenna doubtless knows . . . She
put the thought aside, and bent again to take something from the chest. Her
wrists almost snapped with the unexpected weight of it, and Morwen leaped to
help her hold it.
But she
too was surprised, and taking it from Aeron carefully balanced the thing in her
hands. Astoundingly heavy for its size, beneath its still-supple covering of
gilded leather it felt smooth and round and hard. Morwen began unthinkingly to
unfasten the jewelled clasp.
"Do
not so, Lochcarron." Aeron's voice was softly pitched, so as not to alarm,
but it carried command like the bite of a whip. Morwen set the thing down
hastily at Aeron's feet, for she was suddenly afraid.
"What
is that, Aeron?"
"I
think it can be only one thing: the Eye of Balor, called latterly the Stone of
Fal."
The
names meant nothing to the Fomorians or to Sargus, but Morwen stared fearfully
at the leather-covered globe, the size of a man's head. If only half its deeds
had been done that were sung or spoken of—a tenth part, even—then this stone
was one of the mightiest weapons the worlds had ever seen, and one of the most
destructive. It was said that the Danaans had captured it from their earth
enemies the Fomori, when first they battled for possession of the land of
Ireland. The
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223
tales
told that none could look upon its unshielded gaze and live, that it could
bring burning death to anyone and anything for a league around; ajid in that
moment Morwen believed it all.
"Which
is?"
"A
stone of power; kin, maybe, to the crystals whose wrongful use caused the
sinking of Atland. It is a fearsome weapon, and a fearful thing to think to
use, even in self-defense." Aeron had in her hands now the bowl-thing she
had noticed first of all when she opened the chest. "And this is the last
of the four chief Treasures: Pair Dadeni, the Cauldron of Rebirth." She
drew off the gold-embroidered silk mantle, itself a Treasure, that had wrapped
it, revealing a fair silver bowl set with pearls in the band of knotwork around
its rim. "It has the power—or so, again, it is said—to restore even the
dead to life, so that they are laid within it."
"It
is but a quaich!" protested Morwen. "Scarce of a size to fit a
hand!"
"As
to that," said Aeron, shrouding the bowl once more in the cloak, "it
is in my mind that not always is it as we see it here. It is the original of
all crochans and saining-pools; if it did not exist, no more could they, for it
is from this"—she held it up in both hands—"that they take their
power. You and I, Wenna, of all those here know most truly how such a thing
might be."
Morwen,
as clearly and vividly as if she had been teleported there, found herself back
at Tomnahara that terrible night when Gwydion had dared to fashion a crochan
for Aeron's own healing, without which she had surely died. And this, then, was
the source of the power upon which he had called, the reality of which she
herself had felt, and so could not deny . . .
"If
I understand you rightly," said Sargus, who had said no word since they
re-entered Arthur's chamber, "these things you have come so far to find
have more to them than what we see here."
"Truly,"
said Aeron. "They are both symbol and reality, operating upon more planes
than we know, or can know. They are relics, right enough, but they are also
tools, meant to be used. And by the gods I do mean to use them; much work for
them to do, and they have lain idle long enough."
"And
Arthur?" asked Sargus. "You will take the holy
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tilings
of your people back to their home; will you not take the Red Dragon and his
folk home again as well?"
Aeron
shook her head, surprising all but Monven, and began putting the sacred objects
back into the chest. "Nay, that would be to fly in the face of dan. It was
written that the King should sleep at the last in the island A fail inn, with
his companions about him. Here they shall remain."
"It
was also written, if I am not mistaken," remarked Elathan, "that he
should come again when Keltia had need of him." 1
"Well,
and has he not? Not in his own living person, perhaps, but certainly as he is
here, and in his spirit, and in the weapons he has put into our hands; and in
the long truth of his ending, which is a greater weapon than most. What need is
there of more return than that? We shall take his spirit home with us; so will
his dan be accomplished. That, maybe, is the real meaning of the legend."
Even in
her deepest soul Aeron did not voice the hope she cherished as future reality:
that, perhaps, some time years yet to come, there might be a child of hers and
Gwydion's, a child of Arthur's spirit—and that child would be the true return
of the Red Dragon. Such a hope, however, if not the height of traha and
vainglory, and even if possible by the laws of dan, would be many years away
from fulfillment; and perhaps Arthur was already reborn, anyway, and would make
himself known in a new life in a new and different manner.
"Nid
myned a ddel eilwaith," she said aloud. " 'What comes again has not
gone.' . . . But tonight we shall make a fitting farewell to the King of
Kelts."
That
night, as the sunset glow was fading from the.sky and another, eerier, glow
grew brighter from the peak of Mount Terror, a long skein of torches stretched
like a string of fire-pearls along the ridgeback from the cavern entrance: the
Salamandri of the Ras of Saihi, called to this place by their leader Sargus,
and their outworld guests, all come to lay the Red Dragon to an honored rest.
Aeron
stood flanked by her friends as the great inner cavern filled with Salamandri:
the same folk that had watched the previous night as she walked the fire; and
even when they were all assembled inside the cavern, they filled but a small
corner of that enormous space.
There
was more in the air than ritual: The Salamandri had
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225
come to
do honor to Arthur, and also to Aeron, who as chief priestess of Keltia would
deliver that honor to him, and who had won as much for herself. But beyond even
that, there was a sense almost of mourning, a kind of palpable autumnal feeling,
that seemed to cloak the Firefolk in its aura. It caught at Aeron's soul like a
cold hand, and she turned to Sargus with pain and query in her face.
"We
have talked of this before, you and I," he said gently, for he knew what
she was feeling: guilt, responsibility and other things besides. "It is
that the people accept that you are in truth the second messenger, as the Red
Dragon was the first; and the third messenger, the Herald of our Change, is not
so far off now, though I think few of us now alive shall live to see it. You
spoke only a little while ago of the legend of Arthur and his rebirth; and you
have faith in your own life after this life—well, the death of AfalHnn will be
no less a rebirth, for it and for us, and that is why we do not fear it. We can
sorrow for it, but we are not afraid. No," he added swiftly, to forestall
Aeron's protest, "nothing was made to last forever in this world: not a
people, not a planet, not a galaxy. This you know; and it is no burden of
yours—no, nor ours either."
Aeron
kenned in his words and in what lay behind them how very right he was; though
her sadness remained, it was not all sadness now, and when she turned to face
Prydwen her head was high and her countenance unclouded.
The
ship stood as she had done for centuries; within the now-sealed doors, the
Sleepers lay as they had passed into slumber so many lifetimes ago. Arthur
himself had not been disturbed, though the carved chest was gone now from the
foot of his bed. One thing only was there that he would not have known were he
suddenly to awaken: Aeron, liking not to take and leave nothing in return, had
placed on the hand that had once wielded Fragarach the black and silver signet
of the House of Aoibhell, that had come down to her from Brendan Mor, first of
her family to wear the Copper Crown. She touched the white indentation on her
finger where the ring had been, looked up to meet Morwen's sympathetic gaze.
"Did
I do right, to put the ring where it now is?"
"Leave
it there, so." said her friend. "It is very well bestowed, and not
even Brendan Mor himself would say otherwise."
After a
moment Aeron nodded. // is well bestowed, though
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now my
hands are bare indeed . . . First the Great Seal had gone from her finger, the
big carved emerald of unknown antiquity signifying the governance of Keltia,
which she had left in Caerdroia under a fearful guardianship; and now the
Unicorn Seal as well. Still, bare her hands might be, but scarcely empty:
Weapons had been given into them, and those weapons the wonders of the earths.
And that, surely, could be no bad bargain ...
The
cavern was filled now. The light of the torches.in the hands of the Firefoik
went up and up, throwing the dr/pstone icicles of the ceiling into sharp
relief, casting black and fantastical shadows over Prydwen and onto the cave
floor beyond.
Aeron
stepped forward, and profound quiet settled over the watching throng.
"With the ebb, with the flow," she said in a clear carrying voice,
beginning the litany of the Keltic death rites. Behind her, Morwen, who had
also instructed Elathan and Camissa, gave the response with the others.
"Mar
a bha, mar a tha, mar a bhitheas vyth go bragh." 'So it was, so it is, so
it shall be forever' . . .
As the
ceremony proceeded, Elathan found himself paying more heed to Aeron herself
than to the ritual. She has changed. he thought. There had been a strange
forging here in mis forge-planet; a forging of soul. There seemed something in
her now that had only been possible before: possible as the sword-blade is
possible in the rough length of findrumna, before the smith's hand is set to it
in earnest, before it is heated in the fires of the smithy. And if the strength
be not there, or if a flaw furrow the metal, then all the smithcraft in all the
universe cannot draw mat power forth, nor make shift to work round that flaw
...
Morwen
too found her attention wandering from the prayers to the priestess.
Self-confident Aeron had ever been, like almost all her family; at times
spectacularly so. Though the war and its sequels had badly shaken that
confidence, now all the swithering uncertainty Morwen knew her friend had been
plagued with of late seemed to have vanished. In its place was a quiet new
assurance—nothing vaunting or boastful, just a calm confidence, fixed and
solid, as if it had its roots in something more enduring than the earth of this
world.
Something
happened in that cabin, thought Morwen. Something between Aeron and Arthur;
some secret exchanged between soul and soul in a fated hour. What it was she
did
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227
not
know, and doubted if even Aeron herself yet did; but, whatever it might be, it
was of such a nature as would not for long stay hid ...
The
rite was not a long one; quite a few minutes before Elathan would have thought
to grow restless, it was over. Aeron spoke the Last Prayer, with a siient
farewell of her own, and traced the sign of the circled cross in the air before
her. Where her hand passed, the outline of the sign glowed silver-blue in
momentary afterimage, then faded, and Aeron turned again to her friends.
"An
unnecessary speeding, most like—doubtless they have all long been gone from
here, and been reborn many times over—but a thing that cannot hurt; and
besides, one never knows." She flexed shoulders and neck in a stretch.
"Gods but 1 am tired; and we have still to get back to Retaliator."
Morwen's
heart sank at the thought of the long punishing ride back to the ship, but
Sargus smiled and shook his head.
"That
at least we can spare you. Your ship has been brought here; it awaits you at
the foot of the hill."
Elathan
stared. "But 1 thought—"
"You
thought we had no such technology," said Sargus matter-of-factly.
"Well, we are not so simple as we appear, and mean to appear, to
offworlders. You will recall, Aeron, how I said your ship could not come into
this part of our world; and that was true enough, then. There was a srith laid
upon us: a sacred ban, a proscription—"
"A
geis, in our tongue," said Morwen.
Sargus
nodded. "Well, in brief," he continued, "we were forbidden to
allow any ship to come here because this ship was already here. But what was
done at the Kasulathra, and equally here tonight, has caused that ban to be
lifted, and so your ship has been brought."
"With
this secret technology you did not wish to display," said Camissa.
Sargus
shrugged, a marvelously human mannerism. "No great wonders," he said.
"Tractor fields, antigravity floats; simple enough means. But now you must
leave the Firefolk and their world. Your choqa—your journey of seeking—is done,
and I and my folk must now begin to prepare for a choqa of our own, the
greatest and the last." He took Aeron's hand in both of his, touching it
to his forehead in the style of leavetaking used by the Salamandri when the
farewell was permanent.
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"I
cannot thank you and your people, Sargus, as is fitting and right," she
said. "If there is anything I can do, or might be permitted to do—"
"There
is: You must come safe home, and set to rights that which must be settled. That
is all you are meant to do. Go now."
The
last sight any of them had of the Firefolk was Sargus standing alone in the
mouth of the great cavern. Aeron, looking once over her shoulder as she pulled
herself up into Retaliator, saw him raise his arms in farewell, and es she
lifted her own arm to return the salute he was gone. She sealed the doors
behind her and went forward to take the helm.
The
last sight they had of that planet was the fire-mist hanging like a golden
nimbus around the head of Mount Terror; then Retaliator rose up through
atmosphere, and Kholco—Afallinn—went dark beneath them. Aeron never saw that
world again.
Chapter
20
Sanchoniathon
knocked once on the gilded door and went into the state salon that Jaun Akhera
had long since commandeered for use as a bedchamber. Mindful of other times he
had been summoned so, he was apprehensive; more so still on finding the chamber
empty, illuminated by only a low-set crystal lamp on the chest beside the
silk-hung bed.
JfAkhi
means to make me nervous, he is doing a fine job of it. Waking me up and
commanding me here . . . where can he be, and what does he want?
His
first question was answered almost at once, as Jaun Akhera stepped back into
the room from the terrace beyond the windows. He had apparently been himself on
point of retiring, perhaps had even been asleep as had Sanchoniathon, for he
was clad only in a gold silk chamber-robe; his dark hair was disarrayed, and
his feet were bare. Closing the glassed door behind him, he motioned Sanchoniathon
to a chair near the hearth and himself took the facing chair.
"I
know you are cross with me, Sancho, for calling you here at this hour, but I
think you will forgive me when you hear.''
Jaun
Akhera's voice was strangely vibrant, and his face seemed to be concealing some
great happiness, so that Sanchoniathon bent upon him a puzzled look that
changed into expectation as Jaun Akhera spoke: Here is my second question about
to be answered . . .
"I
wish you to know first of anyone here in Keltia," continued Jaun Akhera,
"save only the one who brought me the message: Our grandfather, upon whom
be the peace of Seti, is dead. I am now Emperor of the Cabiri. Our mother, who
has taken up rule in my name as Princess-Regent, contrived to get this word to
me; a smallship managed to break through Rohan's blockade and land here on
Tara. So we learn
229
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also
that we are not so tightly sealed off as we had thought ... But the news is
absolute. She has given order that the main force of our starfleets be sent to
relieve us here on Tara, and she herself will be coming with the fleet."
Sanchoniathon
had risen to his feet during his brother's speech, and now he crossed the
hearth-space in one stride, his eyes shining. Going to one knee, he took his
brother's hand and kissed it.
"Majesty,"
he said, and rising again threw his arm! around his brother in a warm embrace.
Jaun
Akhera returned the hug, face animated as Sanchoniathon had not seen it for too
many days. "Sit here and talk to me—there is much to do before Mother
arrives with the fleets. Will you help me, Sancho? I know I have not been easy
to be around these past months, but all that will be different now, I
promise."
"Akhi,
you are my brother and my friend. You have no need either to ask or to
apologize. And now that you are also my Emperor, you have no need to do
anything but command.''
"But
I would not command you," said Jaun Akhera, his fine-featured face oddly
intense. "Not you, nor Hanno, nor Garallaz, nor any of my true friends ...
I must tell them presently of what has happened," he added. "But
there is more news yet."
Sanchoniathon
smiled. "What news could be of any importance beside this?"
"You
shajl decide. I have heard word from Dyved. My new friend and loyal
collaborator, Powell, Prince of that planet, has managed to come by the
company—the extremely unwilling company, to be sure—of Lieutenant Sarah
O'Reilly. She was detained on Gwynedd by our old friend Kynon ap Accolon."
Sanchoniathon
frowned, faintly unsettled. Kynon was hardly the surest of auxiliars: He had
been the lone survivor of the plot that Jaun Akhera had made with Gwydion's
treasonous sister, Arianeira, and her accomplice the Terran lieutenant Hugh
Tindai. For his sins, Tindal had been beheaded by his own captain; Arianeira,
after arranging Aeron and Morwen's escape, had taken her own life in atonement.
But Kynon had somehow managed to survive it all, though at Aeron's order he had
been subjected to the ordeal of truth by clearing-stone. In his attempt to lie
to the Cremave. Kynon had been terribly maimed, and Aeron had declared him
kin-wrecked and clann-
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231
broken.
All of which had served only to increase his bitter hatred of the House of
Aoibhell and all its friends and allies; Jaun Akhera, finding him wandering in
banishment after the fall of Caerdroia, had rewarded him by making him Imperial
liaison to Powell of Dyved, and had sent him to Gwynedd in command of the
forces besieging Caer Dathyl.
"How
comes it that she was on Gwynedd?" he asked presently.
Jaun
Akhera shrugged. "She will not say, and it does not matter anyway; though
undoubtedly she was searching for Gwydion. It is a great earnest of Powell's
good faith that he offers to send her to us. I have little use for her at
present, now that Aeron and Gwydion are both beyond my reach and impossible to
sway by concern for the safety of their Terran friend. But she may be able to
give us some information about Earth itself, and the part it may play in the
impending alliance against our Imperium."
"Your
Imperium."
"My—"
Jaun Akhera looked thunderstruck, then remem-bered, and smiled. "Yes ... I
must declare a period of mourning for Strephon."
"Did
Mother tell you how he died?" asked Sanchoniathon with a certain
hesitation, running his finger along the chair's carved gilt arm. His brother
noted the hesitancy, and spoke to it as though he had already noted and
addressed it in himself.
"Her
message said only that there was an accident; that he drowned in his pool,
having slipped on the stone when he leaned too far over."
"And
you believe her?"
"She
is our mother, Sancho . . . Well. I believe that Strephon did indeed meet such
an end as she describes— mostly; I would not be her son if I believed that
that" was all there was to it."
Sanchoniathon
nodded distantly. He loved Helior, but he harbored no illusions as to what she
might not do to keep the Cabin Throne for her firstborn, and he set resolutely
aside the picture that his mind had conjured up.
"When
do you think the fleet may arrive?"
"Any
time now. The ship that brought the message had to go very cautiously to evade
the Keltic blockade, and that took some days. Her captain tells me that Rohan
keeps the Firedrake lying out beyond the Criosanna like a spider, and the chief
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part of
their starfleet seems now to be deployed between this
system
and Kymry."
"The
only places where we have still any strength." "For the moment,"
said Jaun Akhera, touching clasped
hands
to his chin. A smile came over his face, wiping away
cares
and years alike. "At least until Mother gets here."
"Emperor!"
repeated O'Reilly in utter disbelief. "You're lying, Pryderi." \
Pryderi
shook his head, enjoying her discomfiture. He had arrived at Caer Sidi that
afternoon from Caer Carrig Cennan, to bring the news to his two unwilling
guests.
"Jaun
Akhera himself sent word to my father late last night. It appears that Strephon
has been dead for some little time now, and the Princess Helior rules as regent
in her son's name." When O'Reilly remained doggedly silent, he continued,
"She has raised the Imperial fleets and called up levies from the vassal
systems; it is said she will be leading them here herself. Or, at least, she
will be on board the ranking ship; I doubt she is quite so skilled in war as
other royal ladies I might name. Rohan will be hard put to it, if she comes in
any force. And as for the odds now on Aeron's return—" His shrug was
eloquent, and infuriating.
O'Reilly
turned her back on him. God but she would like to scratch his eyes out and then
dance on his bloody face . . .
"Why
do you and your father hate Aeron so?" she asked instead. "What can
she ever have done to you? And Gwydion— he's your father's foster-nephew; he
was your friend too."
Pryderi
shrugged again, tapping on the table with the bronze cuff he had taken from his
left wrist. "I have no real grafaun to grind against Gwydion," he
admitted. "Though'my father feels slighted that Gwydion never came to him
for advice after Arawn died . . . and perhaps he is also a little put out at
Gwydion's rise to royal power and influence."
"And
you, of course, are not?"
He
laughed, his father's short fox's bark. "As a failed suitor of Aeron's, I
might have greater cause for grievance than my father—and more cause to be
envious of Gwydion's success in that quarter."
"You
are a pig-dog," said O'Reilly evenly, "and not fit to clean Gwydion's
muddy boots."
"Nay,
Sorcha, no indignation here; though it does you much credit, I am sure. Well,
I'll tell you. When Aeron came
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233
to the
throne, my father made petition to her over a trifling matter. It was denied,
and she had not even the grace or common courtesy to do it herself."
"That
does not sound like Aeron," said O'Reilly. "She "has always
seemed the soul of courtesy; but I'll bet it was no trifling matter either,
what Powell asked her to do. Was your father sure of this?"
"Ah
well, the words of refusal may not have come from her own mouth, but they were
certainly said with her full knowledge. When Turusachan speaks, the other
worlds obey, and there's an end on it."
O'Reilly
leaned her elbows on the window-ledge, wondering what Gwydion was doing right
now, if he could by some magical means be hearing any of this . . .
"Did
you come here just to annoy me? Or is there more?"
With
her back to him, O'Reilly did not see Pryderi's eyes go hard and narrow and
colder than a piast's. "Oh aye," he said softly. "My sorrow that
it seemed to slip my mind. There was also word from Fomor, in the name of his
new majesty King Talorcan."
O'Reilly
whirled to face him. "Talorcan king! Since when?"
"Since
the death of his brother Elatnan in an escape attempt—with Aeron."
O'Reilly
went rigid. "Are you telling me Aeron is dead?"
He
nodded, his face a mask of malice. "So we have heard, and so we like to
think. Morwen too, and a few ladies of the Fomori royal family; all shot down
in an attempt to flee the planet after Talorcan's coup. But Talorcan has taken
his brother's crown, and, it would appear, his brother's life as well. To take
Aeron's too is a happy extra."
"And
you expect me to believe this?"
"As
you wish, of course." Pryderi slipped the bronze cuff back on his wrist
and stood up, and suddenly she was afraid of him, as she had not been before.
"But another small matter slipped my mind until just now: My father has
also had word from Jaun Akhera as to you. We told him you were guesting with us
here in Carcair, and now the new Emperor wishes to offer his own poor
hospitality back at Caerdroia. We are sorry to lose so charming a guest, of
course, but who dares gainsay an emperor? You will be back at Turusachan within
the week."
"And
Gwydion?"
"—remains
here for now."
O'Reilly
smiled triumphantly. "And how if I tell the new
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Patricia
Kennealy
Emperor
of the Cabin that his loyal ally Powell keeps back a prisoner far more
important than one Terran lieutenant?"
"Then
Gwydion dies within an hour of your saying so ... As you see, Sorcha, it is not
so simple after all."
By God,
it never is . . . O'Reilly did not look up as the door closed and locked behind
him. Back to Turusachan— unbidden, a flood of memories came over her with such
force that her knees gave way, and she sat down hard on the bed. Not for one
minute did she believe Pryderi's preposterous twaddle about Aeron being
dead—why would she have gone to Fomor, of all places, to begin with—but the
rest of the tale sounded plausible enough.
Jaun
Akhera emperor, and wanting her at Turusachan. He would not be asking for her
if he did not need information, he and Sanctioniathon and their hired sword
Hanno. Bar that, her only value would be as a hostage; and with Aeron and
Gwydion both gone, there was no one with whom Jaun Akhera could use her to
bargain.
Well—information,
is it? Let him ask. Maybe he'll get some answers he hadn't counted on.
In the
stonewalled chamber across the courtyard from where O'Reilly had confronted
Pryderi, Gwydion too had had an unwelcome visitor, and at that same moment was
trying to restore himself to calm after his visitor's departure.
Kynon
ap Accolon had accompanied Pryderi, and he had been unable to resist the
impulse to steal a march on his master and taunt the Prince of Gwynedd face to
face; it had taken all of Gwydion's self-control not to let the Kymro see his
angry loathing. This, after all, was the creature who had dragged Gwydion's
sister into treason, by playing cunningly upon her insecurities and doubts of
herself and her jealousies of Aeron—of Aeron as Ard-rian, of Aeron as Gwydion's
lover. If not for Kynon, Ari might be still alive, Keltia still inviolate,
Aeron still beside him ... So Gwydion had held himself to white silence, and at
last Kynon, angered by his inability to break that armor, had flung his most
malicious spear.
"And
I not even a sorcerer! How say you now, Gwynedd; has not my curse come home
upon you and Aeron in full measure? So much for the justice of the Cremave; and
you, for all your wizardry, did not even know that she was dead."
Gwydion
had turned slowly round to him at that, and
THE
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235
Kynon
shrank back at the look upon his face. Bui his voice had held only polite
interest when at last he spoke.
"What
news is this: that Aeron is dead?"
Kynon
had backed toward the door as he answered. "A ^message from Fomor, Jaun
Akhera told Powell ... it is said that Aeron died with Elathan of Fomor, Morwen
too—" in his sudden panic he had begun to gabble, and then had slipped
through the door and slammed it behind him.
Gwydion,
leaning against the wall now in a kind of relief, felt also a kind of triumph—that
Kynon had left the chamber alive. That hell-wrought curse, he thought
passionately. Every word was cut into his memory as if with a laser-pen, and
now unflinchingly he called it up: 'The stars' wandering between you, Aeron,
and the brother of the one who betrayed me. Your crown from your head, your
lord from your bed, and may the Shining Ones themselves ride forth to war
before you _return again as queen to Caerdroia.*
He
believed not one syllable of Kynon's story—some tarra-diddle concocted by Jaun
Akhera, or Powell, or both of them together: but a complete untruth, whatever.
If she were dead, he would know; his magic would not fail him there, and that
was all there was to that. Yet oddly enough, Kynon's claim about Fomor and
Elathan carried real conviction; he had kenned it. Could it be that she had
gone there after all?
Ah,
Aeronwy, I have failed you, he thought in sudden, and uncharacteristic,
despair. / have failed to keep Keltia safe for you, failed even to keep myself
safe. Many had died to get him out of Caerdroia; the merrows had managed a
daring escape for him; the King of the Sidhe himself had sent one of his great
lords to his aid with Manaan's own ship; Aeron's brother Declan had given him a
starship and his blessing and seen him safe off-planet. Yet Gwydion had allowed
himself to trust where no trust was merited, and had ended up again a prisoner.
Worse still, the little gold horn that had been given to him by Gwyn, that he
had carried with such care out of Caerdroia, had been lost; thrown by Powell
into the sea surrounding this island prison, when first Gwydion had been
brought here from Caer Carrig Cennan.
But for
all that, still they had not found the Great Seal of Keltia—he closed his fist
over the massive emerald, hidden by his magic from the sight of any save he
alone. This he would keep for Aeron despite all; they would have to take his
hand off to come by it.
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Still,
what matter if I have the Seal, if neither Aeron nor Keltic be here to make it
reality . . .. Gwydion threw himself down upon the bed and covered his eyes
with one bent arm, then sat as suddenly up again. The veriest amadaun he had
been, not to have thought of it sooner ... His elation blazed, and he instantly
damped it down, lest it be somehow sensed by his captors.
But the
excitement remained alight, like the groundfire that runs through the peat-hags
just below the surface. If t\jose who held him here were of any merit or mettle
as sorcerers, he reminded himself, his plan were all in vain. But he knew that
they were not, though for a while he had forgotten; and upon that lack of
facility all his newborn hopes were pinned. He lay down again, and behind his
strongest shields his plan began to form, and he began to smile.
"Serenity?
You did send for me?"
Helior
turned; upon seeing who stood there, she made a little obeisance—more than a
nod, less than a bow—and a look of unaccustomed deference came over her face.
"Greeting,
Irin Mage"," she said. " You come most promptly upon my
summoning. Please, seat yourself."
The
chief priest of the Cabin order silently took the proffered chair, settled his
hands inside the sleeves of his orange silk robe and bent a keen dark glance on
his Emperor's—and star pupil's—mother. To his sight, the deed was plain,
despite Helior's by no means unskilled attempts to conceal it.
So, it
is as I suspected, he thought. Her hand, in the end, may not have struck down
her father, but her mind surely directed another's hand to do it, and she would
not have hesitated to do so herself if it had proved necessary . . * For all
that, what of it? If one were to indict for patricide or other exotic forms of
murder, legal or no, all the Plexari who stood guilty of such, the Imperium
would have to find itself a new royal house. All this passed through Irin
Mage's mind in an eyeblink, and he waited now for the Princess to come to her
point.
Helior
came to it with speed and bluntness. "You know we sail for Keltia in less
than a fortnight, to come to the aid of my son. What I wish to know from you,
Irin Mage, is what difficulties magic may present to us once we come to
Tara."
So that
is it . . . "What difficulties has it presented heretofore?" he said
carefully. "Aeron Aoibhell did not choose, for
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237
whatever
reasons, to avail herself of her own sorcerous powers—which are agreed by most
judges of such matters to be considerable, both in depth and scope—and, unless
I am much mistaken, it was by sorcery that your son brought down Caerdroia. He
seemed to have little enough difficulty there."
"Oh,
play not coy with me, priestling!" snapped Helior. "You know
perfectly well just how Akhi managed that, since it was you yourself who taught
him. Also it was you advised him, before he left for Keltia, to refrain from
magic altogether. Since he did not—for whatever reasons—I want to know what
complications may arise from his actions."
"Difficult
to say, madam." Irin Mage's look was cool and measuring, as if he were
assessing what level of truth she was fit to hear. "Well then, when your
son used magic in his war on the Kelts, he opened the door for magic to be used
on him. Aeron would never have been the first to do so, not after her
experience at Bellator; your son, by the use of his art, raised the tenor of
the war from that of the purely material to a level involving much, much more.
If he wins, in the end, he shall win on an earthly plane only; but if he
loses—"
"If—"
"If
he loses, he shall lose a good deal more than a war, or even his life."
Helior
was silent for a while. Then: "Because of Aeron's sorcery?''
"Because
of his own. But also because of what she may now have as weapons. I have by my
art seen things I like not at all: shapes and powers each more dreadful than
the last, and all of them as swords in Aeron's hands and hosts at her
back."
"Then
you must stop her," said Helior evenly. "And I promise before the
goddess Selk that you shall rue it if you do not. You shall come with us to
Keltia, bringing whoever you may need—priests, qizars, whatever—such as will best
serve my son."
"Your
son will need more than that, 1 fear," replied the priest. "I trained
him myself in the ways of the Cabiri, as Strephon was trained, and
ErraziH-jauna, and their fathers before them. But it is in my mind that Jaun
Akhera may fail, and, failing, he shall fall. What I have seen coming could
sunder the Imperium itself. I have seen a hand holding a sword of light, and a
silver cup out of which wounded warriors rise up whole; an army of trees; an
old woman
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washing
bloody shirts; a huntsman in gray who courses a pack of red-eared, white-coated
dogs . . ." He gave a convulsive shudder, and ran a hand over his eyes.
"No more," he whispered, as if in pleading protest to one who could
spare him further visions.
Helior
looked at him, herself suddenly cold with a nameless dread; to her eyes he
seemed to have somehow withdrawn, to be receding from her even as she watched,
moving away from her like a retrograde moon.
Irin
Mage took visible control of himself. "My priests and I will be at your
command. Serenity," he said formally. "But as to promises . . . well,
that is not the way of magic. Jaun Akhera knows that as well as any; and Aeron
Aoibhell knows h better than most."
Chapter
21
TTThen
Caerdroia fell to Jaun Akhera's magic, the rest of W the Aoibhell family had
long been gone, by Aeron's express command. Some of them had gone into places
or perils just as uncertain: Rohan to Firedrake; Fionnuala on the embassy to
Earth with Gavin Straloch; Declan to the Kyles of Ra, where Gwydion had found
him after making his own escape from the City.
"But
many of the other members of the royal family, and others who were friends and
courtiers and close to the Crown, had headed for the planet Caledon, and the
castle of Inver, where Declan's twin, Kieran, was lord of the district
surrounding. No Imperial forces had penetrated to Caledon, thanks to the crack
system navy and the support of the main starfleet, and Inver, tucked away in
the wilds of the Decies Country, was a haven both safe and remote.
Among
the very last to leave Caerdroia had been Aeron's sister Rioghnach, Princess of
the Name and next eldest after Rohan, and her husband, Niall O Kerevan, Duke of
Tir-connell, one of Aeron's most trusted generals. Kieran had welcomed his
sister and brother-in-law, and all the others who had found their way to Inver,
and the castie had soon become a nexus of information and planning and
plotting, a clearing-house and nerve center for the resistance movement that
had sprung up almost of itself in the wake of Aeron's flight.
With a
ferocious vigor almost akin to anger, Rioghnach had tackled the colossal task
of organizing and coordinating the masses of information, with Niall and Kieran
as military interpreters, and she kept in almost constant touch with Rohan,
feeding information to him, receiving what he could tell her and passing it on
to where it might do the most good. But the strain had taken a toll: When the
rumor reached Inver of
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Aeron's
and Morwen's alleged deaths on Fomor, Rfoghnach had suffered a nervous
collapse—understandable, in the circumstances, but totally unacceptable to her;
and now that she had recovered, she was pushing herself as hard as before, and
harder still.
Sitting
up late that night, poring over the newest data from Rohan, Rioghnach heard
three sharp barks below her window. The small white odd-eyed cat dozing in her
lap stirred, gave a lazy hiss and fell asleep again. Now that is a strange
thing, she thought. Kieran keeps no hounds here . . . Still, doubtless there
were dogs belonging to others in the castle, or even curs wandering up from the
nearby village. She scratched the cat soothingly under its silky chin, and had
returned her attention to the reading-screen when the barks came again; louder
and sharper now, almost annoyed and impatient in timbre. She frowned; then
setting the protesting cat aside, she went to the window and opened it to the
cold spring night.
The
immense Caledonian moon was only two nights off the full, and Rioghnach could
see as clearly as if the scene had been floodlighted for her. Silver brilliance
poured down over the low hills that fell away from the castle on the east; to
the fortress's other side was a thick wood, then gardens and the sea. The
barking came again, triumphant now, and then her sight was caught by movement
off to her left.
A huge
wolf was playing like a puppy in the moonlight, dancing and leaping and
flirting with his shadow on the grass. / Rioghnach stood very still, for though
she had seen him only once before, there was no way she would not have known
him again: the Faol-mdr, the great spirit-wolf that was the clann guardian of
the Aoibhells. Seldom did he show himself to the family he protected—even
Aeron, who besides being Queen was also clann chieftain, had seen him only a
few times—and never but for some tremendous reason.
Has
something happened to my sister, then? Cold came over her that was not the cold
of the air; but no, had there been disaster to warn of, the beast would be
howling the caoine, the lament. Instead, he was disporting himself like a
delirious cub, wild with joy and seemingly heedless of who saw him; he had even
barked to attract Rioghnach's attention, so plainly did he wish to be seen. But
what as yet unknown event did he celebrate?
She
watched for many minutes, and the wolf below her
THE
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241
never
tired of his dance. She could sense the joy of him, how strong and glad he was;
and she knew that he meant her to feel it. Behind her in the room, the door
opened, and Niall came in.
"Rfona?"
he said, surprised. "Do you wake so late?"
She
lifted a hand to silence him, then beckoned him to the window. He stood behind
her, taller by more than a foot—in a family of tall redheaded siblings and
cousins, Rioghnach was the odd one out, small and dark-haired and delicate like
her great-grandmother Fkma of Aros—and peered obediently out into the night.
"What
do you watch, anwylyd?"
She
breathed an incredulous laugh. "See you nothing, down there—there, where
the trees pull back from the lawns?"
"Nay,
love, nothing but grass in moonlight. Come away, it is unhealthy cold."
Look
how he goes, thought Rioghnach, her heart leaping even as the wolf leaped, one
last tremendous spring, straight up, clean as a sword or a salmon, turning tip
for tail and landing on his paws again without a sound. Then he shook himself
all over, turned his shaggy head to stare up at her window—for an instant she
saw his eyes, like green fires where they caught the moon—and then he was gone.
"But
what do you think it may mean?" asked Niall at last, when she had finished
telling him of what he had not been permitted to see. "Is it some portent,
do you think? Has some ill befallen Aeron, gods forbid, or Rohan?"
"A
portent to do with Aeron, certainly," said Rioghnach, her dark eyes
thoughtful. "But not, 1 think, something baneful."
At Caer
Sidi far away, that dawn brought more than portent. Gwydion had had no
unearthly visitor in the night, nor had he had any sleep either, but instead
had spent all his time in the marana trance, fashioning what he prayed to every
god that ever was would be escape for him and O'Reilly. He had wasted a little
time at first berating himself for a fool: This was not like Turusachan, where
he had had to depend on the courage and cleverness of others. Here at least he
could rely upon himself, on his own skills and daring and resources, for the
first time since the breaking of the Wolf Gate, and that knowledge cheered him
as nothing else had in months.
Turusachan
had been stiff with Coranian sorcerers—not least among them Jaun Akhera
himself—who would not only
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have
detected Gwydion's magic but could have thwarted it, parrying it with spells of
their own. But Powell and Pryderi were both of them untrained and unlettered in
the art; and, with the unease which those who eschewed magic often felt in
magic's presence, they kept no sorcerer of any rank here at their
prison-fortress—not Dragon nor Druid nor even a bard. Within the walls of
Carcair there was no person who could even detect Gwydion's labors that night,
far less halt or hinder him; and in the gray-gold dawn, as his working came
confidently to an end, he spared a part of his attention to reach out to touch
O'Reilly's mind.
It was
the sound of shouts and pounding footsteps that waked her first. O'Reilly
leaped from the bed and ran to the eastern window. What she saw stopped her
breath: An armada seemed coming to Caer Sidi by sea and by air, sleek armored
longships shadowed by craft that looked like falcons, rolling like thunderheads
out of the dawn. The sea was hidden by the findruinna hulls, and the sun by the
black wings, and the shouts of warriors came faint but clear to her ears.
She
stared entranced, a wild hope beginning to blossom: Aeron, Rohan, Desmond,
coming to rescue her and Gwydion; and then a voice spoke in her mind, a voice
to which she paid close heed. Presently she nodded, and dressed herself quickly
and quietly, braiding her hair and looping it above the collar of her cloak to
afford no purchase for an enemy's grip. The« she waited in readiness just
inside the door.
Outside,
the soldiers of the prison garrison were still racing in panic to repel the
coming invaders. O'Reilly could hear them shouting and cursing on the battlements
above, in their unavailing struggles to bring the laser turret guns to bear on
the incoming aircraft; but the guns were fixed and could not be turned around.
She smiled with delight, hugging herself under the cloak; then Gwydion's voice
came clear and urgent through the door.
"Sorcha?
Are you there?"
"Gwydion!
Yes! Is it all right?"
"Very
right. Stand away now from the door."
O'Reilly
moved hastily back into the center of the room, and a few seconds later the
thick oak door burst inwards into a million splinters. Beyond, in the corridor,
stood Gwydion, in his hands a blastgun he had taken from a dead guard.
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
243
"Come,
we must be quick." He grabbed her hand and pulled her along the corridor.
"How
did you do it?" she asked, puffing a little with the speed of their
passage.
"Do
what? Ah, the 'invasion.' Well, it is of course a fith-fath, a glamourie;
naught real to it."
"Yes,
but those ships and aircraft give a solid reading to scanners; otherwise nobody
would be fooled, and they wouldn't be breaking their necks up there to get the
laser cannon shifted. There must be more to it than illusion."
Gwydion's
rare smile flashed as he turned to her. "I see your months with the
Ban-draoi were well spent. . . Well, this is not the time for a lesson in
sorcery, but aye, there is rather more to it than that, and I shall tell you
all about it soon enough. Now we must get off this island, and quickly, before
they find out all those forces are but sham."
They
had reached the ground floor of the castle, and now ventured warily into a
deserted guardroom. O'Reiily took advantage of the moment to grab up some
weapons from the piles left on the tables: a glaive, a blastgun, a pair of
sgians.
Opening
the small postern, Gwydion reached out with all his senses. No one near; all
the guards were concentrating on the "invasion" now nearing land on
the castle's other side. He beckoned to O'Reilly, who dashed up to crouch
beside him under a stone buttress.
"How
are we going to get off the island?" she whispered. "The only ships
are at the landing field across the tide-race; we can't swim it, not with
weapons, and the current is too strong anyway."
"We
shall have good help." He leaped down the path that led to the rocks at
the water's edge, and O'Reilly followed close behind.
Down on
this sheltered side of the island, the tumult up at the castle could not be
heard, and the beetling granite cliffs shielded the fugitives from view.
Standing on the seaweed-covered rocks, Gwydion allowed himself to relax a little,
and the face he turned to O'Reiily was years younger.
"I
was a fool to have let us languish there so long," he said ruefully.
"But having had to keep my mind from magic for so many weeks, I was slow
to think of a magical way out for us. Also," he continued, his voice
lower, "it seemed
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somehow
dishonor to take such a way, an unfair advantage. Which makes me even more the
fool, for certainly no such scruple constrained Powell or Pryderi—the which I
shall settle with them on a day not too far off now. But come stand with me,
Sorcha, and see our help come to us."
He
leaned out over the rocks, the moving water no more than a length below him,
dark and cold. O'Reilly gazed out over the surging tide-strait with despair in
her heart.
Then
Gwydion began to sing, softly at first, then in a voice of power that gathered
power to it as he sang. Any who heard that voice would want to do nothing but
obey his summons, thought O'Reilly; but to whom did he sing?
As she
stared out to sea, she became gradually aware of four small dark heads bobbing
toward them over the roughening water. She stiffened to wary attention, glanced
sideways at Gwydion, who had not ceased to sing, his strong voice carrying a
rhythm like the waves' own. She was caught up in it, heard in the deep-mouthed
chanting echoes of a strange life and a wild, far below the surface of the
rolling ocean: life under a green glassy roof, with floors of gold sand and
fantastic castles of pearl and crystal, with the lacy red weed flickering up to
the light like underwater fiame.
With an
effort O'Reilly cleared her mind of the dizzying images; Gwydion, whose song
had ended, threw her a reassuring smiie. i
"It
is the seal-singing," he said, knowing her confusion. "The effect
will leave you in a moment. I have called the Sluagh-ron to our aid. Wait
now."
The
bobbing heads were very near now; one of them raised up out of the waves and
turned to look at them. It was sleek, round, dark-furred, with long delicate
whiskers; big dark eyes regarded them critically, and with an alarming degree
of intelligence. Then the creature spoke, and O'Reilly jumped.
"You
called us, lord," it said in a voice of haunting timbre. "What would
you of the Sluagh-ron?"
Quickly
Gwydion introduced himself and O'Reilly, with a formality of manner that much
gratified the seal-folk, and explained their plight. When he was done, the
silkie he had addressed dived without a word, and the other three heads
followed him underwater. They seemed to be gone a long time, and above, the two
humans waited in tense expectation. Then, in a fountain of foam, the four
silkies exploded up out
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
245
of the
sea, in a curve so full of grace that O'Reilly exclaimed in wordless delight,
to stand beside them on the weed-slick rocks.
"I
have spoken to my brothers." said the silkie who appeared to be spokesman
for the little group. "We will help Gwydion Prince of Don in whatever way
we can."
As
Gwydion thanked the creatures, O'Reilly tried not to stare, but she was frankly
fascinated. Unlike the merrows, the silkies of Keltia were not humanoid in
form, but retained most of the physical characteristics of their phocine
ancestors. She could not imagine at what distant moment in the past the gifts
of speech and reason had been passed to the Sluagh-ron, or by whom, though
Slaine had once told her that the silkies had come with the Kelts from Earth in
the first great immrama, and even those long-ago Kelts had believed there was
human blood among the seal-folk—and vice versa. She suppressed a desire to
stroke the thick shining fur of the one that stood nearest her; then it looked
up at her out of brimming limpid eyes, and ducked its head against her knee,
and with shy delight she drew a gentle hand along the line of its neck.
But Gwydion
was gesturing her to join him lower down on the rocks. "The Sluagh-ron
will help us cross the tide-race," he said when she stood beside him with
the sea swirling around their boots. "On the other side of that promontory
is a small landing-field, and if I cannot manage to steal us a ship then I
deserve to be Dyved's guest. Are you ready?"
Before
she could reply, the chief silkie chattered something in his own tongue to one
of the others, who held out to Gwydion a small leather pouch that looked as if
it had been for a long time in cold deep seawater.
"That,
I think, belongs to you, lord. We found it some time ago, and have held it for
you since."
Scarcely
daring to believe it was in truth what he thought, Gwydion opened the little
pouch. Inside, sealed in waterproof oiled silk, was the small horn of dull gold
that had been given to him in Diin Aengus by Gwyn ap Nudd, King of the Shining
Folk.
"I
had not expected ever to see this again," he said quietly. "I thank
you for its return; it may mean more than you or I shall ever know."
Wrapping
the horn again in its silk covering and fastening it to his belt, he turned to
O'Reilly. "Let us go; the tide will
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soon be
against us, and my illusion cannot hold very much longer." He slid into
the freezing water, a warm seal body on either side of him for support, and
looked up at O'Reilly, who stood hesitating on the rocks. "Come, Sorcha;
it is not the first escape I have made by water. Jump!" O'Reilly closed
her eyes and leaped.
Chapter
22
The
sail back from Khoico to Fomor had been a swift one. Aeron had pushed
Retaliator as never before—^vven Morwen had been surprised—and though the
voyage had not been exactly a merry one, it had been replete with unspoken
satisfactions.
On the
edge of the Fomorian system, Aeron hove the ship to, to the considerable
mystification of Elathan, who was at that moment occupying the co-pilot's
chair,
"We
will remain here for a few hours," she said, not looking at him. "I
must make some adjustments before we take Retaliator in to Fomor—adjustments to
ready the ship for battle—and also I would discuss with you where we must go
and what must be done when we get there."
"I
think first of all we must return to the duhi'n, to see what Borvos and Treic
may have been able to do in our absence," said Elathan, more baffled than
ever by her suddenly stiff demeanor. "They will have been in contact with
the forces that remain loyal to me, and perhaps they will have devised some
plan that win march with ours. Beyond that, we can only hope for justice."
Aeron's
laugh was bitter. "Justice! When folk say they wish for justice, what they
usually mean is indulgence for themselves and punishment for everyone else . .
. Well, maybe that is not such a bad thing either. You have been as sorely
tried as I; still, you shall be King of Fomor again, and soon too. That is
justice, if anything is."
"And
you shall soon again be Queen of Kelts," he offered, trying to help her,
though he still did not understand her mood,
"Queen?
I am a thrall. Once the Copper Crown has been set upon a sovereign's head,
there is no release save death or
247
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the
will of the people. I have some expectations of the one, but little hope of the
other."
"Aeron,
I do not know what this mood is that is on you, but I wish you would speak
honestly to me of your trouble. After all, you once bade me do the same, and I
did, and was the lighter for it. Maybe I can help you in like manner."
She ran
a hand through her hair. "Upon my soul, Fomor, I do not know what is on me
... Only a selfish graceless carlin could find cause to complain. I am glad of
the Treasures we did find, and glad too that we could speed Arthur with decency
and honor, and excessively glad that we shall soon do to Talorcan as he so
richly deserves. For the rest of it—" She spread her hands in
helplessness. "Have you ever had a thing in your mind to do; then when it
is all but done, and the fruit of all your labor in your grasp, have held back
from it as if from very poison? I can put no other words to it. Can you believe
that almost I wish not to return to Keltia—to leave you and Camissa and Morwen
on Fomor, to take Retaliator and keep sailing on across the galaxy, until I
die, or the ship dies, or the galaxy dies."
Full of
sympathy, Elathan took her by the shoulders and shook her gently. "I can
believe you would wish to wish it—but no more than that. For one thing, it
would be the wish of a weakling and a coward, and you are neither. You are only
tired, and no wonder. Listen, I'M tell you something: When we have Fomor back
from my pernicious brother, we shall first of all rest a little. Then we will
formally declare our alliance; Cami and I shall be wed, with you and Morwen
among the chief witnesses; and then I will call the fleets to assemble and we
shall sail."
A spark
of color seemed to return to her drawn face. "For Keltia?"
"For
Keltia."
"Shall
we, do you think?"
"Yes.
If you are right about the powers of the Treasures. They must win Fomor back
for us first."
The warmth
had reached Aeron's eyes. "Oh. aye,'* she said. "Of that, at least, I
am sure. As to what power they may have against Jaun Akhera, that shall be
seen. He is a formidable sorcerer, and it is in my mind, I cannot say how, that
he will be stronger than we know when we do come to Keltia."
"You
speak of him almost to praise him."
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249
"It
is only the craven belittles a foe. 1 think I have not yet grown so abject with
ill haps that I cannot praise a worthy opponent."
"And
my brother?"
"Ah,
he. Well, kinship is no guarantee of anything, as Gwydion would be swift enough
to tell you. Of all us here, you know Talorcan's mind best. What do you think
his plan will be?"
Elathan
shrugged, looking out at the familiar space of his home system. "Thai will
depend on what control he has over the armies and starfleets. We cannot know
that until we contact Borvos and Treic."
"Which
we shall do," Aeron assured him, pausing in (he hatchway, "before
another day dawns over Tory. Stay at the helm while I am gone."
Alone
in Retaliatory command cabin, Elathan contemplated the stars a while longer,
then reached out to punch up military frequencies on the ship's long-range
transcom. It would all be coded, of course, and old signals for the most part
this far out in the system, but perhaps he could pick up something that would
be of use or interest.
Ah,
Talorcan, he thought, / would not be in your boots today for all the gold in
Fomor. Did Aeron say kinship was no guarantee? True enough; for kinship would
not now keep my hand from your blood were you twenty times my brother . . .
It has
been almost too easy, thought Morwen five days later. And that of itself should
make me most mistrustful . , . Instead, she felt only confidence. Which had,
admittedly, a solid grounding in reality, for she stood at that moment in the
palace courtyard at Tory, while all around her the attacking waves of loyalist
soldiery routed the last of Taiorcan's mercenary rabble.
// is
almost as if the way has been smoothed before us. But perhaps there is a tide
in these matters after all, and having run against us for so long, now the
current bears us with it . . . Whether that was so or no, they had landed
undetected on Fomor, by dint of a brilliant bit of piloting by Aeron. There had
followed an emotional reunion with those they had left behind among the duhm:
Thona, Basilea and Rauni; and a reunion more martial and purposeful in nature
with Borvos and Treic, who had reassured Elathan of his strength among the
armies and the populace at large. Talorcan, not surpris-
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ingly,
was regarded as little better than a regicide, and his brutal policies had made
him few friends.
They
had gathered forces as they went north to Tory; Elathan had declared himself on
the second day, and news of his return had spread within hours to all the
worlds of that system. Only on the plain below Tory had they encountered
resistance of any strength—Talorcan prudently opting to concentrate his forces
around the city rather than engage his brother in the open—but Aeron had told
Elathan to move back his armies, and standing forth from the lines she had
unlidded the Eye of Baior. s
Even
now, two days later, Morwen shuddered at the memory: that long leaping lance of
fire, sweeping across Talorcan's ranks like an arm across a fidchell board,
leaving smoking destruction in its wake. After that, Talorcan had pulled his
forces back into the city proper, where Aeron dared not use the Eye; and for a
day and a night and a day again the fighting had raged through the streets,
until now it swirled like a bloody tide around the foot of the castle rock and
up into the palace precincts. But it was a losing action; the Eye had turned
the balance for Elathan, and very soon the castle's fall would signal the end
of the usurpation.
Morwen
rubbed her knee absently as she waited. It had not gone entirely smoothly, of
course; almost no one was without an injury—she had hurt her knee, Elathan had
sustained several serious cuts and a few bruises, Camissa had torn some rib
cartilage, and Aeron—Morwen shuddered anew as she thought of it: As Aeron had
been shuttering the Eye, a laser flain fired from Talorcan's lines had struck
her in the throat. Luckily, it had been nearly spent and had glanced off her
gorget, causing her little more than a deep scratch. But her friends had had a
bad turn . . .
A
series of muffled mumps came from Morwen's left; laser culverins, she knew, set
in position by the first wave of the assault, to knock a passage through the
fortress walls. She lifted her blastgun, and, with Treic, entered the outer
bawn.
In the
thick of the tumult, Elathan striding through the palace's ground floor met
Aeron and Borvos running toward him from the opposite direction.
"Talorcan?"
he husked, his voice cracking from the smoke and dust.
Aeron
rubbed the back of a rather grimy hand across her
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251
cheek
and shook her head. "Not that we could find," she said. "And we
quartered the palace for him."
Eiathan
broke into an unwilling, and unamused, grin. "Three things are equally
unlikely to my mind: that the Coranians had no hand in this brawl; that the
Salt Lakes turn to usqueba"— Aeron and Morwen had introduced him to the
Keltic liquor, with great success—"and that ! may be in the same place
with my half-brother, both of us sword in hand."
"Perhaps
not so unlikely," said Aeron. "Have we no one to ask?"
Elathan
brightened. "We have taken several who were with Taforcan in the plot. Let
us see what they have to say for themselves."
But
when the prisoners—the general Bargoit, second-in-command to Talorcan's chief
tool Dargato, and one Achivir, a staifleet commodore caught planetside when
Elathan struck— were questioned, they proved something less than communicative.
Elathan
looked up with annoyance—it had been a long and disagreeable session—as the
door of the chamber opened, but his face changed when he saw Camissa and Aeron.
"I
can get nothing out of them," he said, coming over to them. "They
seem to be proof against drugs, and grosser forms of persuasion I think it
scorn to try."
"Let
us see if they may be proof against me." Aeron stretched out her right
hand, the second and third fingers together, toward Bargoit; after a moment of
rigid resistance, his head came slowly around to her.
"What
did you do to him?" gasped Camissa.
"It
is but a kenning," said Aeron. Her voice held a certain distracted
quality, like that of an archer who must make conversation and shoot to hit the
gold at the same time. "A telepathic probing, no pain in it. It does not
even work on all subjects, and can be shielded against by those who are trained
to it, but—" She broke off, her gaze unfocusing, and stood very still.
When she looked again at Elathan, her face was without expression. "They
have succeeded in getting off-planet," she said, and her voice was as
controlled as her face. "Talorcan and his minions; they had Imperial help
in the coup, and they have gone to Jaun Akhera."
"In
Keltia?"
She
nodded once. "In Keltia."
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Even
given the unbounded delight of his people at his return, it took remarkably
little time for Elathan to reassemble his government and reassert his control
over his kingdom. Though Talorcan had executed those loyalists courageous
enough to stand against the usurper—and unfortunate enough to be caught—very
many of Elathan's trusted aides and ministers and advisors had managed to go
into hiding, or to get off-planet, or otherwise simply to stay out of
Talorcan's way. But now they flocked eagerly to Tory, to reaffirm their loyalty
and love to their rightful King and resume their old duties.
And,
rather less happily, to support that King's present policies: most
specifically, the alliance with Keltia. For Aeron sat on Elathan's right at the
council table, and though she chose not to remind the Fomorian councillors of
her part in restoring Elathan to power, others were by no means so reticent,
and did so loudly, frequently and at length: Camissa, Borvos and, especially
and unexpectedly, the Dowager Queen Basilea.
It was
not that the Council grudged Aeron the help Elathan had promised her; like it
or not, it was only by Aeron's grace that Elathan was even alive, much less
restored to his throne and victorious over Talorcan with such comparative low
cost; they owed her a debt, and they knew it. And it was not that they harbored
anti-Keltic feelings and prejudices: None of them had been over-pleased to have
had to support Bres's unholy war, and most would have liked to see an end to
the hostilities long ago.
What
the Council urged now upon their King was not default but prudent delay, until
Fomor should be steadier and the strains placed on the Phalanx alliances should
be eased— for if Fomor itself looked a little uneasily on the pact with Keltia,
the Phalanx was thoroughly alarmed at the idea, and would take far longer to be
placated and reconciled. And perhaps worse than that: Elathan was not the only
one who had heard whispers of Phalanx involvement—the name most often mentioned
was that of Laharan of Felire—and that involvement would have to be looked
into. All this was political work that only Elathan could perform, and, his
advisors argued most cogently, how was he to accomplish this if he was off
leading fleets to Keltia to help Aeron destroy Jaun Akhera? Not that that was
not a laudable and
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253
desirable
goal, and one they would be proud lo have Fomor assist in—some time in the near
future, or not so near, when things were more settled . . .
Elathan
listened to their arguments with a look on his face that was itself a
challenge, letting them wear themselves out with their own rhetoric. He had
expected resistance, of course, but his mind had long been made up as to his
path of action; as he saw it, his only honorable and possible path. Still, it
would be far easier for him, and for the Regent he intended to leave to rule in
his absence, if his advisors could be cajoled or coerced into supporting him.
Aeron would not speak, and that was probably a good idea, but ... He glanced
sideways at her; she saw the inquiry at once, and nodded almost imperceptibly
toward Morwen. An even better idea, he thought. Reading permission in his face,
Morwen seized the floor with practiced confidence and began to address
Elathan's Council.
Now
Aeron had a ready wit and a quick tongue, if a sharp one, but Morwen was not
called Honeymouth for nothing: Straloch had given her the sarcastic epithet one
particularly stormy Council session at Turusachan, when she had sweet-talked
him into agreeing with some pet position of hers much against his own mind. The
ground of their dispute had been long since forgotten. But the name had clung.
And why
should Fomori be any more resistant to a golden tongue than Kelts? thought
Aeron, concealing a grin as she listened to her Taoiseach alternately charm,
bludgeon, flatter and reason with the Fomorian councillors. It was a virtuoso
performance; and indeed, by the time Morwen had finished with them, they had
turned biddable as scolded children, only too happy to accede to whatever
Elathan's wishes might be.
In the
end, of course, his will prevailed, and he sat on with Aeron and some others
after the Councillors had gone.
"But
was it likely to end otherwise?" asked Borvos.
Elathan
collected himself with a start. "Not likely," he said. "In fact,
never even in question; though I cannot say what I might not have agreed to,
had Morwen turned her eloquence on me ... But we wasted time and effort here,
where we have neither to spare. There is much to settle before we can start for
Tara.''
"One
thing that troubles me," said Aeron thoughtfully. "Strephon. If, as
those two traitors revealed to my kenning, Talorcan had Imperial assistance by
connivance of the Princess Helior—"
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"Then
by now word must surely have reached Strepnon of what has happened here,"
said Basilea. "And he will know that Elathan is restored, and that you,
Aeron, are alive and on Fomor.''
If
Aeron still harbored any of her previous resentment against Fomor's
queen-dowager, it did not show now, for she nodded and weighed Basilea's words
no differently than anyone else's.
"Or
so, at least, we must presume. Unless Strephdn is ignorant of his daughter's
venture into interstellar meddling?"
Morwen
shrugged. "There seems not much he is ignorant of, though Heiior might
have managed it. But did not Taiorcan go to her for sanctuary?"
"To
her or to Jaun Akhera," said Aeron. "I could not tell from the
kenning; both pictures were linked in the traitors' minds. In the end it makes
little differ which, though I had thought Strephon did cut his grandson off
from aid and reinforcements. On the other hand, Heiior would not spare nor
stint where her son is concerned . . . We may look to smite all three of
them—Jaun Akhera, Heiior and Taiorcan— when we come again to Tara."
"If
I may say, Aeron," ventured Camissa, "they will try mightily to smite
us first."
"You
may say," agreed Aeron lightly, "and they will try. But by the gods I
promise them no joy of it."
Events
ran now in Tory at double-pace: the mustering of Fomor's forces, after a brief,
brutal purge conducted by Borvos and Treic to remove any who had sided with
Taiorcan; and the arrangements for the King of Fomor's wedding, which had been
advanced by some months, as Elathan wished to solemnize his union with Camissa
before his departure for Keltia.
The day
before the fleets were to begin assembling, an emissary was announced to the
King of Fomor and the Queen of Kelts. Elathan collected Camissa and Aeron, and
went straight to the Presence Chamber, where the emissary in question was pacing
up and down. When they entered the room, the pacing suddenly stopped.
"I
bear greeting from Aojun, Majesties all," said Panthissera of the Yamazai,
which was not strictly correct, as Camissa would not be Queen of Fomor until
the morrow. But the
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255
Yamazai
had calculated the salutation to please and flatter, and it did.
Elathan
returned courtesies, and then Aeron made her own duty to the envoy of the
warrior-women's matriarchy. She had never met one of that fabled race before,
and she was impressed: Panthissera cut a striking figure, dressed all in soft
leathers stitched with beading and intricate embroidery, her black, hair pulled
smoothly back from a high forehead, in the center of which a crescent moon
tattoo rode blue above dark slanting eyes. But far more than any externals of
appearance, she showed plain to Aeron's sight a grace of spirit, and a
steel-true honor with it, that any Kelt in Aeron's kingdom would have been
proud to claim.
"As
you know, I am War-Leader of my people," said Panthissera in excellent
Lakhaz. "And I am sent by Queen Tanaxio to offer the help of the Yamazai
in this fight. We have our own small feud with the Prince of Alphor: You may
not have known it, Queen of Kelts, but the Yamazai refused to join Jaun Akhera
and Bres in their war upon you—as King Elathan will confirm—and we have
suffered since for that refusal."
"That
I did know," said Aeron somberly. "And for that the Yamazai did
pledge to lift no sword against me, I pledge to lift my own in aid of
Aojun."
Panthissera
bent her head in acknowledgment. "That is as Aeron Aoibhell was expected
to reply. My Queen is glad of such a word, and she has a word for you in
return: Aojun's need, as well as your own, can best be served at present by
striking at Jaun Akhera, and this we would do alongside you. So Queen Tanaxio
is sending such forces as can be spared here to Fomor, and has charged me ask
that you allow us to sail with you to Keltia."
Elathan
clasped Panthissera's forearm in the manner common to his world and hers.
"We thank Queen Tanaxio, and you her War-Leader, for such an offer, and we
accept gladiy."
"We
too thank our sister Tanaxio," said Aeron, using as Elathan had done the
royal "we," and putting fist to shoulder in salute. "Tell her we
shall meet when the battle is over, she and I, if the Mother allows it."
"There
is more news still," said Panthissera. "I doubt if Fomor's tracking
stations have as yet logged their presence, but on our voyage here we passed
near two ships in deep space. They were in link, and had apparently stopped to
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parley.
One was a Terran ship bound homeward, Aeron, with your own ambassadors aboard
her."
Aeron's
face lighted. "Oh, the Sword! And the other?"
"An
embassy ship from Earth; she is called the Argo, and she was on course for
Keltia, with the Terran ambassador to your court."
"Did
you speak to them?" asked Camissa.
"Surely,"
said the Yamazai, enjoying the impact her news appeared to be making. "We
conferred all three; and the upshot was that they are both following us here.
As the Sword is less swift than the other, they must hold back a little for
her; and our cutter was faster and lighter than both, so we came here first.
But, bar ill, they should arrive at Tory no later than the day after
tomorrow."
Chapter
23
As the
shuttles descended like a shining flight of silver bees, Aeron, in a hastily
run-up formal Keltic uniform, stood with King Elathan and Queen Camissa on the
landing field; Morwen, Rauni, Borvos, Basilea and others of the royal party
waited some yards behind them.
In
spite of her outwardly calm demeanor, and her experience as Queen with such
occasions, Aeron was in the grip of such an inner tremoring of anticipation as
she thought must rock her entire body for all this foreign world to see. Like a
hare in the jaws of a hound, she thought, being thrashed to and fro—well, I
care not if they do see. May I not be as excited as they?
In
truth there was cause more than enough for excitement and stir. The day before,
Aeron and Morwen had stood in the Great Hall of the palace, and watched with
joy the joy of their friends, as Elathan set the crown of the queens of Fomor
on Camissa's upswept dark hair.
Now
came today the arrival of the Terrans, Fionnuala and Straloch with them; and as
if that were not enough, there would be tomorrow a ceremony of solemnity and
grandeur, at which would be publicly affirmed by Aeron as Ard-rian of Keltia
and Elathan as King of Fomor a treaty of peace and friendship that would put an
end forever to the bitternesses of the past. Both principals also hoped that
the Terran ambassador would recognize the implicit possibilities for his nation
in such an event, and would join with them to make a tripartite agreement. But
that remained to be seen. For the moment, the moment was enough.
The
shuttle from the Sword was first to land. First out the door were Hathaway and
Mikhailova, and Aeron's heart lifted at the sight of them. They saw her in the
same instant, and
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ran
halfway to her before they remembered their public manners and the context of
this occasion.
Aeron
demolished all protocol by herself dashing to meet them, embracing both before
they could salute her.
"Oh
Aeron—Ard-rian—" Mikhailova was near to happy tears, and tears of memory
too, and Aeron's own eyes were bright and brimming.
"Athwenna,
Warren—did I not say we should meet soon again? Oh, but I am that glad to see
you both ..." - But then Fionnuala and Straloch came running, and
formality was at an end. At last, after Morwen too had been greeted with hugs
and tears, Aeron remembered herself enough to present all four to Elathan and
Camissa.
Then
the first craft from the Argo touched down, and they all turned to watch.
Haco
Grex paused in the cutter's door for perhaps five seconds, as an ambassador
should, then descended the steps to the field. Aeron and Elathan, gravely
polite now, came forward to meet him; he looked from one to the other, then
bowed deeply and deferentially.
"Your
Majesty of Fomor, Your Majesty of Keltia: Haco Grex, ambassador to the court of
Aeron Queen of Kelts-Madam, I had not looked to find you here, but you know
better than I how that has come to pass."
"I
do so," said Aeron, "and you shall hear soon enough." She
slipped from Englic into the High Gaeloch. "But for now we confirm Your
Excellency all the same as the Federacy's representative to our presence and
our Court."
"And
as our guest in Fomor," added Elathan. "My lord Grex, if you and your
party would be pleased to accept hospitality here in Tory until plans may be
made? There is much we must discuss, we three, for though you may not know it,
you have come at a busy time."
Grex
nodded, gray-blue eyes suddenly keen. "I rather thought I might have done
. . . Well then, Majesties, let us do our jobs."
Little
more than a day later, Aeron, standing with Elathan and Grex in the palace's
Great Hall, contemplated with immense satisfaction what the next few minutes
would hold, and what the previous day had seen accomplished. Chriesta
tighearna, but that Terran ambassador is a neat-handed cogger; and that consul
of his, that alienist, has a Sight on her any
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259
Ban-draoi
would give much for . . . They had been tough bargainers; still, she was rather
more than pleased with the outcome of the negotiations. She ran it over briefly
in her mind while Elathan spoke, addressing those few hundreds here in the Hall
and all the watching billions: In only one day, she, Elathan and Haco Grex
together had hammered out a preliminary treaty that, if all went according to
plan in the coming battles, would put their three allied nations into such a
position of galactic pre-eminence that not for the foreseeable future would
Imperium or Phalanx or any other nascent and acquisitive superentity be able to
challenge them.
True,
it is what my father said that I must never do; but it must be, Father, my
sorrow but you were wrong, and I could have done far worse ... All in all, not
a bad day's work; though in truth the bargaining had lasted nearly until dawn,
and before it was done had involved not only the three of them but Camissa,
Morwen, Straloch, Elathan's Prime Minister Svaros and the Terrans Valadon and
Deonora.
She
touched the hollow at the base of her throat. Not even a scar or a soreness there
now, thanks to a Fomori medic's quick work with a skinfuser; and any road it
had been not much more than a bad and bloody scratch. But gods, for an instant
there she had thought that was the end of it: Aeron Ard-rian, dead in battle on
the planet Fomor, of an arrow in her throat. It would have read very dashing in
the histories, but I am better pleased still to be on life . . .
Aeron
was recalled to herself by Elathan's amused whisper. "Are you here, Aeron?
We must sign now."
Haco
Grex had done so already; now Elathan set his own signature to the treaty
diptych, and pressed the Seal of Fomor into the matrix.
"You
will have to be content for the present with my sign-manual only,"
remarked Aeron with a smile, suiting action to word as she signed Arigna Regina
Celtarum in her strong flowing script. "But when I wear the Great Seal of
Keltia once more upon my hand, then I will place that stamp beside Fomor's and
Terra's."
"I
have a feeling," said Grex with an answering smile, "that that place
upon the matrix will not remain empty for very long."
All
that past week the Fomori fleets had been assembling, tying to out beyond the
comet clouds on the system's borders,
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261
waiting
for the next day's sunrise on the distant throneworld before the sail to Keltia
would begin.
At the
spaceport that served Tory, a secret departure was being made under the light
of the three moons. In a far corner of the field, a knot of people stood
huddled anyhow, looking spectral and haggard in the light of shut-lanterns. The
narrow beams fell on the glittering black hull of Retaliator, that stood ready
and waiting to receive her passengers and her pilot.
Apart a
little from the others, Elathan stood holding both of Gamissa's hands in both
of his, looking down into her eyes with love and apology.
"You
cannot come, sweethearting. No matter both our wishes, you shall be safer here,
and I shall feel better knowing you are so. Besides, you must be Regent in my
absence, and that will take all your time and skill. Basilea and Rauni will be
your sub-gerents, and you will have other good advisors, but you are sovereign
of Fomor, and you act in my name and with my authority."
"Plague
on it. I want to go with you and Aeron—"
"Nay,
my friend," said Aeron, coming up to them in time to hear this last, from
where she had been taking affectionate farewell of Borvos and Rauni.
"Elathan has the right of it, though I too could wish it otherwise. You
have been a brave and a loyal companion through many hardships; but I am loath
enough to endanger one monarch of Fomor in my fight for Keltia. To put two in
peril would be insupportable. Stay then, and be Regent, and gods with you until
next we meet— very soon, I promise."
Camissa
smiled, though tears stood on her face, and embraced Aeron fiercely. "And
with you as well. Take care of my lord, Aeron, and take care of yourself
also." She hugged Morwen, who stood near, then turned again to Elathan.
"Go, before I change my mind and stow away on Retaliator ..."
Elathan
kissed her tenderly, then turned hastily away to join Aeron on her way to the
ship. The others who were to go on the faring to Keltia had already taken their
places aboard, in the main cabin: Straloch, Fionnuala, Morgan Cairbre, the
Dragon warrior Emrys; Hathaway and Mikhailbva, who had begged long and hard to
be allowed to go; and Haco Grex, who had surprised himself by the strength of
his own wish to do so. So he had given permission to the two Sword officers,
had put Valadon and Deonora in charge of the Argo and a
small
crew aboard the Sword, with instructions that both ships follow to Keltia with
the Fomorian fleets, and now he was fastening himself into a blastchair's
restraint field with a feeling of anticipation such as he had not had for years.
No
doubt it is extremely unprofessional, he thought, with a smile behind the
silver beard that was anything but repentant, but my Lord I am looking forward
to this ... He heard Aeron's voice in the command cabin, then felt the ship
start to rise, and gave himself up to the motion. Theo, my old friend, I will
stand beside you soon now . . .
Below,
alone on the field in the windy dark, Camissa watched the black ship climb
quickly into the summer night sky. The blue ion-wake lay like a broad wavering
arrow, diminishing to a point as Retaliator stood off from Fomor. Then came a
sudden flash and golden smudge of starlight, and Camissa knew that Aeron had
sent the ship into hyperspace, and they were already racing far ahead of that
farewell flash.
She
looked up one last time. The heavens were clear now, the ion-track vanished,
and Camissa slowly returned to her escort for the short trip back to Tory. And
in all that escort— Borvos, Rauni, Treic, five or six others—not one person did
not long to be heading to Keltia rather than returning to his own city.
Once
Retaliator was safely into hyperspace, Aeron turned the helm over to Elathan,
and, ignoring the merry chattering group in the common-room, disappeared aft
into her cabin. Morwen, exasperated as well as concerned—there were, after all,
certain duties even queens could not avoid—gave her an hour alone and then went
to the rear cabin herself. When Aeron did not respond to her knock, Morwen
touched the door-stud and entered uninvited.
"In
gods' name, Aeron, what is on you? Almost it seems that the closer we come to
home, the darker grows your mood. What is your trouble?"
Her
friend gave her a strange little smile. "Today, in Keltia, would be the
observable day of Rhodri's death." There, she had said it, for only the
second time in four years to anyone other than Gwydion; his name was spoken,
and it seemed to fall dead at her feet even as it left her lips.
But
once she had said it, she felt an overwhelming urge to go on speaking of him.
It was true enough that both of them had been maneuvered into the marriage by
their parents, but
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that
had been by no means the whole of it. She had adored Roderick Douglas since her
childhood, with the total infatuation of a young girl for a hero warrior-poet
some years her senior. Gwydion was as her own other hand, had ever been so and
would ever be so, but Rhodri too had been special. She was blessed to have had
two such.
"I
know," said Morwen, after a long dumbfounded silence. "I thought you
wished not to be minded of it—as ever."
Aeron
smiled, this time a radiant clear smile free of pain. "Nay, Wenna, all
that is done with now; four years' silence is silence enough, though it took
Arthur himself to make me know it. There is much you and I have to say to each
other, and now it can be ail said. But I would be alone a little while longer,
and perhaps sleep an hour or two. All is well; you may tell the others
so."
When
Morwen had gone, Aeron drew herself up on the pillows and put her folded
fingers to her mouth. This night four years since Rhodri had gone out forever:
The Gate had opened for him and he was through, the shining spiral Path opening
for him outwards and upwards. He had been called, and he had gone. For some
pain-blinded time—could have been days, might have been weeks, she did not
remember— she had thought to follow; but the same Power mat had called him
forth had called her back. Not yet, it had said to her, and never like that,
and she had obeyed.
Ah
Rhodri, she thought, the tears in her eyes turning the stars beyond the port
into spinwheels of fire, though also she smiled, / would not be thinking of you
tonight if you were not thinking of me. You do not grudge Gwydion and me our
love and life together, and now at last I can believe that.
She
twisted around to look out of the port beside the bed-head, out and down to
that area of space where Rhodri and her parents and so many others had met
their shared d£n all unknowing; and beyond that, to where Bellator once had
spun around its white sun Alcluith. And that too is all part of the weaving . .
. But she had never gone that way again, to pass that place among the stars
from which his spirit had fled. She had thought to, more than once; but that
same feeling of Presence that had bidden her stay had halted her, pulling her
from that intention as a bit checks a captious horse: a hand upon the reins of
her soul, a tug strong yet gentle. And she had bent her neck to it full
willing; had felt, indeed, no
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263
inclination
even to balk, trusting that hand as the horse will trust its rider's judgment,
though its own instincts say otherwise and it cannot fathom the rider's reasons
for those commands.
Aeron
moved away from the port and leaned back again upon the pillows. Her gaze fell
upon the long carved chest that stood over against the opposite wall: the chest
taken from Prydwen, within which rested the Treasures that were the rightful
inheritance of her people, that had been sought so long and so hard.
Even if
I fall in the fight to come, and Gwydion with me, and my friends every one of
them, those here with me now and those I have left behind me, still have I done
one thing that shall never be in vain, and shall never be forgotten so long as
one Kelt may live to sing of it: / have brought the Spoils ofAnnwn back to
Keltia. Set that against all the rest, it can be no bad thing . . .
She
shifted restlessly upon the couch. All the laws of courtesy demanded she rejoin
the others: Social duties dictated attention be given to Grex; sisterly
affection required still more, and deeper, to Fionnuala; and Hathaway and
Mikhailova too had claims of friendship upon her—she had yet to tell them how
Theo had met his end, even, though of course they knew that he had died. But it
was a long voyage yet before they would sight the Curtain Wall, and there would
be time enough for that and more besides.
For the
moment, she would meditate a little, and in that contemplation she would
remember Rhodri, and Arthur, and all the others who had helped her on this
strangest and longest of quests: Sargus and his Firefolk, the duhln of Fomor,
Thona and Basilea, Borvos—all of them part of a pattern but dimly perceived and
never to be wholly grasped. Strive though she might, it would forever remain
just that last littlest most maddening glimpse, tantalizing, elusive as
something seen at night from out of the corner of her eye, that, try as she
would, she could never bring to focus.
Yet
sometimes, as now, on that very verge between trance and sleep, it came briefly
clear, standing revealed in almost mathematical strictness of form, a beauty
and severity not to be admitted by the rejecting prosy eye of everyday. Seeing
it, Aeron smiled; her weariness, taking advantage of the moment, blurred die
boundaries of her trance, and, smiling, she slept.
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Across
the room, a faint white light spilled from between the cracks of the chest that
housed the Treasures, like quick-stiver through cupped fingers; bloomed, and
was gone again. Aeron did not awaken.
Chapter
24
Aeron
came back to Keltia on a wild, wet night of rain and spring winds. She had
chosen a remote area of Caledon upon which to make planetfall: the Decies
Country, a hilly region of lakes and upland forests bordering the sea, on the
mains of Inver, the lordship of her brother Kieran.
Retaliator
plummeted like a stooping falcon through atmosphere and touched down without a
jar. Aeron shut down the systems, sat motionless for a moment, then rose and
left the command cabin with no word to anyone. Elathan started to stand,
thinking to follow, but Morwen put out a hand.
"Nay,
let her be a little time alone. She is feeling much just now."
"But
could we not help—"
"Not
we, and not now. But go and gather up your gear, and tell the others to do so
as well. She will return when she is ready."
Haifway
down Retaliated s length, Aeron stood in the corridor by the main hatchway. Her
hand stretched out tentatively to the control-stud, then contracted into a fist
and pulled back. Angry at her own hesitation, she punched the stud; the
doorseal opened like a lens, without a sound, and through the opening flowed
cool damp air.
The
smell of wet green leaves, of the sea close by, of rain falling in darkness on
peonies: Aeron stepped from the ship onto soaked emerald turf, and walking
several paces forward buried her face in the flowers of a huge peony-tree. The
petals were soft and fresh against her burning skin, and the fragrance rose up
around her in the rain. She reeled against the trunk of the great rough-barked
tree, clinging to it for support, unprepared for and overwhelmed by the wave of
feeling that broke over her now. It was as if someone had
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suddenly
sandbagged her, buckled her knees from behind; the smell of rain on new grass,
the scent of sea and peonies borne on a freshening wind. It took her back
twenty years between one heartbeat and the next, back to that spring night when
first she had met Gwydion Prince of Gwynedd in the palace gardens at Caer
Dathyl . . .
Above
her head, the rain tapped insistently on the leaves; like an eerie counterpoint
she could hear it hissing faintly on Retaliatory still-hot hull plating. She
pulled down a supple branch, let it spring sharply back, so that a shower of
cold drops fell around her, and her fingertips brushed rain and tears across
her cheek. She was home, she and her friends were safe. Already they had
reclaimed one kingdom, and had the means with which to reclaim hers; had made
an alliance that would hold like a schiltron even if all the galaxy should come
against them in arms. What was it, then, this that hurt her so? Like an iron
band around her chest—she could not breathe in for the pain of it ... She
tugged at the silk cord around her neck until a small silver medallion, warm from
her body, came up into her hand. In the peripheral glow of the moon behind low
cloud, it gleamed faintly in her palm: a dragon with wings raised, enclosed in
a circle—sign and token of the Dragon Kinship. The little disk belonged to
Gwydion, given him many years ago upon his acceptance into the Kinship; she had
worn it nearly two years now, as he wore hers. More than ornaments, the dragon
disks were weapons, protection and means of communication; it was no small
matter to entrust them to another, for, psychically keyed as they were to their
owners, they could command minds and even souls. She could speak through it now
and he would hear her; she had only to call.
Aeron
stared down at the silver medallion for a long rime, her mind an incoherent
iconoscope of memories and prescience, a palimpsest upon which was registered a
rocketing volley of images of past and future, so braided and superimposed one
upon the last upon the next that she could not separate what had already been
from what was yet to come; only, she knew that what she saw, all of it, was the
way her dim must go. She smiled then, and closing cold fingers over the
still-warm silver, she sent her soul surging outwards through her hand.
THE
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267
In
space standing off from Dyved, Gwydion swung the ship away from the planet, and
beside him in the co-pilot's chair O'Reilly sighed with deep relief.
"All
right, then . . . We are all right, aren't we?"
He
nodded, smiling, and leaned back in his chair. "If they are not after us
by now, then they will never be, and we are safe away. 1 think, Sorcha, we must
try first to find—"
He
broke off abruptly, sitting bolt upright again, face ashen beneath its tan, his
gray eyes clouded. O'Reilly, terrified, reached out a tentative hand to touch
his.
Gwydion
flinched as if she had slapped his face; then his color flooded back, and
warmth, and with both came a look of unutterable joy. "Aeronwy—Aeron is
back in Keltia. Just now I heard her call."
"Aeron!
But—"
"She
is home. She is home, and not far away, and I know where we must go to find
her."
"Oh,
Gwydion, I want to see her almost as much as you do, but are you sure?"
He
laughed, a joyous, exultant sound she had never heard from him before.
"Never was I surer of anything in all my lives—could she call, and I not
hear her? Sooner would the sun be black, or water dry ... She is waiting for
us, Sorcha; let us go and find her."
Kieran
woke, completely and instantly, from a dead sleep. Someone had called his name
. . . But Eiluned lay peacefully beside him in the big bed. His thought reached
farther, to touch their son; but the baby too slept untroubled. Who, then? He
lay back on the pillows; then the call came again, stronger, and this time he
knew.
Leaping
from the bed, he pulled a tunic over his head and flung a cloak around him, and
dashed barefoot through the silent castle to the postern gate. Fingers clumsy
with haste and excitement, he overrode the security codes and threw the door
open to the streaming night.
Aeron
stood there, cloaked against the rain. He stared at her face in the folds of
the hood, then swept her into his arms without a word. She let her head fall
against him for a moment, then drew away a little to look straight up at him.
"Where
is he? I did call him; he was there, Kieran, and then he was gone, and I could
not find him again. I will blast
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Caerdroia
down to bedrock if I must, to get him out of
there."
Kieran
met her eyes steadily, and with pity. "He escaped from Caerdroia, Aeron,
and went to Declan in the Kyles of Ra."
"Where
is he?"
"He
was betrayed by Powell and Pryderi, when he went to them for help. They have
sold themselves to the Marbh-draoi; they are his creatures now, both of them.
We heard that Gwydion was prisoner in Caer Sidi. There has been no word
since."
Aeron's
face went white, so white the blood left even her lips, and Kieran caught her
shoulders to steady her. "Caer Sidi," she whispered. " 'Complete
shall be the prison of Gweir . . .' " But before she could say more,
Eiluned came running into the gatehouse and threw herself upon her
sister-in-law, babbling incoherently and joyfully.
Aeron
staggered a little beneath the loving onslaught, recovering only when Eiluned
caught sight of Morwen and Fionnuala and catapulted herself upon them in their
turn.
But
Kieran could not take his eyes from his sister's face. He was appalled by the
ravages of change he saw in it, and wondered at the cause. She has something of
thai game look Gwydion had, he thought, when he returned from his errand to the
Hollow Mountains . . , With a start he collected himself, and greeted Morwen as
lovingly, if less boisterously, as Eiluned had done, and Fionnuafa, his pet, as
delicately as if she were made of crystal. Then he noticed the strangers who
stood so quietly in the shadows just beyond the gate, watching this reunion of
Aeron and her family with understanding smiles.
"Sister,
what guests do you bring to Inver?"
Aeron
drew them forward into the light. "I have the honor to present the Prince
Kieran and the Princess Eiluned to His Majesty King Elathan of Fomor—without
whose help and friendship neither Morwen nor 1 should be here now—and His
Excellency Haco Grex, Terran Ambassador to Keltia. We have all three of us come
to an agreement that should stop even Strephon in his tracks."
Kieran's
face changed. "But have none of you heard? Strephon is dead. Jaun Akhera
is now Emperor, and his mother, Helior, rules as Regent."
"By
the gods, is he now." Aeron seemed more amused
THE
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269
than
anything else. "Well, I can see an evening ahead of us even a bard would
be hard put to frame in words."
Eiluned
chose that moment to assert herself over guests, friends, kin and Queen.
"Aeron, do not keep them all out in the wind and the wet, standing on
ceremony, sometimes you can be so—nay, come in then, all of you, and be welcome
to our house. Where is Gwenvor? Come, lassie"—this to Mikhailova, who was
shivering—"you are as cold as a frog— Kieran, summon your man Llew for the
King—oh Aeron, will you never come in—Wenna, up to the baths with you at once,
I will not have you back from gods know where to take a chill on my
doorstep—"
Elathan
looked around helplessly, and Morwen, grinning, linked her arm through his.
"It is no use to oppose Luned under her own roof," she said.
"Come inside now."
"What
will you do now, then?" asked Kieran.
It was
well into middle-night; outside, the rain continued to fall steadily, as Aeron
and the others recounted their tales to half the household of Inver. Rioghnach
and Niall too had been summoned from their bed by Aeron's telepathic call,
arriving only moments after Kieran; others hearing the stir had naturally risen
to inquire, and stayed to rejoice.
But no
matter the urgency or drama, Keltic hospitality had come before all else. There
had been the inevitable prelude of baths and clean dry clothing and food and
drink, and only then talk. Much to say on all sides: Aeron had demanded a full
account of how her kingdom had fared in her absence, and she had returned over
and over to any scrap of news of Gwydion. But she had had to satisfy the
others* curiosity as well; it had made a long tale, even with help from Morwen
and Elathan and Grex, and her voice and mood had both begun to fail her well
before it was ended.
"What
will you do now, then?"
When
she did not answer Kieran's question, Elathan threw her a quick look full of
concern. "Aeron? This need not be discussed tonight; we have a few days'
time to plan. Let it be awhile."
But she
shook her head. "It is not that, though truly we shall all plan far better
after a day's sleep, and maybe more than a day's. Nay, it is but a care of my
own, a private matter, and I think," she finished with a rush, as if she
must speak swiftly or tears would overtake her, "I think I must
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271
deal
with it alone, so go to sleep, all you, and we shall meet again tonight. Nay,
Kieran, I said I must be alone—" She brushed past him and ran, almost
blindly, down the corridor and out into the gardens.
It was
black dark, and her time-sense told her that it lacked perhaps four hours or so
until dawn. A misty rain still fell, and water dripped from the trees, but a
wind had come up, and at intervals the light of the old moon spilled through
the rifts in the clouds.
Aeron
had run out without even a cloak, but she felt neither the chill nor the rain,
and there under the peony-trees she was again hit by the same causeless sorrow,
far stronger now, that had so shaken her earlier that night. An unhappiness
like a grounds we II ing wave spread out to enfold her in one great aching
sadness, leaching away her strength until she thought she could scarcely
continue to stand upright; her bones felt turned all to water, and the darkness
pressed in upon her.
Then a
deeper darkness seemed to form at the end of the alley of peony-trees; it
moved, resolved into a tall shape as she looked up, straining her sight and her
othersight through the mist. Even the rain seemed to hush, and then she was
running through the dark, and the other was running too, and she flung herself
into Gwydion's arms, and he caught her up against him under his cloak.
They
did not kiss, not at first; what he felt, and knew she shared, was a feeling
too huge and deep and solemn to be met with anything save silence and utter
stillness, of body and of spirit. He held her close without a word spoken, and
she leaned her head against his chest, and they did not move for many moments.
When at
last he spoke, it seemed that his words were but a continuation, somehow, of
something he had been saying to her forever, a speech that had never been
interrupted and that had never been begun.
"They
had told me you were dead, do you see; I did not feel it so, but after a while,
alone there, times were when I did begin to wonder if they were not right. So
even I test courage in the end—"
"And
even I, when I heard you were in Caer Sidi." She drew back a little,
looked up into his face. "Just now—I did not think I could bear it."
The
rain had ended; the rising wind had torn the clouds apart, so that the moon now
shone clear upon them. His
countenance
in the moonlight seemed suddenly strange; she had known it all her life, had
loved it near as long, yet now the white light spilling over the planes of his
face made all new: a country of unfamiliar contrasts and terrifying strengths,
his skin blanched of all color against the darkness of hair and beard, the gray
eyes sparkling silver when the moon caught them, black under brow-shadow when
he bent his head away.
What
glyphs of change he read in her own face she did not know; surely he must see
at least what Elathan saw, and Morwen, and Kieran, and doubtless far more than
that. But he said no word of it, only drew one finger, callused from harp and
sword-hilt both, down along her cheek and jaw and throat, and closing his hand
over the neck-brooch of her tunic pulled her close against him once more.
"Keltia
has been asleep without you," he said into her hair. "A troubled
fitful doze full of evil dreams, and all we walking in our sleep. But now will
come a fair waking."
He felt
her shiver once and grow still again. "Better it might be if we stayed
asleep, or slept forever," she said quietly. "I have brought such
things with me, sacred as they are, as could be the engines of true nightmare.
What kind of day is that, for me to cause to dawn in Keltia—to make Tara into
another Bellator? That would be no right awakening, but the worst of all
dreams."
"Then
shall we all dream it together, and make an end of it." She heard the
confident loving certainty in his voice, burnishing its deepness; and it seemed
that never had there been a time when that voice had not been the voice to her
of all the strength and courage and conviction that she had at hand to call
upon; not RhodrTs voice, not her father's, had ever held for her what this
voice held that spoke now so quiet in her ear. She could lean against it, as a
fixed rock that fails not though the planet crumble, and again she looked up
into his face. He was not smiling, but the look in his eyes was a smile.
"Here
is a thing I have kept for you," he said then, and stretching her cold
fingers across his palm slipped the Great Seal of Keltia back into its
accustomed place. The huge flawed emerald had no color under the moon, but deep
in the heart of the stone a tiny twisting flame seemed to burn.
Aeron
closed her hand at once to a fist; the ring was too big for the slimness of her
finger, and for it to slip off now would be an ill omen indeed.
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"Loose
as ever," she said lightly. "I shall never manage to fit this thing,
1 think." A look of bitter amusement came over her face. "We might
come out of this coil as emperor and empress ourselves," she said, her
voice both teasing and warning. "Or come out of it not at all."
"That
is as it will be," he answered after a while. "When you found the
Treasures, you altered the web of this matter as surely as did Jaun Akhera when
he used magic to break the gates of Caerdroia. The final choice is still yours
to make— but now, truly, are the buttons off the sword-points."
Aeron
woke suddenly in the dawn, lay for a moment unmoving, her heart pounding, not
knowing where she was or what danger might be near. Then she became aware of
Gwydion beside her in the wide, carved-goldenwood bed of Inver's best
guestchamber, his back to her and his face toward the door through which any
danger must come. Her terror faded, and she fitted herself against him like one
spoon to another, her breasts against the warmth of his back, her arm slipping
under his to curve around his chest. In his sleep he sighed and murmured
somewhat in Kymric, and clasped her hand; and comforted by his nearness and
reality Aeron slept again.
Gwydion
stirred as late-morning sunlight struck his closed eyes, and without opening
them turned round to Aeron and kissed her bare shoulder. She smiled and nestled
closer; but she had been lying awake for some time, watching the day advance
across the ceiling, and thinking, and she said as much to him.
"Oh
aye? And all before breakfast, too ... Well, to what decision has this brought
you?"
"Ah,
strategy! Now that is for my First Lord of War to tell me . . . But I have
thought, first of all, we must hold somewhat of a war council. Elathan's fleets
are on their way, and we must learn what tally of our own can be sent to join
them. Also I did a small piece of business with our new Terran ambassador that
may be of help to us later, if we should need it. But the chief strike at Jaun
Akhera I do wish to make myself. And, quite selfishly, I would dilute the
pleasure of that strike as little as I must."
They
lay abed for some time discussing means and measures and news; and though they
had talked far into the night, had talked near as hard as they had loved,
always there was
THE
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273
something
one would remember that had not yet been told to the other, and must be
imparted that instant. Then Gwydion upon rising discovered with some amusement
that a lavish meal, half breakfast, half daymeal, had been discreetly left for
them in the adjoining grfanan. Aeron brushed out her hair, wrapped herself in a
chamber-robe tremendously more elegant than those she was accustomed to wear in
her own chambers—Eiluned's, surely, she thought, very impressed— and joined him
at the table. Suddenly she was famished, and this was the first food in months
that had any savor for her.
"You
said remarkably little last night about your stay in Caer Sidi," she said
after a while. "Was that by policy, or did other matters rather drive it
from your mind?"
He
laughed. "A little of both, I should think, though I do not recall hearing
you ask for an account of it then . . . Well, though I told you not last night,
I was not Pow^il's only guest-of-force. Sorcha ni Reille shared my
condition."
"Sorcha!"
Aeron nearly dropped her ale-mether with very amazement. "She was under
strict orders to remain at Glassary; how came she into Powell's grasp?"
Gwydion
related the events that had led to his discovering O'Reilly in the island
prison, and Aeron's face grew somber at the telling.
"I
am grieved to hear this of Dyved," she said when he had finished. "He
was ever a trimmer, but for all his failings, Powell was in the main a good
friend to my father, and to know that he could be so readily seduced by Jaun
Akhera is a bitter quaich to drink of. But," she added, brightening,
"this news of Sorcha sits far better with me. I shall be very glad to see
her again, even if she did disobey me. Where is she now?"
"Not
far," said Gwydion; he had kept as a surprise the news that the Terran had
come with him from Dyved. "She has proved herself a loyal Kelt; does not
that merit reward from the Crown?"
"To
reward O'Reilly? She gave up all to stay with us—as did Theo—did you think I
would not reward her, or him had he lived, insofar as is in my power? But
Sorcha shall have, to answer your uncivil question, anything she wishes that 1
am able to bestow: a title, precedence and position at Court, a maenor and a
diichas wherever she will. She is very dear to me."
"Dear
enough to become kin?" he asked, not looking at
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her; on
the voyage to Inver, O'Reilly had, in a burst of candor, shyly and proudly
confided in him of-her love for Desmond, and his for her.
"Certainly!"
snapped Aeron, in rather sharper a tone than she had intended, wondering why in
all the hells Gwydion chose to pursue this now. "Which of my brothers does
she wish to wed? I'll approve the match this minute."
"No-
brother," said Gwydion, applying himself anew to fresh-baked bread and the
excellent local ale. "A cousin."
She
divined which cousin at once. "Desmond! Oh, this is a fine piece of news!
They shall be wed at Ni-maen, with ceremony, when all is right again. I will
give them something substantial for tinnscra: a continent, or perhaps a small
moon . . . When shall 1 see her again, do you think?"
Chapter
25
f Tpon
her arrival with Gwydion at Inver the previous \J night, O'Reilly had been
swept up jubilantly by Kieran and Morwen and the others, happily confounded by
the presence of Mikhailova and Hathaway, plied with ale and pressed with
questions. Though she had quickly learned the details of Aeron's adventures,
she did not see her that night. Which was just fine, O'Reilly told herself
hastily; Aeron was with Gwydion, and she would not have dreamed of intruding
upon that reunion—
Only ,
. . she would so like to see her, just to reassure herself that Aeron was truly
back, and truly safe, and that everything was ail right. O'Reilly was honest
enough to admit that she would probably feel a little less urgent about needing
to see Aeron had Desmond been there; but that thought carried its own unease:
In spite of all Desmond's assurances, how would Aeron really feel when she
learned that Desmond and O'Reilly had agreed to wed, and all without the
consent of the Ard-rian? More than that—what would she do?
Gray
rainlight filtered through the tall narrow windows as Aeron entered the Great
Hall. The big high-ceilinged room was deserted at this hour, the life of the
castle all moved elsewhere, and it would not emerge from this curious
suspension until the nightmeal, when light and color and people and noise would
once more bring it to life.
Empty—but
Gwydion told me to meet him here . . . No, she saw then, there was someone at
the far end of the room, someone cloaked and hooded standing by the cold
hearth. // that is Gwydion, he has lost over a foot in height since breakfast
...
"Who
is that?" she said aloud, and the figure by the fireplace whipped so
sharply around that the hood fell back,
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and
Aeron saw in the tight from the windows that it was O'Reilly.
For
what seemed hours both women stood frozen, for Gwydion, wishing to surprise
them both, had told neither whom she was really to meet in the Hall. Then
O'Reilly was skimming up the room's length, heedless of protocol, certain of
friendship's reception. Aeron held out her arms, and O'Reilly ran into them
like a lost child home at last.
"Oh,
Aeron—oh God, I thought we'd never see you again— and it was Gwydion all the
time, in that terrible place—and I didn't even know it—and he got us out—the
seal-people— and Pryderi—and they were right all along, they said you were on
your way home, and here you are—"
Aeron
disengaged herself gently from O'Reilly's frantic grip, and, putting her arm around
the younger woman's shoulders, led her over to the window-seat.
"Softly,
alanna," she said smiling. "Let me get a proper look at you in the
light— Well, you seem not to have fared too badly. Though I have missed my
esquire sorely these past months; still, that was no reason for her to bolt
from sanctuary as she did, and I shall have a word with the Abbess Indec on
that account; but who is this told you of my return?"
"Oh,
you mustn't blame Indec, it wasn't her fault that I left ... Well, as for the other
thing, I'd forgotten it till now—but I was walking one afternoon, in the hiils
across the loch from the convent, and I met these—people. They were dressed
sort of strangely, all in red, and they had the most amazing eyes—but I didn't
think of that, somehow, when I was talking to them . . . Anyway, they seemed to
know you, and Gwydion, and they seemed to know you'd be back soon. Then I left
Vannin, and ended up in that castle on the island, thanks to Kynon. But
Gwydion! He was amazing! He made this incredible magic—ships and warriors and
aircars—and then he called the silkies to help us get away—there was a lot
going on."
"So
I have heard," said Aeron dryly, though her face had clouded at the
mention of Kynon. "Desmond is on his way here this minute, with Rohan and
Declan and Melangell and many others of our friends.1'
"You
know!" gasped O'Reilly, blushing furiously. "Ard-rian, I never—"
*"Ard-rian'!
What has become of 'Aeron'? Nay, Sorcha, if we are to be kinswomen, you must
learn to be easy with my
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name.
After all. you will yourself be royal, with duties and obligations much the
same as any other princess of Keltia. Surely you had thought of that?" she
asked, sympathy replacing the teasing note in her voice as she saw the Terran
girl's stunned expression.
O'Reilly
stared back at her, astonished at her own obtuse-ness. "No—no, I hadn't,
really. Not like that—oh God no, I was just so worried about you: when would
you be back, what would you think, would you even give us permission ... I
really do love him terribly, you know—he was so kind to me from the very first
night I came to Keltia, and then after Theo's death . . . Well," she
finished, floundering a little, "I just didn't think of it."
"Naught
to think of," said Aeron, giving her hand an encouraging squeeze.
"For there is no difficulty . . . But for now, we have much to do, and the
Ard-rian's esquire, no less than the Ard-rian, has been too long away from her
duties."
For all
Aeron's words to O'Reilly, little work of real substance was done that day at
Inver. Most of those who had come from Fomor took a quiet day of it, resting or
reading or walking in the gardens. For Aeron, the hours were filled with
reunions: In midafternoon arrived several of Keltia's chief generals and
Council members—the Earl-Marischal, Lady Douglass Graham; Tanwen of Marsco, who
had commanded all the foot-soldiery in the battles down the Great Glen; Grelun,
Gwydion's Dragon lieutenant and rescuer, with Helwen Drummond; Helwen's elder
brother Dafydd, Aeron's first lover and her friend for twenty years; Hollin
Macdonald, the chariotry commander; family too—Aeron's grandmother Gwyneira;
her favorite uncle Estyn, Emer's brother; and beyond all hope, Gwydion's mother
Gwenedour and brother Elved, who had heard from Rohan of Aeron's return and
Gwydion's escape and who had adventured an escape of their own from Gwynedd;
and very many others.
And,
far less welcome, came news of some who would not be returning: Denzil Cameron,
killed in a space-raid off Droma; Maravaun of Cashel, supremely talented
cavalry commander; Mahon, one of Aeron's Aoibheil cousins; Scota, a Kerrigan
cousin; Wolf Graham, Douglass's brother, dead in the Fian raid that had freed
Gwydion; and too many others.
Though
the revelation of each new loss brought each its own measure of grief, Aeron
set her sorrow aside for the
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present,
to welcome the newcomers, to present them to Elathan and to Grex, to listen to
their reports and accountings with as much grave attention as that with which
they heard her own. But of all those she held most dear, still there was one
person yet to come, and not until night had fallen again over Inver did his
arrival make Aeron's homecoming complete.
The
mood was somber and sober at the nightmeal: thankfulness for what had been
restored, but an awareness over all that in the morning the real work would
begin, the task for which those now assembled had fought and waited and
struggled to survive. As the Great Hall filled for the nightmeal, a tumult came
outside the door; as all within turned to see the cause of the uproar, Rohan
entered, with Declan and Desmond, Shane and Melange!!, Fergus, Morwen's
husband, and many others from Firedrake, which was now in orbit out beyond
Caledon's moon.
Though
everyone else that day had been rivers of query, Rohan had no question for his
sister but one, and his eyes held hers as they made their way to each other
through the crowd in the Hall, and came, a little breathless, face to face at
last.
"Did
you find what you did seek?"
She
nodded, face solemn, but the light behind her eyes brimmed over into her face;
and seeing the smile that broke then, Rohan swept her into his arms. Then
Declan seized her, and Desmond; a few feet away, Morwen and Fergus were embracing,
their joy the greater for the day's delay.
Though
the nightmeal concluded with something better cheer than that in which it had
begun, still it was quickly over, for Aeron had called a council of war for
early the next morning, and near all those present were commanded, and eager,
to attend.
"Little
time we have for preparing, and none to spend on private joys," said
Aeron, though her shining face gave that last the lie. "We must lay our
battle-plans quickly: I have called in our own forces, Elathan's fleets will be
here within days, and I am told that my cousin Kerensa brings a small force
from the Protectorates. Aojun too, by the word of Queen Tanaxio, has promised
to send. Myself, I think it great shame if we cannot succeed with the help of
such friends to throw out the Marbh-draoi and all his creatures, and to put a
stop to whatever reinforcements the Princess Helior may be
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sending
to help her son. The which, please gods, will not arrive too soon for us— But
let us hear what our First Lord of War may say."
"It
has not gone all so ill in our absences, Ard-rian," said Gwydion.
"But what must be done now is clear. All our fleetpower must assemble to
beat back the incoming Imperial ships; as few as possible must reach Tara. We
must land on the Throneworld whatever ground forces we can command: The catha
of Tara, though dispersed after Caerdroia's fall, can be rallied quick enough
to serve. We here, and any who can fight their way to us, must play at
pig-i'-the-wood with Jaun Akhera, until the Fomori, at least, do arrive to join
us."
"You
mean we must first lure him out of Caerdroia," said Elathan.
Gwydion
nodded, studying the hologram map of the Great Glen that filled the center of
the table. "We need not be any great force to do so, for he will surely
not refuse our challenge; though of course the greater our numbers the better
our chances of an early victory. But he must be drawn out, and swiftly too, for
any delay will favor him and not ourselves. Moreover, he knows full well that
we would never countenance the destruction, accidental or otherwise, of the
City. Some thousands of our own folk are still within, for one thing, and for
another I do not think that even our magic could bring down its walls?" He
glanced at Aeron, who shook her head but said no word. "Well then, you
have it, so."
"I
have heard much talk of force of arms," said Haco Grex, and his unfamiliar
voice and Terran-accented Gaeloch caused heads to turn. Unruffled by the
attention, he pursued his point. "And that is of course a necessary thing.
But I have heard no word of those—other means which Her Majesty endured so much
to find and bring back to Keltia. Are not those weapons, just as much as swords
and siege lasers, and why do we not speak of them here?"
"Little
enough to say," answered Aeron. "They are here, and we shall
certainly make full use of them when the time comes—when I say the time has
come. I think it not wise to advertise their presence, or even to speculate
overmuch, for as yet we do not know their full powers, or the price of that
power."
"Yet
you risked your life and others' to bring them home," said Thomas de
Valadon from a comer of the room, where he
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stood
with Hathaway. "And you will stake the battle—indeed, the final outcome of
this war—on these things, unproven and untried
"Without
question," said Aeron evenly. "Do not forget, my lord, that these
things, as you do call them, have been already proven in war many times over.
When it comes that we need to know of their powers, it is in my heart that we
shall know."
Valadon
sketched a bow. "As you say, Ard-rian; though I do not understand, and I
doubt the Emperor Jaun Akhera will even believe." . -
"It
is not required that you understand; nor even that you accept. It is not
required even that I do so ... The Treasures take no note of belief or
unbelief, scorn or devotion; they simply are. As for Jaun Akhera, he may
disbelieve alt he likes; that will help him not at all when the Eye of Bator is
glancing across his lines. We shall see how much he disbelieves then." She
turned once more to Gwydion. "Let that tally be sent to Gwennan Chynoweth
on Firedrake, of the ships she can expect to join her at the Roads of Grannos:
their number, and kind, and complement of forces. A like tally has already been
drawn up for the incoming Fomori fleet, by grace of Elathan."
"Heard
and ordered." Gwydion looked around the room. "So, then. This for us
is the Last Battle, Cymynedd, that shall win the world or lose tt. There will
be no midmeasures this time."
"To
lose the world or win it," said Elathan. "A fairly final prospect,
either way."
"If
it be truly Cymynedd for us," said Aeron, "our task is only to fight
it. What shall come of it in the end is not for us to rule."
Elathan
smiled. "Dan again, Aeron?"
She
matched his smile. "As you say."
Though
begged to do so by almost everyone at Inver and many who were not, Aeron
delayed for some days in an-nouncing her return to the people. Those who knew
that their Queen had come home had been told so only under the strictest oaths
of secrecy, until such time as she thought it best to inform the rest of
Keltia. When pressed for an explanation for her reluctance, she remarked only
that she had her
reasons,
and Gwydion had more, and that would have to content them all.
Three
days after the war council, Aeron and Gwydion, and others beside, could not be
found at Inver; and Elathan and Grex were not alone in wondering what was afoot
and where they were. The truth, had they known it, would perhaps have given
them less comfort than their ignorance.
For a
call had gone out the night before the convening of the council, a call that
reached to every part of Keltia and was not hindered by either time or
distance, a call that was heard only by those to whom it had been sent. It
summoned them to a place they knew on Caledon, not very far from Inver as the
hawk flies, a place called Pawn Shallow: a green plain that had once been the
bed of a vanished loch, cleft for nearly a league where the rock had cracked
and risen unevenly, pushed up from below by volcanism and down by glaciation
from above. At one end of the great rift, a huge flat rock jutted out over the
falling ground, like a natural platform or podium; and so it was used, for here
at Pawn Shallow was the assembly-place of the Dragon Kinship.
They
came now at Gwydion's own command, for this was one calling he would not
entrust to his Summoner but had sent out himself; as many of the Ten Thousand
as could respond. Many had been slain in the ongoing battles; some were too
badly injured in body or in mind to answer his call; very many were unable to
get to Caledon undetected; and many more were simply unable to get to Caledon
at all.
But for
all that, the plain below the rift was black with people as Gwydion stepped out
onto the rock platform. Though few for secrecy's sake were robed in their usual
panoply of black and purple, still at every neck gleamed the silver dragon
disk, and upon every face upturned to the stone was written the same
questioning expectation.
Any
meeting of the Kinship was a solemn occasion, but this one, by context and
purpose, was particularly so. Perhaps, thought Gwydion as he watched his
foregathered Dragons, the graves: and most desperately important that has ever
been . . .
A
sudden alert stillness, like a collective breath being drawn and held, came
over the assembly as Aeron joined Gwydion upon the great rock plinth. They were
flanked by Shane and Melange!!, both of whom had come down with
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Rohan
from the Firedrake; Grelun, Helwen and others who had come from Inver stood a
little below the rock.
Gwydion
stepped forward and began to speak, and the rock overhang amplified his
bard-voice, so that his words rolled out over the silent throng as clear and
unstressed as everyday speech.
"My
Kindred, I have called you here this night both to tell you a thing and to ask
of you a thing. First the telling, though I know already that you do not need
to be told: Aeron Queen of Kelts is once more home." He held out his hand
to Aeron, who took it and came forward to stand beside him.-
"And
it is I, by courtesy of the Pendragon of Lirias, who do the asking," she
said, still holding Gwydion'? hand. "Know then that with the help of many,
Kelt and gallain both but all friends alike, I have brought home to Keltia the
Treasures that were so long lost." She paused a moment to allow the
exultant murmur to die down again. "Many of you, 1 know, will have felt
their coming; and it is to the Kinship, founded in memory of the last King of
Kelts who had the Treasures to his hand, that I thought to turn first. For they
are not Treasures only; they are weapons, one of which I have already made use
of in what I deemed a time of need.'And I intend to use them all, as and if I
must, to win back Keltia from the Marbh-draoi. Now, the power of the Treasures
is of itself, and needs no aid of ours to be so; but they have lain a long time
idle in a foreign place. Therefore I ask you to join now with Gwydion and with
me in a rite of purification and reconsecration before the last battles; for
weapons are most useful when cleansed and in best repair, and so also are
souls. Jaun Akhera and I must face each other again, before all is over, and magic,
not swords, shall decide the issue between us. 1 cannot know what form this
fight may take, nor what power he may bring to it. Whatever, I must deny that
power and win that fight, and I shall need not only the Treasures to my hand
but the Kinship at my back. I may not command you in this matter: I am not
Ard-rian here but Dragon only, under the authority of the Pendragon even as you
yourselves. I may only ask."
There
was but one answer that could ever have been made to that, and they made it
joyfully. Aeron's face lighted as she felt it, and when she turned to Gwydion
she looked to his sight as a girl of seventeen again, all her years of learning
and
lore
and power and responsibility somehow lifted, all the weight of queenship set
aside.
He
raised a hand, and, as had been arranged beforetimes, the four Treasures were
brought out and set on a low altar at the edge of the lip of rock. First
Helwen, carrying the Spear Birgha; then Grelun, with the Sword Fragarach;
Melange!!, who bore the Cup Pair Dadeni; and last Shane, in his hands the Stone
of Fal. Though no visible signal was given, the four bearers stepped back as
one, and Gwydion came forward alone.
"Even
in this company we dare not remove the coverings from these holy things, save
the Cup alone," he said. "To look upon the others in untimely hour is
death, and we do not need to see them for them to be Seen." As if in
confirmation of his wordr, the same faint bloom of light that had come to the
Treasures in Aeron's cabin aboard Retaliator began to gather around them now,
like the Solas Sidhe or the tinna-galach, a ghostly flame that seemed to come
out of the air itself.
Gwydion
began the rite, but now he did not speak in words; those who were Kin to the
Dragon were skilled in other means of communication, surer and clearer and
altogether more tangible. As the rite progressed, it seemed that every soul
upon that plain took fire from the Treasures' presence; but by the time it was
done it seemed that the Treasures had drawn a fire of their own from the Kinship,
a subtle reinforcement of their own matchless reality.
They
are realer than alt of us, thought Aeron, awed, as Gwydion concluded the
ceremony and gave his parting blessing as Pendragon to the Kinship. And tonight
they have come alive again . . . They are alive again, the Spoils of Annwn
themselves; and so are we—Keltia—for we and they are one. Let us never diminish
ourselves again.
In the
last hours on Caledon, most lay sleeping, gathering what rest they could before
the dawn. In the morning Aeron would go to the Firedrake, there to announce her
return to Keltia—and to Jaun Akhera. The strains of the last few days had been
appalling: They had worked tirelessly, in the utmost secrecy that could be
managed, and now the regrouped military might of Keltia was a grafaun poised to
fall. For tonight, though, they slept, and their dreams were full.
Yet
some still waked: In the great square room atop the
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keep,
Kieran held his fretful son in his arms, soothing the outraged little squeaks
with a murmuring bass rumble, and the baby soon quieted and fell asleep again.
In a
spacious guest chamber, Desmond and O'Reilly stood watching the strange
luminescence that burned far out upon the sea. Almost it seemed that creatures
were dancing out there, by the light of those watery flames, dark slender
shapes that arced and rose and leaped, wild with joy above the waves, and a
high sweet singing came faintly to their ears.
And in
the cool darkness beneath the peony-trees, Aeron spread her cloak upon the deep
grasses and pulled Gwydion down with her, her arms closing around chest and
back and shoulders as he lifted her beneath him, and his mouth, came down on
hers in the spring night.
Chapter
26
Jaun
Akhera had been anything but idle in the weeks he had been Emperor. From the
moment he had deciphered the message that his mother had contrived to send him,
he had been as a man transformed, alive with a fierce fevered energy that
crackled around him, like the blue sparks that leap from the fur of a cat in
thundery weather. Though Sancho-niathon and Hanno, among many others, had
counseled him to prudence—the forces Jaun Akhera was counting on were scarcely
halfway on their sail from Alphor—he had redoubled his attacks on the Keltic
raiders who had been making Imperial life at Caerdroia a hungry hell, had
redeployed his remaining starfleet strength, which had been until now
carefully, even grudgingly, husbanded, and—what was alarming his advisors most
of all—had begun to strike back at the Keltic fleets beyond the boundaries of
the Throneworld system.
Rohan,
initially contemptuous, had quickly recognized in the altered tactics something
more substantive than the all-out throws of a desperate general, and himself
took the counsel of wariness that had been urged in vain upon Jaun Akhera. He
had called in the main Keltic fleet to patrol those areas where the Imperials
seemed to be concentrating their new raids; so that for the first time since
the war had begun, the breach in the Curtain Wall was not so rigidly guarded as
it had been. A ship from outside, perhaps, could even slip through unnoticed,
if its pilot had great skill and its captain had need of passing the Wall, and
if both alike were still more greatly daring . . .
Then
suddenly Rohan was gone, and the Firedrake seemed to have vanished from the
space around Tara.
"How
can we lose track of a ship the size of a planetoid?"
Jaun
Akhera's voice was full of all the irritation he felt. He did not really expect
any answer, and he would have angrily
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dismissed
any answer that his aides might have offered. But they knew better than to
offer, and watched instead in prudent silence.
Leaning
over the gallery rail in the Fianna War Room, Jaun Akhera stared at the huge
two-story hologram star display as if he could somehow reach into it and pluck
out the Firedrake like a ripe plum. Gods' curse upon you, Rohan, he thought
passionately, you are very near as much trouble as your sisfer . . . "Tell
the scout sloops to double their sweep range. We need more information and we
need it now."
"Majesty—"
began Hanno.
"Do
it!" barked Jaun Akhera. "I prefer my enemies where I can see their
eyes; but if that is not possible then at least I want to know for sure if they
are behind my back. Rohan is up to something, I can feel it."
Sanchoniathon,
coming at that moment into the War Room, looked around for his brother; then,
seeing the lifted head and glance of greeting, joined him at the rail.
"You
have word of Firedrake?"
He
shook his head. "No, Majesty; though there is certainly something going on
we have yet to get to the bottom of. And we will," he added hastily,
forestalling Jaun Akhera's angry question, then lowered his voice for his
brother's ear alone. "For the moment, Akhi, there is other news—from
Mardale."
Jaun
Akhera frowned. Mardale was the spaceport for Caerdroia, some five miles beyond
the city gates in a small valley of the Loom. There seemed no reason why news
should come from there—much less news important enough for Sancho to bring in
person—since the port had been all but shut down since the fall of Caerdroia.
All the same—
"What
news?"
"I
think it better told to you in private." Sanchoniathon indicated the
passageway leading back to the palace.
"Very
well, Prince of Alphor.1' Jaun Akhera swept a reinforcing glare over his
generals. "Gentlemen, I will leave you awhile. See that the new patrol
patterns are devised by the time I return, and get out those scout sloops. I
want to know where Rohan is, and 1 want to know quickly: I grow extremely weary
of Aoibhells pouring tike water through my fingers."
"And
now," he said to Sanchoniathon, as they entered the passageway and the
laserproof doors closed behind them.
"we
are alone, so you may safely impart to me the nature of this news from
Mardale."
"Visitors,"
said his brother tersely. "Or perhaps I would do better to call them
petitioners—or even beggars."
"You
would do best of all if you were to tell me who they are."
"Well,
there is Kynon ap Accolon; he arrived first, full of tales of a miraculous
escape made by Gwydion and the Terran O'Reilly from—"
Jaun
Akhera stopped dead in the corridor. "Gwydion! Do you mean Kynon knew
where he was and did not tell us?"
"Not
quite; Kynon himself did not know until very recently; well, so at least he
claims, and I believe him."
"Do
you! But you said 'escape'; that generally implies from somewhere."
Sanchoniathon
took his brother's arm and gently urged him forward. "You will not love
this, Akhi," he began. "But you were right, you know, about where
Gwydion would go, once he had escaped from Caerdroia."
"Powell?"
His eyes blazed like sunstones. "Gwydion went to Powell for sanctuary, and
Powell kept that information from me?"
Sanchoniathon's
silence confirmed it, and with an effort almost physical Jaun Ahkera closed
control over his rage.
"By
the gods, but Dyved had better have an excellent reason for this," he said
at length in his usual voice. "I suppose they are the new arrivals—Powell
and Pryderi? Yes, they and Kynon, each hurrying to reach me first, to fill my
ear with tales of the other . . . Well, I do not wish to see any of them,
Sancho, not for at least three days and perhaps longer; attend to it. As for
Gwydion, though it grates me that he is free and that I might have had him here
again, it is of less import than it might have been, and maybe it matters not
so much after all; not now that I am Emperor. Not now that Mother is bringing
the fleet."
"There
is word of that too,* said Sanchoniathon eagerly, glad of being able to offer
some good news against the tidings of Gwydion and his former captors. "For
some reason, the Curtain Wall seems not so tightly sealed as il has been of
late; a cutter sent in advance of the main fleet has also landed at Mardale.
Its captain is an officer of our mother's household, with news: The armada will
be at the Curtain Wall in three
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days'
local time, and here at Tara six days after that, if all goes well."
The
golden eyes took fire again, this time with exultation. "Ah, now we shall
see some real doings! We shall see, Aeron, who really holds Keitia for you:
Rohan or I."
As
Retaliator rose up from below the orbit of Ruchdi, Caledon's moon, a gold glow
seemed to come from the far side of the satellite, as if the sun were rising
beyond that cold horizon. Then, with a suddenness that was startling even to
those who were expecting it, a colossal spaceborne dragon seemed to be leaping
at the black ship, claws outstretched to seize them. Grex actually flinched,
and even Elathan shifted a little in his blastchair, as the Firedrake seemed to
hang before them poised against the stars.
"I've
never seen anything like it," said Grex, recovering his composure, to
O'Reilly who sat beside him.
"There
isn't anything like it," she replied happily. It had alt come spinning
back to her: her own first sight of that glorious golden ship, from the command
cabin of the little Sword; how they had all felt, watching her grow ever huger
across the star-miles, eating up the vast distances like some inexorable force
of nature. Even the unavoidable thought of Theo that came with the memory,
though no less sorrowful, somehow seemed less painful, linking her past with
her present happiness. Glancing across the cabin, she met Desmond's
understanding smile.
But
already Aeron had brought Retaliator in to one of the flagship's many
landing-bays, and was setting her down with a feather touch. When she emerged
from the command cabin, they were already clustered at the main hatch, and she
laughed to see the hopeful expectancy on their faces.
"All
you took like children on Midwinter Eve, anxious for gifts in the morning . . .
Come then, sillies; did you think I meant to lock you in the ship?''
Gwydion
turned around as Aeron and the others came onto the upper level of the main
bridge. He had himself gone up to the Firedrake from Inver some hours before
Aeron's own departure, to ensure that all was in order on the flagship and that
Aeron, when she came aboard, would have no trouble or fret about anything. But
there had been new things in the meantime . . .
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He
saluted her formally as she came up to him, seeing the spark of amusement in
her eyes as she returned the salute, for their parting four hours since had
been anything but formal. But now was neither time nor place for a more
affectionate greeting.
"Well,
King of Keitia," she said. "You see that we are here."
"Well,
Ard-rian . . . Shall you speak now to the folk?"
Aeron
nodded. "If all is ready?"
"It
is; we have blanketed all signals, and the Crann Tarith will be raised on all
worlds. Only on Tara will that not be possible, but 1 doubt not Jaun Akhera
will hear of your return without it."
"And
what a surprise for him." She looked past him, at the activity in the
bridge-well below. "What is it you have not told me?"
"The
Imperial fleets approach the Curtain Wall. They will be past the
Barna-baoghaill, and well within the Bawn, before we can come to Tara
ourselves."
"What
then could be the ill news," said Aeron smiling, "for surely that is
good news in my ear."
"Well
then, it is all good. The Fomori fleets will be at the Wall before the
Coranians, We are lowering a section—your cousin Rhain is overseeing the
work—so that they may cut across the Bawn in hyperspace to join our own fleets
and be waiting for Helior when she arrives. On Tara, as you did order, there
are already many troops assembling; in secret, for we dare not challenge the
Marbh-draoi openly just yet."
Aeron's
face lighted, and she exchanged a quick look with Elathan. "Artzan Janco
hear me, but Keitia and Fomor together shall give Alphor a welcome he will not
soon forget. But first I must speak to my Kelts."
On the
Throneworld, no Crann Tarith had lifted its eerie banshee wail; yet all the
same the people seemed somehow to know, and not a farviewer screen on all that
planet lacked for watchers.
In
Caerdroia, Jaun Akhera stood staring at the big screen in the War Room, rigid
with shock at what he saw.
"AERON
... By Seti, is it possible—"
"A
trick?" suggested Hanno, though he knew as well as the rest of them that
it was not.
"That
is no trickery," breathed Jaun Akhera, slowly shak-
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ing his
head, never taking his eyes from the image before him: Aeron, seated at a table
in what looked to be a starship common-room, Gwydion at her right and Elathan
of Fomor on her left. Morwen sat next to Elathan, while beside Gwydion was a
gray-bearded man of distinguished mien whom Jaun Akhera did not know. He was
alarmed to see Elathan, annoyed to see Gwydion; but it was Aeron herself who
commanded his full attention. She was speaking now, staring straight at him.
She looked little the worse for her trials of the past half-year, whatever
those might have been, but she did look different, and it bothered Jaun Akhera
even more than the fact of her return that he could not decide what that
difference was. Something about the eyes, perhaps, or was it the set of her
mouth . . . With an effort he focused his attention on her words.
"—returned
to Keltia by the help of His Majesty Elathan King of Fomor, and in company with
His Excellency Haco Grex, Terran Ambassador to Keltia—and in alliance with both
of their nations."
A
torrent of astonished angry comment broke out, drowning Aeron's next words, and
Jaun Akhera hushed it with one raised warning hand.
"—since
last I was with you. Though I can make no promise that the next days will not
be more evil still, I am in the fairest hopes that they will not. No more time
now for talk, though I do promise that if all goes as we wish it, then I shall
tell you at) my tale. But for me, and for the King of Keltia"—here her
hand closed over Gwydion's—"and for the King of Fomor"—her other hand
covered Elatnan's—"for Terra and for Aojun of the Yamazai and for KeUia's
Protectorates, we go now to Tara. Jaun Akhera, bide this tryst."
The
screen blurred to static, and all around Jaun Akhera a storm broke of which he
was the unmoving eye. Sanchoniathon peered anxiously through the uproar at his
brother's unnatural calm and untroubled face: Akhi seemed deep in thought,
certainly, but neither stunned nor enraged by Aeron's dramatic announcement of
her return. But why did he stand there so still? He had heard, surely?
"Shall
we call in the fleets, Majesty?" said Hanno, and Jaun Akhera knew by the
emphasis in Hanno's voice—a sort of exaggerated courtesy that was no courtesy
at all—that his captain-general had asked the question at least once before.
"No,
Captain-General, I think not. Let her come to Tara;
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she
will in any event. But I want the fleets sent to the Curtain Wall with all
speed. Elathan of Fomor is not with her merely for show, nor is he here in
Keltia on some holiday jaunt. If he has come in alliance, as she has told us,
then he does not come alone, and his fleets will not be far behind him. As for
this Terran ambassador, who knows what strength he may bring with him, or have
following; not to speak of the levies from the Keltic protectorate systems or
those god-cursed Yamazai ... I want our own forces to hold off the Fomori, at
the very least, until my mother arrives with our reinforcements, and that will
take some days."
"And
us?" asked Garallaz. "What shall we do here on Tara?"
A slow
smile touched Jaun Akhera's mouth. "Why, we shall make ready to welcome
the Queen of Kelts back to her Throneworld, my lords. What else should we do in
such a case—and surely she will be expecting nothing less."
There
had never been any doubt from the first as to where Aeron intended to make her
stand. If she had been at any time dismissive of Gwyn's word to Gwydion, she
was not so now, and, aboard Firedrake, she headed straight for the vale of
Nandruidion as obediently as if she had been ordered there.
Of all
the narrow glens that came down out of the tangled massif of the Loom east of
Caerdroia, Nandruidion, Valley of the Druids, was surely the bleakest.
Threading off the northern slopes of Stratton Vow, where the saddle dipped and
climbed again to the heights of Skirrid, Nandruidion ran down toward the Great
Glen, bare at first, somberly forested in its lower reaches. No window of croft
or castle looked out upon the Valley of the Druids; the nearest habitation was
the castle of Tomnahara, and that at the glen's very mouth.
But
once a tall tower had stood a league or so up the glen, and there Edeyrn had
dwelt when he had a mind to commune in silence with his own dark soul. The
tower had been pulled down long ago, by Morgan Magistra herself, its very
stones blasted to dust and scattered by the winds, and now only a low green
mound showed where the tower had been.
Some
thought it an evil omen, that Aeron should make this her ground of choice for
her Final confrontation with Jaun Akhera; others thought it eminently
appropriate, even when they did not know—as in fact few yet did—the burden of
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Gwyn's
prophecy. But when the doubters voiced their misgivings to Aeron, they found
her more than usually obstinate.
"Gwyn
said that he and Gwydion should meet again and that they should meet at
Nandruidion; and that is that," she said to Morwen, latest of those who
had come to make known their fears to the Ard-rian. "I am grown a fervent
believer in any word of the Sidhe, since Gwyn's words did lead me to Prydwen,
and to Arthur, and to the Treasures."
But she
well understood their uncertainties, and the inborn fears. She herself could
scarcely credit Gwydion's own account of how Allyn son of Midna had come in
Manaan's ship at Gwyn's behest, to aid Gwydion and his companions after the
escape from Turusachan. In the past months, though, she had learned not to
scorn help wherever it might be offered, and if the Sidhe deigned to
offer—well, she had accepted aid before now from stranger quarters than that.
"Still
and all, Aeron," said Morwen severely, "it is hardly the same. The
duhin and the Firefolk were one thing, the Terrans and Fomori and Yamazai are
even as our own selves; but the Shining Ones are not—"
"Are
not what?" challenged her friend. "Are not hunfan? What of that? No
more were the Salamandri or the duhin, and we did not scruple to take their
help where it was given. Are not Kelts? Surely the Shining Ones are more Kelts
than are the Fomori and those others, all of whose assistance we have not been
too proud to accept."
"Well,
not mortal then! Aeron, they could be gods, and even if they are not,
they—well, they are not like us, and the thought of it fears me."
Aeron
sighed and ran her fingers through her hair. If her own sister-in-law and
Taoiseach had such difficulty with the idea of help from the Sidhe, what then
would the rest of her people think, the most of whom held superstitions
stronger by far, and ideas considerably less enlightened, about meddling with
the folk of the duns. But there really was no choice.
"Nay,
they are not like us, that is true enough. But, Wenna, if they are gods, then
they have power lo grant prayerful petition, and that is well. And if they are
not gods, why then, no more are we, and there is no problem."
Morwen
remained unimpressed. "You have a clever tongue, Aeron Aoibhell, like all
your family, but fence no words with me. And do not lie to me, either, not
about this. It is too important. Truly, now: Are you easy about it?"
"Easy
about it! Chriesta tighearna . . . Well, if by that you mean do I have
confidence in Gwyn and his word that his folk will fight for Keltia, then aye,
I am easy about it indeed. If you mean rather do I take comfort from the
thought of possibly divine direct assistance, then nay, I most certainly am
not. But aye or nay, I welcome Gwyn's aid when and where and how it shall come.
And if you have any respect left for my decisions, you will do the same."
Morwen
stared at her, hurt showing plain in the blue eyes. "Aeron, after all that
has befallen us since we fled Tara, can you possibly dream I do not respect
your choices? You found Arthur, rescued the Treasures, restored Elathan, allied
with the Terrans ... If you say we go now to Nandruidion, and that the Sidhe
will be for us, then I am with you. How could I not be? Even did I disapprove,
could you think for one smallest minute that I would let you go into this last
alone?''
"Nay,
Wenna, I never thought that," said Aeron with a tired smile. "And I
never will ... But go now to Fergus. He must leave us in the morning to rejoin
his squadron, and we must go down to Tara in Retaliator not very long
after."
When
Morwen had gone, Aeron sat down on the edge of tile blastcouch, looking around
her quarters as if she had never seen them before. How long it seems since I have
been on Firedrake—last time, Elharn was with me . . . and Theo . . . But she
had made her peace with that; those losses had been healed for her forever, and
other losses too, when she had knelt by Arthur's side and buried her face in
his cloak.
She stood
up again and went to look out the main port. In the center of the window, still
a star and not yet a sun, burned Gn'an, the familiar yellow primary of the
Throneworld system; two orbits out from her warmth and brilliance lay Tara,
invisible from this distance. But before tomorrow was done, that sun would warm
Aeron's face, and her feet would stand again on Tara's earth. And she and Jaun
Akhera would meet once more in war, this time to be the last for one of them.
// /,
then I am ready for it, she thought, and knew that it was true. And if he—well,
that was a matter for him to settle in his own soul. But she knew that he
waited for their meeting as eagerly as did she, and was every bit as ready. He
too was a sorcerer; he could read the omens of the moment as welt as could she,
could discern as clearly the shadow of the Alterator come to change their
worlds forever. The voice of Sargus echoed in her memory: "Nothing was
made to last
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forever;
not a people, not a planet, not a galaxy." True enough; and it was given
to few indeed to see so clearly the moment of their change coming upon them.
Sargus had been so blessed, and he had tried his best to make her see it too.
And I
do see it, now . . . saw it rolling toward her as huge and inexorable and
inescapable as that wave that rolled over Atland. And if that was indeed to be
her fate, and Keltia's with her, well enough. She would fight until the wave
pulled her under, and then let it carry her in peace to another shore. But if
the wave came not for her but for Jaun Akhera, that too was well; though she
would have to keep Keltia itself afloat m the backwash of that sea when it was
raised at last, she had a new and certain knowledge that she could do so.
I am a
better swimmer than I was when last I saw Tara . . . Strange it is, though,
that I should have learned to master such tides on a world that has no seas.
Now on
Tara, the word was war. However discomfited he may have been by Aeron's sudden
reappearance, Jaun Akhera had rallied at once to the moment, seeming, to the
eyes of his friends, almost to welcome it. Which observation was not so very
far off the mark: As Emperor, Jaun Akhera had much to prove; as Aeron's
adversary, still more.
But in
the press of these more immediately crucial matters, he had held by his
decision not to meet with Powell and Pryderi, though almost hourly they sent
messages to him, alternately pleading and demanding, and ever more frantic,
requesting an audience. The Dyvetian lords had been cooling their heels at
Turusachan for almost a week before they were at last given access to the
presence of the Cabin Emperor, on the evening after Aeron's unexpected
broadcast,
Jaun
Akhera watched them with a certain detachment as they crossed the room to come
to a halt before his desk. Apparently they had not as yet decided on the tack
they thought best to try, for their manner was both servile and blustering. He
allowed them to wait a long moment before even acknowledging their presence,
and then peremptorily gestured them to sit.
"It
was not well done. Prince of Dyved, to conceal from me Gwydion's presence at
Caer Carrig Cennan," he said at last, though his tone of voice was
unaccountably mild, quite at variance with his demonstrated attitude. Let them
wonder why I am not angry . . . "But come, I forgive your lapse,"
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he said
with an engaging smile. "I regret that 1 could not receive you sooner, but
you are of course aware that we are much taken up with preparations ... 1 have
asked you here to discuss what numbers you may bring to my meeting with Aeron.
She will be landing on Tara any time now—there has already been heavy fighting
as Firedrake approaches the planet—and I must meet her with what forces I have
to hand and what other ones may reach me quickly."
Powell,
who had taken a deep breath to weather the Imperial wrath, let it out slowly
and carefully. So that is why he does not punish us for losing Gwydion—he kept
us dangling around the palace to show his displeasure, but he has need of us now
. . .
"You
know, of course. Majesty, that Dyved is at your service. It is in my interest
now too to keep Aeron from regaining her kingdom. As to troops, Dyved is near
enough to Tara that what forces I can call upon will be here perhaps even
sooner than Aeron; certainly sooner than her Fomorian reinforcements."
Jaun
Akhera made a notation on the computer pad under his hand, then looked up again
at Powell. "They must be near indeed if they will arrive here before
Aeron."
Powell
allowed himself a tiny smile. "They are already within the Throneworld
system. They will be landing on Tara in less than a day." And that's one
for me, Coranian . . .
Jaun
Akhera's smile was even thinner than Powell's. "You anticipate me. But ail
this can be conveyed later to Hanno and my other generals; and from them to our
loyal servant Kynon ap Accolon, who is even now at Nandruidion with my
assembling armies. Come with me now to Mardale; there is yet another new
arrival, and I would have you meet."
Escaping
from Tory, his brother Elathan's forces close behind him, Talorcan had at first
thought to find the Princess Helior and the Imperial armada that he knew she
would by then be leading to Keltia. But his fellow escapees—Dargato, Salenn and
some others—had succeeded in convincing him that it was madness to waste time
in a search that had of necessity to cover nearly a quarter of a galactic
sector; and unnecessary in any case, as both Talorcan and Helior had a common
destination—the planet Tara. In the end, it had taken very little to sway him,
and he had ordered the ship to the Keltic throneworld.
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Though
he had expected stiff resistance from the Keltic fleets, for some reason
Taiorcan had found it a comparatively simple matter to slip through the gap
that the traitor Arianeira had made in the Curtain Wall; and once within the
Bawn, he had pressed the ship as fast as he dared, for fear of pursuit or
interception.
Now he
looked out the viewport as the ship touched down at Mardale. Yes, that was
certainly Jaun Akhera himself waiting to meet him, and his brother
Sanchoniathon, who had been named Prince of Alphor and Imperial
heir-presumptive since Jaun Akhera's sudden elevation to Emperor. And I'd give
a good few astari to know exactly how that had come about, thought Taiorcan.
Then again, maternal devotion can be a mighty power , , . But that only set his
mind on his own mother, Thona, and what she had done on Fomor, and that was a
thing he wished not to have to think of, at least not here and not now. The
Princess Helior, though, was another matter altogether.
He
remarked as much to Jaun Akhera, as they went together back to the City, in
company with several others: Powell, Pryderi, Garallaz.
"Have
you ever met my mother. Lord Taiorcan?" asked Jaun Akhera with an
unreadable smile.
"I
have not yet had that pleasure, Majesty."
"Ah.
Well, you will, no doubt. But as to family matters, did you know that your
brother the King of Fomor is here?"
Talorcan's
sudden sharp intake of breath told Jaun Akhera that he had not. "You are
certain? He came with Aeron, then?"
Jaun
Akhera nodded. "But do not entertain any rash hope-fui notion about a
quick backtrack to Fomor. Elathan has by ai! reports left it well and truly
subdued to his will, with his new queen as regent and his pet warlords Borvos
and Treic to give iron to her fist, I have had certain information that he has
seen fit to send a large portion of the Fomori starfleet here to Keltia in
Aeron's need, and he comes to Tara with her on the Firedrake."
"When
will he—they—be here?"
"Perhaps
even as we speak. The Firedrake holds in orbit out beyond the Criosanna, and I
do not think Aeron will long remain aboard her."
Twenty
leagues to the east of Caerdroia, Aeron emerged from Retaliator into the middle
of a campment of war. Tara,
again .
. . Caledon had been Keltia, of course, but this world to her was truly home.
She took a deep breath and closed her eyes, letting the planet itself welcome
her back, then reluctantly returned her senses to the matter at hand. Rohan and
Desmond did their mustering work well, she thought with satisfaction, looking
around at the enormous camp. And Rioghnach coordinated all perfectly . . .
Already a vast army was assembled: Though not so vast as the one that had met
Jaun Akhera beside the Cliffs of Fhola, still it should be sufficient for her
purposes.
Shane,
standing beside her, understood her emotion and her thought. "More forces
are arriving each hour, Aeron," he offered. "We are in better case
than we had feared."
"And
they are landing unhindered, those that come from off-planet?''
"For
the most part, though that is beginning to change now that Helior's ships have
penetrated the Bawn. But our own fleets are keeping theirs too busy for them to
interfere overmuch with our landings." They began to walk down toward the
center of the camp, where above an otherwise undistinguished tent the Royal
Standard flamed on the wind beside the Gwynedd stag. "Two odd things,
though. An unidentified cutter—Fomorian, by her markings—managed to land at
Mardale some hours ago, and I had word just now from Firedrake that another
small ship seems to have broken off from the Imperial fleet, and is headed here
at speed. Shall I order it destroyed?"
Aeron
considered a moment. "Nay," she said then. "A minnow in a pool
of fighting salmon—let it come. I have a thought as to who might be in that
minnow, and in its predecessor with the Fomorian markings; and if I am right
then we shall very soon have ail our sword-guests within our reach. AI! the
same, though," she said reflectively, "we shall still be outnumbered
by the Marbh-draoi's forces."
"Outnumbered,
aye, but never overmatched."
Aeron
threw her cousin a grateful smile. "That is not for us to say,
Shane."
"Nay,
but for us to prove. Come, Ard-rian; you are waited for below."
Chapter
27
Had
Aeron known for fact, though, who it was as passenger aboard the Coranian
cutter, she might not have dismissed it so easily as a minnow, but instead have
ordered Firedrake, that killer pike, to snap it up.
Even
Jaun Akhera had no warning of the ship's arrival: not until his mother stood in
the door of his chamber, Tinao and Indarrak behind her.
He was
out of his chair in an instant, dashing across the room to sweep both women
into his arms. "But how did you come here?" he asked presently.
"I had not a word Of your landing; Sancho and I and everyone else thought
you still with the fleet."
"And
so I was," said Helior, with an appraising, and approving, glance over the
ornate room. "But 1 decided that I had not come all those tedious
star-miles to pace on the bridge of a second-class destroyer, and I wanted to
see my sons, and I wished it kept secret to surprise them—particularly that son
of mine who is Cabiri Emperor. As simple as that."
Jaun
Akhera smiled at her. "And the Emperor's mother's secrets are surely kept
... I cannot thank you properly, Mother, for your decision to send the
fleets—and for bringing such travelling companions. Indarrak, it is good to see
you again, especially so far from home; and as for you—" He pulled Tinao
close against him. "It has been hell here, and sure to grow even more
hellish now that Aeron has returned. But Auset knows how glad I am that you are
come."
"You
will be gladder still when you hear what was done for you," said Helior.
"By Tinao and Indarrak both; you would not be Emperor without them."
"I
would not be your son, either, if I had not already a fairly good idea of what
you have done, my mother . . . But such can wait until later. Let us take what
time we have just
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to be
happy together awhile. In the morning, as you may know, we go out to meet
Aeron. She has had too much time already to assemble her armies out at
Nandruidion. We allowed her to do so unhindered only while waiting for you to
arrive, though of course we have been moving our own legions to take up
position against her. But now all is ready for our final victory." He put
an arm around each woman, nodded for Indarrak to follow. "It is joy
unlooked-for that you have come to share it. Let us go and find Sancho."
In the
Keltic camp at Nandruidion, Aeron stood in the doorway of her tent. Before her
stretched the familiar sight of a battle-campment: all the tents and clochans,
the horse-lines and chariot-ranks and rows of long-range lasers, the hundreds
of thousands of warriors who had contrived against all odds to join her here,
for perhaps the last, and surely the most decisive, battle Tara would ever see.
And
tomorrow is May Eve, she thought, glancing up to judge the height of the sun.
Strange it is that all our most fated battles seem to fall out at
Beltain—Brendan's first fight for Tara; and, on Earth, the fight of the Danaans
against the Fomorifor possession of Ireland, and later the Danaans' own fight
to hold that land against the sons of Mil. . . She let fall the tent flap, and
turned again to those who had been watching her, knowing her mind, waiting in
patience for her mood to alter.
"Well,
my very dear," she said smiling, "that is a fine parcel of heroes
below there."
"Fine
indeed,11 said Desmond. "But not so many as at Rath na Riogh, Aeron; and
there we could not hold our ground against the Marbh-draoi."
"That
is so," said Aeron unconcernedly. "But we had not the Treasures then,
and it is in my mind that those shall be all the army we may require. Also do
not forget that other help has been promised, and I for one believe that it
shall come."
"All
the same, Ard-rfan," said Gwydion, as she settled into a camp-chair beside
him, "we would do best of all to rely in chief upon ourselves. It is in my
mind that the Treasures are so made as to give most freely, and most fully, to
those who have already given all they have of their own; and that they have
most power when they are least wielded."
In the
thoughtful quiet Gwydion's words produced, Elathan
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caught
Aeron's eye, from where he sat over against the tent's outer wail, flanked by
Rohan and Grex.
"And
the Sidhe?" he asked. "What shall they give?"
"That
our need shall determine, and their grace confirm. We shall not know until
their moment is at hand. But even so, perhaps—" Aeron glanced across at
Struan Cameron. "Is there aught you can See for us, Cameron?" she
asked with deference in her voice, for Struan was one of those Kelts gifted, or
afflicted, with the an-da-sha!la.
"The
Hounds are on the track already, and the Washer goes even now to the
fords," said Struan after a while, in the dry toneless voice of prophecy.
"And they be not all: Comes the hungry grass, the Plica's bay, and a
battle fought not with swords."
"What
more?" asked Gwydion softly.
*'The
way is dark, and darker grows. I see a white banner waving, and hear the sound
of a hom . . ." He blinked, shook his head and spoke then in his normal
voice. "I could See no more, Aeron. I am sorry."
"Nay,
my friend, you saw quite enough. My thanks for it, for well I know that to
force the Sight to order is no'easy or pleasant task," Aeron' pushed back
her hair with sudden energy. "Well, setting aside just now all such
imponderables, we must of force meet the Marbh-draoi on unequal terms. Reckoned
warrior for warrior, he has the greater army by many tens of thousands."
"What
if he does?" challenged Slaine instantly; Aeron's cousin had spent the
months of her kinswoman's absence aboard the Firedrake, at the behest of her
brother Desmond, where her very considerable healing talents had been put to
good use. But now that it had come once more to fighting, Slaine had put aside
her healer's tools for her sword; though the tools too would have their hour
after. "What if he does? We have right to our cause here; that counts more
than mere numbers. Not so, Ard-rian?"
Aeron,
who was looking at Gwydion, did not respond to her cousin's words. Slaine,
however, was not one to let it bide.
"Sore
disgrace to us all, Aeron Aoibhell, if you let yourself be daunted by a few
Coranian sluglings the more or less. { for one had thought better of your
courage."
At that
Aeron turned around, laughing. "My gods, no question but that you are the
most contentious Aoibhell who
ever
Jived, and that is saying a great deal." She gave her cousin an
affectionate shove. "Go, rattle your troops, Slaine nic Elharn; such a
war-bent is wasted on us here."
Slaine
saluted exaggeratedly and left the tent, and Aeron looked after her with a
smile still on her lips. "I love her well," she said, "but
sometimes I think I love her best of all at a distance."
Elathan
grinned. "You are much to thank me after all, it seems, for sparing
Keltia—and Fomor—the reign of the Ard-rian Slaine."
A wave
of easy laughter ran around the tent. "Still," said Aeron, pursuing
her earlier thought, "even though we be outnumbered, and even though most
of the Fomori cannot get through to us on Tara to alter that, neither can most
of Helior's forces get through to Jaun Akhera. Each of us must make do with
what help is to hand. And though 1 tempt dan by saying so, I think that the
weight will surely swing to us."
"And
may the Morrigu keep it there." Gwydion looked up as one of the Fians on
guard in the faha came into the tent. "What is it, Linnhe?"
"There
is a woman would speak with the Ard-rian, Pen-dragon," she said. "She
will not give her name, but she shows this as token." Linnhe held out an
antique smallsword: hilled of silver, its scabbard inlaid with blue stones and
in its pommel a sapphire the size of a walnut.
Aeron
sat up with a glad cry. "Ithell! Mighty Mother—but let her come in,
Linnhe."
The
Fian shook her head. "She asks that you come out to her, Aeron; she has somewhat
to show you, she says, best seen first out of doors."
"Well
then, out of doors it is." Aeron pulled on her boots. "This is she 1
told you all of, this very Ithell, and Brioc her husband, who sheltered Morwen
and me at Tintock, on our flight down the Dales to Keverango; healed me of the
snow-sickness, and a raxed leg as well. For thanks, I bestowed upon her that
sword."
"And
so she may demand of you?" Grex's tone was polite, if a little
questioning.
"Demand
as she pleases," said Aeron with a matching coolness, "for that she
saved our lives."
The sun
had only just set, and the clear sky was lambent with afterglow as Aeron
emerged into the faha; seeing what awaited her, she stopped so suddenly that
Gwydion, close
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behind
her, all but trod upon her heels. Then she was kneeling and almost flattened by
the loving assault of her two great brindled wolfhounds, Cabal and Ardattin.
Nor did Gwydion, Rohan or any of the other Kelts present escape their frantic
greetings; and when at last the beasts were soothed and calmed, reassured that
their mistress was not about to vanish yet again, Aeron turned with tears in
her eyes to Ithell, who stood by, still holding in her hand the leather thong
that had leashed the dogs.
"Once
again I owe you thanks," she said. "But by what miracle did you
manage to come by my hounds? Gwydion has told me that they ran away from
Turusachan, some time after I had gone."
"They
came to us," said Ithell. "They must have tracked you over the Loom
from Caerdroia and down through the Dales; a month or more after you and Morwen
left Tmtock, they arrived in a snowstorm. They were thin as withy-whips, the
poor barebones; most like they had been hunting in your tracks all that time,
sparing no time to hunt for themselves. But they seemed content enough to stay
with us—we knew well whose dogs they were, and were more than Nappy to keep
them safe against your return. They earned their keep, I will say that." '
Aeron
smiled through her tears. "Name what you will for reward, Mistress Ithell.
But where is your man Brioc?"
"He
is dead, lass. Your hounds were not the only creatures who followed you from
Caerdroia."
"The
Marbh-draoi?" That was Gwydion. "He came through the Dales in search
of Aeron and Morwen?"
"Not
himself," said Ithell then, her face filling with pain at the memory,
"but a troop of his soldiers. They questioned us long and hard; Brioc had
not been well, and he died soon after.''
Aeron's
face had hardened. "Say no more. You shall join my household as of this moment,
and if it is your wish to return to Tintock, I will myself appoint a rechtair
to help manage your affairs; or if you would prefer to dwell now elsewhere, you
shall have one of the Crown maenors to hold, and your heirs after you."
Ithell
bowed her head to hide her own tears. "You are too generous, lassie,"
she murmured, embarrassed. "As I told you at Tintock, it was joy to serve
you."
"And
now mine to reward such service. Go now with
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Linnhe,
she will see you safe sheltered." Aeron watched her go. her hand ruffling
the soft ears of Ardattin, who was leaning happily against her legs. Surely
this is a portent of greatest good fortune, she thought, thai my hounds have
been restored to me: a portent of what else shall be restored, please gods . .
. She turned then to the others.
"I
am a little foredone, I think; though more with good cheer than with
fearfulness ... Let us all take an early night, my friends, and rest well for
the morning."
When
all had bidden them good night, Morwen and Fergus and Rohan last of all,
Gwydion closed the tent flap behind them, spoke softly to the wolfhounds, who
found their accus-tomed places at the inside door and collapsed into them with
small contented sounds, and looked down at Aeron's face beside his shoulder.
The green eyes were focused on nothing in the tent; yet even so she looked as
if she saw something clear and plain and present before her that he could not
see,
§
something every bit as real as he himself, some thought or memory or imagining
both signal and fair. What it was he could not say, and she chose not to; but
he sensed its import, and he saw her smile.
"By
the gods, beloved," she said then, in the voice she used to him alone,
turning to him and putting her arms around his neck, "by alt gods but I
think we have won this fight ai ready."
As dawn
came cool and brilliant to Strath Mor, Jaun Akhera and his party rode out from
the commandeered castle where they had spent the night, taking the river road
that led down to Nandruidion. A transport had conveyed them from Caerdroia the
previous night, and now they were riding to join the forces that had been
assembling for days, only a few miles away.
A fine
and fitting day for our last meeting, Aeron, thought Jaun Akhera, as he led the
little party at a canter through a straggling pinewood. Battle was
imminent—indeed, both armies had been drawn up in attack order for some hours
now, waiting only upon their commanders' word—but the niceties of combat were
worth observing, and he had had for some time now a wish to speak once more
with the Keltic queen before their swords were drawn for the last time.
So he
rode now to an unarranged and unannounced parley, not certain if Aeron would
even be willing to meet him, but
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sure
that he wished in any event to make the offer of speech. With him were
Sanchoniathon, as always, and some of the lords of the household; Hanno and
Garallaz and the other generals had gone ahead several days ago to the lines. With
him also, guarded by a strong escort of his most trusted men-at-arms, rode
Helior and Tinao.
As they
cantered around a blind turn where the road ran through a fringe of thicker
woodland, the horses shied suddenly and violently as one. Jaun Akhera, thrown
onto his mount's neck, hauled himself back into the saddle, and, quicker than
the others to control his horse, laughed scornfully to see what had so alarmed
the beasts.
At a
little ford, where a stream came out of the forest to cross the road over a bed
of white stones, an old woman was kneeling and singing to herself. Beside her
was a mound of stained linen shirts, the long, loose sort often worn by Kelts
in battle, and on the other side, a heap of mail loricas; she was washing first
one, then the other, in the water of the stream.
As he
urged his unwilling horse nearer, puzzled at the animal's sweating terror, Jaun
Akhera saw that the dark stains on the linen, which at first glance he had
taken for soil, and the red ones upon the mail, that he had thought rust,s were
in truth blood, blood both dried and fresh, and as the washer scrubbed, the
stains floated away, ominous streaks upon the surface of the water.
The
woman—old, bent, her hair full of elf-locks, fox-gray and rough as
goosegorse—did not look up once from her rhythmic washing, but continued her
eerie croon unbroken, and the hair stood up on their necks as her words came
clear at last.
"1
am the Water Doleful One, O my sorrow; Bean-Nighe am I, the Washer at the Ford.
I lodge in the green hills, the round hills. Come ye in, all you present. Soon
shall we be dwellers together, thou and I; aye, dwellers alike, all in the same
long land."
Her
voice was water dripping on iron, a sword drawn shrieking down the side of a
breastplate. The horses panicked anew to hear it, and bolted screaming past
her. But Jaun Akhera, looking back to the ford, saw only the stream flowing
clean and untroubled over the white stones, and no one knelt beside it.
"I
will not speak with him."
Gwydion
said patiently, "It is warriors' courtesy, Aeronwy, as you perfectly well
know. Even the lowliest galloglass would not deny any parley asked for under
the white flag."
"Now
would he not! I am however no galloglass but the Queen of Kelts, and / say
nay." About to dismiss the Imperial envoy—not Garallaz this time but a
lord called Amzailac, who had accompanied Helior and the rest from Escal-dun
and who had been luckless enough to be elected Jaun Akhera's messenger—Aeron
changed her mind with almost visible abruptness.
"Very
well so," she said. "Let your master choose a place where I may see
him, and I will join him there, each of us alone."
"Majesty—"
"Alone,
my lord, or there is no further discourse save at the sword's point. Tell him
so, go."
"He
will never come, Aeron," said Rohan, who stood by.
"He
will come, right enough," she said, looking out across the mouth of
Nandruidkm. "Oh, but he will come."
Jaun
Akhera sat his horse at the top of a small rise in the land, halfway between
his camp and the Keltic lines at the glen mouth. It was still very early in the
morning, and he narrowed his eyes against the sunblink. She has chosen ill
ground this time, he thought. Little choice of ways to retreat—up into the
confines of the glen on the one side, or into the Avon Dia on the other ... He
shifted his weight in the saddle. Aeron did nothing without good reason, even
if she was the only one who understood or even knew what that reason might be;
and the suspicion that she had some hidden motive for her choice of
battleground was growing hourly in his breast.
He sat
up straighter, unconsciously shortening his reins, as he saw Aeron approaching
at a gallop, on an unfamiliar gray horse with blue trappings. She did not
slacken pace as she drew near, pulling up only at the last possible instant in
a swirl of flying turf.
"Well,
Marbh-draoi," she said with a smile, "have you no words of welcome
for me? I have been long away."
"Not
long enough," he said, returning the smile, though he had not meant to.
"Or perhaps too long: 1 have a grip on Keltia now you will find hard to
break."
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"And
I have a new way, or two or three, of loosening your fingers . . . What is it
you would speak of, Jaun Akhera? I am in no mood to parley, and my soldiery are
in no mood to wail battle on your words."
"Then
1 snail speak both swift and plain. Your forces are outnumbered and
ill-equipped, your ground doubtful. Your spacefleets, even with the help of the
Fomori, must contend with the armada my mother has brought. Yield Keltia to me
now, Aeron, and I give you my royal word—my Imperial word—that you and Gwydion,
and what kin and companions you choose, may go safely into exile."
Aeron
shook her head, smiling. "My sorrow that we must always decline each
other's suggestions . . . Well. As to that armada brought by your loving
mother, I think you will find, if you communicate with its commanders, that
there is by now but little of it left. As to the insufficiency of my army, or
the inadequacy of their gear or the shortcomings of their position—I shall let
the battle itself be judge of those. And so I wit! not bid you farewell just
yet." She gave him one last long sober stare, and spurred the gray horse
back to the Keltic lines. '
Jaun
Akhera had barely regained the safety of his own lines before the chilling
war-yell of the Kelts rising from across the valley—the barra-glaed that had
struck terror into armies on the battlefields of many worlds—and the even more
bloodcurdling wail of the warpipes, in a banshee descant, signalled the
beginning of the attack.
"Has
she gone mad completely?" he demanded of Hanno, leaping down from his
lathered horse. "She is seriously outnumbered, as I told her just
now."
His
captain-general nodded, attention nailed to his own advancing forces.
"Then she must be mad, for that seems not to matter to her. Look for
yourself."
"Then
what? She cannot be relying on reinforcements from the Fomori; they are too
busy engaging our own fleets—as she told me just now, and I want that looked
into at once."
"Something
else, then," said Garatlaz.
"Yes
. . ." Jaun Akhera paused a moment, standing motionless, frowning a
little, as if he strained to hear a faint voice in another room, a voice that
spoke softly in a foreign tongue. "I like this not—there is magic
afoot."
"A
magic which you yourself gave Aeron license to use."
The
deep voice was not accusatory, but calm and almost pedantic, as if its owner
were doing no more than stating an obvious, if unpalatable, fact.
Jaun
Akhera turned at the sound of it. "Irin Mage," he said, real respect
in his voice, and made a brief bow. "My mother told me that you had
accompanied her.''
The
priest nodded. "It is fitting that I should be here," he said.
"But more even than that: There was compulsion upon me, that I be here to
witness the ending."
"The
ending! You mean rather the triumph of Telchine over Danaan, of Cabin over
Draiochtas."
Irin
Mage's eyes remained distant. "I mean the ending."
Across
the glen mouth, Aeron came to sudden alertness, feeling the touch of magical
attention upon her, and sensing Jaun Akhera's personality in it. Ah,
Marbh-draoi, it matters not what strength you have with you—teacher, friend,
kin, lover, whatever—before this fight is done, you and I must meet, and no
other strength with us but our own.
The
battle continued for some hours then; the day grew warm with sun, though the
wind stayed strong and cold out of the east. Aeron, who had fought among the
knights of her guard, now watched through a field-glass, and, as Gwydion and
Elathan came up behind her, turned to give each man a searching look.
"What
word from the field?"
Gwydion
met her gaze. "No good word. In fact, it goes very ill just now. It seems
we were perhaps a little overconfident as to our ability to hold off Jaun Akhera's
force with force."
"What
then?"
"Go
you both to the other side of the glen and wait there with Niali and Desmond.
It is time to make a throw of desperation."
She
caught at his arm, suddenly fearing. "What will you do? Gwydion—"
He
smiled then, but the smile did not reach his eyes. "Was mere not a promise
that you should have help unlooked-for in the last battle? Whatever that help
might be, I go now to call it to us."
In a
while Aeron, standing with Niall and Elathan on a rise across the dale, heard
the cry of a horn. High, bright, clear,
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ringing,
it echoed from the rocks in a haunting shimmer of golden sound, bathing the
whole valley in its call; yet it held no note of urgency, only a kind of sweet
entreaty—coaxing, rather than command.
"Whom
does the horn summon?" asked Niall, his voice hushed.
Aeron
shook her head, equally hushed; for the sound of the horn had thrown sudden
silence over the entire dale, and even the weary warring armies had paused
where they stood.
"I
know not, Niallan. Whosoever they may be, though, we stand in very desperate
need of them."
But
across the valley, something strange was happening. The dark slopes of
Nandruidion, clothed in iron-oak, silver ash, tall redpine, slender rowan, pale
goldenbirch, all the other trees of an upland forest, were threshing violently
back and forth as if in the grip of a high wind, though'below the skirts of the
wood the grasses were motionless.
Gwydion,
who sat his horse midway down the valley floor, was thunderstruck to see moving
toward him like a black wall the forest trees themselves. Then words were
written upon his mind in letters of flame, burning in the air before his eyes,
and he rose in his irons and began to chant.
"Sure
is leaf, and heartwood sound. If my words be true ones. Come, trees, to battle
array. I summon, stir, and call you up: A sword in the hand, a shield in the
fight."
And
that was the first of the three ranns spoken by Gwydion Prince of Don at the
Battle of the Trees . . .
The
words of Gwydion's chant hung in the valley like the sound of the horn. And
then, where the moving trees had been, stood warriors. Men and women both, some
tall and dark and somber as the oak; others lighter and tither of build,
elegant as the bending birch; others again thicker and broader, sturdy as the
sinewed pine. But all were of one grimness as they marched; their feet seemed
to move through the earth, not upon it, and where they had passed the green
turf remained unfurrowed and unbroken.
They
quickly drew near to Gwydion, but he said a soft word and they halted; then he
raised his arm and chanted again.
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"Grass
be sword to wound their feet, Leaf be shield to ward their blows. Needle of
pine, be as arrows to the mark. Trees, in thy array strong chieftains of
battle, Teach war to those who know it not. Pre-eminent thou in the field of
blood."
And
that was the second of the three ranns spoken by Gwydion Prince of Don at the
Battle of the Trees . . .
On the
hillside, Aeron had been as awed as any as she watched the living trees become
living fighters, and tolling dully through her brain, like some fateful
harmonic to Gwydion's chanting, rang the words of Gwyn: "As to thee,
Prince of Don, the very trees shall be thy warriors."
And
these then are those promised warriors, given life by the horn—that strangest
and most unexpected ofhai anons . . .
But now
at Gwydion's rann of attack, the tree-warriors were pouring in a dark tide of
slaughter over the Imperial lines. Jaun Akhera's troops had not waited for
their commanders to call retreat, but at sight of the sorcerous army advancing
upon them had broken and run, and Jaun Akhera himself did not blame them.
So did
that fight begin which ever after was known as C5d Goddeu, the Battle of the
Trees. For not all the Imperial forces fled, some standing their ground against
even the terror of the trees; though not for long, and not victoriously, for
wherever the trees overtook the enemy, very soon only the trees still moved.
Jaun
Akhera watched impassively as a third or more of his warriors fell to the
forest army, though his hand shook as it held the field-glass.
"Enough,
Gwydion," he said at last, and his voice too shook. "In the name of
all your gods, enough."
He was
not the only one who sickened of the unequal slaughter: Across the valley,
Aeron closed her eyes as if she had heard her enemy's entreaty, and spoke to
the air.
"Have
done. King of Keltia," she said softly. "Make an end. Let there be
clean battle in the morning."
And
Gwydion, standing on a rise at the glen mouth in the sunset light of Beltain,
turned his head as if he had heard both pleas, and called home his strange
forces from the fight.
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310 Patricia Kennealy
"When
the Shout is heard, the Cry above the Abyss, Hope renewed, form altered, life
changes. From high twelve to ox-hour Thou hast played in Lloughor. Now sleep
thou in purple. There is hope for trees."
And
that was the third of the three ranns spoken by Gwydion Prince of Don at the
Battle of the Trees . . .
The
dark tide now receded, the tree-warriors surging in silence back up the valley,
looking with every stride less like warriors and more like trees; and by the
time they came again to their homeslopes they were all trees, rooted once more
in the forest mold as if they had never left it.
In
their wake they left a terrible stillness. Gwydion, who had by this time
returned to Aeron where she stood with Elathan, threw his leg over his horse's
neck and slid to the ground, bone-weary. He was about to speak to her when a sound
came that turned their blood to sand.
A high
despairing shout, a howl of grief and anguish and helpless hopeless protest,
rose up from the Coranian side of the devastation wrought by the trees, hanging
in the valley like a ghastly echo of the horn-cry that had earlier rung upon
the air. Gwydion, his arm around Aeron's shoulders, felt her catch her breath
at the horror of it, and knew, as she did, the shout to be no cry uttered by
voice or throat, but a lamentation wrenched from Jaun Akhera's very soul,
imprinted upon the astral itself.
And
forever after, on every May Eve, the echo of that fearful cry was heard upon
Tara, in every glen and forest, on every loch and mountain, through every city
and village, over every hearth on all the Throneworld from castle to farmstead;
so was that battle never forgotten.
When
the last keening echo had died away, Aeron moved away from Gwydion's encircling
arm, and stood looking out across the glen, its horrors mercifully masked by
the growing darkness. Beyond the fateful trees, she could see the pinpoints of
light that were the Imperial quartz-hearths. Many fewer now than before, she
thought. Though they be all my enemies, still had I not wished them such an end
. . .
She
turned, intending to offer some word to Elathan. But the Fomorian king was
looking at Gwydion; his face bore vivid traces of the shock and horror they all
felt, but the chief
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311
emotion
thereon just then was grim approval—and, not so strangely perhaps, a kind of
pity.
Gwydion
returned the look; then his eyes went to Aeron, and his mouth moved in what
might have been either a stillborn smile or a flinch of sorrow.
"I
did not know," he said then. "Upon my soul I did not. But had I
known, I would have done no differently; that horn would still have
sounded."
"We
do what we must," she said, hearing the pain in his voice. "But for
now—" Her mouth quivered as Gwydion's had done. "It is Beltain; had
you forgotten? Festival of summer and healing growth. Let the sacred fires be
lighted."
Chapter
28
HTdo
not presume to instruct you, Aeron, in matters you
JL know
far more of than do I," Elathan was saying carefully. "But I think
perhaps the time has come for you to use the Treasures."
Aeron
did not reply to this advice, instead studying her hand where the Great Seal of
Keltia once more circled her finger; then she cast a look down and sidewise to
where Gwydion reclined on a pile of furs, her hound Cabal lying across his
knees. They were in Aeron's tent, where they had spent most of the evening; it
was almost midnight now, end of a long and terrible day, and outside the
Beltain fires still blazed upon the hills. '
As was
her duty by law, Aeron had made a brief public appearance some time earlier, to
set alight the royal belfire from which all others in the campment would take
their starting flame. But she had strangely scanted the rite, racing by rote
through the prayers and almost flinging the ritual needfire onto the thirteen
sacred woods. Ignoring worried friends and scandalized subjects alike, she had
not even remained, as had been her custom and pleasure in years past, at the
celebration that followed; for never in her life had she felt less renewed, and
for once it seemed to her that her faith had failed to sustain her. 'Now at summer's
coming,' she thought bitterly, repeating to herself, tike a rann against
despair, a phrase from the prayers she had just recited. The bitterness rose:
This year at summer's coming, came death, not life; and I it was who did bid it
come . . .
Gwydion,
well aware of her heaviness of spirit, and the reason for it, answered the
question she had not yet summoned the strength to ask. "Today's work
reduced the Imperial forces by many thousands. But they still outnumber us by
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THE
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313
three
warriors to two, and that is a margin must be narrowed as quickly as may
be."
"And
that is why I think the Treasures must be used," pursued Elathan, after a
swift exchange of glances with Gwydion when Aeron still did not respond. All
the same, he took pains to keep his tone one of pacification, for he was still,
whether rightly or not, wary of her mercurial temper. "You did not
hesitate to use the Eye of Balor to win Tory for me, and that was Fomor. This
is your own Keltia, and those warriors out there your own Kelts. What purpose
to delay?"
He need
not have feared her wrath this time; she looked over at him with a smile,
thinking to herself that he had courage indeed to take her on just now, when
many who could boast close kinship or long friendship with her would not have
dreamed of so daring.
"Nay,
no more did I, on Fomor; but, as you say, that was Fomor and this is Keltia,
and it may be that I was permitted an action on Fomor that I am forbidden here
upon my own ground. Well, perhaps I should have by now unlidded the Eye against
the Marbh-draoi, used the other Treasures as well. And I may yet: I have
delayed this long only out of hope that we might be able to win without needing
their aid. They may work greater ill if they are used wrongly than if they are
never used at all. It will be a fearful thing—"
"It
is what you went for," said Gwydion, his face stem, a hardness now to his
voice.
Aeron
glared at him. "Do not think to try your bard-tricks with me, Gwynedd . .
. But aye, as you so graciously remind me, it is indeed what I went for, though
I had not thought I should so loathe the moment when it came. This delay of
mine is but the hearkening-wind—that lull in a gale before the last destroying
blast. It must blow, and it shall; but very many will wither before it. Maybe
even ourselves." She flexed her shoulders; to Gwydion's eye, it looked
like a shiver. "And so I say the Eye of Balor shall open with the sun; and
you, my heart, must manage it."
He
bowed where he sat. "And what to you?"
"To
me, another task whose time I think has come."
"But
the other Treasures?" asked Elathan.
"—will
fill each their proper task in proper time; though it may not be I whose hand
shall be set to them." Aeron slid down in the cushioned camp-chair, until
she sat on her spine, and her legs were stretched out in front of her.
"Mislike it
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Patricia
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however
I might, in all good faith I can tarry no longer. One way or another, this
matter will be settled before tomorrow's sun shall set."
A
little before dawn, Aeron stood with Elathan and Gwydion on a slope overlooking
the Imperial lines. A few others clustered a little distance away: Rohan,
Morwen, O'Reilly, commanders and officers of the royal household. The air was
spring-cold and very still: the morning of the first of May. The grass was
soaked with dew beneath their boots, and above their heads, mist hung in the
hollows of the Loom, like steam rising from the flanks of a hard-ridden horse.
Aeron
turned her head to look for the sun that was not yet up. In the east, it seemed
as if the clouds themselves were drawn up in schiltrons, close-serried,
awaiting their turn to move: first the low hill-scraping ones, then those
farther behind and higher up the sky, thicker, puffed like bog-cotton, and
highest of all the thin icy mare's-tails, so high that already they were
catching the gold blaze from the sun that was still below the horizon. Off to
Aeron's left, the Avon Dia was blue as sword-metal in the growing light,
running high in its banks, strong and swift with snow-melt off the mountains to
the east.
Gwydion
came up behind her, and after a moment she felt his kiss upon her hair.
Heedless of the many watching eyes, she smiled and reached up a hand to caress
his cheek, a thing that once she would not have dreamed of doing in public. But
that too had changed: After the first desperate violence of. their reunion had
been abated, they had discovered in themselves a new tenderness with each
other, a heightened communion that, for all their double-souled closeness, had
not been there before—a function perhaps of having nearly lost each other many
times over, or a result of the evil haps that had befallen each of them in the
months of their separation. Whatever its cause, and knowing too that all was
dan and they could set their backs against that certainty, still there was a
sense that never again would they take each other's presence as a given; that
from now on they would trust to nothing save what they made between them for
themselves.
"This
is too grave an hour for such," she said smiling. "Keltia itself is
today upon the counterpoise."
"Then
all the more reason for it. You are ready?"
"I
am not; but I will act all the same." She gave a teasing
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315
tug to
the lock of dark hair she had twined in her fingers, and faced round to him.
"Tide what may betide. King of Keltia," she said, voice so soft that
he heard her more clearly in his heart than with his ear, "know that I
love thee."
"And
I thee, Ard-rian," he answered as softly in the High Gaeloch, and raised
her hand to his lips. "Go now."
Her
eyes, moving past Gwydion's shoulder, met Elathan's in a silent interchange
that seemed to sum up all they had not said, nor needed to say; a quick glance
for the others, then she was running lightly down a narrow track that led up
onto the hill behind them, and was soon lost to their sight in the mist.
Gwydion
looked after her a few moments longer, then swung his glance across the valley,
to where the Imperial armies were beginning to stir.
"Well,
Fomor," he said to Eladian. "Now let the Eye of Fa'1 behold its
enemies."
Far
below Aeron as she toiled up the hillside, the battle began, the lines slowly
flooding toward each other like rivers rising. She looked up, measuring the
distance above her that had still to be covered, and sighed. The hill at the
entrance to Nandruidion—Talion Law, it was called—was far steeper than it
looked, its green-turfed sides as sheer as a pudding basin. And about as easy
to climb, she thought, winded by the effort that had brought her thus far. But
this was the only hill that looked away unimpeded to the northeast; and, if all
went according to expectation, that was the direction from which their help
must come.
Aeron,
reaching at that instant for a new and firmer hold, nearly came off the hill
altogether as, below her and behind, a blaze of white fire shot out like some
enormous arrow, straight and deadly, aimed at the heart of the Imperial camp.
To look that full on would be like looking into a score of suns; even from the
side, the light leakage was almost blindingly bright. She knew as if she had
seen with her own eyes what had happened below: Standing behind it as she
herself had shown him, using a hooked spear as the legends all commanded,
Gwydion had raised the bronze lid of the Eye of Balor.
From
where she clung now on the side of the Law, Aeron could see where the Eye did
glance, the grass crisping and smoking in its wake, the ground blackening as
she watched; could pray, vainly, that she did not see what was happening
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when
living bodies were caught in that Eye's terrible glare. But she had an errand
of her own that she must perform. Turning her face and her thought from the
carnage, she called upon her last reserves of breath and strength to gain the
top of the Law; and fifteen minutes later, stood there panting, staring down at
the battle.
The
last stages of her scramble had taken her around the far side of the summit,
and so for some time she had not been able to see what was happening below.
From here, five hundred feet above the plain, the fight unrolled beneath her
like a bloody tapestry. The armies had engaged in earnest now, and because of
that the Eye had been shuttered, lest its baleful brilliance fall upon friend
as well as foe. But threads of the tapestry crossed and ran and knotted with no
regard for pattern: Kelts here. Imperials there, strands of other kind woven
throughout—the few Fomori troops that had managed to win through to Tara, a
sprinkling of the Protectorate levies brought by Aeron's cousin Kerensa, some
of the Yamazai warrior-women, even. Yet as Aeron watched, a pattern began to
come clear, and it was one she did not like.
She
looked down at what she had brought with her to the top of the Law: a scrap of
white silk tucked beneath her baldric—the Bratach Ban, the White
Banneret—the-Faery Flag that cou-ld be waved but three times to summon
otherworldly help.
Twice
had that flag been waved, and twice had that help arrived timely, as had been
promised long ago, when a queen of the Sidhe had given it as tinnscra to a
daughter of hers who had wed a mortal, with the pledge that thrice would it
bring the help of the Sidhe to that princess's new kindred. Merlynn Llwyd,
Arthur's Druid mentor, had waved it for the first time, to summon the Shining
Ones to the defeat of Edeyrn; the second waving had been only seven hundred
years ago, when Aeron's own great-grandsire to the eighth, the Ard-righ
Tigernach, had used it in his desperation, to bring to an end at last the
bloody civil wars that had killed, one by one, his father Lachlan, his brothers
Declan and Raonall, and his sister Angharad, each of them sovereign in turn
over Keltia as another fell, and each falling in turn.
Now it
had come time for Aeron to use it, for the third and last time of waving.
Gwydion had been promised the help of the Sidhe by Gwyn their king; but it was
for the Ard-rian of Keltia to ask for it; that she had known since first he had
told
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317
her of
Gwyn's promise. And it is right and fitting that I should ask . . . She
unfolded the Bratach with careful fingers. No one knew for sure how old it was,
but Merlynn had thought it ancient when it came to his hands, and that was
fifteen hundred years ago; it had been in the keeping of Clann Graham ever
since, and the new Master of Graham, Doug-lass's brother Aluinn, had proudly
delivered it into Aeron's hands at Inver before they left for Tara. She stared
down at it with wonder, and a little fear. A square piece of heavy white silk,
close-woven and fine, its edges bound with remnants of heavy gold braid, it
shone with a multicolored iridescence that belied its name.
"I
know not what words of ritual may unlock your powers," said Aeron aloud,
"or what ceremony may properly go with this summoning. But bring us what
aid there may be, for all our sakes." She lifted her arm and swept the
banner three times slowly through the air, hearing a faint shout go up from
below as the Kelts saw her action, and the banner crumbled away to dust in her
hand.
But the
Imperials had seen too, and with some alarm Aeron noted the flashes off the
lenses of the big siege guns—those that the Eye of Balor had not exploded—as
they were swung to focus on her. She threw herself down the far side of the Law
as the hilltop erupted around her.
Below,
the fighting had grown savage, and no one now stood aloof from it. From the
humblest foot-soldier to Gwydion and Elathan and Jaun Akhera themselves, every
warrior who could still lift a sword raised it against the enemy, even if that
warrior could no longer stand but must fight instead upon his knees.
But
strange opponents were meeting now in the bloody press: Rohan, who had given
over his usual place on the bridge of Firedrake to his brother Declan, had
chosen to assume the cavalry command formerly held by Denzil Cameron—who had
died in combat in Rohan's own service— and had been leading it brilliantly
against the Imperial foot.
He was
now extricating his horsemen from the assault, to regroup and attack again.
Guiding his bay stallion with knees and voice alone, to leave his hands free
for his weapons, Rohan suddenly saw from the corner of his eye a hatefully
familiar face among the Coranian troops.
"Kynon
of Ruabon—" he breathed. "Son of Accolon, I
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knew
that I should see you one last time before all was ended." Drawing his
sword, he closed his knees on the stallion's flanks, and the powerful horse
charged to its master's will.
A
little way away, on the banks of the stream Velenryd, Gwydion stood in a bloody
circle that' his own sword had carved for him. For the moment, his opponents
hung back, unwilling to be the next to fall beneath his blade, for none had yet
come away alive after matching strokes with him.
The
ranks around them churned, and when the swirl of battle had once more steadied,
Gwydion found himself face to face with Pryderi. They had not met since Caer
Sidi, and they stared now at each other across the detritus of slaughter.
"Well,
Gwynedd," said Pryderi at last. "After all our time, it comes in the
end to this."
Gwydion
shook his head. "That end was settled two months since, at Caer Carrig
Cennan, when you and your father found it in your hearts—and interests—to break
the guest-law and betray one who had come to you in need. The penalty for that
crime has never changed since first the Kelts left Terra."
"The
galanas, then? Well, take it; if you can." With that word Pryderi came at
him, sword already swinging in a blue arc.
Even
then Gwydion held off until the last possible moment, then brought his own
weapon up to parry, and the shock of the blades' contact nearly sent the
Dyvetian off his feet.
Pryderi
recovered his balance, cursing fluently under his breath. Cythraul take him, I
had forgotten how neat-handed a swordsman he is . . . He lunged again, and
again Gwydion casually parried, with a languid grace that belied the skill and
strength behind it.
With a
skill of his own born of his despair, Pryderi for some minutes and many blows
gave good account of himself, and both of them were bloodied by the time
Gwydion drew back a little.
"My
sorrow, Pryderi," he said, and there was true-sorrow in his eyes. "I
had thought this would be easy justice; but justice never is easy. Better for
us both to end it swiftly." His sword-arm rose and fell and backslanted in
the air between them, too quick for the eye to follow, and Pryderi fell without
a cry. The waters of the Velenryd closed over his face, running red downstream.
»T .-
But
skill of fence was not the only thing in play upon that field . . .
O'Reilly,
who had been fighting side by side with Desmond, paused in a lull of the
battle, then straightened suddenly, her attention caught by something on the
far side of the glen. She pointed with her sword.
"Over
there—what is it with those Coranians?"
Desmond
looked where the blade was pointing. A small group of Imperial foot-soldiers,
perhaps twenty at most, seemed bizarrely plagued: They had thrown aside their
weapons and now were stumbling through the lines, searching packs, tents, even
the persons of the slain. Wherever they found food of any kind, they devoured
it as if they were in the grip of excruciating hunger-pangs—some of them were
even stuffing grass and leaves.
"Are
they crazy, or what?"
Desmond
shook his head. "Nay, the poor bodachs; they have set foot upon the
faer-gortha, the hungry grass. It is a magic of the Shining Ones, that they use
chiefly as a defense against mortals. There must be a patch of it hereabouts,
left over maybe from the days of Ederyn."
The
hungry grass . . . O'Reilly felt a chill, and hitched her tunic up around her
neck. "What does it do?"
"It
sets upon such a hunger as no natural need could cause, nor right feeding
allay. As you see"—he nodded toward the ravenous soldiers—' 'they are
driven by the famishing to devour anything they can find, even grass if there
be naught else. They will die of the hunger in short order, if they are not fed
to break the spell."
"Fed
on what?"
"Bread
and salted buttermilk—they are not like to find it here, though every
countrydweller in Keitia keeps some in the cookptace against just such sudden
need. It is a hard way to die, by the faer-gortha, and Beltain the worst day of
all for the hungry grass to strike." His eyes clouded briefly. "I must
mention it to Aeron; after the battle is done, Druids or Ban-draoi must find
the place and purify it, so that none of ours takes the hunger. But see,
Sari-fach, it is over."
O'Reilly
looked up reluctantly, to see the last few of the afflicted Imperials stagger
and fall, fingers still cramming grass into choked mouths.
"Gods
help them."
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A
galloglass standing by overheard her, and said with surprise, and respect also,
for he recognized Desmond, "But they are gallain, lady, and the enemy as well."
"Gods
help them," repeated O'Reilly.
The
sound, when it began, began low, almost beneath the threshold of human hearing,
and seemed to have been going on for a long time: a deep harmonious chanting in
distinct parts, musical, rhythmic, strong—a march ing-chant, as though the gods
themselves went forth to war, out upon Achateny, the Field of Fire, the
battleground of the universe where shall be waged Cymynedd.
Aeron,
who had half-fallen, half-run down the steep hillside only a few yards ahead of
the laser strikes, came now tearing around the base of the Law, and was caught
in mid-flight by Dafydd Drummond.
"Deio,
let me pass—"
"Nay,
Aeron, look!"
She
stood motionless as he had seized her, staring open-mouthed at the sight before
her: The Sluagh Sidhe were riding to the battlefield, even as Gwyn son of Nudd
had promised, and they were singing as they rode. How they came there none
could afterwards say: Some swore they had come out of the north; others said
not, that they had ridden from the west, or the east or the south; or had come
out of the hills, or out of the air. One breath they were not there, the next
they were; and none was nol nearly frozen at their coming. Even the Kelts, who
had been warned what to expect, and who had been raised for generations on
tales of the Shining Ones and their rades—even they would not have held firm in
their lines had they not been held there by Aeron's word and Aeron's will, and
by the love they held in turn for her.
"The
Shining Ones," said Dafydd in a near-whisper, "you have called them
by the Bratach Ban."
Aeron
heard his awe, and felt the same in her own heart. All the old tales made much
of the unearthly glory of the Sidhe in the moment of their twice-yearly
transcendence, when they rode from their hollow hills at Samhain and again at
Beltain; but no tale she had ever heard had dared to tell of them in their
battle rage. Nor had she thought to find them so beautiful, and so terrible:
Tall they were, fine-drawn and luminous, their hair of all shades from purest
silver-gilt to darkest blue-black, their skin all of the same poreless pallor,
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321
white
and flawless, and their eyes—But she could not meet their eyes, not yet, not if
she were to fulfill the task she knew was only half-completed.
With a
resolve she did not feel, she disengaged herself from Drummond's restraining
arm and walked forward to greet her newest-come allies.
Others
too managed to set aside their own fears and walk out in front of the armies,
toward those who led the faerie host: Rohan, still on his big bay stallion,
though now there was blood on the beast's front hoofs, and Kynon of Ruabon's
head at the saddlebow; Elathan, who had fought alongside Niall O Kerevan,
Tanaxio of the Yamazai and Haco Grex for one epic hour against a cohort of Jaun
Akhera's personal guards; O'Reilly and Desmond; and Gwydion, who turned from
the body of Pryderi and came, drawn sword still in hand, to stand with Aeron
before the Sluagh Sidhe.
Mounted
upon a gold-maned white stallion, Gwyn ap Nudd bowed very slightly to them from
the saddle. From his place a little behind, Allyn son of Midna lifted his hand
to Gwydion with a sparkling smile, and Gwydion gave a small start as of sudden
gladness, instantly controlled. But Aeron's attention was held by the
black-haired woman, sidesaddle upon a chestnut mare, at Gwyn's right hand.
Clad
all in red, her raven hair bound by a silver fillet, the woman heeded Aeron not
at all- But looking at Gwydion, she lifted a golden branch from where it had
rested in the crook of her left elbow, and shook it thrice. The tiny golden
bells in the shape of apples that depended from the branch gave out a pure
clear chiming; and meeting Aeron's eyes the woman spoke.
"Queen
of Kelts," said Etain, queen of the Sidhe, "spancelled is your
man."
Aeron
dragged her gaze away from the queen's face, as beside her Gwydion suddenly
stiffened, as if he had been all at once turned to stone. She touched his cheek
in utter disbelief: He neither moved nor seemed to breathe, and the gray eyes
did not even blink at her touch; and Aeron turned on Etain with a face of
thunder.
"Spancelled
is your man," repeated the queen, in a voice like the bell-bough or birds
calling.
"Unfettered
they that live the longest," snapped Aeron in answer, and Gwydion shook
himself all over, as one who has
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just
come in from the rain or the deep cold, looking first at Aeron, then at Etain,
in blank bewilderment.
Etain
smiled. "Were it not that you understood my meaning, and answered correctly,
you had been less your lord."
"Had
1 been less my lord," said Aeron very softly, and now she too was smiling,
"no matter what help your own lord had given me, I had levelled your
palace to the ground and sown the earth of it with salt and fenced it round
with cold iron, and you and all your folk to be scattered whistling down the
wind for an age and an age of this world."
"Ah.
It seems that Fionnbarr's daughter, then, is not entirely free of a vengeful
spirit."
"Not
entirely; but let us not put it to the test." Aeron looked then at Gwyn,
who had watched the by-play between his lady and the Keltic queen with an
amused air. "Gwyn Nudd's son," she said, only courtesy now in her
manner, "my greeting to you and your folk."
Gwyn
bowed again. "And mine to you and yours, Aeron daughter of Dana. We have
come as I did promise."
"And
shall fight as you also did promise?"
He
gestured. "Look about you. We have already begun."
Aeron
scanned the vailey behind Gwyn, where his sluagh had dispersed as at an unspoken
order. Everywhere she looked, the faerie warriors were riding down the enemy;
and as she looked more closely, she saw that the Sidhe warriors were unarmed.
But it seemed that the Shining Ones did not need to draw weapon to rout their
foe. The very terror 6f their presence seemed enough and more than enough.
Wherever they rode they took fear with them, and the Coranian lines parted like
water before them.
"We
did not promise to win your fight for you, Aeron," said Gwyn. "That
is your dan, not ours. But we came here to Nandruidion in fulfillment of two
things: one a recent promise, the other an old—a very old—debt."
He
stood in his gilded stirrups and whistled; from between the silver-shod hoofs
of the faerie horses threaded two red-eared, white-coated dogs. At sight of
them, Aeron's wolfhounds, fearless in hunt and battle alike, whined piteously
in their throats and retreated as close to their mistress as they could get;
Aeron felt Cabal shivering against her leg, and laid a reassuring hand on the
lifted hackles of the dog's neck.
"My
hounds Bran and Sgeolaun," said Gwyn. "Given to me by Fionn. and to
him by Arawn. Their rightful prey is
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323
traitors."
He made a small gesture; giving voice to three terrifying bays, the faerie
hounds raced away down the hill, and they ran now in silence.
"One
word more," said Gwydion slowly. "You spoke just now of a promise,
and that we know of; but you spoke of a debt also. What debt may that be, and
to whom owed?"
Allyn
son of Midna stiffened in his saddle, and even Etain the queen seemed to shrink
a little at the question. But Gwyn only smiled.
"Ah,
Prince of Don, I should have known that it would be you dared ask that
question; and the answer I must make to it goes far and deep into the past . . .
You know it was Edeym Archdruid, whose dun lay not a league from this place
where now we stand, who first brought treacherously the evil of the gallain
into Keltia: the same evil, and the same gallain, that you fight here this day.
And it was Arthur of Arvon who did put him down. Know then that it was I who
gave the Treasures of Keltia into Arthur's hand that he might do so: the
Treasures that had been in my keeping for long years before; those same
Treasures, Aeron, that I sent you in search of, so that the evil let in long
ago by Edeym, and scotched by Arthur, might now be brought by you to a latter
end. Daeth yr amser—Time is come—delay no longer. And when all is done, go to
Caer-na-gael upon the Holy Mountain, where the circle will receive you."
Aeron
had stepped forward as Gwyn was speaking, and stood now at his stirrup, her
eyes searching his face. "Why do you, a king of the Shining Ones, trouble
yourself with the sins of Edeyrn, and the evil of the galiain?"
Again
Gwyn smiled, and gathering his reins began to wheel the white stallion in a
caracole.
"Did
you not know? Edeyrn was my brother."
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325
Chapter
29
Though
Gwyn had gone and Etain with him, as strangely and as suddenly as they had
come, Allyn ap Midna yet lingered, as if he would have further speech with the
rulers of Keltia.
Aeron
herself had not moved, but still stood, deep in thought, where Gwyn had left
her, eyes on the middle distance where a curtain of dust hid the battle from
her sight.
At last
she stirred, and looked at Gwydion. "So that is why—"
He
nodded, but it was Allyn who answered. "My lord Gwyn is son to Nudd our
king who was," he said. "And Edeyrn, to whom we were first to give
the name of Marbh-draoi, was son to one Rhun, a mortal Kelt. But both alike were
sons of the lady Seli, she who was Nudd's queen. One day in anger she left the
dun and her own lord; she was gone for a year and a day of our counting, and
when she returned she brought with her—for our years and days are not in pace
with your own—a boy of seven years' growth. She named him Edeym, which is to
say 'golden-tongued,' and he lived with us for seven of our own years, though
in the outer world he had attained to full manhood's age. His mother sent him
out then from our dun, to the hall of his mortal father; but what Edeyrn
learned in his time with us he never forgot, for he was in part of our own
blood, and in the end he turned it all to evil."
"And
so Gwyn his brother gave Arthur the means to destroy him."
Allyn
nodded. "So he did, Prince of Don; and still the evil was not ended, not
completely. Therefore did Gwyn give you the words to set Aeron on the path that
would, he hoped, bring her to the Treasures, to end Edeym's evil forever. There
is no more that we can do."
324
Aeron
had been silent while.the Sidhe lord and Gwydion spoke, but now she raised a
hand, and Shane came quickly to her side from where he had been waiting with
the others, some yards away.
"Gwyn
has said it," she murmured, as if to herself. Then more loudly:
"Daeth yr amser . . . Fetch now to me Fragarach, and the Spear Birgha. I
will make an end."
The
ride of the Sidhe had reduced Jaun Akhera's forces as much by panic and
disarray as by real destruction. He had watched, stunned and silent, as the
faerie horsemen rode against his lines, scattering the terrified soldiery in
aJl directions. But then ail at once the Sidhe were gone, and wearily he
prepared to rally his army once more against the Keltic schiltrons. Even as he
did so, though, Jaun Akhera concealed the dismay and disbelief he felt. What
else can she have to throw at me? he thought despairingly. She must be the
goddess Ananzanzu in human guise, whose sorceries are inexhaustible . . .
Still, even Aeron could not have many more surprises left, and if he could hold
out until sunset—unless . . .
Jaun
Akhera's face blazed with a sudden hope. Once before, Aeron had challenged him
to fior-comlainn; perhaps, now, he could offer her that challenge renewed.
A
quarter-mile away, nearer the banks of the Avon Dia, Helior looked around in
panic scarcely controlled, trying to see through the dust and confusion of
maddened troops. Where are my sons? Akhi. where are you?
Out of
the tumult she saw a familiar figure emerge, and forgetting her royal dignity,
she ran after him like some street-waif, to grab at his arm. "Lord
Hanno—"
He
looked at her as at some stranger, then his face cleared and he nodded.
"Madam? What is it? I cannot spare even a few moments from my command, the
battle goes so ill—"
Helior
felt a fresh wave of terror wash over her. "My son—"
*'I
have just left the Emperor. He has decided on a course from which none could
persuade him: "to face Aeron in a meeting that may well decide all our
fates ... I must go now. Serenity; you will be safest if you remain here, you
and the lady Tinao."
Tinao .
. . Helior realized that she had not seen the girl since the early hours of the
day's fighting. Where is she? Has
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she
gone to Akhi? Nay, no doubt Indarrak is looking after her . . . And what of
Sancho? In her renewed fear and distraction, she began to run again, though she
had no thought of to where, or from what. Then she saw before her in the eerie
light Inn Mage's tall orange-clad form. The Cabin priest was standing very
still, his eyes seeing something a long way off, or perhaps it was not his eyes
that saw . . .
"Well,
priestling?" snapped Helior, fear sharpening her voice to contempt.
"What think you now of your counsel? What will you do to mend matters for
my son?"
He
looked at her from a greater distance than the merely physical. "There is
nothing I can do; or may do. I taught him, and I warned him, and now he must do
for himself. No one else can help him here."
"We
shall see about that," muttered Helior, and ran once more through the
chaos of the Imperial lines, following Hanno's retreating form.
Powell
of Dyved stood alone on a ridge above the battle. He had not shirked the
fight—as more than one wound attested— and he had seen his only son fall to
Gwydion's sword—as unconcealed tears had attested.
But the
grief had been stanched even as the blood, and now his only thought was to
emerge from this horror alive. Early on in the fighting, as soon as he saw
which way it appeared like to go—between the Eye of Balor and the coming of the
Sidhe, Aeron's way, not Jaun Akhera's—he had given secret orders for the
Dyvetian troops to steal away from the Imperial lines as best they could; and
now he was ready to attempt his own escape. He had ripped off his surcoat with
its betraying blazon, and thrown away his riven shield, and in the seething
battle-stour had withdrawn to the comparative safety of this ridge, whose other
flank was a deep coombe through which, with tuck, he could creep away
unnoticed, to pass beyond Aeron's writ forever.
And
beyond Jaun Akhera's as well; for by now, Powell knew, he was almost certainly
hunted for a traitor by both sides alike, and the punishment for treachery was
much the same no matter whose hand dealt it out.
Almost
safe, he thought, almost there . . . Just over the lip of the hill, and down
into the coombe's steep-sided safety, and then he would have more than a
chance; for he had had the foresight to conceal a smallship, equipped for
space, not
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327
ten lai
away in a fold of the hills. Near sobbing with exhaustion and exertion, he
gained the crest of the rise.
Powell
never knew what caused him to turn, for there was no smallest sound, neither
then nor later. But turn he did, and then there was no time for any sound of
any sort, as Gwyn's white hounds Bran and Sgeolaun leaped for him in silence,
in silence brought down their lawful prey, and, still in silence, tore out his
throat.
In the
few months of his acquaintance with Aeron. Etathan had thought himself grown
inured—by sheer frequency, if nothing else—to any astonishment at anything his
new friend might compass, though in truth her deeds even in that brief span had
given astonishment cause enough. But the friendship they had so gingerly
embarked upon had come to be a real and solid one in spite of such, the giving
and taking on either side as free and open as it may ever be between true
friends; though, given the stature of these particular participants, the scope
of it was rather greater than most friendships can claim. Still, for ail the galactic
scale and interplanetary implications, at root it was two persons, not two
monarchs, who were friends here; and it was as persons, even more perhaps than
as monarchs, that each had acted.
So
Elathan had entered wholeheartedly into Aeron's fight to reclaim her realm, as
unstinting of himself and his resources—and of his own safety, even—as Aeron
had been at Tory. And he had watched as Gwydion turned the trees to warriors,
and as the Eye of Balor had been once again opened, and as Aeron had waved the
Bratach Ban and summoned the Sidhe to Nandruidion. But through it all had run
like a red thread the thought of Talorcan, and the dilemma that was twin to
that thought: what, when he encountered his brother at last, would he do to
him. Aeron had already once prevented him from shedding Talorcan's blood, had
been willing to take even the guilt of that upon herself, though in the event
it had fallen out otherwise. But here on Tara that problem was no longer hers,
if indeed it had ever been, and Elathan knew very well that the knot of blood
and betrayal between Talorcan and himself was his alone to deal with: to
unravel, or to cut.
It was
therefore less with shock than with a feeling of cold smiling inevitability—dan
to its last pinch, he thought dully— that, watching Aeron and Gwydion speak to
the Sidhe, Elathan
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saw
down over the sloping ground to the west his brother standing among the
officers of Jaun Akhera's high command. And it was thus less with personal hatred
than with this new vast sense of being moved by fated forces that he now
approached Aeron, knowing at last what he must do and how it must be done . . .
Allyn
son of Midna had ridden away with his kindred when, obeying his cousin's
bidding, Shane brought to Aeron the two things she had requested: the Sword,
Fragarach, and Birgha the Spear. She had replaced her own glaive with the great
leather-scabbarded longsword, and was about to take the Spear from Shane's
hands when Elathan came up beside her.
She
looked her inquiry, for in his face was no friendliness but only a rigid
control.
He
pointed to the Imperial lines. "Talorcan is there. I think this quarrel is
mine to settle."
Aeron
studied his flushed face, which paled again beneath her gaze; then she looked
over to where Talorcan was a clear and recognizable figure in his red surcoat,
and nodded once.
"Very
well so. How do you choose to settle it?"
Elathan
looked at the Spear in Shane's hands, its head still shrouded in the silver
silk that had wrapped it for all the centuries of its slumber. Aeron, following
his gaze, understood, and nodded again.
"To
you then. King of Fomor." She signalled to,Shane to give the Spear to
Elathan, and then withdrew a little, to see what he would do. He has earned this;
else the thought would never have come to him, nor the license to use Birgha
been granted him . . .
Eiathan
looked down at the weapon in his hands. A beautiful thing; its siim ashwood
haft was carved with baffling symbols—patterns that looked like broken wands
and double-discs, combs and mirrors and grinning long-nosed beasts— and ringed
below the point with findruinna. As soon as his fingers closed around it he
felt its power; even wrapped in its silk veils, it pulled like a hound in
leash. With sudden decision he ripped away the silk; the spearhead glittered in
the light, seeming neither metal nor crystal, almost jewel-like in its
translucence, but with a writhing cloudy fire at its heart.
Slowly
he lifted the Spear to the level of his shoulder, feeling it balance itself
almost against his will. From boyhood Elathan had been trained in the
spear-toss, had excelled in it
far
above the average; but he was suddenly sure that this Spear would hit its mark
by no skill of his ... With renewed resolve he sighted down the shaft's length
at Talorcan's distant red-clad figure, and the symbols on the Spear seemed to
move and writhe in the corner of his eye.
The
unexpected movement startled him, so that he faltered in the very moment of his
release; but with no thought that he could afterwards recall, Elathan flung
Birgha at his treasonous brother.
The
weapon left his hand with such celerity—alacrity, rather, he corrected himself,
staring after it—that it seemed he had not so much thrown the Spear as ceased
to hold it back. Its flight kindled a stream of fire from the dusty air; and
Taiorcan, looking up too late, had not time even to flinch. As the Spear struck
him through the heart and carried him backward to the earth, it roared.
And
still Elathan did not move . . ,
"
'I am the Spear that roars for blood,' " said a low voice behind him:
Aeron had come up quietly. "So did one of our bards speak of Birgha, long
ago on Terra."
She
followed his glance to where Talorcan, his figure diminished by distance, lay
now upon the hillside, arms flung out to either side and the Spear upright
through his chest pinning him to the ground. He iay alone, for all those
standing near had fled as Birgha struck.
Elathan
sighed and turned his back on the sight. "He spoke rightly, that bard of
yours ... I am glad Cami was not here to see that," he added. "On
Fomor it is the King's responsibility alone to deal death to such as he and the
law deem to merit it. But it is also the King's duty to ensure that it is
justice that is being dealt, not revenge; and just now I failed in that
duty."
"Not
so, King of Fomor," said Aeron. "If that were true, Birgha would
never have endured even the grip of your hand. It was execution, and justice
undoubted."
"And
mercy unmerited—a death richly deserved, though he was my father's son. He
dishonors even the instrument of his execution."
"Well,
whatever else he was, he was of royal blood, and a death by Birgha's kiss is
both fitting and cleansing. He will go on now to face what he has prepared for
himself.'' Aeron nodded toward the Spear. "Call it back."
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THE
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331
He
looked sharply at her, uncertain if she jested, but she nodded again.
"Aye
so; call it. ft will return to your fist like a falcon trained. You it was who
sent it forth; now you must call it home again."
Feeling
as fearful as he did foolish, Elathan raised his empty hand, palm outwards, and
in his mind summoned the weapon to him. And, across the valley, the Spear
quivered as if a hand of flesh and bone had been set to it, then rose free of
the body of Talorcan and blazed once more to Elathan's grip. Aeron quickly
swathed the point once more in its silver silk, and Elathan dropped the weapon
into her hands as if it had been a live laser blade, or a bar of white-hot
metal.
Only
then did those who had been watching come forward: Gwydion, Desmond, Grex, some
others. Aeron looked at them questioningly.
"News?"
"For
Elathan," said Desmond. "Those ones who came here with your brother
are now also mostly dead—Dargato, Salenn and Grive chiefest among them—and the
rest are taken, Shall we put an end to them?"
"Upon
your peril!" Elathan was as surprised as the rest of them by the vehemence
of his order. "I am sorry, I am a little—overwrought. All the same, I do
not wish them slain. Put them in some place of safehotding for now, and I will
deal with them when the fight is done, or perhaps back on Fomor, as I think
best."
"As
you wish," said Desmond, and left to obey.
When
they stood alone again, Aeron watched her friend covertly for a while in
silence. "Is it well with you?"
Elathan
nodded, not looking at her, and ran a hand over his face, banishing his fatigue
and his heartsickness alike. "It is, now; or well enough, at any event. .
. But that is the end, for me. You have still to deal with Jaun Akhera."
He glanced down at Fragarach, that hung from its baldric across her chest.
"Shall that be for him—as Birgha was for my brother?"
Aeron
did not reply immediately. "It might be," she said then. "Or
again, it might not."
And
there came an hour between noon and sunset when the armies were balanced one
for one, as if on the sword-bridge that spans the chasm-entrance to Annwn
itself, so evenly matched that it seemed they fought in a mirror.
Aeron
alone. The roar of the battle broke over her like waves on a rocky coast; she
did not speak, not even to Gwydion who stood beside her, and she did not move,
save that her fingers flexed now and again around Fragarach's serpent-hilt. She
knew very well that those close to her were wondering, with impatience or
compassion according as to how well they understood her mind, why she did not
draw Fragarach, or open the Eye of Balor yet again heedless of the Kelts who
might stand in its sight, or send the Spear roaring into Jaun Akhera's ranks,
or into his heart; any or all of which would ensure victory for her and her
allies. Knew just as well that she was free to use them if she chose, that the
decision was hers alone to make.
//
would be victory, right enough, but, I think, not any victory worth having ...
As she had told Morwen, so many weeks ago, before Retaliator had even come to
the Morimaruse, it was an advantage she could not in honor take; as if it were
fior-comlainn, and she bore two longswords and her adversary only a table-sgian.
This quarrel would be—should be— settled on more even ground than that, and she
waited now only for the sign she knew would come.
It came
as a call she alone could hear. The very air around her seemed to ring with her
name, and she looked eagerly for the summoning's source. And saw Jaun Akhera,
as she had known she would, alone, down beside the Avon Dia. Before Gwydion
could move to stop her, she was running down the hill into the heart of the
fight.
Jaun
Akhera watched her come. He had seen what she had earlier perceived: that the
armies were locked, and that therefore the struggle would have to be decided
elsewhere. And that suited him as well as it did her; the private quarrels of
princes should not involve their folk, and, beyond all the political trappings
with which this war had been bedecked, behind all the masks of power and
ascendancy and sway, this fight came down in the end to him and her only, and
for more than merely the Throne of Scone. Even more narrowly than her battle
against Bres, there was a clash of polarities drawn here between them, a
contradiction of souls that could not be allowed to stand, and both of them
knew it.
He
sensed a familiar presence at his elbow. "Mother," he said gently,
never taking his eyes from Aeron's approaching
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figure,
"you must stand away now. And whatever happens
here,
you must accept."
"And
I?" came a pain-soft voice, and a hand upon his cheek.
Jaun
Akhera's features contracted briefly, as if she had struck him, not caressed
him. "Especially you, beloved." He turned then to look at
them—perhaps for the last time, he thought: Helior white and still; Tinao no
less pale, but with tears on her face like a skein of jewels, glittering in the
eerie light.
Jaun
Akhera brushed away the tears, then kissed his tear-damp fingertips and pressed
the kiss to her lips. He did not watch as Heiior put an arm around Tinao's
shoulders and drew her away.
The sun
broke through the mounting cloudbanks, gold shafts splintering through to light
theatrically the plain below, as Aeron made her way down to where her enemy
awaited her. Running heedlessly, throwing off the hands that grabbed for her,
ignoring the swords that slashed, she dodged through the press until she stood
in an open space above the Avon Dia, Fragarach flaming now in her hand, and
Jaun Akhera facing her not a dozen feet away.
Near
enough to see his eyes: Their gold was changed now, something coiling darkly
far inside; and as she looked into those baneful depths, Aeron felt her strength
of body and of will running through her into the ground beneath her feet, like
sand through a glass or water through a pipe.
"Well,
Aeron," said Jaun Akhera pleasantly. "This then is the test."
"There
is no test," she said, with a calm she was far from feeling. "But
once before you declined to take our quarrel to the sword between us two alone.
Now I offer you that choice again."
Jaun
Akhera laughed. "Though I flatter myself that I am a better man with a
blade than your last royal opponent, I remember very well how you dealt with
him, and I fear I must again decline. But I offer you a counterchallenge."
"Of
what like?"
He
nodded at the blazing Sword. "Easy enough, with such as that and its
fellows, to face down and destroy any foe. But it would not be you that won the
victory: The weapon, not the warrior, would do the fighting. You cherish your
pride to face
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
333
the
fior-comlainn, but where would be the truth in that combat? Would it not be
merely Bellator over again, another unequal contest in which you held the
strong hand uppermost not by reason of your own skill and merit, but by mere
witchery? And would that be a thing worthy of the Queen of Kelts?"
Aeron
made no outward sign, but she felt as if he had flicked her with a tip-whip on
an open wound, and all the tiny barbs tugging at her flesh. How had he known?
How had he reached so cunningly past all her defenses, to seize upon the very
reasons that had caused her to hold back thus far? My guilt for Bellator, and
the Aoibhell traha: What a pair of motives to decide this quarrel and to rule a
queen . . . and they will rule me, too; he surely has the right of it there . .
.
"You
argue as a plausible Kelt," she heard herself saying. "Past doubt but
you have been here too long . . . Well then, what shall be the ground of our
meeting?"
"Set
aside that blade you bear," he said, his eyes never leaving her face,
"and meet me armed only with your own powers, as I with mine. That would
be a contest of honor such as the worlds have never seen, an equal fight
between equal princes; the stakes equal also—my throne for yours. My challenge
to you, Aeron, is^nagic."
Aeron
never hesitated. "I accept for myself."
"Only
for yourself? Will your armies not be bound by the outcome?"
"It
is usual with us that if the chieftain be slain the fight is over," she
said with a shrug. "Though I cannot promise mat Gwydion and Elathan will
not keep the war alight should I fall."
"I
care nothing for that. To settle our score between us is enough for my part."
"You
seem sure of victory, Telchine."
"And
should I not be—Danaan? Whose magic was it defeated your folk's, on the last
day of Amnael in the city of Lirias? Whose was it, not so very long ago, broke
the Wolf Gate and took Caerdroia?"
Aeron
smiled then, a real smile, open and guileless. "Well, I can only hope that
my folk—not to mention myself—have learned somewhat since."
Unsiinging
the baldric upon which she had carried Fragarach, she set belt and Sword
reverently aside upon the grass. As her hand left the gleaming hilt, she felt,
as if from an infinitous
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THE
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335
distance,
a reechoing of that feeling of tightness that had come to her once before, in
her cabin on Retaliator, many months since: a reassurance like the sound of a
far chime, faint, but true and clear-noted. Ah, I was right then after all;
this was indeed a test, though I said not so just now to the Marbh-draoi; and
though it was lawful to allow the use of the Spear and the Eye, and, later, will
be so to employ the Cup, for me to use the Sword to settle this quarrel would
not have been lawful. Not so much because it is the Sword, but because it would
have been I who used it. It was a geis and a test together, and by the grace of
the gods I have been so far saved from failing—but then, it is barely begun.
Straightening
to full height, she pointed a little distance off to a patch of carse near a
ford of the Avon Dia.
"Does
the ground suit?" she asked in the formal challenge.
"It
suits."
"Be
it so." They took positions perhaps a score of feet apart, bowed their
heads deeply and ceremonially to each other. Then Aeron stretched out her hand,
and lines of blue-white fire ran east and west from where she stood, to meet in
a ring of cold flame that shut them off from interference and assistance alike.
When it
became clear what Aeron and Jaun Akhera were about to commence, an unspoken
truce seemed to fall over their armies, like a ripple of stillness moving
outward from a calm center. And an unvoiced horror fel! likewise over their
friends: As the battle slowed and then came to an uncertain halt, those closest
to the two adversaries hastened through the lines to be as near as they could
be to what would be the deciding combat of this war, though they knew well
there was nothing could now be done to stop it: Gwydion, Rohan, Efathan,
O'Reilly; from the Imperial lines, Hanno and Garallaz, Helior and Tinao,
Indarrak and Inn Mage.
And in
the center of all, Jaun Akhera and Aeron: Though the war had halted around
them, waiting upon their contest, they were no longer of it. Within the
riomhall, the protective fire-circle that Aeron had cast upon the carse, it was
a different war that these two now did fight: a war that had been begun
thirteen thousand years ago in Atland, a war that had continued even after both
their races were free of the stars themselves. Once again it had come to Danaan
against Telchine, and once again magic was their weapon.
To
those who watched, tense with horror, from beyond the riomhall. it seemed that
the two tall shapes within the perimeter were altering the very stuff of their
own bodies: They rocketed through a bewildering sequence of transformations,
preliminary ploys—bears and badgers, wolves and hounds, eagles and serpents,
basilisks to griffins to columns of faceless flame. Then the shapeshifting was
suddenly over, and they stood again in their own forms, both breathing hard, as
if they had been running, and a little less firm upon their feet.
Aeron
recovered herself first, pointed her right hand, the two middle fingers
together. "Ami thened, deini 16chet!"
A lance
of light formed in the air and launched itself at Jaun Akhera, striking him
full in the chest and hurling him to the ground. Yet even as he fell he was
muttering a counter-charm, and Aeron's head was suddenly knocked to one side,
as if an invisible hand had dealt her a vicious slap. Before she could regain
her balance, he had struck again; this time the unseen blow sent her to her
knees in the grass, and biood beaded the corner of her mouth. Outside the
circle, Gwydion willed himself to motionlessness, and Eiathan closed his eyes.
But
Aeron was on her feet again, and crying words in an unknown tongue she threw
one arm up to the heavens. Lightning arced from her fingertips, and thunder
answered in the shifting clouds. Then between them on the dueling-ground stood
a giant black dog. Enormous and terrible, its smooth coat gleaming over
rippling muscles and its powerful tail, thick at the base, tapering to a narrow
tip, it crouched protectively in front of Aeron, and its eyes as it looked at
Jaun Akhera were blazing red.
"The
Puca," whispered Desmond to O'Reilly, who had shrunk back against him.
"It is only partly in the world of form. It says much for Aeron's power
that she was able to summon it, but whether she can command it . . ."
His
voice fell away into silence as the faerie animal drew back its lips to show
gleaming fangs, then loosed upon the air a long and terrifying bay. It began to
move menacingly toward Jaun Akhera, but Aeron, feeling her control slip, spoke
curt words; the beast, swinging its huge head to look at her, made a noise deep
in its throat and was gone.
"I
had thought you a better tactician than that, Aeron," jeered Jaun Akhera,
"not to call up what you cannot command." But his voice was not so
steady as his words.
So it
went for many minutes, each countering what the
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other
conjured: Jaun Akhera entangling Aeron in a hedge of thorns, she turning the
inch-long curving spines into white flowers, though not before they had stabbed
her cruelly; Aeron throwing round Jaun Akhera a wall of fire, he drawing snow
whispering out of the clouds to quench it, though not before he had been badly
burned; and other exchanges beside, and both of them grew weary long before it
was done.
"Where
is the magic that did so well for Bellator?" taunted Jaun Akhera, watching
lynx-eyed for the first signs of her next spell. They had been fighting more
than an hour now, and still they seemed evenly matched. /// can anger her, so
thai she forgets her self-mastery for her wrath; and Bellator being to her a
sharper thorn than those ones I conjured earlier . . . "Black magic once
to such spectacular result, why not black magic again? You have grown soft as
well as soft-hearted since then, Aeron; even Arianeira managed better at Murias
than you do now."
"That
is as it is," she said, voice low but very clear. "I have made my
choice not to use the Treasures to decide this; still less will I use the
dark-knowledge, the eolas dubh. Not if I must perish for it and Keltia to
follow me; but no working of Anghar, the Loveless Place, shall be wrought here
by me."
Jaun
Akhera gave a deep mocking sigh. "Ah, the never-ending traha of the
Aoibhells . . . but, as you will have it." He made a curious sign with his
left hand, and the writhing dark thing that had been in his eyes leapt
suddenly- out, assuming palpable form on the ground between them where the
Plica had stood.
Aeron
took an involuntary step backward, as a low vibration came from the
shadow-creature and quickly grew to an unpleasant humming noise. A sick
loathing mounting'to nausea came over her as the humming waxed in strength; her
vision blurred, and before she could move to defend herself the black thing was
at her throat.
Chapter
30
Gwydion
had watched impassively as Aeron and Jaun Akhera came to first grips with each
other's magic. This is a thing neither of them has done before, matched spells
for life or death against a foe of equal skill . . . It must be, he thought,
but he was desperately afraid, and he had no comfort for any other: not for
Elathan, who had turned away at last, unable to watch any longer; nor for Rohan
nor Grex nor even for O'Reilly, who had come running to him for reassurance as
she had done once before in fear for Aeron. But this time he could give no
courage to her, for he had barely enough for himself. Aeronwy, if you come not
alive and unhurt from that circle, I will choke out his life with my own hands,
and care not for what may come after , . .
Morwen,
with Fergus and Rfoghnach and some others, had been standing a little to one
side, and now she came forward to touch Gwydion on the arm. "Do
something," she said, her voice utterly without inflection. "It
cannot go on so."
He
looked at her then, and she saw the anguish in the gray distant gaze. "I
can do nothing," he said. "Only she . . ."
"Do
something," begged Tinao, both hands clawing at Helior's arm.
"Nothing
can be done," said the Princess. "You yourself heard Akhi tell us we
must accept whatever befalls. Be silent now and watch, else you are not worthy
of him."
Defeated,
Tinao lifted her eyes—dark, desperate, pleading—in turn to the faces of the
others who stood there, mutely beseeching their help: Hanno, Inguari, Garallaz,
Inn Mage". But the captains would not meet her gaze, and Sanchoniathon,
who might have tried to help, and who surely would have comforted, was not
there. Of them all, only Irin Mage the Cabin would look at her, and Tinao found
no shred
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of
comfort in that, for there was both pity and pitilessness in his gaunt face.
She turned away, shivering, and Indarrak put a gentle hand upon her shoulder.
"Oh,
'Darrak, he will be all right," she said in a clear determined voice.
"You will see. He will be all right. He must be."
As the
shadow-thing came at her, Aeron instinctively flung her arms in front of her
face; then it struck, with a force that knocked her backward to the grass. She
could feel the weight of the thing: In shape it was something like to a badger
or a monstrous talpa, ovoid and covered with dark siJky shadow-fur, and it had
no eyes that she could perceive. Though she sensed no personal hostility from
the creature, she could feel ft trying to leach away her power, drawing its
shape and sustenance from her. And in that, she knew, it was but obeying its
master, with no will of its own; if she could not throw it off, it would hold
her there until she weakened, and then Jaun Akhera would place the final sea)
to their combat.
As if
from a great distance, she heard Jaun Akhera cry out the words of a spell of
augmentation, in a high ghastly voice: "Kay o kam avriavel, kiya yakh6 lo
beshel!"
Her
counterspell came quick as she would have riposted a swordthrust.
"Lezh-han, lezh-hon, bac'h an arer zo gant don!" A net of silver cast
itself around the shadow-talpa, lightening in pulses that matched her own
heartbeats; the more it contracted, the smaller the creature grew, until it was
gone and the silver lattice with it.
Aeron
got to her feet with care, head ringing, and looked at Jaun Akhera. He was
staring at her with fear plain on his face for the first time, for he had
counted heavily on that-spell. But as she looked at him, she saw, horribly, his
face began to change: It was now Gwydion's, now Bres's, Haruko's now,
Elathan's, Grex's, Strephon's, Morwen's, her own. In a silent explosion of
clarity she saw a truth that cleared away all her weakness and steadied her on
her feet; and the truth was that Jaun Akhera was her Shadow made reality and given
form by her own fears, and she of course was his. Not the Shadow that was the
other side of her soul's Light; that inborn darkness had long ago been absorbed
as part of herself— her Self—and would not perish until she did; even then, it
would only be unbodied, united with the rest of her soul. No, this Other who
faced her here, all in white as she herself wore
THE
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339
black,
was rather the embodiment of all those things she hated most in the world, and
she was that to him, and in that absolute difference they were utterly one and
the same. There was no way to go on living sanely if the other also lived; dan
had brought them to this place, in this time, and only death could free them.
After
her bout with the talpa, Aeron had felt ready to drop, or howl, or both
together; now there came a sharp slab of triumph to hold her up, rising through
her weariness like a mast holding aloft the remnants of a tattered sail. Now
let the combat truly begin, for now we have each of us seen what we are fighting;
thou, White Destroyer, and I . . .
So it
went, for another hour and more, there beside the Avon Dia; first one would
have the mastery, then in an eyeblink the other would overmaster it again, and
gradually their magics grew less subtle and more desperate, as they tried to
defeat on a purely physical level what neither had been able to break on a
higher.
By now
they were both of them barely able to stand upright. Jaun Akhera's left arm was
useless, shattered in many places where a spell of Aeron's had closed on the
bone like a chokevine; but he bound the arm across his chest with a strip of
cloth torn from his cloak and chanted something heavy and dark.
And
Aeron's sight was filled by nothing but sun-colored rough hair. The mane of a
huge lion was under her hands, and green-gold eyes without a pupil and three
times the size of her own stared down at her.
She
felt the lion's pads upon her shoulders, the claws digging bloody welts across
her back, the immense weight and strength of the creature, and her arms that
held off the beast's fangs from her throat began to tremble with the strain.
With one mighty effort she flung back the magic; the lion was gone, and
overbalancing, she fell to her knees before she could catch herself; but even
as she fell she murmured a rann.
Jaun
Akhera, taken off guard, found every joint in his body suddenly frozen; it took
all his strength even to move his fingers, to blink an eyelid. His muscles were
brass and his tendons lead, and his spine seemed a bar of cold iron.
Aeron's
own back felt as if it were on fire, and she knew that the lion's claws must
have left skin and tunic alike in shreds; knew too that she must strike now,
while her enemy was stUl struggling against her meath-fhuar, the slowcold.
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She
drew a long sobbing breath. She was so tired, and no bone in her body but did
not feel like bloody knives, and her mind seemed turned to mud. The words of
yet another rann crawled now to the forefront of her brain, with a snaily
slowness; she did not even.know from where, but they came, and with the last of
her strength, she dragged them forth.
"Daear
a'th iwnc, dw'r i'th le—"
Earth
gapes, and water in thy place shall be . . . Gasping out the (Cymric syllables,
Aeron sank back into the grass with her hands clasped between her knees,
totally spent, but also strangely lighthearted that it was over at last. That
was it. That was her last arrow; if it did not strike the inmost ring of the
gold, she was lost, and Keltia with her.
Nothing
happened for several seconds; then, with a roar like ten thousand lions, the
earth behind Jaun Akhera seemed to open like two lips drawing back from bared
fangs. The turf peeled away, then the soil, rust-red and volcanic, then the
rock itself—skin and flesh and bone of the planet, all exposed now as if the
ground had been slashed open by some sword of the gods, and in the cleft only
black nothingness.
Gwydion,
shading his eyes against the horror of that sight, saw now unbelievably in the
sky behind Aeron's small forlorn form the towering phantom-shape of a Woman.
She was leaning forward, drawing the pin of Her bronze cloak-brooch through the
valley of the Avon Dia; the earth-gash was forming as She furrowed it. Her head
was crowned with stars, and lightnings flickered in Her hair; rooted in earth
were Her bare feet, and the hem of Her guna seemed to brush against Aeron's
bloody back.
Earth
gapes, and water in thy place shall be . . . Earth had gaped, and now came the
water: the Avon Dia itself. River of the Gods, joining in battle, gathering
itself into a foaming fountain that grew every second thicker and higher, less
translucent and more ominously dense.
Jaun
Akhera, breaking from his immobility, lifted a face blind with awe, and with
terror swiftly mastered. He raised his arm to Aeron in a gesture that was
surrender and acknowledgment and final salute, and then with a smile he was
gone. The water fel! like a mailed fist, sweeping him down into the chasm the
Ban-dia had opened to receive him. He did not go uncompanioned: Helior and
Tinao, Garallaz and Indarrak and Irin Mage, and many thousands more, went with
him into darkness. Not a single Kelt, nor any Keltic ally, was taken by
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341
tfie
waters; they had all been pulled back, by Gwydion's quick order, to the high
ground where they now watched, numbed, almost as blind with fear as their
enemies had been.
The
roar of the avenging waters died, to be followed by a deeper roar as the earth
split folded in upon itself, neatly as a seam being stitched. Where the gash
had been, no living thing now stood, nor dead neither; no scar marked the
smooth green turf, and the Avon Dia once again foamed whitely in its accustomed
bed. Only, Jaun Akhera was gone, and most of the Imperial forces with him.
Aeron
rocked back onto her heels, dirt streaking her face, her boots and cloak-hem
soaked and draggled where the backwash of the water had swirled around her. The
circle of fire, the riomhall, had died away, extinguished by the rival powers
of earth and air and water. She was alt but unaware of the few thousand
Imperial survivors throwing down their weapons as one; through the smoke and
tumult and buffeting wind her eyes sought Gwydion's.
Sanchoniathon
and Hanno, and a handful of other officers who had been fortunate enough to
survive the last few minutes by mercy of their distance from chasm and river
alike, had come up behind her, their faces wild.
"Empress—"
Aeron
turned and rose at the sound of Sanchoniathon*s shaken voice, and already to
his eye her posture seemed to hold a more than royal distance. First he, then,
more slowly, Hanno and the other officers, went to one knee before her on the
muddy turf, and across their bent heads she and Gwydion held each other's gaze.
'Empress,'
she thought, and the realization caused her to sway a little on her feet. Yr
Mawreth . . . nay, it cannot be—it will not be . . .
"Mae'r
dial drosodd," she whispered, and Gwydion closed his eyes, as if in pain,
or pain's ending.
Vengeance
is done with . . . The words sounded through his soul like the horn-cry that
ends the long hunt, and every muscle in his body, so long strung for battle,
seemed to unknot at the sound.
Aeron
looked down then at those who still knelt before her; they had neither moved
nor lifted their heads.
."Rise,
my lords," she said in Hastaic, and her voice seemed strange even to
herself. She touched Sanchoniathon lightly on the shoulder, a tap that could
have been an acco-
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lade,
and he rose to face her as Gwydion came to stand beside her.
Sanchoniathon
looked from one to the other, searching their faces, then drew his sword and
presented it hilt-first to Aeron. Holding his glance, she touched the hilt and
returned the weapon to him.
"To
me?" he said blankly, staring at her. "I do not understand—"
"No.
Well, I do not understand either, not completely, and we will speak of it
later, you and I. As for that name of Empress that you give me, it is no name
of mine—neither claimed by me nor conferred upon me by another, or many
others."
"Then
you do not declare yourself Empress?" gasped Hanno. "But
surely—"
"Have
I not just now said so?" said Aeron impatiently. "Imperial
sovereignty is not what I made this war for, or did you not notice?"
"For
what, then?"
"The
Ard-rfan of Keltia, and her friends the King of Fomor and the Queen of the
Yamazai and the Ambassador of Earth, made this war upon the Emperor of the
Cabiri in answer to his war upon her," said Gwydion. "To take her
kingdom back from his unlawful grip; no more than that."
Sanchoniathon
smiled. "Very well, both of you; believe what you like." His eyes, so
like his dead brother's, gleamed with sudden amber flame. "But remember
afterwards that it was I who told you first: Empire is a neverending temptation
to anyone with the strength to win it and the strength to turn away from it. No
shame in being tempted, or even in accepting the temptation. The only shame
lies in pretending that you cannot be tempted in the first place. Do not forget
that, ever."
Aeron
returned his look levelly, then nodded, and Desmond and Rohan came forward, at
Gwydion's bidding, to escort the Coranians from the field to the castle of
Tomnahara; though, as Aeron had shown by returning Sanchoniathon his sword, as
guests and not as prisoners. She watched them go, then turned away, passing by
unheeding the exultation and praise and triumphant joy of her friends and
allies, and went up the rise to a place below the outer walls of Tomnahara
where stood perhaps half a dozen aircars.
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343
Gwydion
caught up with her as she was about to climb up into the cabin of the nearest
ship.
"Aeronwy—"
He caught her arm. "Where do you go? Listen to them below there; you
cannot leave them now, they are delirious with victory, theirs and yours
alike."
She
leaned against the hull of the aircar, willing her exhaustion away and forcing
herself to an explanation, for she loved him, and he deserved one.
"Do
you not recall Gwyn's words? He said that when all was over, I must go to
Caer-na-gael; that the circle would receive me. If I gave such heed to his
words that i went blindly upon their strength to Afallinn itself, surely now I
must heed them this little bit further, and go a few hundred leagues to the
Holy Mountain."
"And
what of the people? Your friends, your kin, all those who love you—what will
they say, when they see you have left them in the very hour of victory?"
"They
who know me will understand. As for the others—" Aeron looked up at him,
and something of what the combat with Jaun Akhera had cost her was now there
for him to see, though she had kept it hidden from everyone else. "You
heard Sanchoniathon just now, and Hanno—how they took it as given that I should
assume Imperial sway for myself. And worse than that . . . Did you see just
now, as I came up the hill, how my own folk kept clear of my very shadow on the
grass? Any other time they would have come crowding to my side, talking and
laughing and touching. Not now. Not after what I have done this day. They do
not see that I had no choice; that it would have been less fearful for them,
perhaps, had I used the Sword to settle the matter, but total perdition for me.
But I am no empress, to take up Jaun AJthera's crown, and never am I a god, for
my shadow to be kept clear of, and I will not be dealt with as either, Gwydion,
upon my soul I will not."
He
heard the note of wildness, almost madness, that rang then in her voice, and he
took her by the shoulders. "It is but the moment they give way for, those
folk upon the hill. They were afraid, and your manner of taking away that fear
was perhaps a little—dramatic; hard for them easily to accept. They will treat
you as they did; but they need a little time to remember that it is still
you."
Some of
her old self-mockery came back then to her face, and she laughed. "Well,
let them be quick about remember-
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ing,
then. They have only until my return from Caer-na-gael to jog their
memories." She turned then, grasping the metal bars to pull herself up
into the control-seat of the aircar; as she did so, he saw her back clearly for
the first time, and his mouth tightened at the sight.
"At
least let Slaine tend to that before you go. Five minutes with a
dermasealer—"
But she
shook her head. "Nay, it is in my mind that I must come as I am, straight from
the battle . . . But do you attend to whatever must be done here. And do not
fret: I will be at Caerdroia in time for the nightmeal."
Gwydion
reached his hand up to her; though she stretched her arm down as far as she
could through the small port, only their fingertips caught—but they caught and
held.
"Aeronwy—"
"Pendragon."
And the ship lifted from the grass.
The
stone circle of Caer-na-gael, holiest place in all the Keltic worlds, stands
beneath those twinned peaks of Mount Keltia that are called the Gates of the
Sun: first of all points in the Northwest Continent to catch the light of the
rising Grian. Alone on that high cold plateau is set Caer-na-gael, a double
ring of rough-cut bluestone slabs laid out in the, ancient pattern of
trilithons and helestones common to all nemetons, brought to Keltia from Earth
itself, and before that from the Danaans' lost home.
Aeron
had landed the aircar on the edge of the plateau, and stood now at the entrance
to the sacred circle, between two great carven pillarstones three times the
height of a tall man. Behind her, the sun was setting in a mass of cloud—purple
cloud, scarlet cloud, a cloud like a gray whale's tail—and the clear gold light
sent her shadow streaming out before her across the width of the circle.
She
took off her boots and walked forward., bare feet not even feeling the frozen
stubbled grass. Around her, an odd susurration ran among the stones, as if the
lithic giants themselves had sighed, or perhaps it was after all only the wind
over the mountaintop.
Coming
to the center of the circle, she halted before the majestic bluestone that lay
like an altar at the nemeton's heart. She remembered well the only other time
she had come to this place: the night before her coronation, when, like all the
others who had preceded her as sovereign over Keltia,
THE
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345
Ard-righ
and Ard-rian alike, she had kept vigil here from dusk to dawn, alone, fasting,
half-frozen as much from fear as from the cold. And what she had seen then,
what she had heard—and she had not been alone either, not really . . . She
turned her mind from that memory, feeling suddenly her full grubbiness: the
tangled hair full of dust, the black uniform torn and shredded and stiff with
mud and blood, the sweat of battle still upon her; sensed too that it was right
and fitting to come here so.
"I
am come, whom you did call," she said aloud. Only the wind, as I thought.
. .
"And
I, who did call you."
She
turned with a smile, for she knew that voice, though she had heard it only once
before. "Gwyn, son of Nudd and Seli," she said, and, despite her
attire, despite her weariness, despite the pain in her back, made a curtsy to
the king of the Sidhe.
Gwyn
bent his knee in return, and he too was smiling. "So, Aeron," he said
then, and his voice that was deeper even than Gwydion's was merrier than when
she first had heard it, on the plain at the mouth of the Valley of the Druids.
"You have won, and the Marbh-draoi is no more, and the last remnant of my
brother's evil is lifted from this world. And now I return to you something I
have had in keeping."
He
nodded toward the bluestone altar, and Aeron saw that there, where the stone
had been empty, now rested the leather casket she herself had given Gwydion to
bring to Dun Aengus, to deliver into Gwyn's hands. The coffer's lid opened,
though no hand had been set to it, and Aeron turned back with cold-stiffened
fingers the purple velvet that shrouded the Copper Crown.
"Always
it seems that by grace of the Shining Ones I am given some great gift,"
said Aeron when she felt she could trust her voice again. "The Bratach Ban
and the help it brought; the hom you yourself gave to my lord, and the army it
summoned; the way to the Treasures; the Treasures themselves, even; and now
this . . ."
"Ah,
nay! This at least was fairly yours before; and as for the others, well, they
too were yours . . . But one thing more I wiil give you."
He
raised his hand, and a globe of misty light formed in the air above the
bluestone altar. Dim shapes seemed to move
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Kennealy
within
its depths; then, at a quiet word from the faerie lord, the shapes came into
sparkling resolution: a comer of the battlefield, an oak-grove below the walls
of Tomnahara, near to the Avon Dia.
Aeron,
leaning forward, lips parted in wonder at the sight, saw Gwydion with the Cup
in his hands; he was setting it down upon a mossy bank beneath the ancient
oaks.
"As
you chose in the end not to avail yourself of the power of Fragarach,"
came Gwyn's voice as from a very great distance, "so he has chosen not to
avail himself of the full powers of Pair Dadeni; and both choices were noble
ones, and the right ones."
They
watched in silence as, within the magical sphere, Gwydion stepped back from the
Cup. A silver mist began to gather around the bowl's graceful outlines, the
pearls set into the knotwork rim glowing with blue-cream luminescence. Slowly,
silently, the Cup became many times its size, expanding and overlapping itself
like some eerie silver flower, until it stood the size of a great cauldron
beneath the oaks, its mouth more than seven feet across, its depth perhaps
three feet, the weight of it sinking its base some inches into the soft moss.
"He
will use it to heal the wounded," said Aeron, suddenly understanding.
"Though not the dead . . ."
"Nay,
even though Pair Dadeni be the Cauldron of Rebirth, having the power to restore
the dead to life, there are things worse far than the death of the body. Such
use, even, could bring a kind of living death in very deathlessness."
Gwyn's dark eyes were soft with compassion, for he knew the bitterness of her
present thought. "Only the very newly dead, any road, may be restored by
the Pair. Not lawful, to try to call back those who have already reached Tir fo
Thuinn, Land-under-Waves, and commenced their next turn upon the Wheel."
Aeron
gave a gentle laugh. "And no more would they welcome such a recalling from
so glad a place as that, even by one who loved them in this life . . . But it
is well thought of by Gwydion, and a thought such as he would have, to deal so
with the wounded. I was myself given the grace of such a healing, and to deny
it to others would be a grave offense against the Lords of Life and
Death."
"Even
so." Gwyn lifted his hand again, and the bright sphere died away. "Think
of this meeting here as the fagail,
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
347
the
parting-gift of the Shining Folk; from now on we shall meet only in dreams, I
think, or by design of a Power greater than either of us. We shall have no
place in the larger kingdom over which you and Gwydion shall rule; we are ever
of Keltia, but Keltia will no longer be of us."
"Say
not so!" Her voice held real pain. "What of Allyn's promise to
Gwydion, that they should meet again? And did not you yourself promise that
there should be closer bonds between your folk and their mortal kin? Friends
are not so easily found, that even the Ard-rian of Keltia can afford to lose
such a one as you have proved."
"There
are promises and promises," said Gwyn, and now again he sounded as if he
were withdrawing from the stone circle and from her very presence, back into
the fastnesses of the Hollow Mountains. "Did you not make a promise mat
you would use no dark-knowledge to gain the mastery in your fight with the
Marbh-draoi, (hough you died for it and Keitia fell? Did you not promise even
to refrain from a victory that the Sword could have given you, though you
endured so much to find it? Your friend Theo, did he not make a promise, that
your hands should not again be stained with gallain blood—though your dan and
his decreed otherwise? And that promise you and Gwydion made to each other and
to Keltia in the circle at Ni-maen: That was a great and gallant promise, was
it not? And all promises come due at the last."
"And
what promise may I make to you, King of the Sidhe, so that you will stay?"
But
only the wind answered, and she knew that he was gone from the mountaintop. Ah,
son of Nudd, you have kept well your promise; surely all debts now are cleared;
and, for all that, I think we shall meet again . . ,
Aeron
leaned forward to lift the heavy leather coffer in her hands, prepared as she
did so for pain in her lacerated back. To her astonishment, no pain came, not
even a stiffness, and she reached round a hand to touch her back. Under the
torn uniform, her fingertips encountered only smooth and unbroken skin, as
unmarred and whole and healthy as if Jaun Akhera's sorceries had never taken
lion-shape to score it. Unbidden, the image of the Cup transforming itself into
the great Pair of healing rose before her eyes. So again I have been healed by
its power . . . And by the power of Gwyn, and the power of Caer-na-gael, and
perhaps most of all by the power of letting go: a healing she herself had given
herself,
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Kennealy
by
relinquishment of her vengeance and by submitting the final contest to the
judgment of justice and the gods alone.
She
brushed reverent fingers over the beaten copper of the Crown and closed the
leather lid. And because of that, I have received my sovereignty here for the
second time; and more truly, for the first time was by right from my father,
and gift from the circle, and by no merit of my own. This time I have earned
it; now, at tost, 1 may go home ...
SCONE
351
Tabiri
Imperium '";ons from
Epilogue
ATight
at Caerdroia, and chilly for springtime, but there JL\ was Midsummer delirium
in the streets of the City. The first of the victorious Keltic armies, with
their Fomori and Yamazai allies, had come within sight of the walls before
sunset, and the joy-maddened citizenry that had yet remained had opened all the
gates and poured out to give them welcome.
On the
little turret-walk outside her chambers, her hounds at her feet, Aeron stood
leaning against the battlements, listening to the sounds of the revelry in
Mi-Cuarta rising faint from below, and to the hushed murmur of the sea in front
of her—tonight Manaan's white-maned horses did not ride. A beautiful night,
with the summer stars beginning to wheel above the horizon and the Criosanna
shimmering across their faces. Sometimes, she thought, and more often than I
did care to admit, I did not think to see this again . . . Beneath her silken
guna, she flexed her shoulders experimentally, still marvelling. Not so bad, to
emerge from Cymynedd with not even a sore back to show for it. . . Even as
Aeron smiled at the traha of the thought, she felt the smile shadowed by the
knowledge that the real wounds of the fight went deeper far than had those
scratches, and they were by no means hers alone.
Still,
even those wounds, grave and painful as they were, were scratches themselves by
comparison to the gains this war had won for Keltia. An alliance with Earth,
friendship with Fomor and Fomor's king, an end to the Cabiri Imperium; perhaps
even, gods willing, an end to the hitherto endless enmity between Telchine and
Danaan, if Sancho-nialhon's seeming change of heart was a true one. And why
should it not be? Gwydion himself had remarked that Sanchoniathon and his late
unlamented brother were more unlike than either of them knew; and perhaps that
too was an augury for a friendlier future.
349
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Kennedy
And the
greatest gain of all—the return of the Treasures to Keltia. In the end, though
I went to find the Treasures and brought them back, they were not meant for me
to use. Gwydion and Elathan were permitted; but not I—and that was the true
test all along: not the using, nor even the finding, but the refusing to use
them, and the finding of the needed strength within myself . . .
A noise
of renewed merrymaking floated up from below, where the windows of Mi-Cuarta
opened on, the sea. They were all waiting down there for her .to join them in a
great ceili of celebration: Elathan, Grex, Morwen, O'Reilly, all her other
friends and kindred, the leaders of the Protectorate levies and Fomori forces,
even Queen Tanaxio of the Yamazai, who had led her women warriors to such
terrible effect against the Coranians who had devastated their home planet.
She
would go down to them presently: It was unthinkable that the Ard-rian not be with
them this night; moreover, she had a need to rejoice every bit as great as
theirs, setting aside for one night at least the thought of the staggering
duties that awaited them all in the days to come. If we are very industrious,
and very lucky, perhaps by Fionnasa we just might be out from under the worst
of it—and that will be a year 'since first the Terrans came to Tara . . . But
she had needed still more to come here first, to her own place, to give it
reality in her own mind: that the battle was over; and that she was alive, and
victorious over her enemy, and victorious over herself.
Behind
her, a familiar step; without turning she reaJhed a hand to him. "I have
been waiting for you to come; why did you tarry?"
Gwydion
kissed her hand and closed it in both of his,'with a quiet word to soothe the
demonstrative greeting of the hounds. "Did I so? Well, it is only that
empresses need time alone still more than do high queens."
She
looked up at him, green eyes glittering in the light. "I thought we had not
yet determined to take such title for ourselves."
"No
more have we," he agreed, relinquishing her hand and settling himself
comfortably on her stone bench, his cloak wrapped around him over his silk and
velvet feast-garb—he was attired, as was she, for the festivities below.
"And 1 mind me well of Sanchoniathon's warning gibe . . . But I speak now
as First Lord of War, and I advise the Ard-rian
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351
that
she has little room for choosing. The Cabiri Imperium lies in ruin. Already Morwen
has received petitions from some of its remnants for acceptance as Protectorate
worlds of Keltia; in the days to follow, there will be very many more. If there
is ever a time when Keltia is to take up a position in the galaxy as a
sovereign power beyond our Curtain Wall, that time is now."
Aeron
was silent for so long that at last Gwydion rose to his feet again and went to
her where she stood, her face still turned to the sea.
"It
is what you yourself said you sought, Aeronwy. Do you forget the day you told
us all in Council?"
She
shook her head. "I said also that same day, if memory serves, that
Imperial rule was no option I would willingly take. 'Empress': It is too much
change, and even the sound of It mislikes me."
"Then
stay Ard-rian, Aeron, if that sits better on your soul, but your sway will be
no whit the less whatsoever you choose for title."
"And
you," she said, all at once amused. "If I defeated Jaun Akhera's
magic, then you as First Lord of War defeated his armies; and therefore half
the Empress Aeron's victory is the Emperor Gwydion's."
A look
of unease passed over his face, and he gave her a rueful smile. "I love
the sound of that no better than do you," he admitted. "But already
such sway is fact, will we or nill we; when the empire be already established,
what differ shall it make to take the title as well? Even Elathan and Grex have
urged you to do so—shall you be any less as Empress than you are as Ard-rian,
or prove worse than Strephon or Jaun Akhera? Too much change, you say; the adage
has ever been. 'Change or die.'"
Again
Aeron was a long time silent, then: "Did you see, at Nandruidion? I think
perhaps most saw nothing, but surely you—"
He
nodded, awed anew by me memory: the Ban-dia, the Mother Herself, clothed as Mam
Tarach, the spirit of the planet, drawing Her brooch-pin through the earth as
easily as a child may draw a finger over a frosted windowpane.
"Many
saw—sorcerers and sensitives for the most part, though O'Reilly and Elathan and
even Grex were granted the vision—but the great run of the folk did not; hence
did spring their fear of their own Ard-rian that you complained of."
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Kenneafy
"And
that still I complain of—by the gods, that will stop! I will endure much for
the sake of this victory—even being Empress if so I must—but I will not be made
to endure fear and reverence from my own Kelts ..." Her eyes danced as she
turned to look at him. "Such is all very well for Keltia, where I am yet
Ard-rfan and my word is law. But how if the Empress shall disagree with the
Emperor? Whose will shall then prevail?"
His
hand playfully grazed the side of her jaw in a bladechop, a jesting touch as
light as swanskin, his fingers turning to caress her cheek. "Then we fight
it out as Fians, sword to sword. It wilt be the honorable thing to do. And more
or less an even match."
"Even!
Nay, I shall give you a handicap—" She was laughing, and Gwydion caught
her round the waist and pulled her back against him. They stood awhile in
silence, watching the moons move across the Criosanna's arc.
"In
spite of all," she said at last, "I cannot believe it is truly
over."
His
mouth moved in the softness of her hair. "You said it yourself, cariad.
Mae'r dial drosodd—vengeance is done with."
"And
not an hour too soon . . . What is to come fears me almost as much as what has
gone by. Since we seem to have been forced at the sword's point into an empire
we never sought—It will be a tremendous task we undertake together, you and
I."
"Aye
so, but we shall be together, Aeronwy, and -Keltia with us; that is all that
matters. As for the rest of it, when one must do a great thing, one grows to
the size of it; and such matters very often appear more terrible from without
than from within. When we are well into it, I think it will not seem so daunting
as now. Still, I have thought, I shall cede Gwynedd formally to Elved, and
perhaps yield up the Pendragonship as well, as my term has two years more to
run. Have you had any thought as to Keltia?"
She
stretched and moved away from him a little. "Rohan as Regent, to begin
with," she said. "Then, once our hold on the new Imperium is secure,
and alliances are made, and matters settled with Earth and Fomor, and Rohan has
established a line of his own, I shall confirm him as Ard-righ."
"And
have you someone in mind, then, for his queen?"
"Surely
I have." But when he pressed her for a name, she
THE
THRONE OF SCONE
353
laughed
and shook her head and refused to tell; and at last, himself laughing, he went
in.
Alone
again, Aeron turned to look out once more over the sea. So many there were who
had shaped this present moment, and the choice she had just made—so many to
whom she owed her thanks, for help and for friendship and even for opposition;
but perhaps none had played a greater part than had Haruko. His face seemed to
form in the moon-washed waves below. Ah, Theo, 1 wonder what you would make of
all this coil. Had you not come to Keltia, very like none of this would ever
have come to pass. Keltia would be still at odds with Fomor, and with the Coranians,
and ignorant of Earth as Earth of us, and Gwydion and I would by now be ruling
peacefully over Keltia only, and not an empire in the making. But you changed
all that for us forever; whether it be dan or karma, come soon back again, to
see what you have helped to make . . .
The big
emerald of the Great Seal of Keltia, flashing in the light from her chamber
behind her, caught her eye, and she held up the stone to the two moons. It must
be, and Gwydion has the right of it, as ever—to be Empress of the West, and
Emperor, in true fact, and all the change that shall come with it . . . when
the Alterator lifts his hand, nothing shall remain as it has been. The very
city below her would feel that change, for it would become the heart and
capital of the new empire that would be—
But it
was time now to go down. Once more she raised her eyes to the Criosanna, and
spoke her thought of the future to the timeless witness that she wanted.
"Queen
Rauni of Keltia," said Aeron aloud. "In the Gaeloch, the folk will
call her Ygrawn."
(Here
ends The Throne of Scone, Book III of THE KELTIAD. Book II is The Copper Crown;
Book I will be called The Silver Branch; it will deal with those matters
leading up to Aeron's coronation: the wars with Fomor and the Coranians; the
feud between Fionnbarr and Bres; the young Aeron; the young Elathan; the
treachery of Bres and the vengeance Aeron took upon Bellator.)
Appendices
History
of the Tuatha De Danaan and the Keltoi
The
Tuatha De Danaan, the People of the Goddess, Dana, arrived on Earth, as
refugees from a distant star system whose sun had gone nova. They established
great city-realms at Atlantis, Lemuria, Nazca, Machu Picchu, and other centers
of energy. It was an age of high technology and pure magic: lasers, powered
flight in space and in atmosphere, telepathy, telekinesis and the like. There
was some minimal contact with the primitive Terran native inhabitants, who,
awed, regarded the lordly Danaans as gods from the stars.
After
many centuries of peace and growth, social and spiritual deterioration set in:
faction fights, perversion of high magical techniques, civil war. The Danaan
loyalists withdrew to the strongholds of Atlantis, or Atland as they called it,
there to fight their last desperate battle with those of their own people who
had turned to dark ways. Atlantis was finally destroyed, in a fierce and
terrible battle fought partially from space, and which resulted in a huge
earthquake and subsequent geologic upheaval that sank the entire
island-continent. (The battle and sinking of Atlantis were preserved in
folk-myth around the world; obviously the effect on the Earth primitives was
considerable.)
The
evil Atlanteans, the Telchines, headed off back into space: their descendants
would Jater be heard of as the Coranians. The Danaan survivors made their way
as best they could over the terrible seas to the nearest land—Ireland—and
354
THE
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355
to the
other Keltic sea-countries on the edge of the European land mass. There had
long been Atlantean outposts in these lands, and they made a likely refuge.
But the
refugees had yet another battle to fight; with the Fir Bolg and the Fomori, the
native tribes currently in occupation of Ireland. Atlantean technology carried
the day. however, and the Danaans settled down to rebuild their all-but-lost
civilization.
After a
long Golden Age, the Danaan peace was shattered by invasion: the Milesians,
Kelts from the European mainland. War exploded; the new race was clever, brave,
persuasive and quarrelsome. The Danaans, at first victorious in defense, were
at last defeated by the strategies of the brilliant Druid Amergin. They
conceded possession of Ireland to the sons of Miledh, and obtained sureties of
peace.
The
peace and amity between Danaans and Milesians lasted many hundreds of years;
there was much intermarriage, informational exchange, joint explorative and
military expeditions against raiding Fomori and Fir Bolg. Then a period of
Milesian distrust turned to outright persecution, and the Danaans began to
withdraw to live strictly isolated, although even then there continued to be
marriages and friendships and associations. With the coming of Patrick to
Ireland, bringing Christianity, the persecutions resumed with redoubled
intensity, as Patrick and his monks called upon all to denounce the Danaans as
witches and evil sorcerers.
Brendan,
a nobleman of the House of Erevan son of Miledh, was also half-Danaan by
birth—and more than half one in spirit. His mother was Nia, a Danaan princess,
and he had been taught by her in the old ways. He rebelled against the
persecutions, the narrow-mindedness and prejudice and condemnation of all the
high old knowledge, and he resolved to relearn all the ancient lore, to build
ships and take the Danaans back out to the stars, to find a new world where
they could live as they pleased. All who felt as Brendan did might go, and did:
Druids, priestesses of the Mother, worshippers of the Old Gods and followers of
the Old Ways, all now so ruthlessly put down by the Christians.
After
much study, instruction, construction and a few short trial runs, Brendan was
ready at last, and the Great Emigra-
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tion
began. Following the directions of Barinthus, an old man who was probably the
last space voyager left on Earth, Brendan and his followers left the planet.
After a two-year search, they discovered a habitable star system a thousand
light-years from Terra. He named it New Keltia; eventually Keltia, as it came
to be known, would command seven planetary systems and a very sizable sphere of
influence.
The
emigrations continued in secret over a period .of some eight hundred years,
with Kelts from every Keltic nation participating in the adventure, and not
human Kelts alone; the races known as the merrows and the silkies also joined
the migrations.
After
the first great voyage, or immram, Brendan himself remained in the new worlds,
organizing a government, ordering the continuing immigrations, setting up all
the machinery needed to run the society he had dreamed of founding: a society
of total equality of gender, age, nationality and religion. He personally
established the Order of Druids in New Keltia; his mother, Nia, who left Earth
with him, founded the Ban-draoi, an order of priestess-sorceresses.
Brendan,
who would come to be venerated by succeeding generations as St. Brendan the
Astrogator, became the first monarch of Keltia, and his line continues to rule
there even now.
By
about Terran year 1200, the Keltic population had increased so dramatically
(from both a rising birth rate and continued waves of immigration from Earth)
that further planetary colonization was needed. The Six Nations were founded,
based on the six Keltic nations of Earth: Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Man,
Cornwall and Brittany, called in Keltia'Erinna, Scota, Kymry, Vannin, Kernow
and Brytaned. A ruling council of six viceroys, one from each system, was set
up, called the Fainne—"The Ring." The monarchy continued, though the
Fainne had the ultimate sovereign power at this time.
This
was the Golden Age of Keltia. The mass emigrations ended at around Terran year
1350, and the dream of Brendan seemed achieved. There was complete equality, as
he had intended; a strong central government and representative local
governments; the beginnings of a peerage democracy; great advances in magic,
science and art.
THE
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357
It
could not last, of course. By Terran year 1700, increasingly vocal separatist
movements sprang up in each nation, and, a hundred years later, the Archdruid
of the time, Edeym, saw in the unrest the chance to further his own power, and
the power of the Druid Order. A fiercely ambitious and unquestionably brilliant
man, Edeyrn succeeded in engineering the discrediting and ultimate dissolution
of the Fainne, in forcing the monarchy into hiding, and in installing those
Druids loyal to him as magical dictators on all levels. Civil war broke out all
over Keltia, and the realm was polarized by the conflict.
This
was the Druid Theocracy and InterregmidL which was to endure for nearly two
hundred unhappy years^Edeyrn and his Druids were joined by many politically
ambitious and discontented noble houses, who saw in the upheaval a chance for
their own advancement.
There
was of course a fierce and equally powerful resistance, as many Druids remained
loyal to the truths of their order, and joined forces with the Ban-draoi, the
magical order of priestesses, the Fianna, the Bardic Association and some of
the oldest and noblest Keltic families.
This
resistance was called the Counter-insurgency, and it opposed Edeyrn and his
Druids with strength, resource and cleverness for two centuries. Consistently
outwitting the aims of the Theocracy, the loyalists managed to preserve the
fabric of true Keltic society. Through the efforts of the Bardic Association, they
also succeeded in salvaging most of the important lore, science, art and
records of the centuries of Keltia's settlement, and the records from Earth
before that.
The
terrors of the Theocracy raged on for two hundred years, with the balance
continually shifting between Theocracy and Counterinsurgency. The general
population was sorely torn, but most did in fact support the loyalists, in
their hearts if not in their outward actions. Then full-scale alien invasion,
by the races called by the Kelts Fomori and Fir Bolg after their old Earth
enemies, hit Keltia, causing enormous destruction and loss of life. But even in
the face of this appalling new threat, Edeyrn continued to dominate, and some
even said he was responsible for the invasions. Though he himself was by now
ancient beyond all right expectation, his adopted heir Owain served as his
sword-arm, and Owain was as twisted as ever Edeyrn was.
Though
their most immediately pressing need was to repel
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Kennealy
the
Fomori and Fir Bolg invaders, the Kelts had first to break free of the grip of
the Theocracy; and in the midst of that chaos, a mighty figure began to emerge.
Arthur
of Arvon, a minor lordling of a hitherto minor noble house of the Kymry,
rallied boldly the forces of the Counter-insurgency. Arthur proved to be an
inspired leader, and more importantly, a military genius, and he quickly
smashed Qwain's Druids in the Battle of Moytura. The Theocracy, its military
power broken, caved in, and Arthur was named Rex Bejlorum, War-Chief, by the
hastily reconstituted Fainne and the newly restored monarch Uthyr. Arthur then
led the Keltic forces out against the invaders; the aliens were not prepared
for such a concerted counterattack, and Arthur succeeded in utterly crushing
the invasion.
But
King Uthyr had died in battle. Arthur married the royal heir, Gweniver, and
with her assumed the sovereignty of Keltia by acclamation. The wars behind him,
at least for the present, Arthur turned his genius to political and social
reform, establishing elective bodies of legislators, the Royal Senate and
Assembly, restoring the House of Peers, formulating a new judicial system on
the remains of the old brehon laws, and laying the groundwork for a standing
battle force. He commanded a purge of the Druid Order, setting his closest
advisor and old teacher, Merlynn Llwyd, to undertake the task, and he gave new
power and prestige to the loyai orders of the Ban-draoi, the Fianna and the
Bardic Association.
Arthur
and Gweniver reigned brilliantly and successfully for nearly fifty years, and
had two children, Arawn and Arwenna. Then, in Terran year 2047, he was
betrayed'by his own nephew, Mordryth, and the infamous Owain's heir, Malgan.
Their treachery let in the invading Coranians, descendants of the Telchines, who
had evolved into a race of sorcerous marauders whose savagery made the Fomori
and Fir Bolg look like sheep. This was Arthur's first chance to test his
reforms, and he was well aware that it might be his last also. He dealt with
Mordryth and Malgan, then led a space armada against the Coranians, with
devastating success. Tragically, he disappeared in the climactic battle,
sending his flagship Prydwen against the Coranian flagship and taking both
vessels and all aboard them into hyperspace forever. His
THE
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359
last
message to his people was that he would come again, when he was needed.
In the
absence of proof positive of Arthur's death, he is still King of Kelts, and all
succeeding monarchs have held their sovereignty by his courtesy and have made
their laws in his name ... for who knows when Arthur the King might not return?
The
monarchy, after Arthur's disappearance, became a Regency, the only one in
Keltic history. Arthur's sister Morgan, his wife Gweniver, and his mother
Ygrawn ruled jointly, until such time as Prince Arawn should be old enough to
take the crown.
All
three women were strong characters, skilled in magic, but Arthur's sister
Morgan, called Morgan Magistra, was the greatest magician Keltia would ever
see.
After
taking counsel with the Ban-draoi, Merlynn's newly rehabilitated Druids, the
Fianna and the Bardic Association, and with her own co-Regents, Morgan
undertook the immense achievement of the raising of the Curtain Wall. There was
no other feat like it, even back to the days of the High Atlanteans.
The
Curtain Wall is a gigantic force-field, electromagnetic in nature and
maintained by psionic energies; it completely surrounds and conceals Keltic
space, hiding suns, planets, satellites, energy waves, everything. Once outside
its perimeters, it is as if Keltia does not exist. Space is not physically
blocked off, and radio waves and the like are bent round the Wall, but any ship
attempting to cross the region is shunted into certain corridors of
electromagnetic flux, that feed into the Morimaruse, the Dead Sea of space, and
now no one goes that way, ever.
So the
Keltic worlds and their peoples became a half-legend of the galaxy, a star-myth
to be told to children or to anthropologists. But behind the Curtain Wall, the
Regency carried on Arthur's work, and when in time Arawn became King, he proved
almost as gifted as his parents. The dynasty he founded was followed in
peaceful succession by the closely related royal house of Gwynedd, and that by
the royal house of Douglas.
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For
fifteen hundred years Keltia prospered in her isolation— not a total isolation
even then, for still there were out-Wall trading planets and military actions,
and ambassadors, were still received.
In the
Terran year 2693, the Crown passed to the House of Aoibhell. Direct descendants
of Brendan himself, the Aoibhells have held the monarchy in a grip of
findruinna for eight hundred years, according to the law of Keltia that the
Copper Crown descends to the eldest child of the sovereign, whether man or
woman.
In the
Earth year 3512, the probe ship Sword arrives in Keltic space. The Ard-rian
Aeron Aoibhell, seventeenth member of her House to occupy the Throne of Scone,
determines on an alliance with the Terran Federacy, and Keltia is plunged into
war as a result of it. The tale of that war, and what followed, is told in The
Copper Crown.
Glossary
(Words
are Keltic unless otherwise noted.)
Abred:
"The Path of Changes"; the visible world of everyday existence,
within the sphere of which one's various lives are lived
aircar:
small personal transport used on Keltic worlds
alanna:
"child," "little one"; Erinnach endearment
antadaun:
"fool"
amylle:
decorative water plant native to the planet Sannox
an-da-shalla:
"The Second Sight"; Keltic talent of precog-nition
andere:
(Hastaic) suffix denoting nobility used with a woman's name
An
Lasca: "The Whip"; the ionized northwest wind at Caerdroia
anwyl,
anwylyd: "sweetheart"; Kymric endearment
Annwn:
(pron. Annoon) the Keltic religion's equivalent of the Underworld, ruled over
by Arawn, Lord of the Dead
ap:
Kymric, "son of
Ard-rian,
Ard-righ: "High Queen," "High King"; title of the Keltic
sovereign
Ard-rianactitas,
Ard-righachtas: "high queenship," "high kingship"
astar,
pi. astari: gold currency unit of the Cabiri Imperium
athiarna:
"High One"; Fianna form of address to a superior officer
aurichalcum:
(Hastaic) a type of metal-stone mined on the planet Alphor and used extensively
in building there
ban-a-tigh:
woman householder (far-a-tigh, male
householder) Ban-dia: the Mother, the Great Goddess
361
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Kennedy
THE
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363
Ban-draoi:
lit., "woman-druid"; Keltic order of priestess-sorceresses in the
service of the Mother Goddess
bards:
Keltic order of poets, chaunters and loremasters
Barna-baoghailk
"Gap of Danger"; historically, that part of a nation's borders where
attack is most likely to come; by extension, the gap in the Curtain Wall (q.v.)
created by the sorcery of the traitor princess Arianeira of Gwynedd
barra-glaed:
war-shout given by army as it attacks
Bawn of
Keltia: the space enclosed within the Curtain Wall 'bawn: the area enclosed by
the outer barbican defenses of a fortress)
bee-bird:
on Fomor, name for the common hummingbird
Beltain:
festival of the beginning of summer, celebrated on 1 May
bodach:
term of opprobrium or commiseration, depending on circumstances
braud:
Kymric, "brother"
brehons:
Keltic lawgivers and judges
bruidean:
inn or way station, maintained by local authorities, where any traveller, of
whatever rank or resources, is entitled to claim free hospitality
Cabin:
(Hastaic) Coranian magical order of adepts, similar to the Druids or the
Ban-draoi
cam-anfa:
"crooked storm"; violent localized cyclonic disturbance of the sort
known on Earth as a tornado
camur:
feral scavenger canine; usually runs in packs
cantrip:
very small, simple spell or minor magic
caoine:
"keen"; lament or dirge of mourning, usually sung (cf. coronach, a
lament that is played only, on th,e pipes)
cariad:
"heart," "beloved"; Kymric endearment «
carlin:
shrew, hag
cath,
pi. catha: military unit of 5,000 warriors
ceili:
(pron. kay-lee) a dancing-party or ball; any sort of revelry
chai:
(Japannic) beverage brewed from any of several different sorts of dried leaves
or herbs in infusion
chori:
(Hastaic) broad-leaved tree native to the planet Alphor (alizachori: tame white
birds that feed off such trees, often found in format gardens)
ChHesta
tighearna!: lit., "Lord Christ!"; name of the Christian god, used as
an expletive
dthere:
seventeen-stringed lap harp or lyre common throughout the Imperial worlds
cithog:
"port," as on board ship (cf. deosil)
clochao:
dome- or yurt-like structure used by the Fianna in the field
coelbren:
magical alphabet used by Druids
coire
ainsec: "the undry cauldron of guestship"; the obligation, in law, to
provide hospitality, shelter or sanctuary to any who claim it
Coranians:
ruling race of the Imperium, hereditary enemies of the Kelts; they are the
descendants of the Telchines, as the Kelts are the descendants of the Danaans
Crann
Tarith: "Fiery Branch"; the token of war across Keltia- Originally a
flaming branch or cross; now, by extension, the alarm or call to war broadcast
on all planets
Cremave:
the clearing-stone of the royal line of St. Brendan
Criosanna:
"The Woven Belts"; the rings that circle the planet Tara
crochan:
magical healing-pool that can cure almost any injury, provided the spinal
column has not been severed and the brain and bone marrow are undamaged
crossic:
unit of Keltic money (small gold coin)
cumal:
female serf, bondswoman; used as fern, of bodach
ctirragh:
small leather-hulled boat rowed with oars
cursal:
very fast light warship of the Keltic starfleet
Curtain
Wall: the artificial energy barrier that encircles and conceals the seven
Keltic star-systems (also known as the Pale)
Cwn
Annwn: (pron. Coon Annoon) in Keltic religion, the Hounds of Hell; the
red-eared, white-coated dogs belonging to Arawn Lord of the Dead, that hunt
down and destroy guilty souls
Cymynedd:
in Keltic mythology, the Last Battle, to be fought by gods and mortals both
upon the battleground of Achateny, the Field of Fire; it will decide the fate
of the universe between good and evil
daer-fudir:
"outlaw"; a legal term, used in banishment of a
malefactor
d&n:
"doom"; fated karma
deosil:
on board ship, the starboard side (cf. cithog) dermasealer: skinfuser; a
medical tool that is used to repair
flesh
lacerations by means of laser sutures
364
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Kenneaty
derwyth:
Kymric, "oak-tree"
dichtal:
bardic finger-language, often used as secret code Dragon Kinship:
magical-military order of Keltic adepts Draiochtas: generic term for the body
of arcane knowledge
shared
by adepts of the Ban-draoi and Druid orders Druids: magical order of Keltic
sorcerer-priests dubhachas: "gloom"; melancholy characterized by
causeless
depression
and inexpressible longing for unnameable things dubh-cosac: stimulant herb
usually taken in powder form duchas: lordship or holding; usually carries a
title with it duhi'n: (Lakhaz) the telempathic, tree-dwelling bipeds native
to the
Great Forest on Fomor dun: a stronghold of the Sidhe, the Shining Ones (also
liss or
rath)
dwnedau: Kymric, stanzas of a poem or chaunt (sing., dwned)
earth-nuts:
any of several species of underground hard-shelled fruit
Englic:
tongue of Terran Federacy; unofficial galactic Common Tongue
e>aic:
"blood-price"; payment exacted for a murder by the kin of the victim
-fach
(masc., -bach): Kymric, suffix added to a woman's
name to
denote affection fagail: "bequest"; the parting-gift of the Sidhe to
a mortal
they
have befriended faha: courtyard or enclosed space in a castle complex or
encampment
Fdinne:
"The Ring"; the six system viceroys of Keltia falair: winged horse
whose species is native to the Erinna system fetch: the visible form taken by
the spirit-guardian of a Keltic
family
Fianna:
Keltic officer class; order of military supremacy fidchell: chess-style game
findruinna: superhard, silvery metal used in swords, armor
and the
like
Fionnasa:
feast of the god Fionn, celebrated on 29 September fior-comlainn:
"truth-of-combat"; legally binding trial by
personal
combat
flth-fath:
spell of shapeshifting or glamourie; magical illusion Fomori: ancient enemies
of the Kelts; sing., Fomor or
Fotnorian
THE
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365
Fragarach:
"The Answerer." Also translated "Retaliator." Historically,
the magical sword borne by Arthur of Arvon; also, the moon-size laser cannon
emplacement that defends the Throneworld system of Tara
fodir:
"criminal," "outcast"; term of opprobrium
Gabha-Bheil:
"trial by Beli"; form of truth-test that requires
the
subject to walk barefoot through fire gallain: "foreigners"; sing.,
Gall; generic term for all
non-Kelts
galloglass:
Keltic foot-soldier gauran: plow-beast similar to ox or bullock geis, pi.
geisa: prohibition or moral injunction placed upon a
person
glaive: (from Erinnach, claideamh) lightsword; laser weapon
used
throughout Keltia goleor: "in great numbers, an overabundance";
Englic word
galore
is derived from it grafaun: double-bladed war axe grianan:
"sun-place"; solar, private chamber guna: generic name for various
styles of long robe or gown
hai
aiton: "heigh to us"; the horn-cry that rallies an army
Hastaic:
the language of the Cabiri Empire
hydromel:
sweet, extraordinarily intoxicating honey-wine
iconoscope:
tube-shaped optical toy, activated by telepathic
imagery,
that shows constantly changing visual patterns immram: "voyage"; the
great migrations from Earth to
Keltia
innaga: (Hastaic) "daughter," "child"; endearment used by
family
or friends ton-besom: machine for cleaning carpets, floors, etc., by
suction
of reversed ion polarities
Justiciary:
voluntary interstellar court, located on the neutral planet Ganaster, to which
systems may make petition for arbitrated settlement of grievances short of war;
all participants must agree beforehand to be bound by the decision
kenning:
telepathic technique originally developed (and used
almost
exclusively) by Ban-draoi and Druids kern: Keltic starfleet crewman
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Kennealy
lah
unit of distance measurement, equal to approximately
one-half
mile
Lakhaz:
the language of the Fomori Uthfaen: "lodestone"; quartz crystal,
piezoelectrically charged,
that can
be keyed to various objects and acts as a homing
device
lonna: light hydrofoil-type vessel used by Keltic navy
machair:
" sea-meadow"; wide grassland tracts bordering
on the
sea and running down to the high-water mark maenor: hereditary dwelling place,
usually a family seat marana: "meditation"; thought-trance of Keltic
sorcerers Marbh-draoi: "Death-druid"; Jaun Akhera's epithet'among
Kelts
merrows: (Na Moruadha) the sea people originally native to
Kernow
mether: four-cornered drinking-vessel, usually of wood or
pottery
Morann:
arid volcanic upland plain on the planet Kholco Morar-mhara: "lord of the
seas"; title of chieftain of the
Moruadha
Morimaruse: vast electromagnetic void; the Dead Sea of
space
nemeton;
ceremonial stone circle or henge ni, nighean: ' 'daughter of'
ollave:
a master-bard; by extension, anyone with supreme command of an art
pastai:
small handmeal; a turnover consisting of -a pastry
crust
filled with meat or vegetables Pheryllt: class of master-Druids; they serve as
instructors at
the
Druid schools piast: a large amphibious water-beast found in deepwater
lakes
on the planets Erinna and Scota; the species was
known
to Terrans as the Loch Ness Monster pig-i'-the-wood: children's game in which
those in a "safe"
place
are lured out by those who are "it" pishogue: small magic; cantrip
puca: mischievous, sometimes malevolent spirit of darkness;
also,
cap., a spirit-dog, terrifying of appearance, the size
of a
pony, black-coated, with flame-red eyes
THE
THRONE OF SCONE 367 quaiclt: a low,
wide, double-handled drinking-vessel
rann:
chanted verse stanza used in magic; a spell of any sort reditair: steward of
royal or noble households; title of planetary governors; title of Chancellor of
Exchequer on Keltic High Council
ressaldar-general:
highest rank in Terran military establishment righ-domtma: members of the
Keltic royal family, as reckoned from a common ancestor, who may
(theoretically, at least) be elected to the Sovereignty
saBle:
Erinnach, " willow"
saining:
rite of Keltic baptism
saining-pool:
another name for crochan (q.v.)
SaJamandri:
the Salamander-race, Firefolk; reptiloid race that inhabits the planet Kholco
Samhain:
(pron. Sah-win) festival of the beginning of winter and start of the New Year,
celebrated on 31 October (Great Samhain) and continuing until 11 November
(Little Samhain)
schiltron:
military formation favored by Fianna; very compact and organized, it is
extremely difficult to break
sea-pig:
semi-intelligent aquatic mammal, friendly, noisy and playful
sgian:
small black-handled knife universally worn in Keltia, usually in boot-top
shakia:
chocolate-tasting beverage brewed with water from the berries of the brown ash;
drunk throughout Keltia as a caffeine-based stimulant
Sidhe:
(pron. Shee) the Shining Ones; a race of possibly divine or immortal beings
silkies:
(Sluagh-ron) the seal-folk originally native to the Out Isles
Six
Nations: the six star systems of Keltia (excluding the Throneworld system of
Tara); in order of their founding, they are Erinna, Kyrnry, Scota, Kernow,
Vannin and Brytaned (or Arvor)
skiath:
"shield"; a force-field/pressure suit worn in hard vacuum, it
generates for its wearer all necessary oxygen, gravity and protection against
harmful or poisonous atmospheres
stall-Ills:
"heal-herb"; specific often used in herbal compounds
sluagti:
a hosting, as of an army
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Kennealy
Solas
Sidhe: "The Faery Fire"; a natural phenomenon, similar to the
will-o'-the-wisp but occurring over rocky ground, usually seen in the spring and
fall; also, a magical wall of fire created by sorcerers as a means of attack or
defense
Spearhead:
the polestar of Tara
Stonerows:
the lower circles of Caerdroia
talpa:
blind, blunt-snouted digger animal native to the planet
Kernow
Tanist,
Tanista: designated heir of line to the Keltic throne Taoiseach: the Prime
Minister of Keltia telyn: Kymric lap-harp .;
thrown: stubborn, unreasonably perverse tinna-galach: "bright-fire";
the will-o'-the-wisp, occurring
over
marshy ground; especially noted for its appearances in
the
great marshlands of Gwenn-Estrad, on the planet of
Arvor
in the Brytaned system tinnscra: marriage-portion given to a man or a woman by
their
families, clann, or (in the cases of royalty or high
nobility)
the reigning monarch (tinndl: the marriage-gift
each
partner gives to the other)
tirr: a
cloaking effect, part magical, part mechanical in nature traha:
"arrogance"; wanton pride, hubris
usqueba:
"water of life"; whiskey, generally unblended
vitrigiass:
crystalline substance, its molecular structure reinforced by metallic ions;
used in starship viewports for its extreme hardness and resistance to
shattering
water-acanth:
red-fronded riparian fem used as a decorative planting
waterblanket:
cooling-device used by the Salamandri; large sheets of multilayered plastiweave
linen, with hollow channels quilted into the layers through which water
circulates to carry away excess heat
water-elm:
medicinal herb with stimulant properties
Yamazai:
"Amazon"; warrior-woman race of a matriarchal system, whose homeworld
is the planet Aojun
Yr
Mawreth: "The Highest"; Kymric name for Kelu or Artzan Janco, the One
God who is above all gods
Keltic
Orders and Societies
The
Dragon Kinship
The
Dragon Kinship is a magical and military order of adepts, under the authority
of the Pendragon of Urias. Members are the most accomplished adepts of ail
Keltia, elected strictly on the basis of ability. All professions and ranks are
equally eligible.
All
those of the Kinship are equal under the Pendragon; no formalities are
observed, no titles are used, no precedence of rank is followed. The only other
office is Summoner; chosen by the Pendragon, this officer is what the name
implies—the person responsible for calling the Kinship together on the
Pendragon's order.
The
Pendragon is chosen by his or her predecessor to serve for a term of seven
years; this choice must be confirmed by a simple majority public vote and may
be renewed only by a unanimous secret vote of the entire membership (not
surprisingly, such a renewal has never taken place). At the moment, Gwydion
Prince of Don is Pendragon; he was preceded by a farmer from the Morbihan, a
poetess from Vannin, a weaver from the Out Isles and a bard from Cashel.
To call
someone "Kin to the Dragon" is the highest tribute possible. Most
members are public about it, some prefer to keep it a secret, but all possess a
certain unmistakable and indefinable air of apartness and assurance. It is a
severely demanding society: More than any other power, save only the Crown
itself, the Dragon Kinship is responsible for the well-being, the welfare and
the quality of life and spirit of Keltia, on all levels. As a magical order,
the Kinship takes precedence over all other factions: much of its membership,
in fact, comprises members of other orders such as the Druids,
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Patricia
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Ban-draoi
or the Bardic Association. It is truly a cross-section of Keltic society, for
it reaches from royalty to farmers to artists to techs to soldiers to artisans
to householders. There are no age limits either upper or lower, and no entry
requirement save the possession of psionic Gift.
That
Gift must include ail psionic talents, and feature supreme proficiency in at
least one: healing of body or mind; seership; broadband telepathy, either
receptor or sender; magical warfare—attack, defense or strategic; energy
control; psychokinetics; retrocognition or precognition; shapeshifting;
transmutation; pure magic; or any other magical discipline or talent. Members
are recruited through observation and direct approach by a current Dragon.
There are generally, no more than ten thousand members at any one time, though
in time of war or other great emergency the membership may be increased, if
acceptable candidates are available.
The
Dragon Kinship have their own brugh in Turusachan and rich lands on Brytaned
and Dyved; their main training establishment, Caer Coronach, is in a remote
part of Caledon. A Dragon is by tradition named the sovereign's Magical
Champion, as a Fian is always named Military Champion.
The
Druid Order
The
Druid Order is, with the Ban-draoi, the oldest order in Keltia, founded by St.
Brendan himself in the direct tradition of the Terran Druids. The Order is
limited to men only, who may present themselves for membership beginning at
thirteen years of age. As with the other orders, preliminary training is begun
as soon as a child begins to show promise of talent, sometimes even as early as
three or four years old.
The
Druids are an immensely powerful body; they concern themselves with sorcery and
politics, not necessarily always in that ranking. There are three degrees of
Druidry: Novice, Ovate, Master. Head of the Order is the Archdruid, who is
chosen by his predecessor upon his deathbed, and who then rules until his own
death. The Archdruid sits in the House of Peers as Lord of Carnac, and is a
member of the High Council which advises the monarch.
The
training is long and intensive: all forms of magic, lore,
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371
herbalism,
alphabets, correspondences, alchemy, psionics, chants, music, healing,
seership, trance mediumship, and Other occult disciplines. A fully qualified
Druid is a master of magic, and very few can manage to withstand him when he
puts forth his power.
There
have been a few doubtful passages in the history of the Order, most notably the
appalling two-hundred-year period known to infamy as the Druid Theocracy and
Interregnum.
At a
time of unusual political polarity and turmoil, the Archdruid, a brilliant and
devious man called Edeyrn, saw in the divisiveness a chance to seize power for
his Order—which is to say, for himself. A series of battles and massacres
called the Druids' Wars followed, effectively demolishing all semblance of
civil order in Keltia, and Edeyrn installed himself as magical overlord. He was
supported in this by his fellow renegades and quite a few equally opportunistic
noble houses. He was opposed by the .remnants of the Fainne, the Ban-draoi, the
Bardic Association, the Fianna, most of the noble houses and many of his own
Druids who had remained loyal to the teachings of their Order. This opposition
was the Counterinsurgency, and they were very, very strong.
This
horrific state of affairs existed for nearly two centuries, with the balance of
power continually shifting from one side to the other, until the invasion of
Keltia by Fomori and Fir Bolg space fleets resulted in enormous destruction and
panic. The Theocracy, now led by the ancient Edeyrn's heir Owain, died to make
a deal with the invaders but failed, opening the way only for full-scale war.
Arthur
of Arvon, himself a Druid, rallied the Counterinsurgency in one great desperate
throw and defeated Owain's forces at the Battle of Moytura. With the help of
his chief teacher and advisor Merlynn Llwyd, who assumed the Archdruidship,
Arthur went on to pull Keltia together and become King of Kelts, as has been
told elsewhere. But throughout his long and glorious reign, Druid precepts
remained Arthur's guide to action.
The
Druids, under Merlynn Llwyd, began a period of severe purge and purification,
and eventually were restored to their former high standards.
The
current Archdruid is Teilo ap Bearach; the ranks of Master-druids include
Gwydion Prince of Don, Aeron's uncles Deian and Estyn, and her cousins Alasdair
and Dion.
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The
Druid Order has a brugh of its own in Turusachan, and its chief college is at
Dinas Affaraon on Gwynedd.
The
Ban-draoi
Equal
in rank and antiquity with the Druid Order, the Ban-draoi are the evolvement of
the incomparably ancient Goddess-priestesses of the most deep-rooted Keltic
tradition. The Order was founded in Keltia by St. Brendan's mother, Nia
daughter of Brigit, who many said was of divine parentage hersetf, and who
became the ancestress of the House of Dana in Keltia.
Divine
or not, Nia of the Tuatha De Danaan was brilliant, beautiful, foresighted, and
incredibly gifted in magic, and the Order she established had power, respect
and influence right from the start.
Open
only to women, the Order of the Ban-draoi (the name is Erinnach for, literally,
"woman-druid") has as its chief purpose the worship of the Lady, the
Mother Goddess; but they are sorceresses as well as priestesses, and their
magic matches that of the Druids spell for spell. All women, whether initiates
or not, participate to some degree in the ways of the Ban-draoi, as do all men
in the ways of the Druids, since both systems are at their deepest hearts paths
of worship. But the mysteries of the Ban-draoi are the Mysteries of the Mother,
the things of most awe in all the Keltic worlds. Priestess or not, every Keltic
woman shares in this awe, and every Keltic man respects it.
The
Ban-draoi were never so politically oriented as the Druids, but when the
Theocracy began, they became-the chief focus of the Counterinsurgency and gave
the resistance movement much of its force. Later, Arthur's mother Ygrawn and
sister Morgan, and his wife Gweniver, were al! three high priestesses of the
Order, and gave him invaluable aid in his task of defeating both Druids and
aliens. After Arthur's departure, it was Morgan who raised the tremendous
energy barrier of the Curtain Wall, thus protecting Keltia from the outside
worlds for fifteen centuries.
Obliged
by circumstances to assume a critical political role, the Ban-draoi adapted,
and have retained a position of political preeminence down to the present day.
Aeron Aoibhell
THE
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373
Ikolds
the rank of Domina, or a High Priestess of the Order, as $oss tier sister
Rioghnach.
The
training of a Ban-draoi (the word is both singular and plural) is as intensive
as that of a Druid, and includes the same body of magical knowledge. Due to the
heritage of Nia, however, it also emphasizes many branches of arcane lore known
only to the priestesses. It is not so hierarchical as the Druid Order; an
aspirant to the Ban-draoi is initiated as a priestess once her training is
judged complete. If she wishes, and if her teachers agree, she may then seek
the rank of high priestess, which carries with it the deepest knowledge of all
.and the title Domina.
The
Chief Priestess is elected for life by a conclave of all die high priestesses;
she bears the title Magistra, sits on the monarch's High Council, and sits in
the House of Peers as Lady of Elphame. The office is currently held by Ffaleira
nighean Enfail.
The
Ban-draoi have a brugh of their own within the walls of Turusachan, and their
chief training school is at Scartanore on Erinna.
The
Fiantia
The
Fianna is a purely military organization, comprising the most skilled and
talented warriors of Keltia. To become a Fian, a candidate must pass a series
of incredibly rigorous tests of his or her warrior skills: a test of knowledge,
in which he or she must demonstrate mastery of a specific body of lore; a test
of soul, in which the candidate must face psionic examination by a qualified
inquisitioner, who may be Druid, Ban-draoi or Dragon; and finally a formal
combat with a chosen Fian of the First Rank.
So
rigorous are these tests, in fact, that it seems astounding that anyone at all
ever becomes a Fian; but many do indeed succeed, and rightly are respected.
Membership is open to all ranks, ages and professions; candidates must be at
least eighteen years of age, for physical reasons, though training may often
begin at age six or seven if a child shows talent.
SkiHs a
Fian must learn include all forms of combat and martial arts: sword-mastery,
both classic and lightsword tech-
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Kennealy
niques;
fencing; archery; wrestling; four forms of unarmed combat approximating to
Terran judo, karate, kung-fu and fool-fighting; boxing; riding; marksmanship
with all forms of weapons; tracking; running; spear-throwing; and the piloting
of all types of vehicles from starship to snow-yacht.
The
test of knowledge requires extensive study in the fields of history, both
Keltic and Terran; literature; brehon law; the arts; heraldry and genealogy;
politics; and science, both pure and applied. Fians are expected to be able to
speak ail seven Keltic tongues, Latin, and as many alien tongues as possible
(the minimum is three, and Hastaic, the Imperial tongue, is mandatory). In
addition, Fians are taught the secret Keltic battle-language, Shelta Thari. - '•-
The
test of soul could well be called an ordeal. It involves deep-trance,
telepathy, and astral travel, and no candidate, whether pass or fail, will ever
speak about it afterward.
The
final formal combat is determined on an individual basis by the Captain-General
of the Fianna; choice of weapon and combat form will vary, but there is always
one.armed and one unarmed duel for each candidate. The Captain-General also
selects the First-Rank Fian who will oppose the prospective member. No
allowance is made for sex or physical size: Women, for instance, are expected
to know how to defeat a male warrior who vastly outmeasures them in height,
weight and strength.
The
Fianna have their own training establishment, Caer Artos in Arvon, and their
quarters in Turusachan, the Com-mandery, are directly across from the roya!
palace. Military champions for trial-by-combat are always selected from the
ranks of the Fianna; the Royal Champion is always a First-Rank Fian, and the
monarch's personal bodyguard is made up of Fians.
The
current Captain-General of the Fianna is Donal mac Avera.
TTie
Bardic Association
The
Bardic Association has a long and honorable history. From its founding in
Keltic year 347 by Plenyth ap Alun, the society of bards has held without stain
to its high principles
THE
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375
.rigorous
requirements, and bards of all degrees have Hy been granted hospitality, honor
and semi-royal precedence throughout Kcltia.
/Although
bards receive a good deal of magical training in the course of their studies it
is not emphasized; the primary training of bards is words. Any and all literary
disciplines: poetry, sung or spoken; satire; history; sagas; ballads; myths and
legends; drama; genealogy; precedent—all belong to the bardic tradition. Unlike
magical schooling, the bardic discipline may begin at any age; there are
records of peers in old age handing over their titles to their heirs and going
to the bardic colleges to end their lives in study.
Bardic
aspirants spend five years as apprentices; five years as journeymen; five years
as institutional bards. Having completed the fifteen-year training program
(which does not preclude other study; Gwydion of Don, for instance, is both
Druid and master-bard), they are then permitted to take the examination for the
rank of ollave, or master-bard, if they so wish. If they are successful in this
bid, they may then represent themselves as master-bards of the schools and seek
the very highest employment. Not all bards choose to seek the status of ollave,
however; and many do not remain even to become institutional bards. Any bard
who has successfully passed the examination at the end of the journeyman term
may serve as a teacher of children, and many choose to leave at mis level to
work in such capacity.
Bards
of all degrees, whether journeyman, institutional bard or ollave, are much in
demand throughout Keltia; they are employed by royal or noble families, or by
merely wealthy families, as poet of the house and artist in residence,
encouraged to recite the old lore and to compose creatively on their own.
Exceptional bards of high degree are often entrusted with delicate diplomatic
or social missions, including—not to put too fine a point on it—spying; though
the last is done only in cases of the gravest national importance, for if too
many bards did it, all bards would be suspect. The Ard-rian Aeron makes great
use of bards, and gives them greater honor than they have had from the monarchs
of Keltia for some years.
Bards
have by law and custom several odd privileges: A bard may demand the nightmeal
from anyone, in exchange for a song or a poem; the royal ollave (or
riogh-bardain) has the right to a seat at the high table in Mi-Cuarta not more
than seven places from the monarch's right hand; an ollave is
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Patricia
Kennedy
permitted
by law to wear six colors in his cloak (only the reigning monarch may wear
more—seven, if desired).
The
Chief of Bards is chosen by a vote of senior masters; he serves until death or
retirement, and sits on the monarch's High Council. Chief of Bards at present
is Idris ap Caswyn.
The
Bardic Association has a brugh of its own, Seren Beirdd—"Star of the
Bards"—within the walls of Turusachan, and the Bardic Colleges are located
on Powys.
Partial
Chronology
3400 Fionnbarr born at Caerdroia 3405 Bres born at Tory 3434 Emer born at Coldharbor 3438 Haruko bom at Old Kyoto 3442 Quarrel of Bres and Fionnbarr 3455 Fionnbarr and Emer marry 3467 Jaun Akhera born at Escal-dun
Roderick
born at Kinioch Arnoch 3470
Gwydion and Arianeira bom at Caer Dathy!
3472 Desmond and Slaine born at Drumhallow
3473 Elathan born at Tory
3475 Aeron born at Caerdroia
Morwen
born at Kinioch Arnoch
3476 Rohan born at Caerdroia
3477 Rioghnach born at Caerdroia
3479 Fionnbarr's reign begins {death of
Lasainan)
3480 O'Reilly born at Sandiangeles 3482 Kieran and Declan bom at Caerdroia
Melangell
born at Bryn Alarcn 3489 Fionnuala
born at Caerdroia 3509 Aeron's
reign begins (deaths of Fionnbarr, Emer
and
Roderick) 3512 Arrival of Earth
ship Sword in Keltic space
Dates
given here are in Earth Reckoning <A.D.>: to find the date A.B. (Anno
Brendani) or A.c.c. (Anno Celtiae Conditae), subtract 453 and 455,
respectively.
The
comparative ages can be misleading, as Terran lifespans average 100-110 years,
while those of Kelts, Coranians and Fomori run to 160-200. Therefore, the
"younger generation" of protagonists (Aeron, Elathan, Jaun Akhera, et
al.) are very young indeed.
377
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Patricia
Kennealy
Note on
Age
The
average Keltic lifespan is 160-175 years, and many individuals reach, even
surpass, the two-century mark in full possession of their faculties both
physical and mental. Physical development occurs at the same rate as in
shorter-lived races, with full physical maturity coming between the ages of 18
and 21.
There
is no single legal majority age. At 18, all Kelts, both male and female, are
liable for military service; the mandatory term is three years. They may also
vote in local elections and assume minor titles.
At 21,
citizens may marry with consent (though marriage at this age is almost
unheard-of—thus the scandal of Emer ni Kerrigan's elopement with Prince
Fionnbarr as he then was; most marriages occur at around ages 30-35), vote in
planetary elections, and hold minor public office.
At 27,
Kelts may marry without consent, vote in major (system and national) elections,
hold major public office, and succeed to major titles.
And no
one under the age of 33 may hold the Copper Crown unregented.
Note on
Sources
Although
THE KELTIAD is for the most part what we are pleased to call fiction, 1 owe a
debt beyond acknowledgment to those sources from whom I have systematically—in
the great Celtic tradition of cattle-raiding—pillaged elements to serve my
story. For those readers who might be interested in these majestic,
too-much-forgotten tales, or the work of the dedicated scholars who preserved
them, here is a list of some of those books that served me best and longest:
Trioedd
Ynys Prydein (The Welsh Triads), Rachel Bromwich,
ed.
Popular
Tales of the West Highlands, J. F. Campbell Celtic Invocations, Alexander
Carmichael Shadow and Evil in Fairytales, Marie-Louise von Franz The White
Goddess, Robert Graves Visions and Beliefs in the West of Ireland, Lady Gregory
Old Celtic Romances, P. W. Joyce A Social History of Ancient Ireland, P. W.
Joyce Legendary Fictions of the Irish Celts, Patrick Kennedy The Mabinogion
Celtic Folklore, John Rhys The Hibbert Lectures, John Rhys
Atlantean
Traditions in Ancient Britain, Anthony Roberts Myths and Legends of the Irish
Race, T. W. Rolleston The Tribal System in Wales, Frederic Seebohm Celtic
Scotland,^. F. Skene Magic Arts in Celtic Britain, Lewis Spence The Mysteries
of Britain, Lewis Spence Celtic Myth & Legend, Poetry A Romance, Charles
Squire Ancient Legends of Ireland, Lady Wilde Folklore in the English and
Scottish Ballads, L. C. Wimberly Irish Folk Stories and Fairy Tales, W. B.
Yeats Mythologies, W. B. Yeats
379
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Patricia
Kennealy
My
chiefest borrowing is of course the famous poem attributed to the Welsh bard
Taliesin, Preiddu Annwn (The Spoils of Annwn). For the version that appears in
these pages, I used phrasing from the translations of Graves, Rhys, Skene and
Squire (his translation a collation of itself), did some creative translating
of my own and invented the rest to fit the demands of the action.
The
other major borrowing I should like to acknowledge is another poem of
Taliesin's, by way of the Red Book of Hergest, called Cad Goddeu (The Battle of
the Trees). Elements used here are from the translations of Graves and D. W.
Nash, with, again, additions of my own devising.
About
the Author
Patricia
Kennealy was born in Brooklyn and grew up in North Babylon, New York. She was
educated at St. Bonaventure University and Harpur College, taking her degree in
English literature. For three years she was the editor-in-chief of JAZZ &
POP magazine, a national publication devoted to rock and progressive music in
the late 60's and early 70's, and she has written extensively in the field of
rock criticism.
She is
an award-winning advertising copywriter, a former record company executive, and
a member of Mensa. In 1970 she exchanged vows with the late Jim Morrison,
leader of the rock group The Doors, in a private religious ceremony. Her leisure
pursuits include riding, fencing and playing the violin.
She
lives in New York City. Her ambition is to christen a warship.