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The Fortress of Glass: Chapter Ten
Last updated: Sunday, March 19, 2006 10:41 EST
Oh Chalcus! Merota cried. Its all right! Ilnas here!
It certainly isnt all right, Ilna thought. Merota hugged her and she patted the girls shoulder, but she was ready to act if there was need.
Which there didnt seem to be. Shed stepped from the wizards chamber into a maze with broad aisles. The hedges, twice her height, were holly, but trees and fruiting bushes grew among the interwoven, spiky branches.
Underfoot the grass was soft and curly. The ends were pointed so it hadnt been cropped, but the blades were only high enough to brush Ilnas ankles.
Chalcus was a double pace away, as close as he could be to Merota and still have room to swing his curved sword with reflexive speed. He didnt have his back to a hedge, either, which surprised Ilna till she noticed faint rustlings and the way leaves occasionally quivered in the still air.
That might be ground squirrels, of course. It might also be a viper hunting ground squirrels, and it wasnt hard to imagine worse things than vipers here.
I heard the child call, Chalcus said. His mouth smiled but his cheeks were set in hard planes and his eyes went every direction in quick jumps like a bird hunting. I tried to follow her, but I got dizzy. Do you know where it is we are, dearest?
Were in the tapestry Double set you to look at, Ilna said. Its a trap, or at least Double used it as one. The pattern the hedges make draws you into it if you concentrate. Which of course you did.
Poking through the holly beside her was what looked like blackberry canes with the usual mix of purple, red, and pink fruit on them. She picked a ripe one and tasted it. It was an ordinary blackberry, tart and tasty.
She looked at her companions. It was my fault, she said. She stood as straight as shed have done if she was about to be hanged. Shed rather be hanged than to have made the mistake she had. I shouldve looked at the tapestry myself. I wouldve known.
Dear one, said Chalcus with real affection, though his eyes continued to search. Under other circumstances hed have touched her cheek with the back of his hand, but now each held a naked blade. When I think I need you to scout before I look at a wall or a field or it may be a stretch of sea, Ill drown myself. Ill have lived too long to be a man.
He stepped toward the next angle of the maze; the path branched left and right. What I dont see..., he said, looking down both paths. Is why Double would want to catch me that way. I wasnt a particular friend to him, but I wasnt his enemy either. Not then.
He glanced back and gave the women a hard grin. That will change when we return, he added.
He didnt care about us, Chalcus, Merota said. She wasnt looking at the ground or the hedges either, it seemed to Ilna. He used us to draw Ilna here. He knew shed follow us, dont you think?
He wouldnt need to be a wizard to see that, Chalcus agreed. But how is she his enemy?
The amulet, Merota said. Lord Cervoran set Ilna to control Double. Double sent Ilna away so that he isnt under Cervorans mastery any more.
There was a tiny note of frustration in her voice. Merota was a courteous and respectful child, but this was a strain for her as surely as it was for the rest of them. She clearly felt that what was obvious to her ought to be obvious to other people, at least when shed pointed it out.
Ilna smiled coldly. The child might learn better, or she might not. Ilnad never quite learned that lesson herself.
Ah, said Chalcus with a wry smile. I see, Id been getting too full of myself, thinking I was the target. A flaw Im prone to, milady, and Im thankful to you for catching me.
He spoke lightly, but he wasnt being ironic. Chalcus wasnt the man to deny his faults. Now he turned to Ilna and said, Is there a way out, then, dear one?
Probably, Ilna said. That was the first thing shed considered, of course; the thing shed been puzzling over even as she stepped into tapestry. Almost certainly. Its a complex knot, but theres no knot without an end somewhere. I havent found it yet, is all.
She took another blackberry, realizing that she hadnt eaten in longer than she wished was the case. Food wasnt a great pleasure to her, but without it she was more apt to make mistakes. Lack of food, lack of sleep, cold weather or to a lesser extent hot weatherthey all made her less effective than she liked. She regarded those requirements as weaknesses and disliked herself for them, but she wasnt the sort to deny that she was weak.
Is it best we stay here, dearest? Chalcus said. Or is there a direction you think we should go?
I dont know anything about this place, Ilna said, irritated to be asked questions she couldnt answer. Shed known where they were, no more. Well need food and theres little enough here. Water too, I suppose. There were fountains and streams on the tapestry.
She cleared her throat. To take the sting out of her previous tone she added, Though the blackberries are good. Will you have one?
Merota was standing primly with her hands tented together. Ilna glanced at her, then looked again: the child was terrified. Ilna reached into her sleeve for the twine she kept there. Itd be a simple thing, a few knots and a pattern to spread in front of Merotas barely focused eyes to calm her....
Ilna paused, put the twine away and instead hugged Merota. The child threw her arms around Ilna and squeezed hard before relaxing and stepping back.
Thank you, Ilna, she said formally. Im all right now.
Theres an apple tree to the right, Master Chalcus, Ilna said, pretending nothing had just happened. Since we have no better direction, lets go that way. Perhaps we can see something from its branches, too.
Her cheeks were hot. She hated embarrassment, hated it, and being around other people was one embarrassment after another.
Theres little men in the hedges, said Chalcus with a lilt as he led with his sword and dagger angled out in front of him like a butterflys feelers. Brown and not so tall as my waist, short fellow though I am. But theres a lot of them.
He sounded cheerful, and perhaps he was. Ilna smiled grimly. Chalcus wasnt a cruel man, but he regarded the chance to kill something that deserved it as the best sport there was.
What Ilna really hated was emotion. At least now she had some emotions besides anger, but a life spent suppressing anger left her uncomfortable with the softer feelings as well.
Insects buzzed and fluttered in the foliage, but Ilna didnt see birds. There were sounds that mightve been bird calls, but she thought they were more likely insects alsoor frogs. They couldve been frogs.
Her fingers began plaiting a fabric for occupation. Though she didnt see the little men that the sailor had, she could feel movement in the way leaves trembled or the grass lay: everything was part of an interwoven whole.
Including of course Ilna os-Kenset. She knew that another person in her place mightve learned how to leave this tapestry before following her friends into it; but that other person wouldnt have been Ilna and very probably wouldnt have been able to see the patterns that Ilna saw.
Ilna grinned to think what shed never have said aloud: she hadnt met anybody except for her brother who saw patterns as clearly as she did. Cashel wouldve gone bulling straight ahead just the way shed done, if hed known how to.
Theyd reached the ground beneath the apple trees spreaing limbs. The trunk was hidden within the hedge, but the branches reached out from above the holly.
Apple cores lay scattered on the grass. Some were so fresh that though the flesh had browned it hadnt started to shrivel. The mouths thatd nibbled the fruit were no bigger than a young childs.
The little people eat apples, said Merota, meaning more than the words.
So do we, said Ilna tartly, but that doesnt mean wed turn down meat.
Shed snapped at the childs foolish hopefulness before she could catch herself--and regretted it as the words came out. Chalcus glanced at her with a hint of pain and probably irritation, completely justified. Of course the girl was being foolish, and of course the girl knew that as surely as Ilna herself did.
Merota, Ilna said, Im nervous; Im afraid, I suppose. This makes me more unpleasant to be around than usual. Even more unpleasant. I apologize.
Youre not unpleasant, Ilna! Merota said. She probably even meant it. She was a sweet child, truly nice, and she couldnt understand what a monster her friend Ilna really was.
Chalcus cleared his throat. I might be able to jump to the lowest branch, he said, looking at the tree above them. But I dont think I can get through the prickles without leaving more of my skin behind than Id choose to. The little folk have skills I do not.
Ill go up, said Ilna, slipping loose the silk rope she wore around her waist in place of a sash. You stay with Merota.
You and your sword stay here, but there was no need to say that.
She eyed the branches. The lowest, less than her own height above her, wasnt as thick as shed like but shed try it for a start. She cocked the rope behind her, then sent it up in an underhand cast. It curved over the branch and dropped.
Ah! cried Chalcus, sheathing his dagger to grab the dangling end in his left hand. Hed been frowning, obviously wondering what Ilna expected to catch with the loop. There was nothing for a noose to close over, but itd weighted the throw nicely.
Ilna scrambled up the rope with the strength of her arms alone: the silk cord was too thin for her feet to grip it well, but the present short climb didnt require that. She pulled herself onto the branch, then stood and surveyed their surroundings.
It doesnt help, she called, keeping the disappointment out of her voice. The hedges are as thick as theyre tall. I cant even see into the next passage. And in the distance theres fog.
The fog might be ordinary water vapor, but Ilna doubted it. She hadnt imagined that they could get back to their own world by walking to the edge of the tapestry, but perhaps....
Ilna smiled grimly. She hadnt consciously allowed herself to hope for anything, but obviously the part of her mind she couldnt control had been hoping. The human part of her mind.
No matter, dear one, Chalcus called. At least weve the apples.
The branch swayed gently, but Ilna was comfortable with its support. She lifted the skirt of her outer tunic into a basket. and plucked fruit from the branches above her into it. The apples were small but sweet; apparently they were fully ripe when half the skin was still green. Many were wormy, but she had no difficulty gathering sufficient for the three of them.
Because the hedge was so thick, the branches in the interior had leaves only on the tips. Ilnad walked some way out in that direction to complete her foraging. As she turned, she saw faces staring up at her from among the knotted gray stems.
They were visible only for an instant, but shed gotten a good look at a trio of naked brown-skinned people, adult in proportion but no bigger than a six-year-old. One was a woman. Their large dark eyes reminded her of rabbits, and theyd vanished like rabbits leaping into a brush pile.
Ilna walked back to where her friends waited and spilled the apples onto the ground. She hung from the branch by one arm and dropped. While Merota picked the apples up, she looped the rope back around her waist.
Chalcus continued watching in all directions. He hadnt ceased to do that even when he was belaying the rope for Ilna to climb.
I saw the little people, she said quietly. They dont seem to have weapons. Or any tools whatever.
Aye, said the sailor. Theyre a fleeting, fearful lot and likely harmless. But it strikes me, dear heart, that they wouldnt be so fearful were there nothing here in this garden to fear, not so?
He stepped around the next corner of the maze, munching an apple in his left hand as his sword quivered like a dog scenting prey. Merota followed, holding the apples in her tunic with both hands, and Ilna brought up the rear as before.
Several trees grew in the opposite wall of the hedge. One was a walnut, she thought. Nutmeats would be a good addition to the apples, though the capsules holding the nuts would stain her hands indelibly when she shucked them. Perhaps
A fat-bodied snake stepped on two short legs from the opposite end of the aisle. The creature was the size of a man, pale red in front and its back and tail covered with vivid blue scales. It raised a neck frill as Chalcus lunged forward.
Look away! Ilna shouted, closing her eyes. Her fingers knotted a pattern that she understood perfectly though she couldnt have described if her lifed depended on it. Words were for the worlds Lianes; Ilna had her own way of communicating.
Merotas scream muted into the desperate wheeze of someone drowning. Ilna lifted her pattern of cords and looked.
A shock lashed her. It felt like whatd shed gotten from touching metal after walking across wool in a dry day. Merota stood paralyzed with her mouth open; Chalcus had fallen as if his legs were wood. His sword was outstretched and his eyes stared in horror.
Instead of a snakes jaws, the creature had a blunt, bony beak like a squids. A forked blue tongue trembled from it in a high-pitched hiss. Ripples of blue and red played across its broad frill in a sequence as wonderfully perfect as a nightingales song. The pattern caught every eye that fell on it and gripped with the crushing certainty of a spiders fangs.
The creature, taking one clumsy stride forward, saw the open fabric in Ilnas hands. The rhythm of color in its frill broke, bubbled, and subsided into a muddy blur.
Basilisk! Merota shouted. She flung an apple at the creature. It bounced harmlessly away. The rest of the harvest fell to the ground.
Chalcus rolled to his feet. The creature leaped backward. The sailor was still off-balance so his sword notched the frill instead of skewering the long snake neck.
My pardon! the creature cried. It leaped onto a limb of the walnut tree; the stubby legs were as powerful as a frogs. My pardon, I didnt realize you were Princes! The One hasnt added new Princes in an age of ages!
Chalcus jumped upward, his sword flickering left to right. The creature sprang over the hedge and into the aisle beyond.
I beg your pardon, fellow Princes..., it called, its voice trailing off behind its hidden flight.
It was a basilisk! Merota said, staring at the scars the creatures claws had left in the bark.
What did it mean by calling us Princes? Ilna said, trying not to gasp.
Chalcus shot his sword and dagger home in their sheaths. He leaned forward, resting his hands on his knees to breathe deeply.
What Id like to know..., he said to the ground in front of him. Is who the One is?
It was so dark that Garric couldnt see his own hand at arms length, but he knew they were being stalked. He didnt hear the predator, but changes in the sounds other marsh creatures made showed that something was disturbing them.
Donria, Garric said quietly. He slid the axe out from under the sash that was his only garment for the time being. He hoped that mud hed splashed on the grip wouldnt make it slippery. Somethings moving up on us from behind. I want you to take the lead, but dont make a fuss about it.
Youd have made a good scout, lad, Carus whispered in his mind.
Perhaps, but what Garric had been was a shepherd. Hed learned to absorb his surroundings: the color of the sky and the sea, the way light fell on the leaves or the swirls of fog over the creek on cool mornings. Garric didnt exactly look for dangers. He simply noticed things that were different a few minutes ago or yesterday or last year.
Hed heard a shift in the pattern of trills, chirps and clicking. The little animals he and Donriad disturbed were remaining silent after they were well past. Previously the chorus of frogs and insects had resumed as soon as they went on.
Theres a human following us, Garric, said the Bird. His name is Metz, but you think of him as Scar. Hes been lying in wait on the route Torag used to attack Wandalos village twice in the past.
Garric stopped and straightened. He couldnt see a thing. Besides darkness, the rain was falling as it had more hours than not during the day. He and Donriad been moving since they broke out of Torags keep, and fatigue was taking a toll of him.
Metz! he called. Scar! This is Garric! Ive escaped from the Coerli and Im here to help you!
Hed come back to join Wandalo and his people, at any rate. He might or might not be able to help, but he was going to try.
Nothing happened for a moment; then Metz sloshed up from the darkness and came forward. He held whatd started as a fishing spear. A single hardwood spike now replaced the springy twin points intended to clamp a fish between them.
How did you learn to speak our language? he asked, obviously doubtful. Then, frowning in real concern he added, And how did you see me? Nobody couldve spotted me, not at night!
I listened to the frogs, Garric said. Ive spent a lot of time outdoors too.
He didnt say that hed been a shepherd. That wouldnt have meant anything to Metz, since the only large animals hed seen here were humans and their dogs.
The Bird landed on Garrics shoulder. Its feet were solid pressures, but the glittering creature didnt seem to weigh anything. I am helping you speak to one another, but I can speak to you as well.
Master Garric? said Donria, is this man the chief of the village?
No, the chiefs named Wandalo, Garric said. This is the man who found me when I came here from my own land.
Wandalos dead, Metz said. It was too dark for Garric to be sure of the hunters features, but his voice sounded tired and worn. Nobodys really chief now.
He turned to look back in the direction Garric had come from. My uncles and I decided wed better watch the way the Coerli came from, he continued. Nobody else was willing to. If we dont have any warning, theyll keep snatching us up until nobodys left. I said Id watch nights; Im better at it than Abay or Horst.
Garric had thought a club hung from Metz belt; it was actually a wooden trumpet. Garric looked at it and looked up at the man again. Metz might be able to hide from a raiding party as long as he kept silent, but as soon as he blew a warning on that trumpet the Coerli were going to kill him. Unless they captured him to torture at leisure at their keep.
Well, what else could I do? Metz said angrily. Somebody had to watch!
You couldve done what the rest of the villagers did, Garric thought. Hide in your hut like a frightened rabbit till the cat men came to wring your neck for dinner.
Aloud he said, The village must be close, then. Well go there and call a town meeting. Theres a way to deal with the Coerli if we stay together and work fast.
Torag wont be coming tonight, the Bird said. Nor tomorrow night, I think; but soon he will come. Garric will act before then.
Metz led the way sure-footedly through the marsh to the village gate. Donria had never been this way before, but she had less trouble with the slick wood rods of the catwalk than Garric did.
Marzan said he was summoning a hero to destroy the Coerli, Metz said. Thats why my uncles and I were waiting for youMarzan told us where youd come. Hes a great wizard. But you didnt seem....
I cant do much about the Coerli by myself, Garric said quietly. With your helpthe help of everybody in the villageI think theres an answer.
The village walls loomed up before them. Metz lifted the trumpet to his lips and blew a surprisingly musical tone, clear and wistful.
Open the gates, Tenris, he called. Ive brought friends back with me.
Is that you, Metz? called a man from the gate platform. Thered been no sign that the guard had been aware of their presence, even though Garric thought hed been slipping and splashing enough to wake the dead. All right, Im opening the gate.
And call the villagers to assemble! the Bird said in what wouldve been a tone of command if the words were audible. We must prepare immediately.
Whos that? cried the guard in sudden alarm.
Never mind, Tenris, its a friend, Metz snapped. And do as he says. The Bright Spirit knows we need all the friends we can get in these times.
Wood squealed on the platform and the bar shifted on the inside of the gate. There was apparently a lever and cord, a large-scale equivalent of the ordinary latch string. Metz pushed open one of the gate leaves, then lifted his trumpet and blew it again in harmony with the three blasts of the guards deeper horn.
Lights, dim and yellow, began to wink through the fog. Villagers were lighting oil lamps from embers on their hearths. Garric heard a woman begin to wail in high-pitched despair.
There is no danger, said the Bird, dropping down from the stockade to perch on Garrics shoulder. You are not being attacked. You must assemble and do as Garric orders, because the Bright Spirit has sent him to save you.
Garric frowned and started to turn his head, but the Bird was too close for him to focus on it with both eyes. He faced front again and said quietly, How many of the people in the village can hear you?
All of them, said the Bird with a hint of satisfaction. Every one of them. But they will not follow me, Garric. They will follow you.
That remains to be seen, Garric thought, but cynicism didnt suit him. Natural optimism lifted his spirits as he saw villagers coming toward the gate with whatever weapons had come to their hands. Just maybe....
The sky had brightened from pitch black to dark gray. Thatd make it easier to address the villagers, though he still wasnt clear about what he was going to say. He grinned: maybe he could claim his arrival at dawn was a good omen.
Get up on the platform where they can see you, Carus directed. And make sure Metz comes with you. Itll work, lad.
It would or it wouldnt, but Garric was going to try regardless. Come along, Metz, he said to the hunter. Were going to tell them how to defeat the Coerli.
How are we going to do that? Metz muttered, but he looked up and called, Get down from there, Tenris. Me and the hero who Marzan brought us need the room.
Tenris dropped from the platform with real enthusiasm. Theres no chief, Metz had said; because nobody wanted the job in the face of inevitable disaster. The villagers were terrified, so anybody could become chief just by saying he wanted to lead.
Which was different from saying anybody would follow him; but maybe....
The ladder and platform were lightly built, but they werent as flimsy as Garric had expected. The Grass People lacked arts that everybody in the Isles took for granted, but they had very highly developed skills nonetheless. Woodworking, including the ability to weave withies into solid structures, was among the latter.
Whats going on, Metz? called one of a pair of husky men in the growing assembly below. It wasnt bright enough yet for Garric to be sure of faces, but the voice sounded like one of the men whod met himcaptured himwith Metz when he arrived in this land.
Garric escaped from the Coerli, Metz said. Nobodys ever done that. Hes going to talk to us.
Hes the hero I summoned to save us! cried Marzan. A girl of seventeen or so had been helping him along the path from his house, but now the old wizard stood with only his staff to support him. The feathered crown waggled on his head. See how my foresight has been repaid?
Well, not yet, thought Garric, but that was a good opening for him. In a loud voice he said, People of the village. Fellow humans!
That was a nice touch. Hed given enough speeches by now that he was getting the feel of the task.
The Coerli can be defeated! he said. My return proves that. But we, the rightful owners of this world must act together and we must act now. We must arm ourselves. Ill teach you the tactics Ive used to kill cat men already. Instead of waiting for them to attack again, well go to them. Tomorrow evening well set out for Torags keep, the chief whos been raiding you, so that we arrive at dawn. We will destroy Torag and free his human captives!
Youre a demon, sent to destroy us all! cried a woman. Metz, come down here now! Better yet, throw that madman off the walls and close the gate!
That is Opann, said the Bird; to Garric alone, he supposed, though there was no way of telling. She is Metzs wife. Her father was chief before Wandalo.
The chief of my village was Paltin! called Donria from the base of the ladder. I am Donria who was Paltins wife. Torag and his warriors came to us, snatching folk from the fields by day and entering our walls at night. At first they took a handful, then another handful. At the end we were only a handful, and they took all of us but those they slew. Listen to Lord Garric! Metz Scarface! Opann said. Get down here at once! The madman lies, and the foreign slut lies as well. Our only safety is to hide behind our walls. The cat men cant be killed!
Ive killed them myself! Garric said. I killed two warriors the night they raided this village, and
He brandished the axe hed taken from the Corl guard.
I killed another when I escaped to come here. Join me and together we can
He lies! Opann said. Was she simply frightened, or was she ignoring the Coerli threat in her concern about Garric becoming her husbands rival for leadership of the village? No human can kill a cat man!
Some of you saw me do it! Garric said. That probably isnt true in the darkness and confusion of the raid. And the Coerli carried off their dead.... Together we can
You lie! said Opann. Iuhh!
Donria stepped away from her. Opann fell forward as though her joints had all given way. The hilt of a knife projected from just beneath her rib cage. From the angle, itd been driven upward through her left kidney. Wooden knives couldnt cut very well, but theyd take enough of a point to be good poignards....
Duzi! said Garric aloud. Donria killed her!
What? said Metz. Garric put his hand on his shoulder, but Metz didnt seem so much angry as confused. What? Did that really happen?
Our only safety lies with Lord Garric, Donria called in a ringing voice. He will save us if we give him complete obedience. He tore his way alone out of captivity, bearing me on his shoulders, and with our help he will destroy the monsters entirely.
I, Marzan the Great, brought the hero from the far future to save us! the wizard said. My power and the heros power will join to rout the cat men.
The old mans cracked voice wasnt loud, but the words were vivid and compelling in Garrics mind. He didnt doubt that the Bird was projecting them to the villagers as well.
You are correct, Garric, the Bird said, adding an audible cluck of laughter.
Abay? Metz said. You and Horst, youre with me, right?
Why, sure, Metz, one of the bulky men said. Youve always been able to see as far into a mudbank as the next fellow.
Right, said Metz with satisfaction. Idway, Mone, Granta? You men trust me too, dont you?
Well, I guess, a man said. If you want to be chief, Ill back you, but yesterday you said you didnt. Didnt you?
I dont want to be chief, thats right, Metz said. But I want Garric here to be chief . He knows how to fight the Coerli and I sure dont. Does anybody want to argue that?
The uncle whod spoken before, Horst or Abay, turned to look back at the crowd. Youre arguing with me if you do, he said in a tone of low menace.
Nobody spoke for a moment.
Unexpectedly Donrias clear voice called, Chief Garric, I have a boon to ask of you. Grant me to your deputy Metz, the greatest of our warriors except yourself!
Garric froze with his mouth open. Then he cried, To Metz, the first of my warriors, I give Donria, a wife fit for a warrior and a chief. May they be happy together!
Very quietly he added, Metz, you may not always thank me, but youre better off with her than youd be against her.
And that, said the laughing ghost in Garrics mind, is the truth if truth was ever spoken!
Three-wick oil lamps hung from stands to Sharinas right and left. Before her on the long table spread reports and petitions. These ranged from a ribbon-tied parchment scroll in which the high priest of the Temple of the Plowing Lady objected in perfect calligraphy to the destruction of a shrine to the Lady by lime-burners, to a note scratched by those same lime-burners on a potsherd. The shrines walls were brick and useless for their purpose, but the roof beams and the wooden statue itself had provided fuel to reduce lumps of limestone to fiery quicklime.
Sharina tossed the parchment to a clerk. The Temple of the Plowing Lady was on the spine of hills in the middle of the island. It, rather than one of the temples in Mona, was the head of the cult on First Atara.
Request that they send a formal statement of damages to Lord Tadai for examination, she said. Add the usual language about sacrifices in this hour of the kingdoms need.
Sharina slid the potsherd to a second clerk. Noted and approved, she said, then paused to rub her eyes.
About a hundred documents remained. Long before shed worked through them, messengersd bring in that many more new ones. This was her third trio of clerks, but all they and the earlier shifts did was to transmit the decisions Princess Sharina alone could make. Sharina knew what Liane was doing now was necessary, but she remembered with wonder the smooth way in which this sort of task had vanished when Liane attended to it.
Lord Attaper had been talking with a messenger at the door of Sharinas suite. Lady Lianes back, your highness, he said quietly.
Lady, you have blessed your servant, Sharina whispered. The prayer was heartfelt and spontaneous. Then, louder, Send her in please, milord.
She knew that Liane would be as tired as she was, but at least they could talk for a moment. The thing Sharina missed most in being regent was the chance to chat with equals. Garric was gone and Cashel was gone; and Ilna as well, though Sharinad always felt restraint with Ilna.
With Ilna you were always aware that you were talking to someone who judged herself by standards harsher than those of the most inexorable God. Sharina had to suspect that Ilna in her heart of hearts applied the same standards to everybody else as well, no matter how good friends they were.
Liane looked worn. Her clothes were smudged and wrinkled, and the suggestion of fatigue in her posture wouldve been visible a bowshot away.
Sharina embraced her friend, feeling a rush of sympathy. She was embarrassed tove complainedeven silentlyabout the stream of work she herself faced.
The plants retreated to the plain as the sun set, Liane said. Theyd carried the first line of earthworks and were starting to fill them in, but now theyre just standing in a circle. Waldrons going to attack when the moon rises.
She slumped into a straight-backed chair beside the door. It was one of a set of four whose ornate bronze frames matched that of the bed. Sharinad thought the chairs looked terribly uncomfortable. Perhaps they were, but Liane was too tired to mind.
More of them came from the sea after you left, Sharina, she said. She pressed her fingertips together, then straightened with a noticeable effort of will. More hellplants. Still, Waldrons hopeful that tonights attack will destroy those already ashore, and if more appear tomorrow we should have the artillery with quicklime projectiles in position. So long as they become torpid at night, we should be able to contain the attacks for the time being.
Till the kingdom runs out of soldiers, Sharina translated silently. That would happen eventually, but not soon. Not for the time being.
Shed planned to ask Liane to help with the petitions, but that was obviously impractical. Though Liane would try, she was sure.
You need sleep, Sharina said. Come, why dont you use the servants chamber of the suite here? Ill wake you if theres anything that you should know about.
Particularly if Garric reappeared as unexpectedly as hed vanished. Oh, Lady, bless me and the kingdom by returning my brother!
Yes, said Liane, closing her eyes as she tensed her body to get up again. Ill sleep for
Do you wish to see the attack? Doubles scraping, squealing voice called from the Chamber of Art. I can show you what your human forces can do, better even than the generals leading them see. Then you can decide whether your powers are sufficient to scotch the Green Woman!
The door between the rooms was empty, but the pair of Blood Eagles on the other side hid Double from Sharinas eyes. One of the men advanced his shield slightly, a psychological attempt to fend the wizard away.
Come into the chamber, Princess! the wizard said. It giggled, a sound as unpleasant as the whistle of gas escaping from a bloated corpse. Come and see how human might succeeds against the Green Woman!
Your highness, said Attaper forcefully. We dont know what happened to Mistress Ilna and her friends, but it happened in that room. Its too dangerous for you to enter. And I dont trust that one
He nodded his helmet fiercely in the direction of the doorway and beyond it.
a bit. Not a bit!
If the Princess is afraid, said Double, let her send a lackey to observe and report to her. Is the great Attaper afraid of me also?
Ill go, said Liane, rising to her feet. I wanted to stay and watch the attack anyway, but Waldron said Id only be in the way.
Well both go, said Sharina. She looked around the room. Clerks and guards and courtiers all watched her in silence. Anyone who likes can come with Lady Liane and myself. Those of you who prefer to avoid wizardry stay here.
She grinned wryly. And I wont blame you. Believe me, I wont.
Attaper took a deep breath. Yes, I suppose..., he said.
He looked at Sharina with an expression of bleak humor that she didnt recall seeing on the guard commanders face before. My father was sitting at table, no older than I am now, he said. Hed just reached for his cup of wine. He shouted, Sister take me! and jumped up; and died right there. She did take him.
Attaper took a deep breath and forced a smile. Theres no certainty in this life, your highness, except that well die some day.
Sharina laid her hand on Attapers armored shoulder as they walked into the Chamber of Art together. Perhaps, milord, she said. But I expect to live considerably longer because of your care than I would without it.
The rooms only light was a single oil lamp hanging from a central chain. Double had moved away from the door; he now stood beside one of the symbols inlaid in the flooring. Tenoctris joined Sharina with a nod and a crisp smile.
Sharina glanced over her shoulder. Half the staff from her bedroom was joining them, far more than shed expected.
Doubles lips twisted in an oily sneer. The figure hed chosen was a triangle with a circle of the largest possible radius drawn within it. Words of power were written along each side in yellow chalk, though Sharina couldnt read them well enough to pronounce in the present light. A piece of cloth, probably a dinner napkin, lay over something slight in the center of the enclosed circle.
He has a length of seaweed there, Tenoctris said quietly. And a bone which I presume is human; Im not an anatomist. Hes using them as a focus.
Nothing in the old womans dry voice suggested horror or disgust that Double was using human bone. Tenoctris was a wizard, and shed used necromancy when that was the only way to get information which the kingdom needed. Sharina had asked her to use necromancy, though shed been too squeamish to watch the incantation.
Remembering that morning, not so long before, Sharina gripped Tenoctris hand and squeezed it. Friends did things you couldnt or wouldnt do for yourself. Tenoctris was a friend to the kingdom, and a friend to Good; and very certainly a friend to Sharina os-Kenset.
Double drew the ancient athame from his sash and lifted it above the figure. Watch, Princess, he said, then chanted, So somaul somalue....
At each slow-spoken syllable he dipped the black blade, shifting the point from one angle to the next. The lights dimmed or seemed to dim. Zer ze-er zeruesi....
A clerk dropped her slate tablet with a clatter and ran sobbing from the room. Nobody else moved.
Lu..., said Double. Lumo luchresa!
The lamp went out completely. Instead of plunging the room into darkness, a circular lens as bright as the full moon appeared above the center of the figures. In it was a marshy landscape on which every object showed as sharply as they would if carved on a triumphal relief.
Double stepped back. His hand trembled slightly as he lowered the athame, but he managed an oily smile and said, You see my power, Princess. Now you will see the power your human forces have against the Green Woman.
Instead of staring into the lens as everyone else was doing, Tenoctris bent to peer at the words chalked around the figure. Sharina gave her friends hand a final squeeze and concentrated on the image Double had created. She supposed Tenoctris was more interested in details of another wizards art than she was of what was happening on a battlefield miles away. The first was her job, come to think of it.
In the lens Sharina saw the hellplants wedged as close together as sheep in a blizzard. Their bulky green shapes formed an arc with both flanks anchored on the bay. Though a heavy mist blanketed the valley, she could see every detail of the creatures with a clarity that wouldve been impossible at arms length in bright sunlight.
She frowned. Her subconscious mind was sure the image was real. She wondered if Double was bringing distant events close or if instead he was merely tricking the minds of those watching. She could get details from Lord Waldron after the battle and see how well they jibed with what she thought shed seen.
A trumpet called, thin and unimaginably distant. Wheres that coming from? said Attaper, looking around angrily. Thats Charge! Are we hearing commands from Calfs Head Bay?
Watch and learn, brave soldier, Double said in a deadpan sneer. He gestured with his athame like a pastry chef teasing icing into a delicate spire; the image in the lens shifted to the earthworks on the surrounding slopes. Soldiers climbed out from the defenses with their swords drawn. In ragged groups of six to ten they marched toward the plain. Generally one man of each group had a torch and the others carried faggots of brushwood to use when they reached the hellplants.
The torches were pinpricks of yellow light; fog swirled around the troops like the tide rising in a mangrove swamp. Sharina could see the men clearly, but from the way they splashed and stumbled they themselves were almost blind.
Theyre sinking above their ankles, Sharina said, frowning. I thought the valley was sown in barley. You couldnt plow ground that soft, let alone get crops to sprout in it.
It wasnt that wet this morning, Liane said. It kept getting boggier as the day went on. I think the tide may be rising, but theres the fog as well. Local people say theyve never seen anything like it, even in the dead of winter with the wind from the southwest.
The Green Womans minions are reclaiming the land for her, Double said. As they advance, the marsh will also advance.
He turned his white, swollen face slightly. Light from the lens glinted on his bulbous eyes.
If you kill the hellplants, soldier, Double said, will you then drain the soil with your sword?
Attaper met the dead glare. Creature, he said in a tight, controlled voice, you have no friends in this room. Dont push your luck! The way I see it, its not murder to cut apart something thats already dead.
Staggering, tripping; often grabbing one another so as not to fall in the muck, the soldiers pressed their attack. Sharina could faintly hear the angry, blasphemous murmur of the advancing army. A few of the men had kept their spears; they used them to probe the fog-blurred darkness.
The hellplants were as silent as a rank of haystacks. Sharina was tense, expecting the massive forms to rush forward now that theyd lured the troops close, but the men continued to advance against a motionless enemy.
A soldier screamed on a rising, piercing note. Twenty more soldiers echoed his cry with nearly identical ones.
Double pointed his athame and twisted it. The image shrank to a full-sized image of the marsh: a soldiers right leg stepping forward in muck in which half-grown barley lay matted. Though dismounted for the moment, the man was from a cavalry regiment; he wore knee boots instead of hobnailed sandals as the infantry did.
A scorpion like the ones thatd spilled from the hellplant in the palace squirmed through the gooey earth. Its pincers caught the mans calf and the tail arched up to strike.
The soldier shouted in terror and brought his long sword down sideways, crushing the scorpion against his boot. The creatures sting stayed in the leather, still twitching even though itd been torn from the tail.
Demons! the soldier screamed. Demonsre coming out of the ground!
He slashed wildly in front of him. Probably hed imagined that a waterlogged furrow was moving, because the unnatural clarity of Sharinas vision didnt indicate any danger where the blade splashed muck.
Instead of assuming that his sword didnt kill another scorpion because there was no scorpion present, the soldier turned with a despairing cry. The bundle of brush on his back wobbled as he ran, forgotten in his panic.
Hes not a coward, Liane whispered in sick horror. Hes from Lord Waldrons personal regiment and theyve been fighting all day. Its the darkness and the fog, thats all....
Shes probably right, Sharina thought. But conditions are never going to be better than they are tonight, and tonight is a disaster.
Double gestured with his athame, drawing back the apparent viewpoint so that his audience could see the panorama of the attack. Here and there a bonfire blazed, but it seemed to Sharina that some had been lighted at a distance from the hellplants instead of being laid up against the creatures as intended.
The troops were retreating in more or less order all across the plain. Generally less order. They couldnt see their attackers, and the paddle-legged scorpions were as agile as seals in the flooded field.
A circle of dismounted cavalry kept good discipline. Every other man had a torch made from the faggots they carried. With those for light, the other half of the squadron stabbed and cut at the scorpions curling toward them from any direction.
Lord Waldron was part of the defensive circle, not within it protected by his troops. His sword dripped with the ichor of at least one scorpion, and his chief aides stood to either side with torches.
But even these men were pulling back to the temporary safety of the hills from which theyd sallied. In the morning the hellplants would attack again, and more of the creatures would come from the sea, as surely as the tide and the sunrise.
The lens faded, then regained clarity as it shrank to half its size.
Lamsucho! Double said in a high-pitched snarl. He sliced his athame through the air, wiping the lens away. The oil lamp blazed, seemingly brighter than itd been before the incantation darkened it to Sharinas eyes.
You have seen! Double said. The strain of his art mustve greatly weakened him, but only those familiar with wizardry wouldve seen that beneath Doubles bravado. You have seen human strength against the Green Woman.
What do you offer instead, milord? said Liane. Her face was calm, her voice cool. She was poised lady to every hairs breadth of her body, and that too was bravado.
In the morning I will show you, said Double. First I will destroy the Green Womans minions, then I will destroy her. I will be God!
One thing at a time, Lord Wizard, Sharina said. Her mind was as hard as glass. One thing at a time....
Cashel stood on ground covered with leaf litter; the forest around him was silent. Winter had stripped the trees of foliage, but a swath of them had been blasted to dead gray stumps by something more sudden than the cold.
Protas let go of Cashels belt and stepped away. He cleared his throat. Cashel guessed he was embarrassed to be frightened when the boulder they stood on seemed to fall away.
Its cold here, Protas said formally. He took off the crown and polished the big jewel on his sleeve; just to have something to do with his hands, Cashel supposed. Do we just wait, Cashel, or...?
I dont know which way wed go if we walked on ourselves, Cashel said quietly. This landscape was nothing like the one theyd left. The shape of the land was different from where theyd been, not just one being sun-baked waste and this a forest late in the year.
The boy was right about it being cold, though for a matter of pride he hadnt hugged his arms around his thin tunic to cover himself from the wind. Above, the sky was gray with streaks of pale blue; a winter sky, promising worse in the future if not now, not quite now. A flock got restive and peevish in this weather, though you had to know sheep pretty well to realize they were in a bad mood.
Cashel tapped the ground with his bare toes. Leaves rustled slickly; the soil beneath was firm but not frozen. He and Protas were just standing here instead of there in the place where the trees were running toward them.
He focused on the forest as a whole again instead of the dirt at his feet, though he hadnt ever really lost track of the general landscape; a shepherd doesnt dare do that. These trees, even the ones that were still alive, werent attacking anybody. It was a terrible waste of timber to smash so many trees this way and just leave them scattered about.
Something was jingling toward them through the trees. Cashel turned and faced the sound, his staff lifted. It wasnt loud, but it sure wasnt trying not to be heard.
Without being told, Protas stepped to where he wouldnt be in the way. Is somebody driving a carriage through the woods? he asked. It sounds like harness, almost.
Hello there! Cashel called to the bare trunks. Im Cashel or-Kenset and Im just passing through!
From the sound being so slight he figured it must be far off, but around the shattered trunk of a chestnut came
Thats a helmet! said Protas. Its rolling along the ground!
That wasnt quite true: the helmet was walking on little jointed metal legs, and it had two short arms besides. One held a butcher knife, notched from cutting things it shouldnt have been used on.
Hello? Cashel said again, not so loud as before. He started spinning his staff, not hostile exactly but bringing it into motion in case he needed to use it suddenly.
He wasnt a bit surprised to see little dustings of blue wizardlight trail off behind the butt caps. His skind been prickling ever since he and Protas stood with Cervoran back in the palace.
Hello yourself, the helmet said in a voice that seemed to come from the grating under the front of the flared brim. Since youve been fool enough to come here, Im the poor devil tasked to guide you out again.
It gave a nasty laugh and added, Poor devil indeed!
The helmet sounded angry but not angry at anything in particular. Cashel relaxed a little and smiled to find something familiar in this strange place. He knew a number of people who acted that way too, waving their ill temper like a flag they were proud of.
Thank you, then, he said politely. Im Cashel and this is Protas. Well be out of your way as soon as you show us how.
Come along, the helmet said. Itd kept on walking as it talked, but it wasnt coming toward them Cashel realized. It trundled past, heading for a goal that theyd been standing in the path to. And be ready to hide if I tell you to. It isnt far, but it could take your whole life to get there if were unlucky.
Cashel motioned Protas ahead of him and walked along at the rear himself, a trifle to the left of the line their guide was taking. He didnt have to run to keep up but those little legs clinked and jingled along like a centipedes. The helmet covered ground faster than hed figured it could.
There wasnt a path but the going wasnt too bad. In summer the trees shaded out undergrowth, so the saplings they came across were spindly and easy to push aside. The worst trouble was stones covered with leaves, slippery and easy to stub your foot on if you werent used to it.
Protas wasnt used to it, but he never quite fell on his face and he didnt complain. The boy didnt know a lot of things, but he made a better companion than plenty of folk who might notve stumbled so much.
The helmet was muttering. To itself, Cashel figured, but then in a louder voice it said, You, boy! You have the Great Talisman. Why have you come to this benighted Hell?
Were passing through, Master Helmet, said Protas easily. Do you get many visitors to your world?
He was the funniest combination of little boy and gracious prince. It was the prince who seemed to do most of the talking to strangers.
Visitors! grated the helmet. No, we dont get many visitors, boy! No one comes here but fools and men who like to kill more than they want to live. Or those who want to die, of course. Which are you, eh?
Ive been called a fool often enough, said Cashel, figuring it was time for him to take over. Their guide wasnt talking, he was pushing, and if there was pushing to be done then it wasnt for a boy to take it unaided while Cashel was around. The folks who called me that maybe were right, but looking back on it they werent themselves people Id trust if they said the sun would rise.
He cleared his throat. And were not either of the other two things, he went on. Though if somebody figures he just has to have a fight, Ill give him one.
Faugh, muttered the helmet, suddenly tired and dejected instead of angry the way hed been from the first. Im a fool myself, so why should I complain about what you two do?
Theyd been going more or less uphill ever since they met their guide, not steep but noticeable. Because of the slope there were more bare rocks poking out; the helmets feet clicked and sparked on them, which set things ringing inside its body too. That was what Cashel and Protasd heard coming toward them like a miniature carriage.
The trees in this stretch werent knocked about like the ones were back where theyd met their guide. A lot of them were pines on this thin soil, but there were near as many chestnuts, some of them huge trees with boles thicker than Cashel standing with his arms spread straight out to either side.
Cashel heard a buzzing that seemed to come from the treetops. He looked up, trying to find the source. It was way too late in the year for bees to be swarming, and there wasnt anything else that
The helmet turned lizard-quick and said, Stand against a tree trunk and dont move! Dont hide, just get against a tree. Theyll see movement, but youre all right if you keep still!
Protas opened his mouth to ask a question. Cashel gripped him by the shoulder and backed against a big spruce whose branches didnt start till several times Cashels own height up the trunk. He didnt know what was going on, but he didnt doubt that theyd be better off doing what they were told just now instead of arguing about it.
The helmet hunkered down among the rocks, drawing in its legs like a box turtle closing up. It held the blade of the butcher knife under its body.
When Cashel was sure the boy wasnt going to jump he relaxed his grip, though he didnt move his arm away. Protas swallowed stiffly, but he didnt so much as turn his head. There was lots of things the boy didnt understand because he hadnt been raised in places where those sorts of things happened, but he was a quick learner. That was certain sure.
The noise was getting louder. Cashel didnt move, just waited, and sure enough something high up in the air swam into sight. It looked a lot like a white bird, but it was the size of a ship and its stubby wings were rigged as sails. Black smoke oozed from the birds open beak, rising only with difficulty.
Cashel couldnt tell for surethe bird was near as high as the cloudsbut it looked like people in armor stood in stood in the open back half of the body. He thought about their guide. There was armor, anyway, and maybe it had people in it.
As Cashel watched, the wings canted and the creature started to come about. The figures in the stern turned also, raising round metal shields. They shouted in ringing, angry voices, too thinned by distance for Cashel to understand the words.
Dont move, the helmet grated. On your lives, dont move!
The bird was silent except for the creaking of cordage and the cries of the crew. The buzzing didnt come from it, so
Three saucers with silvery wings burred down from the clouds, curving toward the bird. In the belly of each saucer rode what looked like a man-sized frog holding a lance. The frogs were trying to point their lances toward the bird, but as they gestured their mounts wobbled awkwardly.
The leading saucers almost flew into each other. As they jerked apart wildly, flame shot from the birds beak in a great, arching jet that briefly enveloped the third saucer that trailed the others. The wings melted like ice in a furnace.
The saucer flopped onto its back and the frog tumbled out, blackened and burning. From its wide mouth came a scream like steam jetting from under a pot lid. The birds crew shouted in triumph.
One of the surviving saucers dived away, but the other looped up over the bird. The rider was actually upside down when his lance sent a bolt of crackling lightning into the open back. Several armored crewmen flew apart, helmets and segments of limbs spinning away from the bird in smoking arcs.
The survivors sent arrows sailing after their attacker. They didnt hit the rider, but at least one stuck in the saucers glittering gossamer wing.
The bird was rising. Its outlines blurred in the overcast, then faded entirely. For a time Cashel could still hear the buzzing sound, but the saucers didnt come into sight again. At last the sky fell silent.
We can go on now, the helmet said. And quicklywe were lucky this time that they stayed high. You saw in the valley what happens when they fight closer to the ground!
Aye, we did, Cashel said. He understood the blasted trees, now.
You mean that we might have been hurt by accident if the ships had stuck the forest instead of each other, Master Helmet? Protas said.
The route they were following was steeper than itd been. Sometimes it was simply steep, places where Cashel used the quarterstaff as a brace to lift him up to the next firm footing. The helmet flowed over whatever was in the way like a centipede climbing a wall, not slowing down a bit. Protas scrambled along right behind it, putting a hand down for a grip whenever he needed to.
No, I dont mean that, boy! the helmet said. I mean if theyd been lower they mightve seen usand theyd have killed us if they had. Youre easier prey than their usual enemies, you see. Perhaps you think the talisman would save youand perhaps youre right, it would. But it wouldnt help me!
Or me either, it sounds like, Cashel thought. Well, he hadnt expected their guide was the sort who worried much about what happened to other people. Other people if you wanted to call a walking helmet a person, that is.
The top of the ridge was a bald with only small plants clinging in crevices filled with leaf litter. Part of it was bare even of that: a blast of fire had scoured not only the surface but fused the rock to a glassy polish. Half caught in that but untouched by heat thatd melted dense granite on both sides of the line was a star with as many points as the fingers of one hand.
Stand in the pentacle, the helmet ordered. And be quick about it. Theres no cover here, and if they see me theyll hunt me down even if I get back into the forest.
The wind whipping up the back side of the bald was fierce, strong enough that even Cashel had to lean into it to walk to the center of the star. Cashel put his left arm around Protas; the boyd done all right with the wind, but his trouser legs and the hem of his tunic were flapping fiercely.
Master Helmet? Cashel said. What are they fighting about? The frogs and the folk in the bird?
Fighting about? said the helmet. Theres no about. They fight to fight, thats all. Its the same as in your world.
No sir! said Cashel, surprised at how hot that made him. Theres fighting on our world, thats so; but theres good and evil fighting at the bottom of it!
Do you think so? the helmet said. Well, Im a fool too, just as I said.
Laughing in a nasty, knowing way it pointed the jagged butcher knife toward Cashel and Protas. Light as red as a sunstruck ruby sprang from the blade. Again solid stone vanished from under Cashels feet, and he felt the illusion of falling through a starless void.
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