Hawkmistress!
A
DARKOVER NOVEL by Marion Zimmer Bradley
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The
soldier's drinking song in Part III was suggested by the Ballad of Arilinn
Tower, a "folk song" written by Bettina Helms and copyright 1979. The
song Aldones Bless the Human Elbow was suggested by a folk song by that most
prolific of authors, Anonymous; with a bow to the Berkeley-based folk-song trio
OAK, ASH AND THORN and their manager Sharon Green.
Although
Hawkmistress!, like most of the Darkover novels, is complete in itself,
requiring no knowledge of the other books in the series, those who follow the
chronicles of Darkover may wish to know that it comes during the time of the
Hundred Kingdoms, between Stormqueen and Two to Conquer.
-M.z.B.
Arrow
Books Limited 17-21 Conway Street, London W1P 6JD
An
imprint of the Hutchinson Publishing Group
London
Melbourne Sydney Auckland Johannesburg and agencies throughout the world
First
published in Great Britain 1985 © Marion Zimmer Bradley 1982
This
book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or
otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the
publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in
which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition
being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
Printed
and bound in Great Britain by Anchor Brendon Limited, Tiptree, Essex
ISBN
0 09 934990 6
CONTENTS
Book One:
FALCONSWARD, in the Kilghard Hills
Romilly was so weary that she could hardly stand on her feet.
It
was dark in the mews, with no light but a carefully shielded lantern hanging
from one rafter; but the eyes of the hawk were as bright, as untamed and filled
with rage as ever. No, Romilly reminded herself; not rage alone, but terror.
She
is afraid. She does not hate me; she is only afraid.
She
could feel it all inside herself, that terror which pounded behind the rage,
until she hardly knew which was herself-weary, her eyes burning, ready to fall
into the dirty straw in an exhausted heap-and what was flooding into her mind
from the brain of the hawk; hatred, fear, a wild frenzy of hunger for blood and
for freedom.
Even
as Romilly pulled the small sharp knife from her belt, and carefully cut a
piece from the carcass placed conveniently near, she was shaking with the
effort not to strike out, to pull away in a frenzy from the strap that held
her-no, not her, held the hawk-to the falcon-block; merciless
leathers, cutting her feet-
The
hawk bated, wings flapping and thrashing, and Romilly jerked, with a convulsive
reflex action, and the strip of raw meat fell into the straw. Romilly felt the
struggle inside herself, the fury and frenzy of terror, as if the leather lines holding
the big bird to the block were tying her too, cutting into her feet in agony .
. . she tried to bend, to search for the meat calmly, but the emotions of the
hawk, flooding into her mind, were too much for her. She flung her hands over
her eyes and moaned aloud, letting it all become part of her, the crashing
frenzy of wings, beating, beating . . . once, the first time this had happened
to her, more than a year ago, she had run out of the mews in panic, running and
running until she stumbled and skidded and fell, a hand's breadth from the
edges of the crags that tumbled down from Castle Falconsward to the very rocks
of the Kadarin far below.
She
must not let it go so deep into her mind, she must remember that she was human,
was Romilly MacAran . . . she forced her breathing back to calm, remembering
the words of the young leronis who had talked with her, briefly and in
secret, before returning to Tramontana Tower.
You
have a rare gift, child-one
of the rarest of the gifts called laran. I do not know why your father
is so bitter, why he will not let you and your sister and brothers be tested
and trained to the use of these gifts-surely he must know that an
untrained telepath is a menace to herself and to everyone around her; he
himself has the gift in full measure!
Romilly
knew; and she suspected the leronis knew, too, but out of loyalty to her
father she would not speak of it outside the family, and the leronis was
a stranger, after all; the MacAran had given her hospitality, as with any
guest, but had coldly refused the purpose of the woman's visit, to test the
children of Falconsward for laran gifts.
"You
are my guest, Domna Marelie, but I have lost one son to the accursed
Towers which blight our land and lure the sons of honest men-aye, and their
daughters too-from home and family loyalties! You may shelter beneath this roof
while the storm lasts, and have all that belongs to a guest in honor; but keep
your prying hands from the minds of my children!"
Lost
one son to the accursed Towers, Romilly thought, remembering her brother Ruyven who had
fled to Neskaya Tower, across the Kadarin, four years ago. And like to lose
another, for even I can see that Darren is more fit for the Tower or the
monastery of Nevarsin, than for the Heirship to Falconsward. Darren would
have been still in Nevarsin, as custom demanded of a nobleman's son in the hill
country, and had wished to remain; but, obedient to their father's will,
returned to his duties as the Hen.
How
could Ruyven desert his brother that way? Darren cannot be Heir to Falconsward
without his brother at his side. There was less than a year between the brothers, and
they had always clung together as if they were twin-born; but they had gone
together to Nevarsin, and only Darren had returned; Ruyven, he told their
father, had gone to the Tower. Ruyven had sent a message, which only their
father had read; but then he had flung it into the midden and from that moment
he had never spoken Ruyven's name, and forbidden any other to speak it
"I
have but two sons," he said, his face like stone. "And one is in the
monastery and the other at his mother's knee." The leronis Marelie
had frowned as she remembered, and said to Romilly, "I did my best, child,
but he would not hear of it; so you must do the best you can to master your
gift, or it will master you. And I can help you but little in what time I have;
and I am sure that if he knew I had spoken to you like this, he would not
shelter me this night. But I dare not leave you without some protection when
your laran wakens. You are alone with it, and it will not be easy to
master it alone, but it is not impossible, for I know of a few who have done
it, your brother among them."
"You
know my brother!" Romilly whispered.
"I
know him, child-who, think you, sent me here to speak with you? You must not
think he deserted you without cause," Marelie added gently, as Romilly's
lips tightened, "He loves you well; he loves your father, too. But a
cagebird cannot be a falcon, and a falcon cannot be a kyorebni. To
return hither, to live his life without full use of his laran-that would
be death for him, Romilly; can you understand? It would be like being made deaf
and blind, without the company of his own kind."
"But
what can this laran be, that he would forsake us all for it?"
Romilly had cried, and Marelie had only looked sad.
"You
will know that when your own laran wakens, my child."
And
Romilly had cried out, "I hate laran! And I hate the Towers! They
stole Ruyven from us!" and she had turned away, refusing to speak again to
Marelie; and the leronis had sighed and said, "I cannot fault you
for loyalty to your father, my child," and gone away to the room assigned
to her, and departed the next morning, without further speech with Romilly.
That
had been two years ago, and Romilly had tried to put it from her mind; but in
this last year she had begun to realize that she had the Gift of the MacArans
in fullest measure-that strangeness in her mind which could enter into the mind
of hawk, or hound, or horse, or any animal, and had begun to wish that she
could have spoken with the leronis about it...
But
that was not even to be thought about. I may have laran, she told
herself again and again, but never would I abandon home and family for
something of that sort!
So
she had struggled to master it alone; and now she forced herself to be calm, to
breathe quietly, and felt the calming effect of the breathing composing her
mind as well and even soothing, a little, the raging fury of the hawk; the
chained bird was motionless, and the waiting girl knew that she was Romilly
again, not a chained thing struggling in a frenzy to be free of the biting
jesses....
Slowly
she picked that one bit of information out of the madness, of fear and frenzy. The
jesses are too tight. They hurt her. She bent, trying to send out soothing
waves of calm all around her, into the mind of the hawk-but she is too mad
with hunger and terror to understand, or she would be quiet and know I mean her
no harm. She bent and tugged at the slitted straps which were wound about
the hawk's legs. At the very back of her mind, carefully blanked out behind the
soothing thoughts she was trying to send out to the hawk, Romilly's own fear
struggled against what she was doing-once she had seen a young hawker lose an
eye by getting too close to a frightened bird's beak-but she commanded the feat
to be quiet and not interfere with what she had to do-if the hawk was in pain,
the frenzy and fear would be worse, too.
She
fumbled one-handed in the semidarkness, and blessed the persevering practice
which had taught her all the falconer's knots, blindfolded and one-handed; old
Davin had emphasized that, again and again, most of the time you will be in
a dark mews, and one hand will be busy about your hawk. And so, hour after
hour, she had tightened and loosened, tied and untied these same knots on twig
after twig before ever she was let near the thin legs of any bird. The leather
was damp with the sweat of her fingers, but she managed to loosen it
slightly-not too much or the bird would be out of the jesses and would fly
free, perhaps breaking her wings inside the walls of the mews, but loose enough
so that it was no longer cutting into the leathery skin of the upper leg. Then
she bent again and fumbled in the straw for the strip of meat, brushing the
dirt from it. She knew it did not matter too much-birds, she knew, had to
swallow dirt and stones to grind up their food inside their crops-but the dirty
bits of straw clinging to the meat revolted her and she picked them
fastidiously free and, once again, held out her gloved hand to the hawk on the
block. Would the bird ever feed from her hand? Well, she must simply stay here
until hunger overcame fear and the bird took the meat, or they would lose this
hawk, too. And Romilly had resolved this would not happen.
She
was glad, now, that she had let the other bird go. At first she had it in her
mind, when she had found old Davin tossing and moaning with the summer fever,
that she could save both of the hawks he had taken three days before. He had
told her to let them both go, or they would starve, for they would not yet take
food from any human hand. When he had captured them, he had promised Romilly
that she should have the training of one of them while he was busied with the
other. But then the fever had come to Falconsward, and when he had taken the
sickness, he had told her to release them both-there would be other seasons,
other hawks.
But
they were valuable birds, the finest verrin hawks he had taken for many
seasons. Loosing the larger of the two, Romilly had known Davin was right. A
hawk like this was all but priceless-King Carolin in Carcosa has no finer
birds, Davin had said, and he should know; Romilly's grandfather had been
hawkmaster to the exiled King Carolin before the rebellion which had sent
Carolin into the Hellers and probably ,to death, and the usurper Rakhal had
sent most of Carolin's men to their own estates, surrounding himself with men
he could trust.
It
had been his own loss; Romilly's grandfather was known from the Kadarin to the
Sea of Dalereuth as the finest man with hawks in the Kilghard Hills, and he had
taught all his arts to Mikhail, now The MacAran, and to his commoner cousin
Davin Hawkmaster. Verrin hawks, taken full-grown in the wild, were more
stubborn than hatchlings reared to handling; a bird caught wild might let
itself starve before it would take food from the hand, and better it should fly
free to hatch others of the same fine breed, than die of fear and hunger in the
mews, untamed.
So
Romilly, with regret, had taken the larger of the birds from the mews, and
slipped the jesses from the leathery skin of the leg; and, behind the stables,
had climbed to a high rock and let her fly free. Her eyes had blurred with
tears as she watched the falcon climb out of sight, and deep within her,
something had flown with the hawk, in the wild ecstasy of rising, spiraling,
free, free ... for an instant Romilly had seen the dizzying panorama of
Castle Falconsward lying below, deep ravines filled to the brim with forest,
and far away a white shape, glimmering, that she knew to be Hali Tower on the
shores of the Lake . . . was her brother there, even now? . . . and then
she was alone again, shivering with the cold on the high rock, and her eyes
were dazzled from staring into the light, and the hawk was gone.
She
had returned to the mews, and her hand was already outstretched to take the
other one and free it as well, but then the hawk's eyes had met her own for a
moment, and there had been an instant when she knew, a strong and dizzying
knowledge within her, I can tame this one, I need not let her go, I can
master her.
The
fever which had come to the castle and struck down Davin was almost her friend.
On any ordinary day, Romilly would have had duties and lessons; but the
governess she shared with her younger sister Mallina had a touch of the fever,
too, and was shivering beside the fire in the schoolroom, having given Romilly
permission to go to the stables and ride, or take her lesson-book or her
needlework to the conservatory high in the castle, and study there among the
leaves and flowers-the light still hurt Domna Calinda's eyes. Old Gwennis,
who had been Romilly's nurse when she and her sister were little children, was
busy with Mallina, who had a touch of fever, though she was not dangerously
ill. And the Lady Luciella, their stepmother, would not stir from the side of
nine-year-old Rael, for he had the fever in its most dangerous form, the
debilitating sweats and inability to swallow.
So
Romilly had promised herself a delicious day of freedom in stables and
hawk-house-was Domna Calinda really enough of a fool to think she would
spend a day free of lessons over her stupid lesson-book or needlework? But she
had found Davin, too, sick of the fever, and he had welcomed her coming-his
apprentice was not yet skilled enough to go near the untrained birds, though he
was good enough to feed the others and clean the mews-and so he had ordered
Romilly to release them both. And she had started to obey.
But
this hawk was hers! Never mind that it sat on its block, angry and
sullen, red eyes veiled with rage and terror, bating wildly at the slightest
movement near her, the wings exploding in the wild frenzy of flapping and
thrashing; it was hers, and soon or late, it would know of the bond between
them.
But
she had known it would be neither quick nor easy. She had reared eyasses-young
birds hatched in the mews or captured still helpless, accustomed before they
were feathered to feed from a hand or glove. But this hawk had learned to fly,
to hunt and feed itself in the wild; they were better hunters than hawks reared
in captivity, but harder to tame; two out of five such birds, more or less,
would let themselves die of hunger before they would feed. The thought that
this could happen to her hawk was a dread Romilly refused to face.
Somehow, she would, she must bridge the gulf between them.
The
falcon bated again, thrashing furious wings, and Romilly struggled to maintain
the sense of herself, not merging into the terror and fury of the angry
bird, at the same time trying to send out waves of calm. I will not hurt
you, lovely one. See, here is food. But it ignored the signal, flapping
angrily, and Romilly struggled hard not to shrink back in terror, not to be
overcome with the flooding, surging waves of rage and terror she could feel
radiating from the chained bird.
Surely,
this time, the beating wings had flapped into quiet sooner than before? The
falcon was tiring. Was it growing weaker, would it fight its way down into
death and exhaustion before it was ready to surrender and feed from the
gauntlet? Romilly had lost track of time, but as the hawk quieted and her brain
cleared, so that she knew again that she was Romilly and not the frenzied bird,
her breathing quieted again and she let the gauntlet slip for a moment from her
hand. Her wrist and shoulder felt as if they were going to drop off, but she
was not sure whether it was because the gauntlet was too heavy for her, (she
had spent hours holding it at arm's length, enduring the pain of cramped
muscles and tension, to accustom herself to its weight) or whether it had
something to do with the frenzied beating of her wings . . . no. No, she must
remember which was herself, which the hawk. She leaned back against the rough
wall behind her, half-closing her eyes. She was almost asleep on her feet. But
she must not sleep, nor move.
You
don't leave a hawk at this stage, Davin had told her. Not for a moment. She
remembered asking, when she was small, not even to eat? And he had snorted,
"If it comes to that, you can go without food and water longer than a hawk
can; if you can't out-wait a hawk you're taming, you have no business around
one."
But
he had been speaking of himself. It had not occurred to him, then, that a girl
could tame a hawk or wish to. He had indulged her wish to learn all the arts of
the falconer- after all, the birds might one day be hers, even though she had
two older brothers; it would not be the first time Falconsward had passed down
through the female line, from a strong husband to the woman heir. Nor was it
unknown for a woman to ride out, with a docile and well-trained bird; even
Romilly's stepmother had been known to ride forth, a delicately trained bird,
no larger than a pigeon, adorning her wrist like a rare jewel. Although
Luciella would never have touched one of the verrin hawks, and the
thought that her stepdaughter would wish to do so had never entered her mind.
But
why not? Romilly
asked herself in a rage. I was born with the MacAran Gift; the laran which
would give me mastery over hawk or horse or hound. Not laran, I will
never admit that I have that evil curse of the Hastur-kinfolk; but the ancient
Gift of the MacArans . . . I have a right to that, it is not laran, not
really. . . . I may be a woman, but I am as much a MacAran as my brothers!
Again
she stepped toward the hawk, the meat extended on the gauntlet, but the hawk
thrust up its head and the beady eyes stared coldly at Romilly; it moved away,
with a little hop, as far away as the dimensions of the block allowed. She
could sense that the jesses were no longer giving it pain. She murmured small
sounds of reassurance, and her own hunger came surging up inside her. She
should have brought some food in her pocket for herself, she had seen Davin,
often enough, thrust cold meats and bread into his pouch so that he could munch
on something while he waited out the long stay with a hawk. If only she could
sneak away for a moment to the kitchen or pantry-and to the privy, too; her
bladder ached with tension. Her father or brothers could have stepped away,
turned aside for a moment, undone breeches and relieved themselves against the
wall, but Romilly, though she contemplated it for a moment, would have had too
many strings and fastenings to undo, even though she was wearing a pair of
Ruyven's old breeches. But she sighed, staying where she was.
If
you can't wait out a hawk, Davin
had said, you have no business around one. That was the only real
disadvantage she could think of for a girl, around the stables, and this was
the first time it had been any real disadvantage for her.
You're
hungry too, she
said silently to the hawk, come on, here's food, just because I'm hungry
doesn't mean you can't eat, you stubborn thing, you! But the hawk made no
move to touch the food. It moved a little, and for a moment Romilly feared it
would explode into another of those wild bursts of bating. But it stayed still,
and after a moment she relaxed into the motionless quiet of her vigil.
When
my brothers were my age, it was taken for granted-a MacAran son should train his
own hound, his own horse, his own hawk. Even Rael, he is only nine, but already
Father insists he shall teach his dogs manners. When she had been
younger-before Ruyven had left them, before Darren was sent to Nevarsin-her
father had been proud to let Romilly work with horses and hounds.
He
used to say; Romilly's a MacAran, she has the Gift; there's no horse she can't
ride, no dog she can't make friends with, the very bitches come and whelp in
her lap. He was proud of me. He used to tell Ruyven and Darren that I would be
a better MacAran than either of them, tell them to watch my way with a horse.
But
now-now
it makes him angry.
Since
Ruyven had gone, Romilly had been sternly turned over to her stepmother,
expected to stay indoors, to "behave like a lady." She was now almost
fifteen; her younger sister Mallina had already begun dressing her hair with a
woman's butterfly-clasp, Mallina was content to sit and learn embroidery
stitches, to ride decorously in a lady's saddle, to play with little stupid
lap-dogs instead of the sensible herding-dogs and working-dogs around the
pastures and stables. Mallina had grown into a fool, and the dreadful thing was
that their father preferred her as a fool and wished audibly that Romilly would
emulate her.
Never.
I'd rather be dead than stay inside the house all the time and stitch like a
lady. Mallina used to ride well, and now she's like Luciella, soft and flabby,
she startles away when a horse moves its head near her, she couldn't ride for
half an hour at a good gallop without falling off gasping like a fish in a
tree, and now, like Luciella, she simpers and twitters, and the worst thing is,
Father likes them that way!
There
was a little stir at the far end of the hawk-house, and one of the eyasses
there screamed, the wild screaming sound of an untrained fledgling that scents
food. The sound sent Romilly's hawk into a wild explosion of bating, and
Romilly, one with the mad flapping of wings, the fierce hunger gripping like
claws in her belly, knew that the hawkmaster's boy had come into the hawk-house
to feed the other birds. He went from one to another, slowly, muttering to
them, and Romilly knew it was near sunset; she had been there since
mid-morning. He finished his work and raised his head to see her.
"Mistress
Romilly! What are you doing here, damisela?"
At
his voice the hawk bated again, and Romilly felt again the dreadful ache, as if
her hands and arms would drop off into the straw. She struggled to keep herself
free of frenzy, fear, anger, blood-lust-blood bursting forth, exploding into
her mouth under tearing beak and talons ... and forced herself to the low
tone that would not further terrify the frenzied bird.
"I
am manning this hawk. Go away, Ker, your work is finished and you will frighten
her."
"But
I heard Davin say the hawk's to be released, and The MacAran's in a rage about
it," Ker mumbled. "He didna' want to lose the verrin birds,
and he's threatened Davin wi' being turned off, old man that he is, if he loses
them-"
"Well,
Father's not going to lose this one, unless you frighten her out of her
senses," Romilly said crisply, "Go away, Ker, before she bates again-"
for she could feel the trembling build in the bird's body and mind, she felt if
that flapping frenzy exploded again she would collapse with exhaustion, scream
herself in fury and frustration. It made her voice sharp. "Go away!"
Her
own agitation communicated itself to the bird; it burst into the frenzied
flapping of wings again, surges of hatred and terror coming and going,
threatening to drown all her own awareness and identity. She fought it,
silently, trying to cling to calm, to send out calm to the terrified bird. There,
there, lovely one, no one shall harm you, see, here is food , . . and when
she knew who or where she was again, the boy had gone.
He
had left the door open, and there was a draught of cold air from the evening
mists; and soon the night's rain or snow would start to fall-damn the wretch!
She stole for a few seconds on tiptoe away from the block to draw the door
closed-it would avail her nothing to tame this hawk if all the birds died with
the cold! Once away from the bird's side, she began to wonder what she was
doing here and why. How was it that she thought that she, a young woman, could
accomplish something at which even the skilled Davin failed two out of five
times? She should have told the boy that the bird was at the end of exhaustion,
have him come and take over ... she had seen what he could do with a wild,
raging, exhausted stallion from the wild herds of the ravines and outer hills.
An hour, maybe two, with her father at one end of a lunge line and the stallion
at the other, and he would come to the bridle, lower his big head and rub it
against The MacAran's chest.. . surely he could still save this bird, too. She
was weary and cold and exhausted, she longed for the old days when she could
climb into her father's lap and tell him all her troubles....
Then
the voice struck through to her, angry and cold-but there was tenderness in it
too; the voice of Mikhail, lord of Falconsward, The MacAran.
"Romilly!"
he said, shocked but compassionate, "Daughter, what do you think you are
doing? This is no task for a maiden, manning a verrin hawk! I gave
orders to that wretch Davin and he lies slack in bed while one hawk is
mishandled by a child, and the other, I doubt not, starved on its
block...."
Romilly
could hardly speak through the tears threatening to surge up inside her and
break her control.
"The
other hawk flies free to hatch more of her kind," she said, "I
released her myself at dawn. And this one has not been mishandled,
Father-"
At
the words and movement the hawk bated again, more fiercely than before, and
Romilly gasped, struggling to keep her sense of self against the fury of
thrashing wings, the hunger, the blood-lust, the frenzy to break free, fly
free, dash itself to death against the dark enclosing beams .. . but it subsided,
and Romilly, crooning to the bird, sensed another mind touching hers, sending
out waves of calm . . . so that's how Father does it, she thought with a
corner of her mind, brushed a dripping lock of hair out of her eyes and stepped
toward the hawk again.
Here
is food, come and eat...
nausea rushed through her stomach at the smell and sight of the dead meat on
the gauntlet. Yes, hawks feed on fresh-caught food, they must be tamed by
starvation into feeding on carrion....
Abruptly
the touching of minds, girl, man, hawk, broke, and Mikhail of MacAran said
harshly, "Romilly, what am I to do with you, girl? You have no business
here in the hawk-house; it is no work for a lady." His voice softened.
"No doubt Davin put you up to this; and I'll deal with him. Leave the meat
and go, Romilly. Sometimes a hawk will feed from an empty block when she's
hungry enough, and if she does we can keep her; if not, Davin can release her
tomorrow, or that boy of his can do something for once to earn his porridge!
It's too late tonight for her to fly. She won't die, and if she does, it won't
be the first hawk we've lost. Go in, Romilly, get a bath and go to your bed.
Leave the hawks to the hawkmaster and his boy-that's why they're here, love, my
little girl doesn't need to do this. Go in the house, Romi, child."
She
swallowed hard, feeling tears break through.
"Father,
please," she begged, "I'm sure I can tame her. Let me stay, I beg of
you."
"Zandru's
hells," the MacAran swore, "If but one of your brothers had your
strength and skill, girl! But I'll not have it said that my daughters must work
in mews and stable! Get you inside, Romilly, and not another word from
you!"
His
face was angry and implacable; the hawk bated again, at his anger, and Romilly
felt it surging through her too, an explosion of fury, frustration, anger,
terror. She dropped the gauntlet and ran, sobbing with rage, and behind her,
her father strode out of the mews and locked it behind him.
Romilly
went to her room, where she emptied her aching bladder, ate a little bread and
honey and drank a cup of milk from the tray one of the serving-women brought
her; but her mind was still with the chained, suffering, starving hawk in the
mews.
It
would not eat, and soon it would die. It had begun, just a little, to trust Romilly
. . . surely, the last two or three times it had bated, before her father had
disturbed them, it had quieted sooner, feeling her soothing touch. But now it
would surely die.
Romilly
began to draw off her shoes. The MacAran was not to be disobeyed, certainly not
by his daughter. Even Ruyven, six feet tall and almost a man, had never dared
open disobedience until the final break. Romilly, Darren, Mallina-all of them
obeyed his word and seldom dared even a look of defiance; only the youngest,
spoilt little Rael, would sometimes tease and wheedle and coax in the face of
his father's edicts.
In
the next room, past the glass doors separating their chambers, Mallina already
slept in her cot, her pale-red hair and lacy nightgown pale against the pillow.
Lady Calinda had long gone to her bed, and old Gwennis drowsed in a chair
beside the sleeping Mallina; and although Romilly was not glad of her sister's
illness, she was glad that the old nurse was busy about her sister; if she had
seen Romilly in her current state - ruefully, Romilly surveyed her filthy and
sweat-soaked clothes - there would have been an argument, a lecture, trouble.
She
was exhausted, and thought longingly of clean clothes, a bath, her own soft
bed. She had surely done all she could to save the hawk. Perhaps she should
abandon the effort. It might feed from the block; but once it had done that,
though it would not die, it could never be tamed enough to feed from the
hawker's hand or gauntlet, and must be released. Well, let it go then. And if, in
its state of exhaustion and terror, it would not feed from the block, and died
. . . well, hawks had died before this at Falconsward.
But
never one with whom I had gone so deeply into rapport. ...
And
once again, as if she were still standing, exhausted and tense, in the
hawk-house, she felt that furious frenzy building up again . . . even safely
tied to the block, the hawk in her terrified threshing could break her wings .
. . never to fly again, to sit dumb and broken on a perch, or to die ... like
me inside a house, wearing women's clothes and stitching at foolish
embroideries. ...
And
then she knew she would not let it happen that way.
Her
father, she thought with detachment, would be very angry. This time he might
even give her the beating he had threatened last time she disobeyed him. He had
never, yet, laid a hand on her; her governess had spanked her a time or two
when she was very small, but mostly she had been punished with confinement,
with being forbidden to ride, with harsh words or loss of some promised treat
or outing.
This
time he will surely beat me, she thought, and the unfairness surged within her;
I will be beaten because I cannot resign myself to let the poor thing die or
thrash itself to death in terror....
Well,
I shall be beaten then. No one ever died of a beating, I suppose. Romilly knew already that
she was going to defy her father. She shrank from the thought of his rage, even
more than from the imagined blows, but she knew she would never be able to face
herself again if she sat quietly in her chamber and let the hawk die.
She
should have released them both yesterday at dawn, as Davin said. Perhaps she
deserved a beating for that disobedience; but having begun, it would be too
cruel to stop now. At least, Romilly thought, she could understand why she was
being beaten; the hawk would not understand the reasons for the long ordeal
till it was finished. Her father himself had always told her that a good animal
handler never began anything, with hawk or hound or horse, that he could not finish;
it was not fair to a dumb creature who knew nothing of reason.
If, he had told them once, you
break faith with a human being for some reason which seems good to you, you can
at least explain to him or her. But if you break faith with a dumb creature,
you have hurt that creature in a way which is unforgivable, because you can
never make it understand. Never in her life had Romilly heard her father
speak of faith in any religion, or speak of any God except in a curse; but that
time, even as he spoke, she had sensed the depths of his belief and knew that
he spoke from the very depths of his being. She was disobeying him, yes; but in
a deeper sense she was doing what he had taught her to think right; and so,
even if he should beat her for it, he would one day know that what she had done
was both right and necessary.
Romilly
took another swallow of water - she could face hunger, if she must, but thirst
was the real torture; Davin usually kept a water pail within reach when he was
working a hawk, and Romilly had forgotten to set a pail and dipper within
reach. Then she slipped quietly out of the room. With luck, the hawk would
"break" before dawn - would feed from the gauntlet, and sleep. This
interruption might lose the hawk, she knew - if it did not soon feed, it would
die - but at least she would know that she, who had confined it there, had not
been the one to break faith and abandon it to death.
She
had already left the chamber when she turned and went back for her
flint-and-steel lighter; doubtless, her father or the hawkmaster's boy would
have extinguished the lantern and she would have to relight it. Gwennis, in the
room beyond the glass doors, stirred and yawned, and Romilly froze, but the
nurse only bent to feel Mallina's forehead to see if her fever had broken,
sighed, and settled back in her chair without a glance in Romilly's direction.
On
noiseless feet, she crept down the stairs.
Even
the dogs were sleeping. Two of the great grey-brown hounds called Rousers were
asleep right across the doorway; they were not fierce dogs, and would not bite
or attack even an intruder unless he offered to hurt them, but they were noisy
creatures, and in their friendly, noisy barking, their function was to rouse
the household against intruder or friend. But Romilly had known both dogs since
they were whelped, had given them their first solid tidbits when they left off
sucking their dam; she shoved them slightly away from the door, and the dogs,
feeling a familiar and beloved hand, only snuffled a little in their sleep and
let her pass.
The
light in the hawk-house had indeed been extinguished. As she stepped across the
doorsill she thought of an old ballad her own mother had sung in her childhood,
of how, at night, the birds talked among themselves when no human creature was
near. She found she was walking tip-toe, half expecting to overhear what they
might be saying. But the birds in the mews where the tame ones were kept were
only hunched forms on the blocks, fast asleep, and she felt from them only a
confused silence.
I
wonder if they are telepathic among themselves, she wondered, if they are aware
of one another's fear or pain? Even the leronis had not been able to
tell her this. Now, she supposed, most of the birds, at least, were head-blind,
without telepathic awareness or laran, or they would all be awake and
restless now; for Romilly could still feel, beating up at her in waves of dread
and fury, of hunger and rage, the emotions of the great verrin hawk.
She
lighted the lamp, with hands that shook. Father had never believed, then, that
it would feed from the block; he certainly knew that no hawk would feed in
darkness. How could he have done that? Even if he was angry with her, Romilly,
he need not have deprived her hawk of its last chance at life.
Now
it was all to do again. She saw the dead meat lying on the block; unpecked,
untouched. The hawk had not fed. The meat was beginning to smell rancid, and
Romilly had to overcome her own revulsion as she handled the dead thing- ugh,
if I were a hawk I wouldn't touch this carrion either.
The
hawk bated again in its frenzy and Romilly stepped closer, crooning, murmuring
calm. And after a few seconds the thrashing wings quieted. Could it be that the
hawk remembered her? Perhaps the interruption had not wholly wrecked her chances.
She slid her hand into the gauntlet, cut a fresh strip of meat from the carcass
and held it out to the bird, but again it seemed that the disgust of the dead
smell was more sickening and overpowering than it had been.
Was
she feeling, then, what the hawk felt? For a moment, in a dizzy wave of
sickness, Romilly met the great yellow-green eyes of the bird, and it seemed to
her that she was badly balanced on some narrow space without any proper place
to stand, unfamiliar leather chafing her ankles, and that some strange and
hateful presence was there, trying to force her to swallow some
revolting filthy mess, absolutely unfit to eat . . . for a split second Romilly
was again a child too young to speak, tied into her high chair and her nurse
was spooning some horrid nasty stuff down her throat and she could only
struggle and scream....
Shaken
and sick, she stepped back, letting the dead carcass fall to the floor. Was that
how the hawk regarded her? She should have let the hawk fly, she could
never live with such hatred . . . do all the animals we master hate us like
that? Why, then, a trainer of horses and hounds is more evil than a molester of
children . . . and he who takes a hawk from the sky, to chain it on a block, he
is no better than a rapist, a violator of women. . . . But the bating,
struggling hawk was off her perch this time, and Romilly moved forward,
patiently adjusting the block so that the hawk could find a secure place to
stand, until it found its feet and balanced securely again.
Then
she stood silent, trying not to trouble the hawk even with breath, while the
battle went on inside her mind. Part of her fought with the chained hawk,
terror and rage contending for place, but Romilly, in her own struggle for
interior calm, filled her mind with the memory of the last time she had hunted
with her own favorite falcon . . . soaring upward with it, striking, and
something inside her remembered clearly that sudden feeling, which in herself
would have been pride and pleasure, as the hawk fed from her glove . . . and
she knew it would have been stronger still if she herself had trained the hawk;
that pleasure in accomplishment, that sense of sudden union with the bird,
would have been deeper still.
And
she had shared the delight, inarticulate, impossible to frame in words, but a
joy deep and swelling, when her favorite bitch brought her puppies to her; the
animal's pleasure at the caress was something like the love she felt for her
own father, her joy and pride at his rare praise. And even though she had felt
the real pain and fear when a young horse struggled against bridle and saddle,
she had shared in the communion and trust between horse and rider, and known it
for real love, too; so that she loved to ride breakneck, knowing she could come
to no harm while the horse carried her, and she let the horse go at her own
pace and pleasure, sharing the delight in the running....
No,
she thought, it is not a violation to teach or train an animal, no more than
when nurse taught me to eat porridge, even though I thought it nasty at first
and wanted nothing but milk; because if she had fed me upon milk and babies'
pap after my teeth were grown, I would have been sickly and weak, and needed
solid food to grow strong. I had to learn even to eat what was good for me, and
to wear clothes even though, no doubt, I would sooner, then, have been wrapped
in my blankets like a swaddled baby! And later I had to learn to cut my meat
with knife and fork instead of gnawing at it with fingers and teeth as an
animal would do. And now I am glad to know all these things.
When
the hawk bated again, Romilly did not withdraw from the fear and terror, but
let herself share it, whispering half aloud, "Trust me, lovely one, you
will fly free again and we will hunt together, you and I, as friends, not as
master and slave, I promise you...."
She
filled her mind with images of soaring free above the trees in sunlight, trying
to open her mind to the memory of the last tune she had hunted; seeing the bird
come spiraling down with its prey, of tearing apart the freshly killed meat so
she could give the bird its share of the kill . . . and again, with an urgency
that made her feel sick, she felt the maddening hunger, the hawk's mind-picture
of striking, fresh blood flowing into her mouth . . . her own human revulsion,
the hawk's hunger, so mingled in her that she hardly knew which was which.
Sensing that hunger, she held out the strip of rabbithorn meat, but now the
smell revolted her as much as the hawk; she felt that she would vomit.
But
you must eat and grow strong, preciosa, she sent out the thought again
and again, feeling the hawk's hunger, her weakening struggles. Preciosa;
that is your name, that is what I will call you, and I want you to eat and grow
strong, Preciosa, so we can hunt together, but first you must trust me and eat.
. . I want you to eat because I love you and I want to share this with you, but
first you must learn to eat from my hand . . . eat, Preciosa, my lovely one, my
darling, my beauty, won't you eat this? I don't want you to die....
Hours,
she felt, must have crawled by while she stood there, tensed into the endless
struggle with the weakening hawk. Every time the frenzied bating was weaker,
the surges of hunger so intense that Romilly's own body cramped with pain. The
hawk's eyes were as bright as ever, as filled with terror, and from those eyes
it all flooded into Romilly, too, in growing despair.
The
hawk was weakening, surely; if she did not feed soon, after all this struggle,
she would die; she had taken no food since she was captured four days ago.
Would she die, still fighting?
Maybe
her father had been right, maybe no woman had the strength for this....
And
then she remembered the moment when she had looked out from the hawk's eyes and
she, Romilly MacAran, had not even been a memory, and she had been something
other than human. Fear and despair flooded her; she saw herself ripping off the
gauntlet, beaten to take up her needlework, letting walls close round her
forever. A prisoner, more a prisoner than the chained hawk, who, at least,
would now and then have a chance to fly,, and to feel again the soaring ecstasy
of flight and freedom....
No.
Rather than live like that, prisoner, she too would let herself die....
No;
there must be a way, if only I can find it.
She
would not surrender, never admit that the hawk had beaten her. She was Romilly
MacAran, born with the MacAran Gift, and she was stronger than any hawk. She
would not let the hawk die ... no, it was not "the hawk" any more, it
was Preciosa, whom she loved, and she would fight for her life even if she must
stand here till they dropped together and died. One more time she reached out,
moving fearlessly into the bird-mind, this time aware fully of herself as a
shadowy and now familiar torture in Preciosa's mind, and the sickening, rank
smell of the meat on the gauntlet ... for a moment she thought Preciosa would
go into another frenzy of bating, but this time the bird bent its head toward
the meat on the glove.
Romilly
held her breath. Yes, yes, eat and grow stronger ... and then Romilly
was overcome by sickness, feeling that she would vomit where she stood from the
sickening rotten smell of the meat.
Now
she wants to eat, she would trust me, but she cannot eat this now; perhaps if
she had taken it before she was so weak, but not now ... she is no carrion
feeder....
Romilly
was overcome by despair. She had brought the freshest food she could find in
the kitchens, but now it was not fresh enough; the hawk was beginning to trust
her, might perhaps have taken food from her gauntlet, if she had brought
something she should actually have managed to swallow without sickness ... a
rat scurried in the straw, and she discovered that she was looking out from the
bird's eyes with real hunger at the little animal....
Dawn
was near. In the garden outside she heard the chirp of a sleepy wraithbird, and
from the cotes the half-wakened chirp of the caged pigeons who were sometimes
roasted for special guests or for the sick. Even before the thought was clear
in her mind she was moving, and at the back of her thoughts she heard herself
say, the fowl-keeper will be very angry with me, I am not allowed to touch
the pigeons without leave, but the hunger flooding through her mind, the
bird-mind, would not be denied. Romilly flung away the piece of dead rabbithorn
meat, flinging it on the midden; it would rot there, or some scavenger would
find it, or one of the dogs who was less fastidious in feeding. There was a
fluttering, flapping stir as she thrust her hand into the pigeon-cote and
brought out one, flapping its wings and squawking; its fear filled her with
something that was half pain and half excitement, adrenalin running through her
body and cramping her legs and buttocks with familiar dread; but Romilly had
been farm-bred and was not squeamish; fowl were for the pot in return for safe
cotes and lifelong grain. She held the struggling bird for an instant of brief
regret between her hands, then fought one-handed to hold it while she got the
gauntlet on again. She thrust into the hawk-mind, without words, a swift sharp
awareness of hunger and fresh food . . . then, with one decisive movement,
wrung the pigeon's neck and thrust the still-warm corpse toward Preciosa.
For
an instant, one more time, it seemed that the bird was about to explode into a
last frenzy of bating, and Romilly felt the sickness of failure . . . but this
time the hawk bent her head and with a thrust so swift that Romilly could not
follow it with her eyes, stabbed with the strong beak, so hard that Romilly
staggered under the killing thrust. Blood spurted; the hawk pecked one more
time and began to eat.
Romilly
sobbed aloud through the flooding ecstasy of strength filling her as she felt
the bird tear, swallow, tear again at the fresh meat. "Oh, you
beauty," she whispered, "You beauty, you
precious, you wonder!"
When
the hawk had fed ... she could feel the dulling of hunger, and even her own
thirst receded . .. she set it on the block again, and slipped a hood over
Preciosa's head. Now it would sleep, and wake remembering where its food came
from. She must leave orders that food for this hawk must be very fresh; she
would have birds or mice killed freshly for it until Preciosa could hunt for
herself. It would not be long. It was an intelligent bird, or it would not have
struggled so long; Romilly, still lightly in link with the bird, knew that now
Preciosa would recognize her as the source of food, and that one day they would
hunt together.
Her
arm felt as if it would fall off; she slipped off the heavy gauntlet, and wiped
her forehead with a sweaty arm. She could clearly see light outside the
hawk-house; she had stood there all night. And as she took conscious note of
the light - soon the household would be stirring - she saw her father and Davin
standing in the doorway.
"Mistress
Romilly! Have you been here all night?" Davin asked, shocked and
concerned.
But
her father's temples were swollen with rage.
"You
wretched girl, I ordered you back to the house! Do you think I am going to let
you defy me like this? Come out of there and leave the hawk-"
"The
hawk has fed," said Romilly, "I saved her for you. Doesn't that mean
anything?" And then all her fury flooded through her again, and like a
bating hawk, she exploded. "Beat me if you want to - if it's more
important to you that I should act like a lady and let a harmless bird die! If
that is being a lady, I hope I shall never be one! I have the laran-"
in her anger she used the word without thinking, "and I don't think the
gods make mistakes; it must mean that I am meant to use it! It isn't my fault
that I have the MacAran Gift when my brother doesn't, but it was given to me so
that now I didn't have to stand by and let Preciosa die. . . ." and she
stopped, swallowing back sobs that threatened to choke her voice entirely.
"She's
right, sir," said old Davin slowly. "She's not the first lady of
MacAran to have the Gift, and, be the gods willing, she won't be the
last."
The
MacAran glared; but he stepped forward, took up a feather, and gently stroked
the breast of the drowsing hawk. "A beautiful bird," he said, at last
"What did you call her? Preciosa? A good name, too. You have done well,
daughter." It was wrenched out of him, unwilling; then he scowled, and it
was like the flood of fury flooding through the hawk.
"Get
you gone from here, inside the house, and have a bath and fresh clothes - I
will not have you filthy as a stable wench! Go and call your maid, and don't
let me see you beyond the house door again!" And as she slipped past him
she could feel that blow he started to give her, then held back - he could not
bring himself to strike anything, and she had saved the life of the
hawk. But out of his rage of frustration he shouted after her at the top of his
lungs, "You haven't heard the last of this, damn you, Romilly!"
Romilly
stared out the window, her head in her hands. The great red sun was angling
downward from noon; two of the small moons stood, pale dayshine reflections, in
the sky, and the distant line of the Kilghard Hills lured her mind out there in
the sky, with the clouds and the birds flying. A page of finished sums, put
aside, lay before her on the wooden desk, and a still-damp page of neatly
copied maxims from the Book of Burdens; but she did not see them, nor did she
hear the voice of her governess; Calinda was fussing at Mallina for her badly
blotted pages.
This
afternoon, when I have done flying Preciosa to the lure, I will have Windracer
saddled, and carry Preciosa before me on ray saddle, hooded, to accustom her to
the horse's smell and motion. I cannot trust her yet to fly free, but it will
not be long....
Across
the room her brother Rael scuffled his feet noisily, and Calinda rebuked him
with a silent shake of her head. Rael, Romilly thought, was dreadfully spoiled
now - he had been so dangerously ill, and this was his first day back in the
schoolroom. Silence fell over the children, except for the noisy scratching of
Mallina's pen, and the almost-noiseless click of Calinda's knotting-pins; she
was making a woolly undervest for Rael, and when it was finished, Romilly
thought, not without malice, then she would only face the problem of getting
Rael to wear it!
Her
eyes glazed in a drowse of perfect boredom, Romilly stared out the window,
until the quiet was interrupted by a noisy wail from Mallina.
"Curse
this pen! It sheds blots like nuts in autumn! Now I have blotted another
sheet!"
"Hush,
Mallina," said the governess severely. "Romilly, read to your sister
the last of the maxims I set you to copy from the Book of Burdens."
Sighing,
recalled against her will to the schoolroom, Romilly read sullenly aloud.
"A poor worker blames only the tool in his hand."
"It
is not the fault of the pen if you cannot write without blots," Calinda
reproved, and came to guide the pen in her pupil's hand. "See, hold your
hand so-"
"My
fingers ache," Mallina grumbled, "Why must I learn to write anyway,
spoiling my eyes and making my hands hurt? None of the daughters of High Crags
can write, or read either, and they are none the worse for it; they are already
betrothed, and it is no loss to them!"
"You
should think yourself lucky," said the governess sternly, "Your
father does not wish his daughters to grow up in ignorance, able only to sew
and spin and embroider, without enough learning even to write 'Apple and nut
conserve' on your jars at harvest time! When I was a girl, I had to fight for
even so much learning as that! Your father is a man of sense, who knows that
his daughters will need learning as much as do his sons! So you will sit there
until you have filled another sheet without a single blot. Romilly, let me see
your work. Yes, that is very neat. While I check your sums, will you hear your
brother read from his book?"
Romilly
rose with alacrity, to join Rael at his seat; anything was better than sitting
motionless at her desk! Calinda bent to guide Mallina's hand on her pen, and
Rael leaned against Romilly's shoulder; she gave the child a surreptitious hug,
then dutifully pointed her finger at the first hand-lettered line of the
primer. It was very old; she had been taught to read from this same book, and
so, she thought, had Ruyven and Darren before her - the book had been made, and
sewn, by her own grandmother when her father had first learned to read; and
written in the front were the crudely sprawled letters that said Mikhail
MacAran, his own book. The ink was beginning to fade a little, but it was
still perfectly legible.
"The
horse is in the stable," Rael spelled out slowly. “The fowl is in the
nest. The bird is in the air. The tree is in the wood. The boat is on the water.
The nut is on the tree. The boy is in the-" he scowled at the word and
guessed. "Barn?"
Romilly
chuckled softly. "I am sure he wishes he were, as you do," she
whispered, "but that's not right, Rael. Look, what is that first letter?
Spell it out-"
"The
boy is in the kitchen," he read glumly. "The bread is in the
pan?"
"Rael,
you're guessing again," she said. "Look at the letters. You know
better than that."
"The
bread is in the oven."
"That's
right. Try the next page, now."
"The
cook bakes the bread. The farmer-" he hesitated, moving his lips, scowling
at the page. "Gathers?"
"That's
right, go on."
"The
farmer gathers the nuts. The soldier rides the horse. The groom puts the saddle
on the horse. Romy, when can I read something that makes sense?"
Romilly
chuckled again. "When you know your letters a bit better," she said.
"Let me see your copybook. Yes, your letters are written there, but look,
they sprawl all over the line like ducks waddling, when they should march along
neatly like soldiers - see where Calinda ruled the line for you?" She put
the primer aside. "But I will tell Calinda you know your lesson, shall
I?"
"Then
perhaps we can go out to the stables," whispered Rael. "Romy, did
father beat you for taming the hawk? I heard Mother say he should."
I
doubt that not at all, Romilly
thought, but the Lady Luciella was Rael's mother and she would not speak evil
of her to the child. And Luciella had never been really unkind to her. She said
"No, I was not beaten; father said I did well - he would have lost the
hawk otherwise, and verrin hawks are costly and rare. And this one was
near to starving on its block."
"How
did you do it? Can I tame a hawk some day? I would be afraid, they are so
fierce."
But
he had raised his voice, and Calinda looked up and frowned at them. "Rael,
Romilly, are you minding the lesson?"
"No,
mestra," said Romilly politely, "he has finished, he read two
pages in the primer with only one mistake. May we go now?"
"You
know you are not supposed to whisper and chatter when you are working,"
said the governess, but she looked tired, too. "Rael, bring me your sheet
of letters. Oh, this is disgraceful," she said, frowning, "Why, they
are all over the page! A big boy like you should write better than this! Sit
down, now, and take your pen!"
"I
don't want to," Rael sulked, "My head hurts."
"If
your head hurts, I shall tell your mother you are not well enough to ride after
your lesson," said Calinda, hiding the smile that sprang to her lips, and
Rael glumly sat down, curled his fist around the pen and began to print another
series of tipsy letters along the line, his tongue just protruding between his
teeth, scowling over the page.
"Mallina,
go and wash the ink from your fingers. Romilly, bring your embroidery-work, and
you may as well bring Mallina's too," said the governess, bending over
Rael's desk. Romilly, frowning, went to the cupboard and pulled out her
workbasket and her sister's. She was quick enough with her pen, but, she
thought angrily, put a needle in my hand and I might as well have a hoof
instead of fingers!
"I
will show you one more time how to do the knot-stitch neatly," said
Calinda, taking the grubby, wrinkled linen in her own hands, trying to smooth
it, while Romilly pricked her finger threading the needle and yelped like a
puppy. "This is a disgrace, Romilly; why, Rael could do better if he
tried, I do believe!"
"Then
why not let Rael do it?" Romilly scowled.
"For
shame, a big girl, almost fifteen, old enough to be married," Calinda
said, glancing over Rael's shoulder. "Why, what have you written
here?"
Startled
by the tone in the woman's voice, Romilly looked over her small brother's
shoulder. In uneven printing, he had lettered I wish my brother Ruyven come
home.
"Well,
I do," said Rael, blinking his eyes hard and digging his fists into them.
"Tear
it up, quickly," said Calinda, taking the paper and suiting the action to
the word. "If your father saw it - you know he has ordered that your
brother's name is not to be mentioned in this house!"
"I
didn't mention it, I only printed it," said Rael angrily, "and he's my
brother and I'll talk about him if I want to! Ruyven, Ruyven, Ruyven - so there!"
"Hush,
hush, Rael," said Calinda, "We all-" she broke off, thinking
better of what she had begun to say, but Romilly heard it with her new senses,
as clearly as if Calinda had said, We all miss Ruyven. More gently,
Calinda said, "Put your book away, and run along to your riding-lesson,
Rael."
Rael
slammed his primer into his desk and raced for the door. Romilly watched her
brother enviously, scowling at the wrinkled stitchery in her hand. After a
minute Calinda sighed and said, "It is hard for a child to understand.
Your brother Darren will be home at Midsummer, and I am glad - Rael needs his
brother, I think. Here, Romilly, watch my fingers - wrap the thread so, three
times around the needle, and pull it through - see, you can do it neatly enough
when you try."
"A
knot-stitch is easy," said Mallina complacently, looking up from her
smooth panel of bleached linen, where a brilliant flower bloomed under her
needle.
"Aren't
you ashamed, Romilly? Why, Mallina has already embroidered a dozen
cushion-covers for her marriage-chest, and now she is working on her wedding
sheets."
"Well,"
said Romilly, driven to the wall, "What do I need of embroidered cushion-covers?
A cushion is to sit on, not to show fancy stitching. And I hope, if I have a
husband, he will be looking at me, and not the embroidered flowers on our
wedding sheets!"
Mallina
giggled and blushed, and Calinda said, "Oh, hush, Romilly, what a thing to
say!" But she was smiling. "When you have your own house, you will be
proud to have beautiful things to adorn it."
I doubt that very much, Romilly
thought, but she picked up the stitchery-piece with resignation and thrust the
needle through it. Mallina bent over the quilt she was making, delicately
appliqued with white starflowers on blue, and began to set tiny stitches into
the frame.
Yes,
it was pretty, Romilly thought, but why did it matter so much? A plain one
would keep her just as warm at night, and so would a saddle-blanket! She would
not have minded, if she could have made something sensible, like a
riding-cloak, or a hood for a hawk, but this stupid flower-pattern, designed to
show off the fancy stitching she hated! Grimly she bent over her work, needle
clutched awkwardly in her fist, as the governess looked over the paper of sums
she had done that morning.
"You
have gone past my teaching in this, Romilly," the governess said at last,
"I will speak to Dom Mikhail, and ask if the steward can give you
lessons in keeping account-books and ciphering. It would be a pity to waste an
intelligence as keen as yours."
"Lessons
from the steward?" said a voice from the doorway. "Nonsense, mestra;
Romilly is too old to have lessons from a man, it would be scandalous. And
what need has a lady, to keep account-books?" Romilly raised her head from
the tangle of threads, to see her stepmother Luciella corning into the room.
"If
I could keep my own accounts, foster-mother," Romilly said, "I need
never be afraid I would be cheated by a dishonest steward."
Luciella
smiled kindly. She was a small plump woman, her hair carefully curled, as
meticulously dressed as if she were about to entertain the Queen at a
garden-party. She said, "I think we can find you a husband good enough
that he will see to all that for you, foster-daughter." She bent to kiss
Mallina on the cheek, patted Romilly's head. "Has Rael gone already to his
riding-lesson? I hope the sun will not be too strong for him, he is still not
entirely recovered." She frowned at the tangled threads and drunken line
of colored stitching. "Oh, dear, dear, this will never do! Give me the
needle, child, you hold it as if it were a currycomb! Look, hold it like this.
See? Now the knot is neat - isn't that easier, when you hold it so?"
Grudgingly,
Romilly nodded. Domna Luciella had never been anything but kind to her;
it was only that she could not imagine why Romilly was not exactly like
Mallina, only more so, being older.
"Let
me see you make another one, as I showed you," Luciella said. "See,
that is much better, my dear. I knew you could do it, you are clever enough
with your fingers - your handwriting is much neater than Mallina's, only you
will not try. Calinda, I came to ask you to give the children a holiday - Rael
has already run off to the stables? Well enough - I only need the girls, I want
them to come and be fitted for then - new riding-habits; they must be ready
when the guests come at Midsummer."
Predictably,
Mallina squealed.
"Am
I to have a new riding-habit, foster-mother? What color is it? Is it made of
velvet like a lady's?"
"No,
my dear, yours is made of gabardine, for hard wear and more growing," said
Luciella, and Mallina grumbled.
"I
am tired of wearing dresses all clumsy in the seams so they can be let out when
I grow half a dozen times, and all faded so everyone can see where they have
been let out and the hem let down-"
"You
must just hurry and finish growing, then," said Luciella kindly,
"There is no sense making a dress to your measure when you will have
outgrown it in six months wear, and you have not even a younger sister to pass
it on to. You are lucky you are to have a new habit at all, you know," she
added smiling, "You should wear Romilly's old ones, but we all know that
Romilly gives her riding-clothes such hard wear that after half a year there is
nothing at all left of them - they are hardly fit to pass on to the
dairy-woman."
"Well,
I ride a horse," Romilly said, "I don't sit on its back and
simper at the stableboy!"
"Bitch,"
said Mallina, giving her a surreptitious kick on the ankle, "You would,
fast enough, if he'd look at you, but nobody ever will - you're like a
broom-handle dressed up in a gown!"
"And
you're a fat pig," retorted Romilly, "You couldn't wear my cast-off
gowns anyway, because you're so fat from all the honey-cakes you gobble
whenever you can sneak into the kitchen!"
"Girls!
Girls!" Luciella entreated, "Must you always squabble like this? I
came to ask a holiday for you - do you want to sit all day in the schoolroom
and hem dishtowels instead?"
"No,
indeed, foster-mother, forgive me," said Romilly quickly, and Mallina said
sullenly, "Am I supposed to let her insult me?"
"No,
nor should you insult her in turn," said Luciella, sighing. "Come,
come, the sewing-women are waiting for you."
"Do
you need me, vai domna?" Calinda asked.
"No,
go and rest, mestra -I am sure you need it, after a morning with my
brood. Send the groom first to look for Rael, he must have his new jacket
fitted today, but I can wait till he has finished his riding-lesson."
Romilly
had been apprehensive, as she followed her stepmother into the room where the
sewing-women worked, light and airy with broad windows and green growing plants
in the sunny light; not flowers, for Luciella was a practical woman, but
growing pots of kitchen herbs and medicinals which smelled sweet in the sun
through the glass. Luciella's taste ran heavily to ruffles and flounces, and,
from some battles when she was a young girl, Romilly feared that if Luciella
had ordered her riding-clothes they would be some disgustingly frilly style.
But when she saw the dark-green velvet, cut deftly to accentuate her
slenderness, but plainly, with no trim but a single white band at her throat,
the whole dress of a green which caught the color of her green eyes and made
her coppery hair shine, she flushed with pleasure.
"It
is beautiful, foster-mother," she said, standing as still as she could
while the sewing-women fitted it with pins to her body, "It is almost too
fine for me!"
"Well,
you will need a good one, for hawking and hunting when the people from High
Crags come for the Midsummer feasting and parties," said Luciella,
"It is well to show off what a fine horse-woman you are, though I think
you need a horse better suited to a lady than old Windracer. I have spoken to
Mikhail about a good horse for you - was there not one you trained
yourself?"
Romilly's
delighted gasp made her stepmother smile. She had been allowed to help her
father in training three of the fine blacks from the Lanart estates, and they
were all among the finest horses to grace the stables at Falconsward. If her
father agreed that she might have one of those horses - she thought with
delight and pleasure of racing over the hills on one of the spirited blacks,
with Preciosa on her arm, and gave Luciella a spontaneous hug that startled the
older woman. "Oh, thank you, thank you, stepmother!"
"It
is a pleasure to see you looking so much like a lady," Luciella said,
smiling at the pretty picture Romilly made in the green habit. 'Take it off
now, my dear, so it can be stitched. No, Dara," she added to the
sewing-woman who was fitting Mallina's habit over her full young breasts,
"Not so tight in the tunic there, it is unseemly for so young a
girl."
Mallina
sulked, "Why must all my dresses be cut like a child's tunic? I have
already more of a woman's figure than Romilly!"
"You
certainly have," Romilly said, "If you grow much more in the tits,
you can hire out for a wet-nurse." She looked critically at Mallina's
swelling body, and the younger girl snarled, "A woman's habit is wasted on
you, you could wear a pair of Darren's old britches! You'd rather run around
looking like a stableboy, in a man's old leathers, like one of the Sisterhood
of the Sword-"
"Come,
come," said Luciella peacefully, "Don't make fun of your sister's
figure, Romilly, she is growing faster than you, that is all. And you be quiet
too, Mallina; Romilly is grown, now, and your father has given strict orders
that she is not to ride astride in boots and breeches any more, but is to have
a proper lady's habit and a lady's saddle for Midsummer, when the people from
High Crags will be coming here for hawking and hunting, and perhaps Aldaran of
Scathfell with his sons and daughters, and some of the people from Storn
Heights."
Mallina
squealed with pleasure - the twin daughters of Scathfell were her closest
friends, and during the winter, heavy snowfalls had separated Falconsward from
Scathfell or from High Crags. Romilly felt no such pleasure - Jessamy and
Jeralda were about her own age, but they were like Mallina, plump and soft, an
insult to any horse that carried them, much more concerned with the fit of
their riding-habits and the ornaments of saddle and reins than in the
well-being of the horses they rode, or their own riding-skill. The oldest son
at High Crags was about Ruyven's age and had been his dearest friend; he
treated Romilly and even Darren as silly children. And the folk from Storn were
all grown, and most of them married some with children.
Well,
perhaps she would have a chance to ride with her father, and with Darren who
would be home from Nevarsin, and to fly Preciosa; it would not be too bad, even
if, while there were guests, she must wear a lady's riding-habit and use a
lady's saddle instead of the boots and breeches more suitable for hunting; the
guests would only be here for a few days and then she could go back to her
sensible boy's clothes for riding; she was willing to dress up properly to meet
her parents' guests. She had learned, as a matter of course, to manage proper
riding-skirts and a lady's saddle when there were guests, and to please her
stepmother.
She
was humming when she returned to her room to change her dress for riding;
perhaps she would take Rael with her when she went to exercise Preciosa to the
lure, the long line whirled around her head with scraps of meat and feathers to
train and exercise a hawk. But when she searched behind her door for the old
boots and breeches she always wore for riding - they were an ancient pair of
Ruyven's - they could not be found.
She
clapped her hands to summon the maid who waited on the children, but it was old
Gwennis who came.
"What
is this, Nurse? Where are my riding-breeches?"
"Your
father has given strict orders," Gwennis said, "Lady Luciella made me
throw them out - they're hardly fit for the hawkmaster's boy now, those old
things. Your new habit's being made, and you can wear your old one till it's
ready, my pet" She pointed to the riding-skirt and tunic laid out on
Romilly's bed. "Here, my lamb, I'll help you lace it up."
"You
threw them out?" Romilly exploded, "How dared you?"
"Oh,
come, don't talk like that, my little love, we all have to do what Lady
Luciella says, don't we? That habit still fits you fine, even if it's a little
tight at the waist - see, I let it out for you yesterday, when Lady Luciella
told me."
"I
can't ride Windracer in this!" Romilly wadded up the offending skirts and
flung them across the room. "He's not used to a lady's saddle, and I hate
it, and there aren't guests or anything like that! Get me some riding
breeches," she stormed, but Gwennis shook her head sternly.
"I
can't do that, lovey, your father's given orders, you're not to ride in
breeches any more, and it's about time, you'll be fifteen ten days before
Midsummer, and we must think now about getting you married, and what man will
want to marry a hoyden who races around hi breeches like some camp-follower, or
one of those scandalous women of the Sisterhood, with sword and ears pierced?
Really, Romy, you should be ashamed. A big girl like you, running off to the
hawk-house and staying out all night like that - it's time you were tamed down
into a lady! Now put on your riding-skirts, if you want to ride, and let's not
have any more of this nonsense."
Romilly
stared in horror at her nurse. So this was to be her father's punishment Worse,
far worse than a beating, and she knew that from her father's orders there
would be no appeal.
I
wish he had beaten me. At least he would have been dealing with me, directly,
with Romilly, with a person. But to turn me over to Luciella, to let her make
me into her image of a lady....
"It's
an insult to a decent horse," Romilly stormed, "I won't do it!"
She
aimed a savage kick at the offending habit on the floor.
"Well,
then, lovey, you can just stay inside the house like a lady, you don't need to
ride," said Gwennis complacently, "You spend too much time in the
stables as it is, it's time you stayed more in the house, and left the hawks
and horses to your brothers as you should."
Appalled,
Romilly swallowed down a lump in her throat, looking from the habit on the
floor to her beaming nurse. "I expected this of Luciella," she said,
"she hates me, doesn't she? It's the sort of spiteful thing Mallina might
do, just because she can't ride a decent horse. But I didn't think you'd join
with them against me, Nurse!"
"Come,
you mustn't talk like that," Gwennis said, clucking ruefully, "How
can you say that about your kind stepmother? I tell you, not many stepmothers
with grown daughters are as good to them as Lady Luciella is to you and
Mallina, dressing them up in beautiful things when you're both prettier than
she is, knowing Darren's to be Lord here and her own son only a younger son,
not much better than a nedestro! Why, your own mother would have had you
out of breeches three years ago, she'd never have let you run around all these
years like a hoyden! How can you say that she hates you?"
Romilly
looked at the floor, her eyes stinging. It was true; no one could have been
kinder to her than Luciella. It would have been easier if Luciella had ever
showed her the slightest unkindness. I could fight against her, if she was
cruel to me. What can I do now?
And
Preciosa would be waiting for her; did Gwennis really think she would leave her
own hawk to the hawkmaster's boy, or even to Davin himself? Her hands shook
with fury as she pulled on the detested habit, threadbare blue gabardine and in
spite of Gwennis's alterations, still too tight in the waist, so that the
lacings gaped wide over her undertunic. Better to ride in skirts than not to
ride at all, she supposed, but if they thought they had beaten her this easily,
they could think again!
Will
she even know me in this stupid girl's outfit?
Fuming,
she strode toward the stables and hawk-house, tripping once or twice over the
annoying skirts, slowing her step perforce to a proper ladylike pace. So
Luciella would bribe her with a pretty habit, to soften the blow? Just like a
woman, that silly devious trick, not even telling her outright that she must
put aside her riding-breeches!
Inside
the hawk-house, she went directly to the block, slipping on her old gauntlet
and taking Preciosa up on her arm. With her free hand she stroked the hawk's
breast with the feather kept for that purpose - the touch of a hand on the
hawk's feathers would take the coating from the feathers and damage them.
Preciosa sensed her agitation and moved uneasily on her wrist, and Romilly made
an effort to calm herself, taking down the hanging lure of feathers and
signalling to the boy Ker.
"Have
you fresh meat for Preciosa?"
"Yes,
damisela, I had a pigeon just killed for the table and I kept all the
innards for her, they haven't been out of the bird more than ten minutes,"
Ker said, and she sniffed suspiciously at the fresh meat, then threaded it on
to the lure. Preciosa smelled the fresh food and jerked uneasily and fluttered;
Romilly spoke soothingly to her, and walked on, kicking the skirt out of her
way. She went into the stableyard and loosed the jesses, whirling the lure high
over her head; Preciosa flung herself upward, the recoil thrusting Romilly's
hand down, and wheeled high into the sky over the stableyard, stooping down
swiftly on the lure, striking almost before it hit the ground. Romilly let her
feed in peace for a moment before calling her with the little falconer's
whistle, which the bird must learn to associate with her food, and slipping the
hood over her head again. She handed the lure to Ker and said, "You whirl
it; I want to watch her fly."
Obediently
the hawkmaster's boy took the lure and began to whirl it over his head; again
Romilly loosed the hawk, watched her fly high, and descend to Romilly's whistle
to the flying bait. Twice more the maneuver was repeated, then Romilly let the
hawk finish her meal in peace, before hooding her and setting her back on the
block. She stroked her again and again tenderly with the feather, crooning
nonsense words of love to her, feeling the sense of closeness and satisfaction
from the fed hawk. She was learning. Soon she would fly free and catch her own
prey, and return to the wrist...
"Go
and saddle Windracer," she said, glumly adding, "I suppose you must
use my sidesaddle."
The
groom would not look at her.
"I
am sorry, damisela - The MacAran gave strict orders. Very angry, he
was."
So
this, then, was her punishment. More subtle than a beating, and not her
father's way - the delicate stitches set by Luciella's hand could be clearly
seen in this. She could almost hear in her imagination the words her stepmother
must have used; see, a big girl like Romilly, and you let her run about the
stables, why are you surprised at anything she might do? But leave her to me,
and I will make a lady of her....
Romilly
was about to fling at the groom, angrily, to forget it, a sidesaddle was an
insult to any self-respecting horse . . . but on her arm Preciosa bated in
agitation, and she knew the bird was picking up her own rage - she struggled
for calm and said quietly, "Very well, put a lady's saddle on her,
then." Anger or no, sidesaddle or no, Preciosa must be habituated to the
motion of the horse; and a ride on a lady's saddle was better than no ride at
all.
But
she thought about it, long and hard, as she rode that day. Appeal to her father
would be useless: evidently he had turned responsibility over to Luciella, the
new riding-habit had been only a signal showing which way the wind now blew. No
doubt, a day would come when she would be forbidden to ride at all - no, for
Luciella had told her of his plans to give her a good horse. But she would ride
as a lady, decorously because no horse could do anything better than a ladylike
trot with a lady's sidesaddle; ride cumbered in skirts, unable even to school
her hawk properly; there was no proper room for a hawk as there was on a man's
saddle where she could carry the block before her. And soon, no doubt, she
would be forbidden the stables and hawk-house except for such ladylike rides as
this. And what could she do about it? She was not yet of age - she would be
fifteen at Midsummer, and had no recourse except to do as her father and
guardians bade her. It seemed that the walls were closing about her.
Why,
then, had she been given this laran, since it seemed that only a man had
the freedom to use it? Romilly could have wept. Why had she not, then, been
born a man? She knew the answer that would be given her, if she asked Luciella
what she would do with her Gift; it is, the woman would say, so that your sons
will have it.
And
was she nothing but a vehicle for giving some unknown husband sons? She had
often thought she would like to have children - she remembered Rael as a baby,
little and cunning and as soft and lovable as an unweaned puppy. But to give up
everything, to stay in the house and grow soft and flabby like Luciella, her
own life at an end, living only through her children? It was too high a price
to pay, even for babies as adorable as that. Furiously, Romilly blinked back
tears, knowing that the emotion would come through to hawk and horse, and
disciplined herself to quiet.
She
must wait. Perhaps, when her father's first anger had cooled, he could be made
to see reason. And then she remembered; before Midsummer, Darren would be home,
and perhaps he, as her father's sole remaining heir, could intercede for her
with her father. She stroked the hawk with its feather to quiet her, and rode
back toward Falconsward with a glimmer of hope in her heart.
Ten
days before Midsummer, on Romilly's fifteenth birthday, her brother Darren came
home.
It
was Rael who saw the riders first, as the family sat at breakfast on the
terrace; the weather was so fine that Luciella had given orders for breakfast
to be served on that outdoor balcony overlooking the valley of the Kadarin.
Rael had taken his second piece of bread and honey to the railing, despite
Luciella's gentle reprimand that he should sit down nicely and finish his food,
and was hanging over the edge, throwing crumbs of bread at the broad leaves of
the ivy that crawled up the sides of the castle toward the high balcony.
"Look,
Mother," he called, "there are riders, coming up the path - are they
coming here, do you think? Father, do you see?"
The
MacAran frowned at the child, raising his cup to his lips. "Hush. Rael, I
am talking to your mother-" but Romilly abruptly knew who the riders were.
"It
is Darren," she cried, and flew to the railing. "I know his horse - I
am going down to meet him!"
"Romilly!
Sit down and finish your food," Luciella scolded, but Romilly was already
out the door, her braids flapping against her shoulderblades, and flying down
the long stairway. Behind her she heard the clattering of Rael's boots, and
laughed at the thought of Luciella's disquiet - the peaceful meal had been
disrupted for good, this time. She licked her fingers, which were sticky with
honey, and went out into the courtyard, Rael behind her; the boy was hanging on
the big gates, calling to the yard-men to come and open them.
"It
is my brother Darren - he is coming!"
Good-naturedly,
the men came and began to tug on the doors, even before the sound of the
horses' hooves reached them; Rael was a favorite, spoiled by everyone. He clung
to the gates, laughing, as the men shoved them under him, and waved his arm
excitedly at the riders.
"It
is Darren, and there is someone with him, Romilly, come and see, come and meet
him!"
But
Romilly hung back a little, suddenly shy, conscious of her hastily-braided,
crooked hair, her smeared fingers and mouth, the bread and honey still in her
hand; she flung it quickly to the yard-dog and rubbed her kerchief over the
sticky smears on her mouth. Why did she feel like this? It was only Darren and
some friend he had made at the monastery. Darren slid from his horse and Rael
was clambering all over him, hugging him, talking so fast he could hardly be
understood. Darren laughed, set Rael down and came to take Romilly into his
arms.
"You
have grown, sister, you are almost a woman."
"It's
her birthday, Darren, what did you bring her?" Rael demanded, and Darren
chuckled. He was tall and thin, his red hair clustered in thick curls over his
eyes, his face had the indoor pallor of a winter spent among the snows of
Nevarsin.
"I
had forgotten your birthday, sister - will you forgive me? I will have a gift
for you at Midsummer," he said.
"It
is gift enough that you have come today, Darren," she said, and pain struck
through her; she loved Darren, but Ruyven was the brother to whom she had
always been closest, while Mallina and Darren had always shared everything. And
Ruyven would not come home, would never come home. Hatred for the Towers who
had taken her brother from her surged within her, and she swallowed hard,
nicking away angry tears.
"Father
and Luciella are at breakfast," she said, "Come up to the terrace,
Darren; tell the condom to have your saddlebags taken to your
room." She caught his hand and would have drawn him along, but he turned
back to the stranger who had given his horse to the groom.
"First
I want you to know my friend," he said, and pulled the young man forward.
"Alderic of Castamir; my oldest sister Romilly."
Alderic
was even taller than Darren, his hair glinting with faint copper through gold;
his eyes were steel-grey, set deep beneath a high forehead. He was shabbily
dressed, an odd contrast to the richness of Darren's garments - Darren, as the
eldest son of Falconsward, was richly clad in rust-colored velveteen trimmed
with dark fur, but the cloak the Castamir youngster wore was threadbare, as if
he had had it from his father or even his grandfather, and the mean edging of
rabbithorn wool was coming away in places.
So
he has made a friend of a youth poorer than himself, no doubt brought him here
because his friend had not the means to journey to his home for the holidays.
Darren is always kind. She
put kind welcome, too, and a trace of condescension, into her voice, as she
said, "You are welcome, dom Alderic. Come up and join my parents at
breakfast, will you not? Darin-" she beckoned to the steward, "Take
my brother's bags to his room, and put dom Alderic's things in the red chamber
for the moment; unless the Lady Luciella gives other orders, it will be good to
have him close to my brother's quarters."
"Yes,
come along." Darren linked arms with Romilly, drew Alderic with them up
the stairs. "I cannot walk if you hang on me like that, Rael - go ahead of
us, do!"
"He
has been missing you," Romilly said, "And-" she had started to
speak of their other brother, but this was to bring family matters out before a
stranger; she and Darren would have time enough for confidences. They reached
the terrace, and Darren was enfolded in Mallina's arms, and Romilly was left to
present Alderic of Castamir to her father.
The
MacAran said with grave courtesy, "You are welcome to our home, lad. A
friend of my son has a friend's welcome here. Are you akin to Valdrin Castamir
of Highgarth? He and I were in the guard of King Rafael before the king was
most foully murdered."
"Only
distantly, sir," said Alderic. "Knew you not that Lord Valdrin was
dead, and his castle burnt about his ears with clingfire because he
sheltered Carolin in his road to exile?'
The
MacAran swallowed visibly. "Valdrin dead? We were playfellows and bredin,"
he said, "but Valdrin was always a fool, as any man is a fool who
meddles in the affairs of the great folk of the land."
Alderic
said stiffly, "I honor the memory of the Lord Valdrin for his loyalty to
our rightful king in exile, sir."
"Honor,"
The MacAran said bitterly, "Honor is of no use to the dead, and to all of
his folk whom he entangled in the quarrel of the great ones; great honor to his
wife and little children, I doubt it not, to die with the flesh burnt from
their very bones? As if it mattered to me, or to any reasonable man, which
great donkey kept the throne warm with his royal backsides while better men
went about their business?"
Romilly
could see that Alderic was ready with a sharp answer, but he bowed and said
nothing; he would not offend his host. Mallina was introduced to Alderic and
simpered up at him, while Romilly watched in disdain - anything in breeches,
she thought, and Mallina willingly practices her silly womanish wiles on him,
even this shabby political refugee Darren picked up at Nevarsin and brought
home, no doubt to give the boy a few good meals - he looked thin as a rake, and
no doubt, at Nevarsin, they feed them on porridge of acorns and cold water!
Mallina
was still chattering to the young men.
"And
the folk from Storn Heights are coming, and the sons and daughters of Aldaran
of Scathfell, and all during the Midsummer-festival there will be parties and
hawkings and hunts, and a great Midsummer-dance-" and she slanted her
long-lashed eyes at Alderic and said, "Are you fond of dancing, dom Alderic?"
"I
have done but little dancing since I was a child," said Alderic, "I
have danced only the clodhopper-dances of the monks and novices when they dance
together at midwinter - but I shall expect you to teach them to me, damisela."
He bowed to her and to Romilly, but Mallina said, "Oh, Romilly will
not dance with men - she is more at home in the stables, and would rather show
you her hawks and hounds!"
"Mallina,
go to your lessons," said Luciella, in a voice that clearly said, I'll
deal with you later, young lady. "You must forgive her, dom Alderic,
she is only a spiteful child."
Mallina
burst into tears and ran out of the room, but Alderic smiled at Romilly and
said, "I too feel more at ease in the company of hawks and horses than
that of women. I believe one of the horses we brought from Nevarsin is
yours?"
"It
belonged to-" Darren caught his father's scowl and amended, "a
relative of ours; he left it in Nevarsin to be returned to us." But
Romilly intercepted the glance that passed between Darren and Alderic and knew
that her brother had confided the whole story to his friend. How far, she
wondered, had that scandal spread, that the son of The MacAran had quarreled
with his family and fled to a Tower?
"Romilly,"
said her father, "should you not be in the schoolroom with Mistress
Callinda?"
"You
promised me a holiday on my birthday," Romilly reminded her stepmother,
and Luciella said with an ill grace, "Well, as I have promised - I suppose
you want to spend the time with your brother. Go, then, if you wish."
She
smiled at her brother and said, "I would like to show you my new verrin
hawk."
"Romilly
trained it herself," Rael burst out, while her father frowned. "When
Davin was sick. She waited up all night until it would feed, and the hawkmaster
said that father could not have done better himself."
"Aye,"
The MacAran said roughly, "your sister has done what you would not do, boy
- you should take lessons from her in skill and courage! Would that she had
been the boy, and you the maiden, so that you might put skirts about your knees
and spend the day in scribbling and embroidering within the house-"
Darren
flushed to the roots of his hair. He said, "Do not mock me before my
friend, Father. I will do as well as I am able, I pledge to you. But I am as
the Gods made me, and no other. A rabbithorn cannot be a war-horse and will
only become a laughing-stock if he should try."
"Is
that what they have taught you among the damned monks?"
"They
taught me that what I am, I am," said Darren, and Romilly saw the glint of
tears in his eyes, "and yet, Father, I am here at your will, to do my poor
best for you." Romilly could hear, as plain as if the forbidden name had
been spoken, it is not my fault that I am not Ruyven, nor was it my doing
that he went from here.
The
MacAran set his massive jaw, and Romilly knew that he, too, heard the forbidden
words. He said, scowling, 'Take your brother to the hawk-house, Romy, and show
him your hawk; perhaps it will shame him into striving to equal what a girl can
do."
Darren
opened his mouth to speak, but Romilly nudged him in the ribs, as if to say, Let
us go while we can, before he says worse. Darren said, muffled, "Come
along, Alderic, unless hawks weary you," and Alderic, saying something
courteous and noncommittal, bowed to The MacAran and to Lady Luciella and went
with diem down the stairs.
For
the last few days Preciosa had been placed on her block among the
already-trained hawks; moving quietly, Romilly slid gauntlet on wrist and took
up the bird, then returned to the two young men.
"This
is Preciosa," she said, pride swelling her voice, and asked Darren,
"Would you like to hold her for a moment while I fetch the lures and
lines? She must learn to tolerate another's hand and voice-"
But
as she moved toward him, he flinched away, in a startled movement, and Romilly,
sensing how the fear in him reverberated hi the bird-mind, turned her attention
to soothing Preciosa, stroking her with a feather. She said, not reproving, but
so intent on what she was doing that she did not stop to think how her words
would sound to another, "Never move so quickly around a hawk - you should
know that! You will frighten her - one would think you were afraid of
her!"
"It
is only - I am not used to be so close to anything so large and so
fierce," Darren said, biting his lip.
"Fierce?
Preciosa? Why, she is gentle as a puppy dog," Romilly said, disbelieving.
She beckoned to the hawkmaster's boy. "Fetch the lures, Ker-" and
when he brought them, she examined the bait, frowning and wrinkling up her
nose.
"Is
this what you have for the other hawks? Do you think they are carrion feeders?
Why, a dog would turn away from this in disgust! I have orders that Preciosa
was to have fresh-killed meat, mice if nothing better was available from the
kitchens, but nothing as old and rank as this."
"It's
what Davin had set aside for the birds, Mistress Romilly."
Romilly
opened her mouth to give him the tongue-lashing he deserved, but even before a
sound was out, the hawk on her wrist bated furiously, and she knew her own
anger was reaching Preciosa's mind. She drew a long breath and said quietly,
"I will have a word with Davin. I would ask no decent hawk to feed on this
garbage. For now, go and fetch me something fresh-killed for my bird; if not
a pigeon, take one of the dogs and find mice or a rat, and at once."
Darren
had drawn back from the frenzied flapping of wings, but as Ker scuttled away to
obey orders, he said, "I see that working with the hawk has at least given
you some command of that temper and tongue, Romy - it has been good for
you!"
"I
wish Father would agree to that," Romilly said, still stroking Preciosa
with the feather, trying to calm her. "But birds are like babies, they
pick up the emotions of those who tend them, I really do not think it is more
than that. Have you forgotten when Rael was a babe, that nurse Luciella had for
him - no, I cannot bring her name to mind just now - Maria, Moyra, something of
that sort - Luciella had to send her away because the
woman's older son drowned, and she wept when she saw Rael, and it gave him
colic, so that was when Gwennis came to us-"
"No,
it is more than that," said Alderic, as they moved out of the darkness of
the hawk-house into the tiled courtyard, "There is a well-known laran, and
it appeared first, I am told, among the Delleray and MacAran folk; empathy with
hawk and horse and sentry-bird ... it was for that they trained it, in
warfare in the days of King Felix. Among the Delleray folk, it was tied to some
lethal genes and so died away, but MacArans have had the Gift for
generations."
Darren
said with an uneasy smile, "I beg you, my friend, speak not of laran so
freely when my father is by to hear."
"Why,
is he one who would speak of sweetnut-blossom because snowflakes are too cold
for him?" Alderic asked with a grin. "All my life I have heard of the
horses trained by The MacAran as the finest in the world, and Dom Mikhail
is one of the more notable of MacAran lords. Surely he knows well the Gifts and
laran of his house and his lady's."
"Still,
he will not hear the word spoken," said Darren, "Not since Ruyven
fled to the Tower, and I blame him not, though some would say I am the gainer
by what Ruyven has done .. . Romilly, now while Father is not by, I will say
this to you and you may tell Mallina secretly; I think Rael is too young to
keep it to himself, but use your own judgment. At the monastery, I had a
letter from Ruyven; he is well, and loves the work he does, and is happy. He
sends his love and a kiss to all of you, and bids me speak of him again to
Father when I judge the time is right."
"Which
will be when apples and blackfruit grow on the ice cliffs of Nevarsin,"
said Romilly, "You were there, you know what he feels."
Darren
shook his head. "Ah, no, sister, I am not so much a telepath as you,
though I knew that he was angry."
Romilly
turned on him, blinking in disbelief. "Can you not hear a thing unless it
is spoken aloud?" she demanded, "Are you head blind like the witless
donkey you ride?"
Slow
color, the red of shame, suffused Darren's face as he lowered his eyes.
"Even so, sister," he said, and Romilly shut her eyes as if to avoid
looking on some gross deformity. She had never known or guessed this, she had
always taken it for granted that all her siblings shared the Gift she had come
to take for granted even before she knew what it was.
She
turned with relief to Davin, who was coming through the courtyard. "Was it
you, old friend, gave orders to feed the hawks on the offal of the kitchens,
and not even fresh at that?" She pointed at the pan of offending refuse;
Davin picked it up, sniffed disdainfully at it, and put it aside.
"That
lazybones of a lad brought this? He'll make no hawker! I sent him for
fresher food from the kitchens, but Lady Luciella says there are to be no more
fresh birds killed for hawk-bait; I doubt not Ker was too lazy to catch mice,
but I'll find something fresher to exercise your hawk, Mistress Romilly."
Alderic
asked, "May I touch her?" and took the feather from Romilly's hand,
stroking the hawk's sleek feathers. "She is indeed beautiful; verrin hawks
are not easy to keep, though I have tried it. Not with success, unless they
were yard-hatched. And this was a haggard? Who trained her?"
"I
did, and am still working with her; she has not yet flown free," Romilly
said, and smiled shyly at his look of amazement.
"You
trained her? A girl? But why not, you are a MacAran. In the Tower where I dwelt
for a time, some of the woman tamed and flew verrin hawks taken in the
wild, and we are apt to say there, to one who has notable success with a hawk, Why,
you have the hand of a MacAran with a bird...."
"Are
there MacArans in the Towers, then, that they should say so?" Romilly
asked, "I knew not that there were any MacArans within their walls, until
my brother went thither."
Alderic
said, "The saying was known in my father's time and in his father's - the
Gift of a MacAran." The word he used was not the ordinary word in the
Kilghard Hills, laran, but the old casta word donas. "But
your father is not pleased, then, to have a son in the Tower? Most hill-folk
would be proud."
Darren's
smile was bitter. "I have no gift for working with animals - and small
gift for anything else, save learning; but while Ruyven was my father's Heir it
did not matter; I was destined for the monastery, and I was happy with the
Brotherhood. Now he will even try to hammer this bent nail into the place laid
out for my brother."
"Have
you not a third brother?" Alderic asked, "Is the little lad who
greeted you nedestro, or feebleminded, that your father cannot give a
son to St-Valentine-of-the-Snows and rear Rafael, Rael, whatever you called
him, to the lordship of Falconsward? Or, seeing what Mistress Romilly can
do-" his smile was generous, and Romilly blushed. But Darren said
bitterly, "You do not know my father-" and broke off while Romilly
was still pondering this; did it seem reasonable to Alderic, then, that she
might even take Ruyven's place at Falconsward?
"I've
brought fresh-killed meat for your hawk, Mistress Romilly," Davin said,
coming into the stableyard, "One of the cooks had just killed a fowl for
roasting at dinner; she let me have the innards for your bird, and I gave
orders for the freshest offal of every day to be put aside for you in the
morning; that garbage Ker brought was from the day before, because one of the
cooks put it aside for the dogs, and he was too busy eyeing the wenches in the
kitchen to ask for the fresh meat. He'll never make a hawker, that one! I
swear, I'd turn him off for a sekal, and start teaching little Master
Rael the handling!"
Romilly
chuckled. "Luciella would have much to say about that," she told him,
"but put Ker to feeding the pigs or tending the kennels, and surely there
must be someone on the estate who has some hawk-sense!"
Darren
grinned mirthlessly. He said, 'Try Nelda's boy Garris; he was festival-got, and
rumor speaks wide about who had his fathering. If he's good with the beasts, it
will bring him under my father's eye, which Nelda was too proud to do. Once I
suggested he should be put to share lessons with Rael, and our great Lady and
Mistress Luciella had fits - one would think I'd suggested bringing the pig-boy
in to dine at the high table."
"You
should know that Luciella hears only what she wants to hear," said
Romilly. "Perhaps she thought that bastardy is like fleas, catching. . .
." She fumbled for the lures and lines, cumbered with Preciosa's weight on
her wrist. "Damnation, Darren, can't you hold her for me a moment? If not,
for charity's sake, at least thread the meat on the lure - she smells it and
will go wild in a moment!"
"I
will take her, if you will trust me with your hawk," said Alderic, and
held out his arm. "So, will you come to me, pretty one?" Carefully,
he lifted the nervous hawk from Romilly's wrist to his own. "What is it
you call her, Preciosa? And so she is, are you not, precious one?"
Romilly
watched jealously as the hooded hawk settled down comfortably on Alderic's
wrist; but Preciosa seemed content and she turned to tying the line around the
meat, so that Preciosa could not snap it away too swiftly, and must bring it
down to the ground to eat, as a good hunting-hawk must learn to do; badly tamed
hawks tended to snatch food from a lure in midair, which taught them little
about hunting practice. They must be taught to bring the prey down to their
master, and to wait until the meat was given to them from the hand.
"Give
me the line and lure," said Darren. "If I can do nothing else, I can
at least throw out the lure."
Romilly
handed it to him with relief. "Thank you - you are taller than I, you can
whirl it higher," she said, and took Preciosa again on her wrist. One
handed, she slipped the hood from the hawk's head, raising her arm to let it
fly. Trailing its lines, the hawk rose higher, higher - coming to the end of
the line, Romilly saw it turn its head, see the flying, whistling lure -
swiftly, dropping with suddenly folded wings, it descended on the lure, seizing
it with beak and talons, and dropped swiftly to Romilly's feet. Romilly gave the
sharp whistle which the hawk was being taught to associate with food, and
scooped Preciosa up on her glove, tearing the food from the lure.
Preciosa
was bending so swiftly to the food that she hopped sidewise on Romilly's arm,
her claws contracting painfully in the girl's thinly-clad forearm above the
gauntlet. Blood burst out, staining her dress; Romilly set her mouth and did
not cry out, but as the crimson spread across the blue fabric, Darren cried out
sharply.
"Oh,
sister!"
Preciosa,
startled by the cry, lost her balance and fell, bated awkwardly, her wings
beating into Darren's face; Romilly reached for her, but Darren cried out in
panic and flung up his hands to ward away the beak and talons which were
dangerously close to his face. At his scream, Preciosa tottered again and flew
upward, checking with a shrill scream of rage at the end of her lines.
Her
jaws set, Romilly hissed in a whisper "Damn you, Darren, she could have
broken a flight-feather! Don't you know better than to move that fast around a
hawk? Get back before you frighten her worse than that!"
Darren
stammered "You-you-you're bleeding-"
"So
what?" Romilly demanded harshly, shoved him back with a rough hand, and
whistled softly, coaxingly to Preciosa. "I might better bring Rael into
the hawk-house, you lackwit! Get out of here!"
"And
this is what I have for a son and heir," said The MacAran bitterly. He was
standing in the door of the hawk-house, watching the three young people unseen.
His voice, even in his anger, was low - he knew better than to raise his voice
near a frightened bird. He stood silent, staring with his brows knitted in a
scowl, as Romilly coaxed the hawk down to her wrist and untangled the lines.
"Are you not ashamed, Darren, to stand by while a little girl bests you at
what should come by instinct to any son of mine? But that I knew your mother so
well, I would swear you had been fathered by some chance - come beggar of the
roads. . . . Bearer of Burdens, why have you weighted my life with a son so
unfit for his place?" He grabbed Darren's arm and jerked him inside the
hawk-house; Romilly heard Darren cry out and her teeth met in her lip as if the
blow had landed on her own shoulders.
"Get
out there, now, and try to behave like a man for once! Take this hawk - no, not
like that, damnation take you, you have hands like great hams for all your
writing and scribbling! Take the hawk out there and exercise her on a lure, and
if I see you ducking away from it like that, I swear I'll have you beaten and
sent to bed with bread and water as if you were Rael's age!"
Alderic's
face was dead white and his jaw set, but he bent his eyes on the backs of his
hands and did not speak. Romilly, fighting for calm- there was no sense in
upsetting Preciosa again - threaded meat on the lure again. Without words,
Alderic reached for the line and began to swing it high, and Romilly watched
Preciosa wing off, both of them frying to ignore Darren, his face red and
swollen, clumsily trying to unhood a strange hawk at the far end of the
stableyard. It was all they could do for Darren now.
She
thought; at least, he is trying. Perhaps that is braver than what I did,
defying Father; I had the Gift, I was only doing what is natural for me, and
Darren, obeying, is going against everything which is natural to him. . . . and
her throat swelled as if she would cry, but she fought the tears back. It would
not help Darren. Nothing would help him except trying to conquer his own
nervousness. And, somewhere inside her, she could not help feeling a tiny sting
of contempt . . . how could he bungle anything which was so easy and simple?
Romilly
did not see the first of the guests arrive for the Midsummer-feast; the day had
dawned clear and brilliant, the red sun rising over just a hint of cloud at the
horizon. For three days there had been neither snow nor rain, and everywhere in
the courtyard flowers were bursting into bloom. She sat up in her bed, drawing
a breath of excitement; today she was to fly Preciosa free for the very first
time.
This
was the final excruciating test for hawk and trainer. All too often, when first
freed, the hawk would rise into the sky, wing away into the violet clouds and
never return. She faced that knowledge; she could not bear to lose Preciosa
now, and it was all the more likely with a haggard who had hunted and fed for
herself in the wild.
But
Preciosa would return, Romilly was confident of that. She flung off her
nightgown and dressed for the hunt; her stepmother had had her new green-velvet
habit laid enticingly ready, but she put on an old tunic and shirt, and a pair
of Darren's old breeches. If her father was angry, then he must be angry as he
would; she would not spoil Preciosa's first hunt by worrying about whether or
not she spotted her new velvet clothing.
As
she slipped out into the corridor she stumbled over a basket set in her door;
the traditional Midsummer-gift from the men of the family to mothers, sisters,
daughters. Her father was always generous; she set the basket inside, rummaged
through it for a handy apple and a few of the sweets that always appeared there
too, and thrust them into her pockets - just what she wanted for hunting, and
after a moment she pocketed a few more for Darren and Alderic. There was a
second basket there too; Darren's? And a tiny one clumsily pasted of paper
strips, which she had seen Rael trying to hide in the schoolroom; she smiled
indulgently, for it was filled with a handful of nuts which she knew he had
saved from his own desserts. What a darling he was, her little brother! For a
moment she was tempted to ask him, too, on this special ride, but after a
minute of reflection she sighed and decided not to risk her stepmother's anger.
She would arrange some special treat for him later.
She
went silently down the hallway and joined Darren and Alderic, who were waiting
at the doorway, having let the dogs outside - it was, after all, well after
daylight. The three young people went toward the stable.
Darren
said, "I told father we were going hawking at dawn. He gave you leave to
fly his racer if you would, Alderic."
"He
is generous," said Alderic, and went quietly toward the hawk.
"Which
one will you take, Darren?" asked Romilly, slipping Preciosa on to her
wrist. Darren, raising his eyes to her with a smile, said, "I think you
know, sister, that I take no pleasure in hawks. If father had bidden me to
exercise one of his birds, I would obey him; but in honor of the holiday,
perhaps, he forbore to lay any such command on me."
His
tone was so bitter that Alderic looked up and said, "I think he means to
be kind, bredu."
"Aye.
No doubt." But Darren did not raise his head as they went across to the
stable, where the horses were ready.
Romilly
set Preciosa on the perch as she saddled her own horse. She would not command
any man to disobey her father against his conscience; but she would not ride
sidesaddle on this holiday ride, either. If her father chose to punish her, she
would accept whatever he chose to do.
It
was sheer ecstasy to be on a horse again in proper riding clothes, feeling the
cool morning wind against her face, and Preciosa before her on the saddle,
hooded but alert. She could feel a trickle of awareness from the bird which was
blended of emotions Romilly herself could not identify . . . not quite fear as
she had come to know it, not quite excitement, but to her great relief it was
wholly unmixed with the terrifying rage she had felt when she began training
the hawk. The clouds melted away as they rode into the hills, and under their
horses' hooves there was only the tiniest crackling of frost.
"Where
shall we go, Darren? You know these hills," Alderic asked, and Darren
laughed at them.
"Ask
Romilly, not me, my-" he broke off sharply and Romilly, raising her eyes
suddenly from her bird, intercepted the sharp, almost warning look Alderic gave
the younger man. Darren said quickly, "My sister knows more of the hills
and of the hawks than I do, Lord 'Deric."
"This
way, I think," she said, "To the far horse-pasture; we can fly the
birds there and none will disturb us. And there are always small birds and
small animals in the coverts."
As
they topped the rise they looked down on the pasture, a wide stretch of
hillside grassland, dotted here and there with clumps of berry-briars, small
bushes and underbrush. A few horses were cropping the bunchy grass, green with
summer, and the fields and bushes were coated with clusters of blue and yellow
wildflowers. Insects buzzed in the grass; the horses raised their heads in
alert inquiry, but seeing nothing to disturb them, went on nibbling grass. One
small filly flung up her head and came trotting, on spindly legs, toward them;
Romilly laughed, slid from her horse and went to nuzzle the baby horse; she
came not much higher than Romilly's shoulder.
"This
is Angel," she said to the young men, "She was born last winter, and
I used to feed her with apple scraps - no, Angel, that's my breakfast,"
she added, slapping the soft muzzle away from the pocket where the horse was
trying to rummage. But she relented and pulled her knife, cutting a small slice
of apple for the filly.
"No
more, now, it will give you a bellyache," she said, and the little animal,
evidently taking her word for it, trotted off on her long spindly legs.
"Let
us go on, or old Windy will be on us," she said laughing, "He is out
to pasture in this field. He is too old a gelding for the mares to take any
notice of him, and his teeth are almost too old to chew grass; Father would
have him put down this spring, but, he said he should have one last summer and
before winter comes. He will send him quietly to his rest; he should not have
to endure another winter of cold with his old joints."
"I
will grieve when that is my task," said Darren, "We all learned to
ride on him, he was like an old rocking-chair to sit on." He looked with a
distant sadness at the aged, half-blind pony chomping at soft grass in a corner
of the field. "I think Father spared him because he was Ruyven's first
horse...."
"He
had a good life, and will make a good end," said Alderic, "Unlike
men, horses are not allowed to live till they are senile and half mad ... if
they gave men such mercy as that, I should not - there would not now be a
usurper king on the throne in Hali and the king would not now be wandering in
his exile."
"I
do not understand," said Romilly. Darren frowned, but Alderic said,
"You are not old enough to remember when King Felix died? He was more than
a hundred and fifty, an emmasca, very old and without sons; and he had
long outlived sense and wit, so he sought to put the eldest son of his youngest
brother on the throne, rather than his next brother's elder son, who was
rightfully Heir. And so the Lord Rakhal, who flattered and cozened an old and
senile king and got the Regents all in his hand with bribes and lies, an aged
lecher from whom no woman is safe, nor, 'tis said, the young son of any
courtier who would like to curry favor, sits on the throne of the Hasturs at
Hali. And Carolin and his sons wander across the Kadarin, at the mercy of any
bandit or robber who would like the bounty set on their heads by our most gracious
Lord Rakhal ... for I will never give him the name of king."
"Do
you know the exiled king?"
Darren
said, "The young prince was at Nevarsin among the monks for a time; but he
fled when word came that Lord Rakhal sought him there."
"And
you support the young prince and the king in exile?" Romilly asked.
"Aye.
That I do. And if some kindly courtier had relieved the ancient Felix of his
life before 'twas a burden to him, Carolin would now rule in Hali as a just
king, rather than turning the holy city of the Hasturs into a cesspool of filth
and indecencies, where no man dares come for justice without a bribe in hand,
and upstart lordlings and outlanders wrangle and divide our land among
them!"
Romilly
did not answer; she knew nothing of courts and kings, and had never been even
so far as the foothill city of Neskaya, far less into the lowlands, or near to
the Lake of Hali. She reached for Preciosa's hood, and then hesitated, showing
Alderic the courtesy due a guest.
"Will
you fly first, sir?"
He
smiled and shook his head. "I think we are all as eager as you to see how
Preciosa has come through her training."
With
shaking hands, Romilly slipped the hood from Preciosa's head, watching the hawk
mantling her feathers. Now. Now was the test, not only of her mastery of the
hawk, but of the hawk's acceptance of her training, the hawk's tie to her. She
felt she could not bear to see this hawk she had loved, over whom she had spent
so many anxious and painful hours, fly from her and never return. It flashed
through her mind, is this how Father feels now that Ruyven has gone? Yet
she must try the hawk in free flight. Otherwise, she was no more than a tame
cagebird, sitting dull on a block, not a wild hawk at all. But she felt tears
blurring her sight as she raised her fist and felt the hawk balance a moment,
then, with a single long wing-stroke, fly free.
She
rose on a long, slanting arch into the sunlight, and Romilly, her mind full of
anxious thoughts - will she fly well, has this long period of inactivity dulled
her flight? - watched her rise. And something in her rose with the hawk,
feeling the wordless joy of the morning sun on her wings, the light dazzling
her eyes as she winged upward, rose, hovered, soared, wheeled and winged
strongly away.
Romilly
let out a long breath. She was gone, she would not return.
"You
have lost her, I fear," said Alderic at last "I am sorry, damisela."
Loss
and pain, and a sharing of ecstasy, battled in Romilly. Free flight, something
of her soaring with the hawk . . . and then fading away in the distance. She
shook her head. If she had lost the hawk, then she had never really possessed
her. She thought, I would rather lose her than tie her to me against her
will....
Why
cannot Father see that? She
knew the thought was Darren's, because of the bitterness. Then he was not
head-blind? Or was his telepathy erratic, as hers had once been, coming only
rarely and when she was deeply moved .. . her own had strengthened when she had
begun working with the animals, but Darren had none of that gift...
So
Preciosa was free, and it was all an illusion. She might as well sit quietly in
the house and mind her stitchery for all it would profit her to hang about the
hawk-house, trying like a man to work with the birds....
And
then it seemed that her heart would stop. For through the infinite pain of
loss, a thread of awareness stole, high flight, the world laid out beneath her
like one of the maps in her schoolbooks, only colored and curiously sharp, with
a sight stronger than her own, and little flickers of life coming from here,
from there, small birds in flight, small animals in the grass....
Preciosa!
The hawk
was still in rapport, the hawk had not flown wild! Darren said something; she
did not hear. She heard Alderic saying, "Don't waste your voice, bredu,
she cannot hear you. She is with the hawk...."
Romilly
sat, with automatic habit, in the saddle, upright, silent, but the real part of
her soared over the high pasture, keen with hunger, in the ecstasy of the
flight. Supernaturally keen, her sight and senses, aware of the life of small
birds, so that she felt she was smacking her lips and almost giggled and broke
out of the rapport with the absurdity of it, sudden burning hunger and a desire
almost sexual in its ferocity ... down. Down on long soaring wings, the beak
striking, blood bursting into her mouth, the sudden fierceness of bursting life
and death....
Down.
Wavering down. She had just enough of her selfhood left to hold out her fist
rock-steady, under the sudden jarring stop of a heavy hawk laden with her kin.
She felt tears streaming down her face, but there was no time for emotion; her
knife was in her free hand as she cut the head away, thrust her portion,
headless rabbit, into her wallet with the free hand; all her own awareness was
feeding with the greedy hawk on her portion. Alderic had loosed his own hawk,
but she did not know; she was weeping outright with love and relief as she
slipped the hood on Preciosa's head.
Preciosa
had come back. She had returned of her free Will, out of freedom into bondage
and the hood. She choked back her tears as she stroked the hawk with the
feather, and knew her hands were shaking.
What
have I done to deserve this? How can I possibly be worthy of it? That a wild
thing should give up her freedom for me . . . what can I possibly do to
make me worthy enough for that gift?
Later
they ate the apples and sweets that Romilly had brought, before riding back,
through the growing light, to Falconsward. As the young people came through the
courtyard they saw strange horses being unsaddled there, one with the banners
of Aldaran of Scathfell, and knew that the highest-born of the guests had
arrived.
Alderic
asked, anxiously, "Is it old lord Gareth still Lord of Scathfell?"
"He
is not, my lord; Gareth of Scathfell is not more than forty-nine," said
Romilly. Alderic looked relieved, and Romilly intercepted a questioning look
between Darren and Alderic. Alderic said shortly, "He might well know me
by sight."
"Do
you not trust to the laws of-" Darren began, frowned in Romilly's direction,
and broke off, and Romilly, bending her head over her hawk, thought; what
kind of fool do they think me? I would need be deaf, blind, dumb and head-blind
as well, not to know he is allied in partisanship to Carolin in exile, perhaps
the young prince himself. And I know as well as he why my father must get no
word of it.
"True;
Old Gareth died three winters gone, sir," Darren said, "and was
half-blind at that. Will all of the folk of Scathfell be here, Romilly?"
Romilly,
relieved that the tension had passed, began to recite the grown sons and
daughters of the middle-aged lord of Scathfell; his Heir, yet another Gareth
("But they call him Garris, in lowland fashion," she added), "Dom
Garris is not wed, he has buried three wives; I think he is only in his thirtieth
year, but looks older, and is lame with a wasting disease of one leg."
"And
you dislike him," said Alderic, and she grinned, her impish smile.
"Why, how could you possibly know that, Lord Alderic? But it is true; he
is always fumbling the maidens in corners, he was not above pawing at Mallina
last year, when she had not even put up her ban-...."
"Lecherous
old goat!" Darren said, "Did Father know?"
"None
of us wanted a quarrel with neighbors; Luciella only told Mallina and me to
keep away from him if we could do so without being uncivil. Then there is Dom
Edric, who is blind, and his wife Ruanna, who keeps the estate books as
well as any man. And there are the young twins, Cathal and Cinhil, they are not
so young either - they are Ruyven's age; twenty-two. And Cathal's wife, who was
one of my childhood friends - Darissa Storn. Cinhil is not wed, and Father once
spoke of betrothing us, but nothing came of it, which gladdened my heart - I
would not want to live at Scathfell, it is like a bandit's hold! Though I would
not mind being close to Darissa, and Cinhil is a nice enough boy."
"It
seems to me you are over young to be wedded," said Alderic, and Darren
laughed. "Women marry young in these hills, and Romilly is fifteen. And, I
doubt not, she thinks it long till she is in a home of her own, and out from
Luciella's guidance - what's the ancient saying, where two women rule a
hearthfire, the thatch may burn with the sparks flying . .. yet I think
Father could do better for Romilly than a younger son, a fourth son at that.
Better lady in a cottage than serving-woman in a castle, and when Dom Garris
weds again - or if old Scathfell should take a wife - Cinhil's wife would be
lowest of all, not much better than waiting-women to all the rest. Darissa was
pretty and bright when she was wedded, and now she looks ten years older than
Cathal, and all out of, shape with bearing children."
"I
am in no haste to marry," Romilly said, "And there are men enough, I
suppose, in these hills; Manfred Storn is Heir to Storn Heights, and he is
about Darren's age, so it's likely, when I am old enough to many, Father will
speak to old Lord Storn. The folk of High Crags will be coming too, and they
have a couple of unmarried sons and daughters, it's likely that they will marry
Rael into that kindred, or me." She shrugged. "What does it matter,
after all? Men are all alike."
Alderic
chuckled. "By those words I know how young you are, Mistress Romilly - I
hope your father does not seek to have you married till you are old enough to distinguish
between one man or another, or you may awaken some day and discover you are
married to the very last man on earth you would have sought for husband. Shall
we go in the house? The sun is high, and your stepmother said something of a
festival breakfast - and I smelled the cooks making spicebread as we passed the
kitchens!"
Romilly
only hoped, now, that she could get up to her room unobserved, to change her
clothing and bathe before the festal meal. But, coming around a corridor, she
almost bumped into a tall, pale, fattish man with fair hair, coming from the
big bathing-room with hot pools, fed by volcanic springs. He was wrapped in a
loose robe and his hair was damp and mussed; he had evidently gone to soak away
the fatigue of riding. Romilly curtseyed politely as she had been taught, then
remembered that she was wearing breeches - curse it! If she had gone on about
her business he might simply have taken her for an out-of-place servant boy on
some errand. Instead his pale flabby face tightened in a dimply creased smile.
"Mistress
Romilly," he said, his eyes sliding up and down her long legs, "An
unexpected pleasure. Why, what a pair of legs you have, girl! And you have -
grown," he added, the pallid china-blue eyes resting on the straining
laces of the old tunic pulled over her full breasts, "It will be a
pleasure to dance with you tonight, now I have had the delights of seeing what
so many women so carefully conceal from their admirers. ..."
Romilly
flushed, feeling heat in her face, ducked her head and escaped. Through the
scalding heat flooding to her ears, she thought, wretchedly, Now do I know
what Luciella meant, that I was too big to run about in breeches - I might as
well be naked, the way he looked at me. All her life she had run about in
her brother's clothes, as free of self-consciousness or shame as if she were
another lad; now, under the man's lustful eyes, she felt as if her body had
actually been rudely handled; her breasts prickled and there was a curious
crawling sensation lower down in her belly.
She
took refuge in her room, her heart pounding, and went swiftly to the washstand,
splashing her hot face with cold water to cool it.
"Luciella
was right Oh, why didn't she tell me?" she wondered wretchedly, then
realized that there was no way to speak of it, and if she had been told,
without this experience, she would only have laughed it away. Her hands were
still shaking as she undid the laces of the boy's tunic, dropped the breeches
to the floor, and for the first time in her life, looked clearly in the mirror
and saw her body as a woman's. She was still slender, her breasts scarcely
rounded, the hips scarcely more flared than a boy's, and the long legs were
really boyish. But, she thought, if ever I wear boy's clothes again,
I shall be sure they fit me loosely enough that I truly look like a male.
Through
the glass connecting doors to Mallina's room she saw her sister exploring her
Midsummer-baskets; like Romilly herself, she had three, which made Romilly turn
back to her father's generous basket, with more fruits and sweets than flowers
- The MacAran had quite a realistic view of little girls' appetites, which were
just as greedy as those of young boys - and the smaller basket she thought was
from Darren. Now, examining it closely, she realized that it was filled with
garden and hothouse flowers, exquisitely arranged, and with one or two exotic
fruits which he must have gotten in Nevarsin, since they did not grow near
Falconsward. Then she saw the card, and read in surprise; I have neither sister
or mother to receive
Midsummer-Gifts;
accept these with my homage, Alderic, student.
Mallina burst into her room.
"Romy,
aren't you dressed yet? We mustn't be late for Festival breakfast! Are you
going to wear your holiday gown? Calinda is with Mother, will you button the
back of my dress for me? What beautiful flowers, Romy! Mine are all garden
flowers, though there is a beautiful bunch of ice-grapes, as sweet as honey -
you know, they leave them on the trees in Nevarsin till they freeze, like redfruit,
and then they lose their sourness and grow sweet. . . Romy, who do you think he
is? He looks so romantic - do you think Dom Alderic is trying to court
one of us? I would be happy indeed to be betrothed to him, he is so handsome
and gallant, like the hero of some fairy-tale-"
"What
a silly chatterbox you are, Mally," said Romilly, but she smiled, "I
think he is a thoughtful guest, no more; no doubt he has sent to mother a
basket as fine as this."
"Domna
Luciella
will not appreciate it," Mallina said, "Still she thinks Festival
Night is a heathen observance not worthy of a good cristoforo; she
scolded Calinda because she had Rael making Festival baskets, but Father said
everyone deserved a holiday and one excuse was as good as another for giving
the farm workers a day of leisure and some well-deserved bonus gifts, and he
should let Rael enjoy the Festival while he was still a child - he would be as
good a cristoforo as he need, if he was a good boy and minded the Book
of Burdens."
Romilly
smiled. "Father has said much the same every Festival since I can
remember," she said, "And I doubt not he likes spicebread and
sweetbaked saffron cakes and fruits as well as anyone else. He quoted from the
Book of Burdens that the beast should not be grudged his gram, nor the worker
his wage, nor his holiday, and Father may be a harsh man, but he is always just
to his workmen." She did up the last button on the gown and spun her
sister around. "How fine you are, Mally! But it is fortunate you do not
wear this dress on a work day - it needs a maid to do it up for you! That is
why I had my festival gown made with laces, so I could do it up for
myself." She finished fastening the embroidered cuffs of her under-tunic,
slipped the long loose surplice, rust-red and embroidered with butterflies,
over her head, and turned for Mallina to tie up her braid at her neck with the
butterfly-clasp that modestly hid the neck of her frock.
Mallina
turned to choose a flower for her hair from the baskets. "Does this
rose-plant suit me? It is pink like my dress . . . oh, Romy, look!" she
said, with a scandalized half-breath, "Saw you not, he has put
golden-flower, dorilys, into your basket!"
"And
so what, silly?" asked Romy, choosing the blue kireseth blossom for
her knotted braid, but Mallina caught her hand.
"No,
indeed, you must not, Romilly - what, don't you know the flower-language? The
gift of golden-flower is - well, the flower is an aphrodisiac, you know as well
as I do what it means, when a man offers a maiden dorilys...."
Romilly
blushed, again feeling the lustful eyes on her. She swallowed hard - Alderic,
was he too looking at her with this kind of greed? Then common sense came back.
She said crisply, "Nonsense; he is a stranger to these hills, that is all.
But if that kind of talk is commonplace among silly girls, I will not wear the
flower - shame to them, for it is the prettiest of all the flowers, but do you
choose me a flower, then, for my braids."
The
sisters went down in their finery to the family feast, bearing with them, as
custom dictated, the fruits from their festival baskets to be shared with
father and brothers. The family was gathered in the great dining-hall rather
than the small room used for family meals, and Domna Luciella was there,
welcoming her guests. Rael was there in his best suit, and Calinda in a new
gown too, dark and decent as suited her station, but well-made and new, not a
shabby or outworn family castoff; Luciella was a kind woman, Romilly thought,
even to poor relations. Darren wore his best clothing too, and Alderic, though
his best was sombre as befitted a student at Nevarsin, and bore no trace of
family colors or badges. She wondered who he was, and kept to herself the
thought that had come to her, that he might well be one of the king's men,
exiled, or even the young prince . .. no, she would say nothing; but she wished
that Darren had trusted her with his secret.
The
middle-aged Gareth of Scathfell, as the man of highest rank in the assembly,
had been given the high seat usually assigned to The MacAran at his own table;
her father had taken a lower place. The young couples and single men and women
were at a separate table; Romilly saw Darissa seated beside Cathal and would
have joined her friend, but her stepmother gestured to an empty seat left
beside Dom Garris; Romilly blushed, but would not incite a confrontation
here; she took her seat, biting her lip and hoping that in the very presence of
her parents he would say nothing to her.
"Now,
clothed as befits your beauty, you are even more lovely, damisela,'' he
said, and that was all; the words were perfectly polite, but she looked at his
pale slab of face with
dislike
and did not answer. But after all, he had done nothing, the words had been
polite enough, what could she say, there was no way she could complain of him.
There
were delicacies of every kind, for this was breakfast and mid-day meal in one;
the feasting went on for some time, and before the dishes were cleared, the
musicians had come in and begun to play. The curtains had been drawn back to
their furthest to let in the midsummer sun, and the doors flung open; the
furniture in the lower hall had been moved away to clear it for dancing. As
Darren led his sister out for the first dance, as custom demanded, she heard
them discussing, at the high table, the men that had been sent out to seek the
exiled Carolin.
"It's
nothing to me," The MacAran said, "I care not who sits on the throne;
but I'll not have my men bribed to be thief-takers, either. There was a time
when MacArans ruled this as a kingdom; but then, we had little to do but keep
it by force of arms, and I've no wish to make my lands an armed camp, and the
Hasturs are welcome to rule as they will; but I curse their brotherslaying
wars!"
"I
had heard word that Carolin and his older son had crossed the Kadarin,"
Lord Scathfell said, "No doubt to seek refuge with my cousin of Aldaran -
there is old hatred between the Hastur-kin and the Aldarans."
Her
father drew up his mouth in a one-sided grin. "None so keen at the hunting
of wolves as the dog with wolf blood," he said, "Were not the
Aldarans, long ago, come from that same Hastur-blood?"
"So
they say," Lord Scathfell said with a grim nod, "I put no stock in
all those tales of the children of Gods . . . though, the Gods know, there is laran
in the Aldaran line, even among my own sons and daughters, as among yours;
have you not one son in a Tower, Dom Mikhail?"
Her
father's brow clouded. "Not by my will or wish, nor by my leave," he
spat out, "I give no name of son to him who dwells among the Hairimyn. On
his lips the harmless word was an obscenity; he calmed himself with an effort
and added, "But this is no talk for a festal board. Will it please you to
dance, my Lord?"
"I
will leave that for younger folk," said Lord Scathfell, "But lead
your lady out to dance if you will," he added, and The MacAran turned
dutifully to Lady Luciella and led her on to the dance floor.
After
the first ceremonious dance, the younger folk gathered for a ring-dance, all
the young men in the outer ring, and the girls and women in the inner one; the
dancing grew riotous after a bit, and Romilly saw Darissa drop out of the
dancers, her hand pressed to her side; she went to fetch her friend a drink,
and sat beside her, chatting. Darissa wore the loose ungirdled gown of a pregnant
woman, but even so she loosed the clasps on her tunic, and fanned herself - she
was red and panting.
"I
shall dance no more till this one is born," she said, pressing her long
fingers against her swollen body, "He holds his own dance, I think, and
will dance from now till harvest-time, mostly when I am trying to sleep!"
Cathal came and bent solicitously over his wife, but she gestured him back to
the dancing. "Go and dance with the men, my husband, I will sit here for a
little and talk with my old playmate - what have you been doing with yourself,
Romilly? Are you not betrothed yet? You are fifteen now, are you not?"
Romilly
nodded. She was shocked at her friend, who had been so pretty and graceful but
three years ago; now she had grown heavy-footed, her small breasts swollen and
thick beneath the laces of her gown, her waist clumsy. In three years, Darissa
had had two children and now she was bearing another already! As if reading her
thoughts, Darissa said with a bitter twist of her lips, "Oh, I know well,
I am not so pretty as I was when I was a maiden - enjoy your last year of
dancing, Romilly, 'tis likely that next year you too will be on the sidelines,
swelling with your first; my husband's father spoke of wedding you to Cinhil,
or perhaps Mallina; he thinks her more docile and lady-like."
Romilly
said in shock, "But need you have another so soon? I should think two in
three years was enough."
Darissa
shrugged and smiled. "Oh, well, it is the way of things - this one I think
I will feed at my own breast and not put out to nurse, and perhaps I will not
get with child again this year. I love my little ones, but I think three is
enough for a time."
"It
would be more than enough for me for a lifetime," said Romilly vigorously,
and Darissa laughed. "So say we all when we are young girls. Lord
Scathfell is pleased with me because I have already given them two sons, and I
hope this one is a daughter; I would like a little girl - later I will take you
to see my babies; they are pretty children, little Gareth has red hair; maybe
he will have laran, a magician for the Towers."
"Would
you want him to-" Romilly murmured, and Darissa laughed. "Oh,
yes, Tramontana Tower would be ready to take him, the Aldarans are Hastur-kin
from away back before the Hundred Kingdoms, and they have old ties with
Tramontana." She lowered her voice. "Have you truly no news of
Ruyven? Did your father really disown him?"
Romilly
nodded, and Darissa's eyes widened; she and Ruyven had played together as
children, too.
"I
remember, one year at Midsummer, he sent me a Festival-basket," she said,
"and I wore the sprig of golden-flower he sent me; but at the end of that
Festival, Father betrothed me to Cathal, and we have been happy enough, and now
there are our children - but I think kindly of Ruyven, and I would gladly have
been your sister, Romilly. Do you think The MacAran will give you to Cinhil if
he should ask? Then should we be sisters indeed."
"I
do not dislike Cinhil," Romilly said, but inwardly she shrank away; three
years from now, then, would she be like Darissa, grown fat and short of breath,
her skin blotched and her body misshapen from breeding? "The one good
thing about such a marriage would be, it would bring me close to you," she
said truthfully, "but I see no haste to marry; and Luciella says, fifteen
is too young to settle down; she would as soon not have us betrothed till we
are seventeen or more. One does not breed a good bitch in her first heat."
"Oh,
Romilly," Darissa said, blushing, and they giggled together like children.
"Well,
enjoy the dancing while you can, for your dancing days will be over soon,"
Darissa said. "Look, there is Darren's friend from the monastery - he
looks like a monk in his dark suit; is he one of the brethren, then?"
Romilly
shook her head. "I know not who he is, only that he is a friend of
Darren's and of the Castamir clan," she said, and kept her suspicions to
herself. Darissa said, "Castamir is a Hastur clan! I wonder he will come
here freely - they held by the old king, I heard. Does your father hold to
Carolin, or support the new king?"
"I
do not think Father knows or cares, one king or another," said Romilly,
but before she could say more, Alderic stood beside them.
"Mistress
Romilly? It is a set dance - will you partner me?"
"Do
you mind being left alone, Darissa?"
"No,
there is Cathal; I will ask him to fetch me a glass of wine," Darissa
said, and Romilly let Alderic draw her into the forming set, six couples -
although one of them was Rael and Jessamy Storn who was eleven, and half a head
taller than her partner. They faced one another, and Darren and Jeralda Storn,
at the head of the line, led off, taking hands, circling each couple in the
complex figures of the dance. When it came Alderic's turn she reached
confidently for his hands; they were square, hard and warm, not the soft hands
of a scholar at all, but calloused and strong like a swordsman's. An unlikely
monk, indeed, she thought, and put her mind to the intricacies of the dance,
which at the end of the figure put her opposite Darren, and then opposite her
brother Rael. When the set brought her briefly into partnership, crossing hands
and circling with Cinhil, he squeezed her hand and smiled, but she cast her
eyes down and did not return the smile. So Lord Scathfell thought to marry her
to Cinhil this year, so she could be fat and swollen with baby after baby like
Darissa? Not likely! Some day, she supposed, she would have to be married, but
not to this raw boy, if she could help it! Her father was not so much in awe of
the Aldaran Lords as that, and besides, it was only Aldaran of Scathfell, not
Aldaran of Castle Aldaran. Scathfell was the richest and most influential of
their neighbors, but The MacAran had been an independent landholder since, she
had heard, before the raising of Caer Donn city!
Now
the set brought her face to face with Dom Garris again. He smiled at her
and pressed her hand too, and she blushed, holding her own hands cold and stiff
against his, just touching as the dance required. She was relieved when the set
brought them back to their original places, with Alderic facing her. The
musicians swung into a couple-dance, and she saw Dom Garris start toward
her purposefully; she grabbed at Alderic's sleeve and whispered, "Will you
ask me to dance, Dom Alderic?"
"To
be sure," he said, smiling, and led her out. She said after a moment,
returning his smile as they left Garris staring after them, "You are not a
clodhopper at all."
"No?"
He laughed. "It has been long since I danced, save with the monks."
"You
dance in the monastery?"
"Sometimes.
To keep warm. And there is a sacred dance at some of the services. And some of
the students who are not to be of the brethren go into the village and dance at
Festival, though I-" it seemed to her that he hesitated a moment, "I
had small leisure for that"
"They
keep you so hard at your studies? Domna Luciella said that Darren looks
thin and pale - do they give you enough to eat, and warm clothes?"
He
nodded. "I am used enough to hardships," he said, and fell silent,
while Romilly enjoyed the dance, the music. He said, as they separated at the
end of the music, "You wear my flowers - I hope they pleased you?"
"Very
much," she said, then felt shy again; had he put the dorilys into
her basket as the invitation Mallina said it was, or was it simply a stranger's
unfamiliarity with the countryside? She would have liked to ask, but was too
bashful. But again it was as if he read her thoughts; he said abruptly,
"Darren told me - I meant nothing improper, believe me, Mistress Romilly.
In my country - I am a lowlander - the starflower, dorilys, it is the
gift of the lord Hastur to the Blessed Cassilda, and I meant a courteous
compliment in honor of the day, no more."
She
said, smiling up at him, "I do not think anyone would believe you capable
of any improper innuendo, Dom Alderic."
"I
am your brother's friend; you need not say Dom to me," said
Alderic. "After all, we have hunted and flown hawks together."
"Nor
need you call me damisela," she said, "My brothers and sister
call me Romy."
"Good;
we shall be even as kinfolk, as I am to Darren," said Alderic. "Will
you have some wine?" They had moved close to the refreshment-table. She
shook her head and said ingenuously, "I am not allowed to drink wine in
company."
"Shallan,
then?"
He dipped her up some of the sweet fruit-drink. She sipped it thirstily. After
the romping dance she knew that her hair was beginning to come down, but she
did not want to withdraw to the giggling girls in the corner and pin it up.
"You
are fond of hawking?" she asked him.
"I
am; the women of our family train sentry-birds. Have you ever flown one, dcani
- Romy?"
She
shook her head. She had seen the great fierce birds, but said, "I knew not
that they could be tamed! Why, they can bring down a rabbithorn! I should think
they were no great sport."
"They
are not flown for sport," Alderic said, "but trained for war, or for
fire-watch; it is done with laran. A sentry-bird in flight can spy out
intruders into a peaceful countryside, or bandits, or a forest-fire. But it is
no task for sport, and in truth the birds are fierce, and not easy to handle.
Yet I think you could do it, Romilly, if your laran was trained."
"It
is not, nor likely to be," she said, "and doubtless you know why, if
Darren has told you so much. Sentry-birds!" She felt a little shiver, half
pleasant, trickle down her spine at the thought of handling the great fierce
birds of prey. "I think it would be no harder to train a banshee!"
Alderic
chuckled. "I have even heard of that in the far hills," he said,
"And banshee-birds are very stupid; it takes little craft to handle them,
only to rear them from hatchlings and feed them on warm food; and they will do
what you will, spying out game-tracks with the warmth left in the ground, and
they make fine watch-birds, for they will scream terribly at any strange
smell."
Now
she did shiver; the thought of the great, blind, flightless carnivores trained
for watchman-duty. She said, "Who needs a banshee for that when a good
Rouser hound is as useful, and much nicer to have around the house?"
"I'll
not argue that," said Alderic, "and I would sooner climb High Kimbi
in my bare feet than try to train a banshee; but it can be done. I cannot
handle even sentry-birds; I have not the gift, but some of the women of our
family do so, and I have seen it done in the Tower, where they use them
for fire-watch; their eyes see further than any human's." Soft strains of
music began again and he asked, "Would you like to dance this one?"
She
shook her head. "Not yet, thanks - it is warm, the sun coming in like this."
Alderic
bowed to someone behind her, and Romilly turned to see Luciella standing there.
She said, "Romilly, you have not yet danced with Dom Garris!"
he
said scornfully, "It is like him to complain to my stepmother instead of
coming like a man to ask me himself."
Romilly!
He is heir to Scathfell!"
I
don't care if he is heir to Cloudland Staircase or to Zandru's ninth hell, if
he wants to dance-" she began, but Dom Garris appeared behind
Luciella and said, with his plump smile, "Will you honor me with a dance,
Mistress Romilly?"
here
was, after all, no way to refuse without being really rude. He was her parents'
guest, even though she felt he should dance with the women his own age and not
hang around gawking at the young girls. She accepted his hand on her wrist to
lead her out to dance. After all, he could not say or do anything rude in the
full view of her father and her brothers, and half the countryside round. His
hand on hers was unpleasantly damp, but she supposed that was not anything he
could help.
Why,
you are light as a feather on your feet, damisela- quite the young lady!
Who would have thought it this morning, seeing you in your boots and breeches
like a boy - I suppose all the young lads in the countryside are hanging around
you, heh?"
Romilly
shook her head silently. She detested this kind of talk, though she knew it
would have made Mallina giggle and blush. When they had finished the dance he
asked her for another, but she declined politely, saying she had a stitch in
her side. He wanted to fetch her wine or a glass of shallan, but when
she said she only wished to sit down by Darissa for a little he sat beside them
and insisted on fanning her. Fortunately, by the time that dance was over, the
musicians had struck up another ring-dance and all the young folks were
gathering into circles, laughing and kicking up their heels in the rowdy
figure. Dom Garris finally went away, sulking, and Romilly released her
breath.
"You
have made another conquest," Darissa teased.
"Not
likely; dancing with me is like grabbing at a scullery-girl, something he can
do without committing himself to anything," Romilly said. "The
Aldarans of Scathfell are too high to marry into our clan, except for their
younger sons. Father spoke once of marrying me to Manfred Storn, but he's not
fifteen yet, and there's no hurry. Yet, though I am not high enough to marry, I
am too well-born for him to seduce without reprisal, and I do not like him well
enough for that." She smiled and added, "The worst thing about
wedding with Cinhil, should he offer for me, would be having to call that great
fat slug brother. Yet kinship's dues, I dare say, would at least make it
unseemly for him to pay me more than the attention due a brother's wife."
"I
would not count on that," said Darissa in an undertone, "When I was
pregnant with little Rafael, last year, he came and sought me out - he said
that since I was already with child I need fear no unseemly consequences, and
when I chided him, he said he looked backward to the old days in the hills,
when brothers and sisters held all their wives in common . . . and surely, he
said, Cathal would pay him a brother's kindness and not care if I shared his
bed now and again, since his wife was also big with breeding - I kicked his
shins and told him to find a servant-girl for his bed if he could pay one to
overlook his ugliness; and so I wounded his pride and he has not come near me
again. To tell the truth he is not so bad-looking, only he whines and his hands
are always flabby and damp. And-" she added, showing the dimples which
were almost the only thing unchanged from the time when she and Romilly had
been girls together, "I love Cathal too well to seek any other bed."
Romilly
blushed, and looked away; reared among animals, she knew perfectly well what
Darissa was talking about, but Luciella was a strictly-observing cristoforo and
did not think it seemly to speak of such things among young girls. Darissa
mistook her blush. She said, almost defensively, "Well, I bear children
without much trouble - I am not like Garris's wife; she left no living
children, and died in childbirth just before Midwinter. He has worn out three
wives, Dom Garris, trying to get him an Heir, and I have marked that all
his children die at birth - I have no wish to get myself with child by him or
I should follow his wives into death, no doubt.
"My
older sister went for a time to Tramontana Tower when she was a girl, and she
said she had heard there about the days of the old breeding-program, when the
Aldarans had some strange gifts of loran, but they were bound, in their
line, to lethal genes - do you know what those are? Yes, of course, your father
breeds his own horses, does he not? And Cathal has them not, but I think Dom
Garris will leave no heir, so one day my sons by Cathal will inherit
Scathfell-" Darissa rattled on.
"And
you will rule the roost as their mother," said Romilly, laughing, but then
Rael came up and pulled them into the set-dance, saying they had not enough
women to make up a second set, and she dropped that line of thought.
The
dancing and feasting went on all day, and before midnight The MacAran and Lord
Scathfell and the rest of the older people, with their ladies, retired to rest,
leaving the young people to their dancing and merry-making. Rael was taken away
by the governess, also the protesting Mallina, who was comforted only by seeing
that her friends Jessamy and Jeralda were also being sent to bed. Romilly was
tired, and almost ready to go with the children - she had, after all, been
awake before daylight. But Alderic and her brother Darren were still dancing,
and she would not admit that her brother could stay awake longer than she
could. But she saw, with a little sinking awareness, that Darissa was leaving
the hall - pregnant as she was, she said, she needed her sleep.
I
will stay close to Darren. In my brother's presence Dom Garris cannot come
too near for comfort . . . and then she wondered why she was worrying; he
had, after all, offered her no word out of the way, and how could she complain,
after all, of a mere look? Nevertheless, the memory of his eyes on her made her
squirm; and now she thought about it, she realized that all this day and
evening she had been somehow, in the back of her mind, aware of his eyes on
her.
Is
this, then, laran?
I
would rather not dance at all, I would rather sit here and talk about hawks and
horses with my brother and his friends....
But
Cinhil claimed her for a dance, and then she could not in courtesy refuse Dom
Garris. The dancing was a little wilder, the music faster, now that the
elderly and more staid people had left the hall. He whirled her about till she
was dizzy, and she was conscious that his hands were no longer decorously on
her sleeve but that he was holding her somewhat closer than was comfortable,
and when she tried self-consciously to squirm away from them he only chuckled
and eased her closer still.
"No,
now, you cannot tell me you are so shy as that," he said, and she could
tell from the flushed look of his face and the slight slurring of his words
that he had drunk over long of the stronger wine at the high table, "Not
when you run about with those lovely long legs showing in breeches, and your
breasts showing through a tunic three sizes too small, you cannot play Lady
Modesty with me now!" He pulled her close and his lips nuzzled her cheek,
but she twisted indignantly away.
"Don't!"
And then she said, crossly, "I do not like the stink of too much wine on
your breath, and you are drunk, Dom Garris. Let me go."
"Well,
you should have been drinking more," he said easily, and guided them in
the dance into one of the long galleries that led away from the hall.
"Here, give me a kiss, Romy-"
"I
am not Romy to you," she said, and pulled her head away from him,
"and if you had not been spying about where you had no right to be, you
would not have seen me in my brother's clothes, which I wear only in the sight
of my little brothers. If you think I was showing myself to you, you are very
much mistaken."
"No,
only to that haughty young sprig of the Hali’imyn who was squiring you
to the hunt and hawking?" he asked, and laughed. She said, twisting her
rumpled hair free, "I want to go back to the hall. I did not come out here
with you of my own will, I just did not want to make a scene on the dance
floor. Take me back to the hall, or I will shout to my brother now! And then my
father will horsewhip you!"
He
laughed, holding her close. "Ah, on a night like this, what do you think
your brother will be doing, then? He would not thank you for calling him away
from what every young man will be about, on Midsummer-Night. Must I alone be
refused? You are not such a child as all that. Come, give me a kiss then-"
"No!"
Romilly struggled away from his intruding hands, crying now, and he let her go.
"I
am sorry," he said gently, "I was testing you; I see now that you are
a good girl, and all the Gods forbid I should interfere with you." He bent
and dropped a suddenly respectful kiss on her wrist. She swallowed hard,
blinked back her tears and fled from the gallery, back through the hall and
upstairs, where she bundled off her festival gown and hid beneath her warm
quilts, sobbing.
How
she hated him!
Every
year The MacAran held his great Midsummer-feast as preliminary to a great
market in hawks, trained dogs and horses. On the morning after the Festival,
Romilly wakened to the great bustle in the courtyard, and men and women
thronging, while on the field beyond the enclosed yard, horses were neighing as
men put them through their paces, and men and women were coming and going. Romilly
dressed quickly in an old gown - there were still guests, so there could be no
thought of borrowing a pair of Darren's breeches - and ran down. Calinda,
meeting her on the stairs, gave a rueful laugh.
"I
knew I should get no work out of Rael this day - he is beyond me, his father
must send him soon to Nevarsin for teaching by men who can handle him,"
she said, "But must you, too, hang about the market, Romilly? Ah
well-" she smiled kindly at her charge, "Go if you will, I shall have
the whole day to work with Mallina on her penmanship - she takes guidance
better when you and Rael are not there to hear. And I suppose you would not
mind your book if your heart and thoughts were all out in the courtyard. But
you must work all the harder tomorrow," she said firmly, and Romilly
hugged the older woman with a vehemence that left her breathless.
"Thank
you, Calinda, thank you!"
She
picked her way carefully through the trampled mud of the courtyard and into the
field. Davin was displaying the flight to a lure of one of the best-trained
hawks, a great bird in whose training Romilly had played no small part; she
stood watching in excitement till Davin spotted her.
"And
this hawk is fierce and strong, but so gentle that even a young maiden could
fly her," Davin said, "Mistress Romilly, will you take the
bird?"
She
slid the gauntlet over her arm and held out her wrist; he set the bird on it,
and swirled the lure, and the bird took off, quickly climbing the sky, then, as
the whirling leather thong with the meat and feathers came swooping down,
striking so quickly that eyes could hardly follow the swift strike. Romilly
picked up bird and lure and stood feeding the hawk from her free hand, to the
accompaniment of little cries of amazement and delight
"I
shall have that hawk, then, for my lady," said Cathal Aldaran of
Scathfell, "She has not had enough exercise since her children were born,
and so fine a hawk will encourage her to be out and about, and to ride."
"No,"
said the elderly Dom Gareth firmly, "No woman shall fly such a hawk
as that under my roof; but your training methods are excellent, messire, and
I will take one of the smaller hawks for Lady Darissa - have you a good lady's
hawk? Mistress Romilly, can you advise me, perhaps, as to what hawk my
daughter-in-law could best fly?"
She
said, lowering her eyes modestly, "I fly a verrin hawk, vai dom,
but either of these-" she indicated three of the smaller birds, with
wing-spans not much longer than her arm, "are well-trained and I think
Darissa would have no trouble in handling them. But I give you my word, sir,
that if you want to buy the larger bird for her, she is so well trained that
Darissa could fly her, and the larger birds are better for hunting for the
kitchens; the smaller hawks can bring down nothing bigger than a
field-shrew."
He
snorted. "The women of my household have no need to hunt for meat for the
pot; if they fly hawks, they do so only to have a reason to take air and
exercise. And The MacAran still lets a great girl like you hunt with a verrin
hawk? Disgraceful!"
Romilly
bit back the protest on her lip - Aldaran might not approve of women flying
hawks, but perhaps other men were not so stuffy and narrow-minded as he was
himself - realizing that a saucy answer would only alienate a valued
neighbor and customer of her father's. While they produced most of what they
needed on the estate at Falconsward, still coined money was always in short
supply, and most of her father's ready money came from this sale every year.
She curtseyed to Lord Scathfell and withdrew, handing back the hawk to Davin.
While he haggled with the man, she cast a quick frightened glance around the
field - her father might have decided to punish her by putting Preciosa up for
sale - but Preciosa was not there, but still safe within the mews. At the far
end, her father was putting one or two of his best horses through their paces,
while the kennel-man was displaying working dogs trained to obedience to word
or gesture. The high nobility who had danced last night at their feast nibbed
elbows with small-holders and farmers who had come to pick up dogs for their
herding, or perhaps to trade for a horse rejected by the nobles. Darren was
stationed at the far end, writing down all the details of the transactions for
the steward; Rael was running in and out of the crowd, playing catch-the-monkey
with a group of small boys his own age, his face and hands already grubby and
his jacket torn.
"Can
you take me to see your father's horses?" Alderic said at her elbow,
"I would like to trade my nag for a somewhat better one; I have not much
money, but perhaps I could work some time for him in return for the difference
- do you think he would be interested in a deal like that? I have marked that
your coridom is old and feeble - perhaps I could work for him for forty
days or so while he finds himself a man better suited to the needs of his
business, and the old man could be retired to an indoor steward."
She
blinked in surprise - she had begun to be sure that he was, in fact, the Hastur
prince in disguise, and here he was offering to hire himself, a paid worker, to
The MacAran in return for a horse-trade! But she said politely, "About the
deal, you must ask him yourself; but we have some good horses which are not
good-looking enough to attract the attention of the highly-born, and must be
sold at a lower cost; perhaps one of them would suit you, if it was
well-trained. That one, for instance-" she pointed out a great ungainly
horse, an ugly color of brown, spotted unevenly with black, his mane and tail
growing somewhat askew, "He is an ugly raw-boned brute, but if you look
carefully at his gait, and the way he carries his tail, you will see that he is
a fine strong horse, and spirited too. But he is no ride for a lady, nor for
any soft-handed fellow who wants his horse to plod along at a gentle pace; he
wants firm hands and good handling. His sire was our best stallion, but the dam
was only a cull, so though his blood is not bad, he is an ugly brute and not
good-colored."
"His
haunches look strong, indeed," said Alderic, "But I would like to
look at his teeth for myself. I suppose he is broken to the saddle?"
"Yes,
though father was at first intending to make a draft-horse of him; he is too
big for most riders," she said, "But you are tall, you would need a
large horse. Ruyven broke him to the bridle, but I myself have ridden him -
although," she said, with a mischievous smile, "Father does not know
it, and you need not tell him."
"And
you can handle him, damisela?" Alderic looked incredulous.
"I
will not ride him before all these people to prove it," she said,
"but I would not stoop to lie about it to you, and-" she met his eyes
briefly, "I think perhaps you would know if I did."
"That
I would, Romilly," he said gravely.
"I
give you my word, the horse is good-tempered enough, but he wants firm
handling," she said, "I think perhaps he has a sense of humor - if a
horse can laugh, I would swear I have seen him laugh at people who think they
need only clamber on a horse and let him do all the work, and he had Darren off
in two minutes; but my father can ride him without even a bridle, only a saddle
and halter; because The MacAran knows how to make him, or any horse,
behave."
"Aye,
and I am told you have the same gift," he said. "Well, I will make
your father an offer for him; would he take my horse in trade, do you
think?"
"Oh,
yes, he has always need of cheaply-priced horseflesh, to sell to farmers and
such," she said, "Men who will use their horses well, but cannot
afford much in the way of stables. One of our old mares, no longer young enough
to carry active young folk who would be in the saddle all day, he gave for
almost nothing to an elderly man who lives nearby, who was too poor to buy a
good horse, just so that the old horse might live out her life in a good home
and have only light work. No doubt he would do the same for your horse - is she
very old?"
"No,"
Alderic said, "but I must be into the Hellers when summer comes, and even
in summertime it takes a strong horse to ride such trails."
"Into
the far Hellers?" She wondered what would take him into the
almost-impassable mountain ranges in the summer, but he turned the subject
deftly before she could ask.
"I
had not expected to find a young woman such a judge of horseflesh - how came
you to know so much?"
"I
am a MacAran, sir; I have worked at my father's side since I was old enough to
follow him about the stables, and when Ruyven left-" she broke off, unable
to say to anyone outside the family that her oldest brother's defection had
left her father with no one but paid help to share his love of the animals he
bred and trained. Yet she sensed that he understood her, for he smiled in
sympathy.
"I
like your father," Alderic said, "He is harsh, yes, but he is just,
and he speaks freely to his children."
"Does
not your father?"
Alderic
shook his head. "I have hardly had speech with my father half a dozen
times since I was out of short dresses. My mother was wedded to him in a
dynastic marriage, and there was little love to lose between them; I doubt they
have said a civil word to one another since my sister was conceived, and now
they dwell in separate houses and meet formally a few times a year, no more. My
father is a kindly man, I suppose, but I think he cannot look on my face
without seeing my mother's features, and so he has always been ill at ease with
me. Even as a babe I called him sir, and have hardly spoken with him
since I was grown to man's size."
"That
cannot have been so long ago," Romilly teased, but he said, with a
poignancy that stopped her teasing cold, "Still, I envy you; I have seen
Rael climb without fear into his father's lap - I cannot remember that I ever
did so with my father, but you can go to your father, speak with him freely, he
treats you almost as a friend and listens when you speak. Even though my father
is high in-" Alderic stopped himself short, and there was a moment of
awkward silence before he finished weakly, "High in station and honor, I
wish I need not always address him as My Lord. I swear I would trade
fathers with you at any moment."
"He
might
think it a bargain," said Romilly bitterly, but she knew she was not quite
truthful; her father loved her, harsh as he was, and she knew it. She said,
"Look, there he stands and for the moment he has no customer, go now and
ask for such a trade for Redwing."
"I
thank you," he said, and went; then Davin called to her to show the paces
of one of the dogs she had trained, and she forgot Alderic again. She worked
all day on the sale fields, displaying the obedience of the dogs, explaining
bloodlines and stud-books, exhibiting the hawks; her noon-meal was a mouthful
of bread and cheese and a few nuts, swallowed in the enclosure behind the
stables among The MacAran's men, and by the time the trading was called to a
halt by the evening rain and the guests began to depart, she was famished and
filthy, ready for a bath and to be dressed in a comfortable worn tunic and
skirt for the family's dinner. A good smell of roasting meat and fresh-baked
bread came as she passed the hall, and she went in and took her seat. Rael was
still chattering to anyone who would listen about his day spent among the
animals, and Luciella finally silenced him with a weary "Hush, Rael, or
you shall have supper in the nursery; there are others in this family who would
like to speak a word or two without being drowned out! How did it go today, my
dear?" she asked The MacAran as he took his seat and picked up his mug. He
took a long drink before answering.
"Well
enough; I made a good trade for Redwing, who is a fine horse for anyone who has
wit to see what lies beneath that ugly coat of his. Dom Alderic told me
you recommended that sale, Romilly," he said, with a kind glance at his
elder daughter.
"Did
I well, father? I did not want to interfere, but it seemed to me that he would
be a good ride for Dom Alderic," she said shyly, "and-"
she looked around to see if Alderic had come in, but Darren's place was still
empty and his friend was not at table either, "He told me he was short of
ready money, so I knew that one of the blacks would be beyond his purse."
"I
am grateful to you; I wanted Redwing in good hands," said her father,
"and most people could not handle him; but with young Castamir, he was
gentle as a child's cagebird. So I thank you, daughter,"
"But
still," Luciella complained, "this must be the last year she goes out
into the fields with the men, showing off hawks and horses - she is a grown
woman, Mikhail!"
No
fear of that," said The MacAran, smiling, "Other news I have too.
Romilly, my dear, you know you are of an age to be married; I had not thought I
would have such a good offer for you, but Dom Garris of Scathfell has
asked me for your hand in marriage, and I have answered him; yes."
Romilly
felt as if an ice-cold hand was closing about her throat.
Father!"
she protested, while Luciella beamed and Mallina squeaked with excitement,
"Not Dom Garris!"
Come,
come," her father said with a genial smile, "Surely you have not set
your heart on someone else? Manfred Storn is not yet ready to marry, and I
thought you loved Darissa well, and would welcome marrying into that family, so
you might be near your best friend."
I
had thought-perhaps Cinhil-"
If
that young man has trifled with your affections," said The MacAran,
"I'll turn him over my knee and dust his breeches for him - he's too much
a child to be worth calling challenge! Why marry the younger son when you can
marry the Heir, my dear?"
Her
heart sank as she remembered the moment in the galleries. I was only testing
you. Now I see you are a good girl. So, she thought, if she had liked Dom
Garris well enough to kiss him she would have been deprived of marriage, as
if it were a prize for good conduct! But since she had showed her loathing, she
was then worthy of his attentions? Her eyes burned, but she would not cry here
before her father.
"Father,
I hate him," she said, pleading, "Please, don't make me marry
him!"
"Romilly,"
said Mallina, "You will be Lady Scathfell! Why, he's Heir to Scathfell,
and perhaps even to Aldaran itself some day! Why, the folk of Aldaran were of
the Hastur-kinfolk!"
The
MacAran gestured the younger girl to silence.
"Romy,"
he said gravely, "Marriage is not a matter of whim. I have chosen a good
young man for you."
"So
young he is not," she flared, "he has buried three wives, and all of
them have died in childbirth!"
"That
is because he married into Aldaran kindred," her father said, "Any
horse-breeder will tell you it is unwise to cross close kindred so often. You
have no Aldaran blood and can probably give him healthy children."
She
thought of Darissa, not much older than herself, swollen and shapeless with
bearing children. Would she be like that, and would those children have been
fathered by Dom
Garris,
with his whining voice and damp flabby hands? The thought made her flesh crawl.
"No
more talk," said her father firmly, "All silly girls think they know
what man they want, but older heads must make the decision as it is best for
their lives. I would not have you married before harvest time - I will not have
my daughter hustled to marriage - but at the harvest you will marry Dom Garris,
and that is all I have to say."
"So
while I thought you were having a sale of horses and hawks," she said
bitterly, "You were also making a sale of your daughters! Tell me, Father,
did Dom Garris give a good price?"
She
knew by the unlovely flush that spread over her father's face that she had
caught him on the raw. He said, "I'll hear none of your impertinence, my
pert young mistress!"
"I
doubt it not," she flung back at him, "You would rather trade in
hawks and horses because they cannot talk back - and you can give them what
fate you will!"
He
opened his mouth to reply; then gave her a heavy glance.
"My
lady," he said to Luciella, "It is your task to bring my daughters
under control; see to it, will you? I will dine with the steward; I'll not have
this brangling at my family table." He rose and strode out of the room.
"Oh,
Mother," Romilly wailed, crumpling and throwing her head into Luciella's
lap, "Do I have to marry that- that-" words almost failed her, but
finally she came out with, "that great slug? He is like something
with a dozen legs that crawled out from under a piece of rotten wood!"
Luciella
stroked her hair gently, puzzled. "There, there, child," she
murmured, "It will not be so bad as you think; why, didn't you tell Dom
Alderic that a horse should not be judged by his ugly coat? Dom Garris
is a good and honorable man. Why, at your age, I had already my first child,
and so had your own dear mother, Romy. There, there, don't cry," she added
helplessly, and Romilly knew there was no help for it; Luciella would never
defy her father. Nor could she. She was only a girl and there was no escape.
Alone
in her room, or riding alone over the hills with Preciosa on her saddle,
Romilly pondered what she could do. It seemed that she was trapped. She had
never known her father to alter a judgment given - he would not hear of
forgiveness for Ruyven, for instance - or to change his mind, once made up. He
would not break his agreement with Dom Garris - or had it been made with
Gareth of Scathfell himself? - though the heavens should fall. Her governess,
her stepmother even, could sometimes be teased or argued out of a punishment or
a judgment; in all the years of her life, her father had never been known to go
back on what he had said, even when he knew it was wrong. Far and wide in the
Kilghard Hills, the word of a MacAran was like the word of Hastur; as good as
another man's signed bond or sworn oath.
What
if she should defy him? It would not be the first time. Something inside her
quailed at the thought of his rage. But when she countered her father's rage
with the thought of the alternative, confronting Dom Garris and the
memory of lust in his eyes, she realized that she would rather that her father
beat her every day for a year than that he should deliver her over to Dom Garris.
Didn't he know what the man was like? And then, with her heart sinking,
she realized that The MacAran was a man and would never have seen that side of
Garris of Aldaran; that, Dom Garris showed only to a woman he desired.
If
he touches me, I will vomit, she thought, and then she knew that whatever her
father's anger, she must make a final appeal to him.
She
found him in the stable, supervising a stableboy in poulticing the knees of a
black pony who had fallen in the yard. She knew it was not an auspicious
moment, for he looked cross and abstracted.
"Keep
up the poulticing," he directed the boy, "Hot and cold, for at least
two hours, and then treat the knees with karalla powder and bandage them
well. And see he doesn't lie down in the muck - make sure he has fresh straw
every few hours. Even with all we can do, he will be scarred and I'll have to
sell him at a loss, or keep him for light work on the farm; if his knees get
infected, we may lose him altogether. I'm putting you in charge - if anything
goes wrong, I'll have it out of your hide, you young rascal, since it was your
careless riding let him fall!" The stableboy opened his mouth to protest,
but The MacAran gestured him to silence. "And don't give me any back-talk
- I saw you running him on the stones! Damned young fool, I ought to put you to
mucking-out and not let you exercise any of them for forty days!" He
turned his head irritably and saw Romilly.
"What
do you want in the stables, girl?"
"I
came to find you, father," she said, trying to steady her voice, "I
would like a word with you, if you can spare the time."
'Time?
I have none this morning, with this pony hurt and perhaps spoilt," he
said, but he stepped out of the stable and leaned against one of the rail
fences. "What is it, child?"
But
she could not speak for a moment, her throat swelling as she looked at the
panorama behind her, the mountains that rose across the valley, the green
paddock with the brood mares near their time, placidly grazing, the house-folk
washing clothes in the yard, over a steaming cauldron poised on the smouldering
fire of little sticks ... this was all so dear to her, and now, whatever came
of this, she must leave it ... Falconsward was as dear to her as to any of her
father's sons, yet she must leave her home to be married away, and any of her
father's sons, even Ruyven who had abandoned it, could stay here forever, with
the horses and the home hills. She swallowed hard and felt tears starting from
her eyes. Why could she not be her father's Heir in Ruyven's place, since he
cared nothing for it, and bring her husband here, rather than marrying someone
she must hate, and living in a strange place.
"What
is it, daughter?" he asked gently, and she knew he had seen her tears.
She
swallowed hard, trying to control her voice. She said "Father, I have
always known I must marry, and I would gladly do your will, but-but-Father, why
must it be Dom Garris? I hate him! I cannot bear him! The man is like a
toad!" Her voice rose, and her father frowned, but quickly smoothed his
face into the forced calm she dreaded.
He
said reasonably, "I tried to make you the best marriage I could, Romy. He
is nearest Heir to Scathfell, and not far from the lordship of Aldaran of
Aldaran, should the old man die without children, which now looks likely. I am
not a rich man, and I cannot pay much of a marriage-portion for you; and
Scathfell is rich enough not to care what you can bring. Dom Garris is
in need of a wife-"
"And
he has worn out three," said Romilly, desperately, "And goes again to
many another girl of fifteen...."
"One
reason he asked me for you," her father said, "was that his other
wives have been weaklings and too near akin to him; he wanted new blood for the
house. If you bear him a healthy son, you will have great honor, and everything
you could possibly wish for."
"And
if I do not I will be dead and no one will have to care whether I am happy or
not," she cried, her tears starting forth again. "Father, I cannot, I
will not marry that-that loathsome man! Oh, Father, I am not trying to defy
you, I would willingly marry almost anyone else-Cinhil, or-or Dom Alderic-"
"Alderic,
hey?" Her father took her chin in his big hand and tipped up her face to
look at it. 'Tell me the truth, now, child. Have you been playing about in a
way you should not? Dom Garris will expect to find you chaste; will he
be disappointed? Has that arrogant young Castamir sprig been trifling with your
feelings, girl? A guest under this roof-"
"Dom
Alderic
has never spoken a word to me, or done anything, which he could not have done
in full view of you and Mother," she flared indignantly, "I named him
only because I would not find him loathsome, nor Cinhil, nor any healthy kind
young man somewhere near my own age! But that-that slimy-" words failed
her, and she bit her lip hard so she would not cry.
"Romilly,"
said her father gently, still holding her face between his hands, "Dom Garris
is not so old as that: it is not, after all, as if I had tried to give
you to Lord Gareth, or to any man I knew to be evil-tempered, or a drunkard, or
a gambler, or one who was a wastrel of substance. I have known Garris all his
life; he is a good, honorable and wellborn young man, and you should not hold
his face against him, since he did not make it. A handsome face will soon be
worn away, but honor and good birth and a kindly temper are the things I want
for my daughter's husband. You are only a silly young girl, and you can see no
further than a man's handsome face and grace at dancing; which is why fathers
and mothers make marriages for young girls, so that they can see a man's true
worth."
She
swallowed, and felt shame overcoming her, to speak of this to her father, but
the alternative was worse. She said, "He-he looks at me in such a way - as
if I were naked - and when we were dancing, he put his hands on me-"
Her
father frowned and looked aside and she knew he was embarrassed too. At last he
sighed and said, "The man is wanting a wife, that is all; when he is
wedded he will not need to do so. And at least you know that he is not a-"
he coughed nervously, "he is not a lover of men, and will not desert you
to hold hands with one of his paxmen or a pretty young page-boy or Guardsman. I
think he will make you a good husband, Romy. He may be awkward and not know how
to make himself known to you, but I think he means you well and you will be
happy together."
Romilly
felt the tears breaking and spilling. She said, feeling her voice break hi
sobs, "Father-oh, Father, please. . . anyone, anyone else, I swear
I will obey you without question, but not-not Dom Garris-"
The
MacAran scowled, biting his lip. He said, "Romilly, this matter has gone
so far I cannot honorably draw back. The folk of Scathfell are neighbors, and I
am dependent on their good will; to break my word at this point, would be an
affront to their honor which I could not recover in a lifetime. If I had had
any idea you felt like this, I would never have given my word; but done is
done, and I have pledged it in honor. There's no more to be said, child. You
are young; you will soon grow used to him, and it will be well, I promise you.
Now cheer up, don't cry; I promised you a pair of fine blacks, broken with my
own hand, for a wedding-present, and I am going to make over the small farm at
Greyrock to you, so you will always have something, a place of your own. And I
have told Luciella to send to the markets in Caer Donn for fine stuff for a
wedding-dress, so you need not be married in homespun. So cheer up, dry your
eyes, and decide for yourself which of the blacks you want for a
wedding-present, and you may ask Luciella to have new dresses made for you,
three-no, four new outfits and everything to go with them, all kinds of
petticoats and feathers and bonnets and gewgaws such as girls like, no girl in the
hills will be better outfitted for her wedding."
She
bent her head, swallowing hard. She had known it was hopeless, and he had given
his word to Dom Garris and to Lord Scathfell. He would never draw back
now, and it would be useless, no matter what she should say. He mistook her
silence for agreement and patted her cheek.
"There's
my fine, good girl," he said awkwardly, "I am proud of you, child -
would that any of your brothers had your strength and spirit."
"I
wish I had been your son," she blurted out, "and that I could stay at
home with you always."
Her
father took her gently into his arms. "So do I, girl," he said
against her hair, "So do I. But it's for man to wish and the Gods to Give,
and the Bearer of Burdens alone knows why he gifted only my daughter with those
things a man wants from his sons. The world will go as it will and not as you
or I would have it, Romy." He patted her, gently, and she cried, holding
on to him, cried hopelessly, as if she would never stop.
In
a way, she thought desperately later, his sympathy made it worse. If he had
stormed and shouted at her, raged and threatened her with a beating, she could
at least have felt that she had a right to rebel. Before his kindness she could
only see his point of view - that she was a young girl, that her good parents
and guardians were doing what they thought best for her, and that she was silly
and thoughtless to speak out against their caution for her.
So
she tried to seem interested in the preparations for her wedding which, so The
MacAran said, would be at the harvest. Luciella sent to Caer Donn for
spider-silk for her wedding-gown and fine dyed stuff, crimson and blue and
violet, for her new dresses, and had ordered so many petticoats and camisoles
and fine underthings that Mallina was openly jealous and sulked while the
sewing was being done.
One
morning, a rider came from Scathfell, and when he was welcomed in the
courtyard, uncovered a cage before him on the saddle.
"A
message from Dom Garris, sir," he said to The MacAran, "and a
gift for Mistress Romilly."
The
MacAran took the letter, scowling slightly, and tore it open. "Your eyes
are better than mine, Darren," he said to his son, "Read it for
me."
Romilly
thought, annoyed, that if the letter concerned her, she should have been
the one to read it. But perhaps The MacAran did not want it known that his
daughter was so much a better scholar than his Nevarsin-educated son. Darren
glanced through the letter and frowned, then read aloud.
"To
The MacAran of Falconsward and to my affianced wife Romilly, greeting from
Gareth-Regis Aldaran at Scathfell. Your daughter informed me that she flies a verrin
hawk, which is understandable in the daughter of the finest hawk-trainer in
these hills, but would be unseemly for the wife of Aldaran's Heir. Therefore I
take the liberty of sending her two fine ladybirds which will fittingly adorn
the most beautiful wrist in all of the Kilghard Hills, so that she need not fly
a man's hawk. I beg her acceptance of these fine birds, and I send them now so
that she may be accustomed to their flight. Kindly convey my compliments and
respectful wishes to my promised wife, and to you my most respectful greetings,
sir." Darren looked up, saying, "It has Scathfell's own seal
affixed."
The
MacAran raised his eyebrows, but said, "A courteous letter indeed. Uncover
the cage, man."
The
cover lifted, two beautiful little hawks were revealed; their hoods were of
fine scarlet-dyed leather with an Aldaran crest worked in gold thread, and the
jesses glimmered with gold threads too. They were tiny brilliant birds,
gleaming with gloss and health, and Romilly caught her breath at the sight of
them.
"A
beautiful gift," she said, "and most thoughtful. Tell my-my promised
husband," she said, and stumbled over the words, "That I am most grateful
to him and I shall fly them with all kind thoughts of him." She held out
her wrist, and lifted one of the hawks on to her glove. It sat so quietly that
she could tell it was perfectly trained. Never mind that such hawks were no
good for anything but flying at field-mice, they were exquisite little birds
and for Dom Garris to pay so much heed to her known interests was a good
sign. For a little while she thought better of her promised husband; but later
she began to think it over; was this simply his way of telling her that when
she was his wife she would not be allowed to work with a proper hawk at all?
From what Gareth of Scathfell - the old man - had said, she was inclined to
think so. It would be unseemly for the wife of Scathfell's Heir. She made
up her mind, firmly, whatever they said, she would never be argued or bullied
into giving up Preciosa! The bond between them was too strong for that.
While
she was first flying the little hawks - with a guilty thought that she was
being disloyal to her beloved Preciosa - she reached out for contact, the
strong bond between hawk and flyer. But the tiny birds gave only a faint sense
of confusion, exhilaration; there was no close emotion, no sense of rapport and
union - the smaller hawks were too lowly-organized to have the capacity for laran.
She knew the cagebirds had no such abilities - she had once or twice tried
to communicate with them - in fact, "the mind of a cage-bird" was a
byword for a stupid woman! Flying the small hawks was dull; she could watch them
fly, and they were beautiful indeed, but there was none of the excitement, the
sense of rapport and completion, she felt with Preciosa. She flew them
dutifully every day for exercise, but it was always with relief that she hooded
them again with the beautifully-worked hoods and cast off Preciosa into the
sky, climbing the sky with her hi an ecstasy of flight and soaring freedom.
She
rode mostly with Darren, now, and Rael; Alderic had been put to the coridom's
work and was always busy about the place with accounts, arranging the
stud-books, supervising the many men about court and stables. She seldom saw
him, except now and again for a decorous word as he sat by the fire in the
evening, or played a game of castles or cards with Darren or her father,
or sometimes whittled wooden toys to amuse Rael in the long evenings.
Her
days, too, were filled; her father had said she need do no more lessons, and
the plan for her to study ciphering with the old steward had of course been put
aside, since she was to be married so soon, so Calinda filled her days with
stitching, and taught her how to oversee the kitchen-women and the sewing-women
and even the dairies . . . not that there would be so much need for her to do
any of these things, but, Calinda said, she must know how to do these things so
that she could know whether her servants did them well or not; Lord Scathfell
was a widower and she would be the first lady in authority at Scathfell; she
must not let them think that Falconsward was a poorly run household, so that
the daughter of Falconsward could not fitly supervise her women. Romilly
thought she would rather muck out barns and milk dairy-animals and make the
butter herself than have to oversee other women doing it; while as for the
sewing-women, she was grimly certain that the youngest and least skilled of
them would be better than she, so how could she ever presume to supervise or
oversee, far less chide or correct? Luciella, too, hunted up one of Mallina's
old dolls, and dressed it in Rael's cast-off babyclothes and taught both
Mallina and Romilly how to bathe a young baby, how to hold it and support its
floppy little head, how to change its napkins and what to do to keep it from
having rashes and skin disorders; Romilly could not imagine why, if there were
skilled nurses and midwives there, and Darissa with two - no, three children by
now - she should have to know how to do all this herself, even before she had
any children, but Luciella insisted that it was part of a young wife's proper
knowledge. Romilly had no particular objection to having children - Rael as a
baby had been adorable - but when she thought of having children, she thought
first of Darissa, soft and flabby and fat and sick, and then of the inevitable
process by which those children would be gotten. She was farmbred and healthy,
and had often thought, with secret pleasure, of the time when she would have a
lover, a husband, but when she sought to put Dom Garris's face into that
place, which (to do her credit) she virtuously tried to do, she only felt sick,
and now even when she thought of any man, the very idea made her feel queasy
and faint. No, but she could not, she would run away, she would join the
Sisterhood of the Sword and wear weapons and fight as a mercenary soldier for
one of the kings contending for this land, she would cut her hair and pierce
her ears - and when she got to this point she realized how foolish she was, for
if she ran away they would only follow her and drag her back. And then she
would make wild plans, a final appeal to her father, to her stepmother, to Lord
Scathfell himself - when they put the bracelets on her she would scream
"No" and tear them off, when they tried to lead her to the bedding
she would fall on Dom Garris with a knife. . . . Surely then he would
put her away, he would not want her ... she would tell him how much she loathed
him, and he would refuse to have her....
But
she knew in her heart that all this was useless. She must marry... and she
could not!
The
summer drew on; the evening snow was only a brief trickle of rain, and the
hills were bright with flowers and budding trees; the nut-bushes were covered
with little green lumps which would ripen into nuts, and almost every day she
and Mallina could cut fresh mushrooms from the sides of the old trees which had
been implanted with fungus-roots. She picked berries dutifully and helped to
stem them for conserves, helped churn butter in the dairies, and seldom had
leisure even for a ride, let alone to give Preciosa proper exercise; but every
day she visited her hawk in the mews, and begged Darren or Alderic to take her
out and fly her. Darren was afraid of hawks, and still avoided them when he
could, but when Alderic had leisure he would take out Preciosa on his saddle.
"But
she does not fly well for me," he told her one evening, "I think she
is pining for you, Romilly."
"And
I am neglecting her," Romilly said, with a pang of guilt. She had herself
formed the tie with this wild thing; now she could not betray it. She resolved
that tomorrow, no matter what duties Luciella laid on her, she would find some
tune for a ride, and to take out the hawk.
She
flew through her work the next morning with such speed and willingness that
Luciella stared, and said, "Why, what you can do when you are willing,
child!"
"Since
I have finished, foster-mother, may I take my hawk out for a little
while?"
Luciella
hesitated, then said, "Why yes; you must not neglect Dom Garris's
gift. Go then, Romilly, enjoy yourself in the fresh air."
Released,
she fled to put on her riding-habit and boots, to order her horse saddled - she
supposed it would have to be a lady's saddle, but riding sidesaddle was better
than not riding at all - and was swiftly off to the mews. Darren was in the
yard, glumly exercising one or two of the hawks; she noted his clumsy
movements, and told him she was going hawking - would he come? He went, with
relief, and had his own horse saddled. She was taking Preciosa from her block,
holding her familiar weight on the gauntlet with pleasure, extending her senses
toward the hawk to set up the old contact, when her father stepped into the
mews.
"Romilly,"
he said sharply, "Take your own hawks, not that one. You know what your
promised husband said; it is unseemly to fly a verrin hawk, and you have
hawks of your own. Put her back."
"Father!"
she protested, in a sudden flood of anger, "Preciosa is my own hawk, I
trained her myself! She is mine, mine! No one else shall fly her! How can it be
unseemly for me to fly a hawk I trained? Are you going to let Dom Garris
tell you what it is right for your own daughter to do, in your own
stable-yard?"
She
saw conflict and dismay on his face; but he said sharply, "I told you, put
that hawk back on the block and take out your own! I will not have you defy me,
girl!" He strode toward her; Preciosa sensed Romilly's agitation and bated
wildly, threshing furiously on her wrist, whirling up to the length of the
fastened jesses, then settling restively back.
"Father-"
she pleaded, lowering her voice not to disturb the easily-frightened birds,
"Don't say this-"
The
MacAran thrust out his hand and firmly gripped Preciosa's feet. He set her back
on the block and said, "I will be obeyed, and that is all there is to
it."
"She's
not getting enough exercise," Romilly pleaded, "she needs to be
flown."
The
MacAran paused. "That's right," he said, and beckoned to Darren.
"Here,"
he jerked his head to indicate Preciosa on her block, "Take her; I give
her to you. You need a good hawk to work with, and this is the best we have.
Take her out today, and start getting used to her."
Romilly's
mouth fell open in indignant surprise. He could not do that to her - nor
to Preciosa! The MacAran grasped the bird again, held it firmly until the
bating quieted, then set her on Darren's wrist; he jerked back, startled, and
Preciosa, even hooded, thrust her head about, trying to peck, beating her
wings; Darren ducked away, his wrist twisting so that she overbalanced and
fell, hanging from her jesses. He stood holding the wildly bating hawk, and The
MacAran said in a harsh whisper, "Pick her up! Quiet her, damn you, if she
breaks a wing-feather I'll break your neck, boy!"
Darren
made ineffectual movements to quiet the bird, finally getting her to something
like quiet on his glove. But his voice broke into falsetto as he said,
"It's not-not fair, sir. Father, I beg you-Romilly trained that hawk
herself, and with her own laran-"
"Silence,
young man! Don't you dare speak that word in my presence!"
"Refusing
to hear it won't make it less true, sir. It's Romilly's hawk, she trained it, she
earned it, and I don't want it - I won't take it from her!"
"But
you will take it from me," said The MacAran, his jaw thrusting
forth, his jutting chin hard with fury, "How dare you say a hawk trained
at Falconsward in my own mews is not mine to give? Romilly has been given hawks
by her promised husband. She needs not this one, and you will take it or-"
he leaned toward Darren, his eyes blazing, his breath coming and going in rough
harsh noises, "Or I will wring its neck here before you both! I will not be
defied here in my own mews!" He made a threatening gesture as if to carry
out his threat here and now, and Romilly cried out.
"No!
No, Father - no, please! Darren, don't let him - take the hawk, it's better for
you to have it."
Darren
drew a long, shaking breath. He wet his lips with his tongue, and settled the
hawk on his arm. He said shakily, "Only because you ask me, Romilly. Only
for that, I promise you."
Her
eyes burning, Romilly turned aside to take up one of the tiny, useless hawks
that had been Dom Garris' gift. At that moment she hated them, the
little half-brained, stupid things. Beautiful as they were, elegantly trapped,
they were only ornaments, pretty meaningless jewels, not real hawks at all, no
more than one of Rael's carven toys! But it was not their fault, poor silly
little things, that they were not Preciosa. Her heart yearned over Preciosa,
perched unsteadily on Darren's awkward wrist
My
hawk. Mine. And now that fool of a Darren will spoil her . . . ah, Preciosa,
Preciosa, why did this have to happen to us? She felt that she hated her father
too, and Darren, clumsily transferring Preciosa from his glove to the block on
the saddle. Tears blurred her eyes as she mounted. Her father had called for
his great rawboned grey; he would ride with them, he said wrathfully, to make
sure Darren used the hawk well, and if he did not, he would learn it as he had
learned his alphabet, beaten into him with The MacAran's own riding-crop!
They
were all silent, miserable, as they rode down the pathway from the peaks of
Falconsward. Romilly rode last, staring in open hatred at her father, at
Darren's saddle where Preciosa perched restlessly. She sent out her
consciousness, her laran - since the word had been used - toward
Preciosa, but the hawk was too agitated; she felt only a blur of confusion and
hatred, a reddish-tinged rage that blurred her mind, too, till she had all she
could do to sit in the saddle.
All
too soon they reached the great open meadow where they had flown their hawks
that day - only then it had been Alderic with them, a friendly face and helping
hands, not their furious father. Awkwardly, pinching her in his haste, Darren
took the hood from Preciosa's head, raised her on his fist and cast her off;
Romilly, reaching out her senses to merge with the rising hawk, felt how fury
dropped away as Preciosa climbed the sky, and she thought, in despair, Let
her go free. She will never be mine again, and I cannot bear to see her
mishandled by Darren. He means well, but he has no hands or heart for hawks. As
she sank into the hawk's mind and heart, her whole soul seemed to go into the
cry.
Go,
Preciosa! Fly away, fly free - one of us at least should be free! Higher-higher-now,
turn and go-
"Romilly,
what ails you?" Her father's voice was filled with asperity, "Get
your bird out, girl!"
She
brought herself painfully back to the moment, her practiced hands loosing the
embroidered hood. The little hawk, shining like a jewel in the red sunlight,
angled off, high on the wind, and Romilly watched, not seeing - her eyes were
blurred with tears, her whole awareness with Preciosa.
Higher,
higher... now, down the wind, and away, away ... free on the wind, flying free
and away. ... a last quick sight of the country, spread out below her like
a colored picture in one of Rael's schoolbooks, then the frail link snapped
asunder and she was alone again, alone in her own mind, her hands and heart
empty, and only the shrill tiny screaming of the small hawk striking at some
little rodent in the long grass, lifting-the bird lighted on her saddle. With
automatic hands she tore at the small carcass, letting the hawk feed from her
glove, but her heart was empty.
Preciosa.
She is gone. Gone. Never again. . ..
Her
father's head was thrown back, scanning the sky where Preciosa had vanished.
"She has gone long," he said, "Romilly, do you usually let her
fly out of sight?"
Romilly
shook her head. The MacAran waited, frozen, and Darren's head was thrown back,
his mouth a round 'O' of dread. They waited. At last The MacAran said in a
fury,
"You
have lost her, damn your clumsiness! The best hawk in the mews, and the very
first time you fly her, you have lost her, worthless son that you are,
worthless brat good for nothing but scribbling. . . ." he raised his
riding-crop and the whip came down over Darren's shoulders. He yelped, more
from startlement than pain, but the sound galvanized Romilly; she flung herself
headlong from her horse and scrambled toward the men, throwing herself between
her father and Darren so that the blows fell on her.
"Beat
me instead," she cried, "It's not Darren's fault! I lost her, I let
her go - I cannot be free, I must be chained inside a house and robbed of my
hawk, you damned tyrant, but I will not have Preciosa chained too! I bade her
go with my laran - with my laran - you have driven Ruyven away
with your tyranny, you have made Darren afraid of you, but I am not afraid of
you, and at least you will never mistreat my hawk again, my hawk, mine-"
and she burst into wild crying. Her father checked a moment as the first blow
fell on her shoulders, but as he heard the flood of abuse, as the forbidden
words Ruyven and laran fell on his ears, his face turned furious
black, congested with wrath, and he raised the riding-crop and struck her hard.
He raised it again and again; Romilly shuddered with the pain, and shrieked at
him, incoherently, harder than ever; her father slid from his horse and stood
over her, beating her about the back and shoulders with the crop until finally
Darren flung his arms around his father, shouting and yelling, and then another
voice; Dom Alderic, restraining her father with his strong arms.
"Here,
here, sir - I'm sorry, but you mustn't beat a girl like that - good God,
Romilly, your back is all bloody - look, sir, you've torn her dress!" He
wrenched the crop from her father's hands. The man made no protest, letting his
arms fall dazed to his sides. Romilly swayed, feeling bloody wetness on her
back, numb and smarting, and Alderic shoved her father into Darren's arms,
coming to support her with his arm. The MacAran looked dazed, his wrath giving
way to numbness; he looked hastily, in dismay, at Romilly's torn dress where
the crop had cut the stiff material into ribbons, and then away again.
He
said numbly, "I-I did not know what I was doing - I am in your debt, Dom
Alderic. I-I-" and his voice failed him. He swayed where he stood and
would have fallen, but Darren held him upright. The MacAran stared at Romilly,
and said harshly, "I lost my temper. I shall not forgive you, girl, that
you caused me to forget myself so shamefully! Had you been a boy, I would still
beat you senseless! But soon enough your husband will have charge of you, and
if you speak to him like that, I doubt it not he will break your head in two!
Get out of my sight!"
Romilly
stumbled; Alderic pushed her toward her horse. "Can you ride?" he
asked in an undertone.
She
nodded, numb, tears bursting out again.
"You
had better get back to the house," he muttered, "while he is still in
shock at what he has done."
The
MacAran stood, still shaking his head in dismay and wrath. "In all the
years of my life," he said, "Never have I laid hand on a woman or
girl! I shall not forgive myself, nor Romilly for provoking me!" He stared
up into the sky where the hawk had vanished, and muttered something, but
Romilly, under a push from Alderic, rode away blindly toward Falconsward.
When
she stumbled into the house, and into her rooms, her old nurse met her with
dismay. "Oh, my lamb, my little one, what has happened to you? Your
back-your riding-dress-"
"Father
beat me," she mumbled, breaking out into terrible crying, "He beat me
because Darren lost my hawk...."
Gwennis
soaked the remains of the dress from her back, dressed the broken skin and
bruised flesh with oil and herb-salve, put her into an old robe of soft cloth,
and brought her hot soup in her bed. Romilly had begun to shiver and felt sick
and feverish. Gwennis was grumbling, but she shook her head and demanded,
"How did you come to anger your father so much? He is such a gentle man,
he must have been beside himself to do something like this!" Romilly could
not speak; her teeth were chattering and she kept crying, even though she tried
and tried to stop. Gwennis, alarmed, went to fetch Luciella, who cried herself
over Romilly's bruises and cuts and her ruined habit, and nevertheless repeated
what Gwennis had said - "How in the world came you to anger your father
like this? He would never have done a thing like this unless you
provoked him beyond bearing!"
They
blame me, Romilly
thought, they all blame me because I was beaten....
And
now there is no hope for me. Preciosa is gone. My father cares more to be on
good terms with Aldaran than he cares for me. He will beat Darren ruthlessly
into shape because Darren does not have my gifts, but he will not let me be
what I am, nor Darren what he is; he cares nothing for what we are, but only
for what he would have us be. She would not listen to Luciella's kind words, not to
Gwennis's cosseting. She could not stop crying; she cried until her eyes were
sore and her head ached and her nose was reddened and dripping. And at last she
cried herself to sleep.
She
woke late, when the whole of Falconsward was silent, and the great violet face
of Kyrrdis hung full and shining in her window. Her head still ached terribly,
and her back stung and smarted despite the healing salves Gwennis had put on it
She was hungry; she decided to slip downstairs and find some bread and cold
meat in the kitchen.
My
father hates me. He drove Ruyven away with his tyranny, but Ruyven at least is
free, learning to be what he must be, in a Tower. Ruyven was right; at least,
out of range of my father's iron will, he can be what he is, not what Father
would have him be. And
suddenly Romilly knew that she, too, must be free, as Preciosa was free in the
wild to be what she was.
Shaking,
she pulled an old knitted vest over her sore back, and put on the old tunic and
breeches she had worn. She slipped quietly along the corridor, her boots in her
hand. They were women's boots; a woman, she had heard all of her life, was not
safe alone on the roads, and after the way Dom Garris had looked at her
at Midsummer, she knew why. Ruyven's room was shut up, all his things as he had
left them; noiselessly she slipped inside, took from a chest one of his plainer
shirts and an old pair of leather breeches, a little too large for her, shucked
off Darren's too-tight ones and dressed in Ruyven's ample ones; she took a
cloak too, and a leather over-tunic, slipped into her room again for her own
hawking-glove. Remembering that Preciosa was gone, she almost left it behind,
but she thought, some day I will have a hawk again, and I will remember
Preciosa by this. At the last, before she slid her old dagger into its
sheath, she cut her hair short to the nape of her neck, and as she stole
outside, thrust the braid deep into the midden, so they would not find it. She
had locked Ruyven's door again, and they would never think to look among his
old clothes and count the shirts. She would carry her habit with her, so they
would be looking for a girl with long hair in a green riding-habit, not a
nondescript young boy in plain old clothes. Slipping into the stable, she put
an old saddle, dustcovered and hidden behind other discarded bits of harness,
on her own horse, then thought better of it and left him in the stall. A black
horse, a fine well-bred one, would betray her anywhere as a MacAran. She
carried the saddle carefully outside and made a small bundle of it with her
tack and her girl's clothes. She left it there and slipped quietly into the
kitchen - in the summer, all the kitchen work was done in an outer building so
the building would not be too hot - and found herself meat and a cut loaf of
bread, a handful of nuts and some flat cakes of coarse grain which the cook
baked every day for the best of the dogs, the breeding bitches and those who
were nursing pups .. . they were palatable enough and would not be missed as
other breads might be, since they were baked by the dozen, almost by the
hundred ... a handful would never be counted. She rolled them in a kitchen
towel and tied the neck of the improvised bag, then put her boots on, went
outside and carried bag and saddle to the outer pasture, where old horses and
culls were left to grass. She scanned them for a horse who would not be missed
for some days - let them think she had gone afoot. Finally she decided on an
elderly hack who was used only once in a great while, when the old coridom, now
retired and seldom out of doors at all, visited the far pastures. She clucked
softly - all the horses knew her - and he came cantering quietly to the fence.
She murmured to him, fed him a handful of coarse vegetables, then put the
saddle on his back, and led him softly away down the path, not mounting till
she was well out of earshot of the walls. Once a dog began to bark inside the
castle and she held her breath and fiercely willed the animal to be
silent.
At
the foot of the hill, she clambered into the saddle, wincing as her fresh
bruises were jolted, but setting her teeth against the pain and wrapping
herself hi her cloak against the midnight chill. Once she looked up at
Falconsward on its crag, high above her.
Bearer
of Burdens! 1 cannot, I cannot - Father is sorry, he beat me, this is madness, I
should go back before I am missed....
But
then the memory of Darren's face as she gave him the hawk, of her father's
rage, of Ruyven's set, despairing eyes the last time she had seen him, before
he ran away from Nevarsin. . . . No, Father will have us what he wishes, not
what we are. The memory of Dom Garris handling her rudely at
Midsummer, the thought of how he would behave when she was turned over to him,
his wife, his property to do with as he would-
She
set her face like iron. Had there been anyone to see, at that moment, they
would have marked; she was very like her father. She rode away from Falconsward
without once looking back.
On
the third day it began to snow. Romilly, who had lived all her life in the
foothills of the Hellers, knew that she must find shelter quickly; nothing
alive could survive a storm, even at this season, except under cover. The wind
whipped like a knife, and howled along the trees lining the path like the
voices of ten thousand devils. Briefly she considered retracing her steps to the
little hill-farm she had passed early that morning, and asking shelter there .
. . but no. The farmers there might have been among those who came, now and
again, to Falconsward, and even in her boy's dress might know her for The
MacAran's daughter. She did not know them; but she had never been this far from
her home, and was not sure where she was.
She
knew vaguely that if she followed this trail, keeping to the north, she would
come at last to Nevarsin, where she could take the road to Tramontana Tower. There
she would find her brother Ruyven - or if he had been sent elsewhere by the leroni
who ruled in the Towers, she could find news of him. It was in her mind
that she might seek the training of her laran within the Towers, as the leronis
Marelie had invited her to do some years ago. Alternatively, she might
remain in Nevarsin for the winter - she had lived in the Hellers long enough to
know that travelling in the winter, by the roads she must take to Nevarsin, was
a dangerous enterprise, undertaken only by the mad or the desperate. Surely in
Nevarsin she could seek to find work somewhere as a hawkmaster's apprentice, or
with some blacksmith or horse-keeper as a stableboy-for she had no intention of
revealing herself as a girl. She had seldom been away from her own home, where
even the kitchen-girls and washerwomen were treated kindly and properly
supervised by Domna Luciella, but the very way they reacted to this
treatment told her how rare it was, and one of the women, who had worked as a
tavern wench for years, had told many stories of the treatment she was apt to
receive. Romilly did not doubt her own ability to care for herself and to keep
unwelcome hands off her; but even the lowest stable boy was paid more than any
cook-woman or tavern maid, and Romilly had few skills to lift her above the
lowest scullery-maid's tasks. All she knew was horses and hawks, and the
supervision of servants. Dressmakers and children's nurses, she knew, could
earn higher wages, but even the thought of working as a sewing-woman made her
smile, remembering the botchery she made of her sewing, and for a child's nurse
they would want to know much more about her than she would be willing to tell.
No, if she chose to stay in Nevarsin for the winter she would remain a boy to
all appearances, and seek work in stables or mews.
And
that way, at least, she would be around horses and hawks. She thought with a
bitter pang of the lost Preciosa.
But
I am glad it happened, she
thought fiercely, hunching against the slashing wind and drawing her cloak high
over her face, almost to covering her eyes. Otherwise, I would never have
had the courage to break away! I would have remained obedient, perhaps even
married Dom Garris . . . and a shiver of revulsion went through her.
No, she was well out of that, even if she must spend the rest of her life
working as a boy in some stranger's stables!
The
snow was beginning to turn to a wet, soggy rain; the horse's feet slipped and
slithered on the steep trail, and Romilly, sliding into rapport, felt the chill
of the wind, the uneasy way the horse shivered and set down his feet with
uncertain care on the slippery road. The rain was freezing as it fell; her
cloak was stiffening with ice. They must find shelter soon, indeed.
They
came to a steep turn in the road, where it forked, one path leading upward
through thick trees that lined the trail, the other broader, but steeply
downward. Romilly slid off the horse's back and went, craning her neck to stare
through the thick misty rain. Downward she could see nothing except a small
runnel of water cascading out of sight over the rocks beside the road; but
upward, it seemed to her, she could make out the walls of some kind of
building, a herder's hut or shelter for animals. The broadening road might lead
down to a village or a cluster of valley farms, but she had no assurance, nor
did she see any lights in the valley, and the rains were coming ever faster.
Upward,
then, it must be, to the shelter, no matter how crude; it would at least be out
of the wind or rain. She did not mount again - on a trail as steep as this
upward path, the horse would fare better without her weight. She took her
horse's bridle, speaking soothingly to the animal as it jerked its head away.
She wished she could have had her own horse; this one was a stranger. Yet it
was docile enough and even friendly.
The
darkness through snow and rain grew darker; it was some building, indeed; not
large, but it appeared weather-tight. The door was sagging, half off its
hinges, and gave a loud protesting noise when she shoved it and went in.
"Who's
there?" a quavering voice cried out, and Romilly felt her heart race and
her throat tighten with fear. Dark as it looked, dilapidated, it was not
deserted after all.
She
said quickly, "I mean you no harm, ma'am - I was lost in the storm and the
rain is freezing. May I come in?"
"Honor
to the Bearer of Burdens, and thanks be that you have come," the voice
said; a trembling, old voice. "My grandson went to the town and I make no
doubt, in this storm he has had to shelter somewhere, I heard your horse's
steps and thought for a moment it was Rory comin' back, but he rides a
stag-pony and I see you have a horse. I canna' leave my bed; can ye throw a
branch on the fire, boy?"
Now
her face was beginning to thaw a little she could smell the smoke; groping in
the darkness, she went toward the dull embers. The fire was almost out. Romilly
stirred the embers, coaxed it alive with small sticks, and when they caught,
built it up again with a bigger branch and then with a log. She stood wanning
her hands, in the growing light, her eyes made out a few sticks of decrepit
furniture, a bench or two, an ancient chest, a box-bed built into the wall, in
which lay an old, old woman, propped up against the back of the bed.
As
the firelight grew, she said, "Come here, boy. Let me look at you."
"My
horse-" Romilly hesitated.
"You
can lead him round into the stable," said the old voice. "Do that
first, then come back."
She
had to force herself to wrap the cloak over her face and go into the bitter cold.
The stable was deserted, except for a couple of scrawny cats, who whined and
rubbed against her legs, and after she had unsaddled her horse and given it a
couple of pieces of the dog's bread - the grain would be enough to feed it for
tonight - they followed her through the door into the warmth of the now-blazing
fire.
"Good,
good," said the old woman, in her shaky voice, "I thought of them out
in the cold, but I could not get up to let them in. Come here and let me look
at you, then, lad." And as Romilly went and stood by the box-bed, she
hitched herself up a little further, peering with her face wrinkled up at
Romilly's face. "How come ye out in such weather, boy?"
"I
am travelling to Nevarsin, mestra," said Romilly.
"All
alone? In such a storm?"
"I
set out three days ago when the weather was fine."
"Are
ye from south of the Kadarin? Red hair - ye have a look of the Hali'imyn about
ye," the old woman said. She was wrapped in several layers of ragged
shawls, and three or four threadbare blankets, not much better than
horse-blankets, were piled on her bed. She looked gaunt, emaciated, exhausted.
The
old woman let out her breath in a trembling sigh. She said, "I hoped he
would be back from Nevarsin early this day, but no doubt the snow is worse to
the North- well, with you to mend the fire, I will not freeze here alone in the
storm. My old bones cannot stand the cold the way I could before, and before he
left he built up the fire to last three days, saying he would surely be back
before then."
"Can
I do anything else for you, mestra?"
"If
you can cook a pot of porridge, ye can have a share of it," said the old
woman, indicating an empty pot, bowl and spoon at her side, "But get out
of your wet things first, lad."
Romilly
drew breath; the old woman apparently accepted her as a farm boy. She took off
cloak and boots, hanging the cloak near the warmth of the fire to dry; there
was a barrel of water near the fire, and she took the empty porridge-pot,
rinsed it, and, as the old woman directed her, found a half-empty sack of
coarse meal, more ground nuts than grain, and salt, and hung the mixture in the
kettle from the long hook over the fireplace. The old woman beckoned her back,
then.
"Where
are you off to at this bitter time of the year, my lad?"
At
that offhand "my lad" Romilly felt a bursting sigh of relief; at
least the old woman had accepted her for what she seemed to be, a young boy and
not a girl at the edge of being a woman. Then it occurred to her that the
deception of an old woman, half-blind, was not so great a matter after all, and
people with younger eyes and quicker wits might see through her more easily.
And then she realized that the old woman in the box-bed was still peering out
at her through those wrinkled eyelids, waiting for her answer.
"I
am travelling to Nevarsin," she said at last, "My brother is
there."
"In
the monastery? Why, you are far off your road for that, youngster - you should
have taken the left-hand fork at the bottom of the mountain. But too late now,
you must stay till the storm is over, and when Rory is back he will set you on
your proper path."
"I
thank you, mestra."
"What
is your name, lad?"
"Rom-"
Romilly hesitated, swallowing back her name, realizing she had not thought of
this for a moment. She pondered saying "Ruyven," but then she might
not remember to answer to that but would look about for her brother. She
swallowed, pretended to have choked for a moment on the smoke of the fire, and
said "Rumal."
"And
why are you going to Nevarsin all on your own? Are you to become a monk, or
being sent there to be taught by the brothers, as they do with the sons of the
gentry? You have a look of gentry about you, at that, as if you'd been born in
a Great House - and your hands are finer than a stable-boy's."
Romilly
almost laughed, thinking of the time when Gwennis, scowling at her calloused
hands, worn by reins and claws, had said, reproving, "You will have the
hands of a stable-boy if you do not take care!" But once again the old
woman was waiting for an answer, and she thought swiftly of Nelda's son Loran -
everyone at Falconsward knew him to be the MacAran's nedestro son,
though Luciella liked to pretend she did not know, and refused to admit the boy
existed. She said, "I was brought up in a Great House; but my mother was
too proud to bring me under my father's eye, since I was festival-got; so she
said I could make more of myself in a city, and I hope to find work in Nevarsin
- I was apprentice to the hawk-master." And that, at least, was true;
she was more Davin's apprentice than that worthless Ker.
"Well,
Rumal, you are welcome," the old woman said. "I live here alone with
my grandson - my daughter died when he was born, and his father's away in the
lowlands in the service of King Rafael, across the Kadarin to the south. My
name is Mhari, and I have dwelt here in this hut most of my life; we make a
kind of living from the nut-farming, or we did until I grew too old for it;
it's hard for Rory to look after the trees at all seasons, and care for me too,
but he's a good lad, and he went to sell our nuts in the market at Nevarsin,
and bring home flour for porridge, and herb-medicines for my old bones. When
he's a wee bit older, perhaps, he can find him a wife and they can make a
living here, for it's all I have to leave him."
"I
think the porridge is boiling over," said Romilly, and hurried to the
fire, to move the kettle a little further from the flame. When it was done, she
dipped up a bowl for the old woman, and propped her up to eat it, then shook
out Mhari's pillows and soothed her bedcovers and settled her down for the
night.
"You
are neat-handed as a girl," said Mhari, and Romilly's heart stopped till
she went on, "I suppose that comes from handling birds; I never had the
hands for that, nor the patience, either. But your porridge will be cold,
child; go and eat it, and you can sleep there in Rory's pallet by the fire,
since it's not likely he'll be home in this storm."
Romilly
settled down by the banked fire to eat her bowlful, then rinsed the bowl in the
barrel of water, set it near the fire to dry and stretched out, wrapped in her
cloak, by the hearth. It was a hard bed, but on the trail she had slept in
worse places, and she lay awake for a time, drowsily listening to the beating
storm outside, and to the occasional drop of water which made its way down the
chimney to sizzle briefly in the fire. Twice she woke during the night to make
certain the fire was still alive. Toward morning the noise of the storm died
away a little, and she slept heavily, to be wakened by a great pounding on the
door. Mhari sat upright in her bed.
"It
is Rory's voice," she said, "Did you draw the bolt, then?"
Romilly
felt like a fool. The last thing she had done before settling down to sleep was
to lock the inside door - which of course the crippled old woman could never
have done. No wonder the voice outside sounded loud and agitated! She hurried
to the door and drew the bolt.
She
looked into the face of a huge burly young man, be-whiskered and clad in
threadbare sacking and a cloak of a fashion which had not been worn in the
Hellers since her father was a child. He had his dagger out, and would have
rushed at her with it, but he heard old Mhari's cry.
"No,
Rory - the boy meant no harm-he cared for me and cooked my supper hot - I bade
him sleep here!"
The
rough-looking young man let the dagger fall and hurried to the box-bed.
"You are really all right, Granny? When I felt the door locked, and then
when I saw a stranger within, I was only afraid someone had come, forced his
way in and done you some harm-"
"Now,
now, now," old Mhari said, "I am safe and sound, and it was well for
me that he came, for the fire was near out, and I could have frozen in the
night!"
"I
am grateful to you, whoever you are, fellow," said the big young man,
sliding his dagger into its sheath and bending to kiss his grandmother on the
forehead. "The storm was so bad, and all night I could think only of
Granny, alone here with the fire burnt out and no way to feed herself. My
hearth is yours while you have need of it," he added, in the ancient mountain
phrase of hospitality given a stranger. "I left my shelter the moment the
rain died, and came home, though my hosts bade me stay till sunrise. And you
are well and warm, that's the important thing, Granny dear." He looked
tenderly on the old woman. Then, flinging off his cloak on to a bench, he went
to the porridge-pot still hanging by the fire, dipped up some with the ladle,
thick and stiff after the night by the hearth, and began to munch on the heavy
stuff from his fingers. "Ah, warm food is good - it's cold as Zandru's
breath out there still, and all the rain has frozen on the trees and the road -
I feared old Horny would slip and break a leg. But I traded for some grain,
Granny, so you shall have bread as well as porridge, and I have dried blackfruits
as well in my bag; the miller's wife sent them for you, saying you would like
the change." He turned to Romilly and asked, "Could I trouble you to
get the saddlebags from my beast? My hands are so cold they are all but frozen,
and I could not unfasten the tack till they are warm again; and you have spent
the night in the warm."
"Gladly,"
said Romilly, "I must go out and see to my horse, in any case."
"You
have a horse?" A look almost of greed lighted Rory's face. "I have
always wanted a horse; but they are not for the likes of me! You must indeed
have been brought up in a Great House."
Romilly
went outside, flinging her cloak over her shoulders, and unfastened the heavy
saddlebags lying across the heavy-boned stag-like chervine Rory had ridden. She
took the sack of coarse grain into the byre, and brought the saddlebags into
the cottage, dumping them on the floor near the fire.
Rory
was bending over his grandmother, talking in low tones; she was sure he had not
heard her, so she slipped out again into the byre, went into her own bags and
fed her horse one or two cakes of the dog-bread, stroking its muzzle and
talking to it. There was an old-fashioned outhouse inside the byre, and she
went into it; as she was readjusting her clothing, she paused, dismayed, at the
bloodstains lining her underwear; because of the storm she had lost track of
the days. When I thought to pass myself off as a man, she said to
herself wryly, / had forgotten certain very important points which I must
remember. She had never thought it would be simple, to remember to pitch
her voice at its deepest level and to remember to move with the free stride for
which Luciella and her governess had always reproved her, but she had forgotten
the inexorable rhythms of female biology which could have betrayed her more
than any of this.
As
she was tearing up one of the old petticoats in her pack - she could wash it
privately by night, perhaps - she took stock of what she should do now. The old
woman had promised that Rory would set her on her road to Nevarsin. Would it be
ungracious, she wondered, to insist that she must leave at once? She should
have invented someone who was waiting for her in that city and would come to
look for her if she did not appear at the appointed time. She made certain that
there were no telltale bulges in her clothing, fed the horse and led Rory's
stag-pony inside, spreading fresh straw and fodder for it - she did not like
the looks of that heavy-set young roughneck, but the riding-animal was
certainly not to blame and should not suffer for her dislike of his master's
face.
Then
she stepped back through the door-and paused, hearing the old woman's voice.
"The
youngster was kind to me, Rory. This is an evil thing you do, and a breach of
hospitality, which the Gods hate."
Rory's
voice was sullen. "You know how long I have wished for a horse, and while
I dwell here at the world's end, I shall never have a better chance. If this is
a runaway bastard from somewhere, he'll never be missed. Why, did you see his
cloak - in all my years I have never even had a chance at such a cloak, and the
brooch in it alone would pay a healer to come all the way from Nevarsin to cure
your joint-aches! As for your debt to him, well, he had lodging and fire the
night - it was not all kindliness on his part. And I can cut his throat quick
as a puff of wind, and he'll never have the time to be afeared."
Romilly
caught, terrified, at her throat. He meant to kill her! Never had she for a
moment thought, even in the poverty of the hut, that her horse and cloak, let
alone the copper brooch in its fastening and the money in her small purse,
might endanger her very life. She would have turned, noiselessly, to flee; but
without cloak or horse, without food, she would die quickly in the bitter cold!
She gripped her fingers on the dagger in its sheath at her side. At least, he
would find no unaware or easy victim; she would sell her life as dearly as she
could. But she must not allow them to know that she knew of their plans, but
pretend to suspect nothing till she had her cloak and her pack, and could make
a run for the horse. She turned quietly about and went noiselessly back to the
byre, where she put her saddle on her horse, and turned him about, ready to
flee. Now she must have her cloak, or she would freeze in the hills.
Keeping
her hand unobtrusively near the dagger's hilt, she came back to the door,
careful to make some noise as she opened it. When she came in, Rory was sitting
on the bench fiddling with his boots, and old Mhari had laid her head back on
the pillow and was asleep, or pretending to be. As Romilly came in, Rory said,
"Would you give me a hand wi' my boots, young fellow?"
"Gladly,"
Romilly said, thinking fast. If he had his boots off, at least he could not
pursue her too quickly. She knelt before him, putting both hands to the boot,
and hauled it free of his foot; bent forward to the other. She had both hands
on it, and was tugging hard, when Rory bent forward, and she saw the glint of
the knife in his hand.
Romilly
acted without thought; she pushed hard on the leg with the boot, sending it up
so that Rory's knee slammed into his chin, with a loud crack. The bench went
over backward, with Rory tangled in it, and she scrambled to her feet and ran
for the door, snatching up her cloak as she ran. She fumbled at the
latch-string, her heart pounding, hearing Rory curse and shout behind her. A
quick glance told her; his mouth was bleeding, either the blow had knocked out
a tooth or cut his lip. She was swiftly through the door and tried to thrust it
shut with her shoulder, but he wrestled it open behind her and then he was on
her. She did not see the knife; perhaps he had dropped it, perhaps he meant to
use only his huge hands. Her tunic ripped all the way down as he grabbed her;
he pulled her close, his hands closing around her throat; then his eyes widened
as he saw the ripped tunic and he tore it all the way down.
"By
the Burden! Tits like a very cow! A girl, huh?" He grabbed Romilly's hand,
which was clawing at his eyes, and held her immobile; then whirled her about
and marched her back into the little kitchen.
"Hey,
there! Granny! Look what I found, after all? Hell's own waste to hurt her -
haven't I been after a wife these four years, and not a copper for a
bride-price, and now one comes to my very door!" He laughed, jubilantly.
"Don't be frightened, wench, I wouldn't hurt a hair of your little head
now! I've something better to do, hey, Granny? And she can stay with you and
wait on you while I'm out at the farming, or away to the mill or the
town!" Laughing, the big man squeezed her tight in his arms and mashed a
kiss against her mouth. "Runaway servant girl to the gentry, are you,
then? Well, pretty thing, here you'll have your own kitchen and hearthfire,
what do you say to that?"
Paralyzed
by this torrent of words, Romilly was silent, filled with terror, but thinking
faster than she had ever thought in her life.
He
wanted her. He would not hurt her, at least for a little while, while he still
hoped to have her. His mouth against hers filled her with revulsion, but she
concealed the crawling sense of sickness and forced herself to smile up at him.
"At
least you are no worse than the man they would have had me marry," she
said, and realized as she said it that she was telling the absolute truth.
"Old, more than twice my age, and always pawing at helpless girls, while
you, at least, are young and clean."
He
said, contented, "I think we will suit well enough when we are used to
each other; and we need only share a bed, a meal and a fireside, and we will be
as lawful wedded as if Lord Storn himself had locked the catenas on our
arms like gentlefolk! I will build up the fire in the inner room where there is
a bed, and you can get about cooking a meal for us to share. There is flour in
the sacks, and can you make a loaf with blackfruit? I do like a good fruity
bread, and I've had nothing but nut-porridge for forty days and more!"
"I
will try my best," Romilly said, forcing her voice to calm, "and if I
am not sure what to do, no doubt mestra Mhari will tell me."
"Ah,
you think yourself my old Granny's betters, do you?" Rory demanded
truculently, "You will say Dame Mhari till she gives you
leave to say Granny, do you hear?"
Romilly
realized, abruptly, that she had automatically used the form of a noblewoman
speaking to an inferior. She hung her head, pretending to be ashamed, and
murmured, "I meant no harm-"
"And
since you're a girl, it's more suitable for you to wash Granny's face and put
her into a clean bedgown, get her ready for the day," Rory said,
"D'you think you could sit in the hearth for a little today, Granny? If
our fine lady here gets you fresh and ready?"
"Aye,
I'll sit in the hearth for your wedding meal, Rory," said the old woman,
and Romilly, biting her lip, said meekly that she would be glad to do whatever
she could for Dame Mhari.
"I
knew she was too fine-handed for a lad," said Mhari, as Romilly bent to
lift her, and went to dip hot water from the barrel. As she washed the old
woman's face and hands, and brought a clean but threadbare gown from the
ancient clothes-press in the corner, she was thinking harder than she had ever
done. How could she escape? They would watch her moment by moment until the
marriage was consummated; by which time she thought grimly, they
would think her too beaten to try and get away. It made her sick at her
stomach to think of that great unwashed lout taking her to bed, but she
supposed it wouldn't kill her, and since she was actually in the bleeding part
of her woman's cycles, at least he was unlikely to make her pregnant. And then
she stopped short in what she was doing, remembering gleefully something
Darissa had whispered to her a few months after her marriage. At the time,
Romilly had only been embarrassed and giggled about it - what great sillies men
were, to be superstitious about such a thing! But now she could make it serve
her.
"I
am cold, wet and bare like this," the old woman complained, "Wrap me
in my gown, girl - what am I to call you?"
Romilly
started to tell the woman her name - after all, now they knew she was a girl
what did it matter? - but then she thought; her father might seek her even as
far as this. She said the first name that came into her head.
"Calinda."
"Wrap
me in my gown, Calinda, I am shivering!"
"I
am sorry, Mother Mhari," she said, using the meek term of respect for any
aging woman, "I had a heavy thought-" and she bent close to the old
woman as she wrapped her in gown and woolly shawl and then laid her on her
pillows, drying her hands with a towel. "I-I-I will gladly wed your
grandson-" and she thought the words would choke her.
"And
well you should," said the old woman, "He is a good kind man, and he
will use you well and never beat you unless you really deserve it."
Romilly
gulped; at least that she would never have bad to fear from Dom Garris.
"B-but," she said, pretending to be embarrassed, which was not
difficult, "He will be angry with me if he tries to share my bed this night,
for my-my cycles are on me, and I am bleeding...."
"Ah,
well," said the old lady, "You did well to tell me; men are funny
that way, he might well have beaten you for it; my man used to thump me well if
I did not tell him well before the time, so he could keep away or sleep with
the dairy-maid-ah, yes, once I was well off, I had a dairy-maid and a
cook-wench at one time, and now look at me. But with a woman's care, I will
grow better soon, and Rory will not have to cook porridge and bake bread, which
is no work for a man. Look what a fine man you are getting, he never scorned to
wash and turn his old Granny in her bed, or bring her food, or even empty my
chamberpot. And speaking of a chamberpot-" She gestured, and Romilly
fetched the utensil and supported the old woman.
She
thinks this life will make me well off; so long as I have a man for husband, I
need ask no better than to drudge about barn and byre and kitchen, waiting hand
and foot on a bedridden old woman, so long as 1 have the name of wife. She shivered as she
thought, perhaps some women would truly think themselves well off - a
home of their own and a hardworking man, one who was kind to his old
grandmother. She settled the woman in the bed again and went to empty the
chamberpot. She was used to working with her hands about animals, and the work
itself did not disgust her, but she was frightened of Rory.
I
did not refuse Dom
Garris to be married by force to a woodsman, however honest or good. And now
I have won myself a few days time. I will pretend to be meek and mild and
biddable, and soon or late, they must let me out of their sight.
When
the old woman was washed and dressed in a fresh gown, Romilly went to the pump
in the yard to draw water, placing the great kettle over the fire to heat for
the washing of linens, then, guided by directions from Dame Mhari, set about
mixing and baking a loaf of bread with small lumps of sliced blackfruit in the
dough. When the bread was baking in the covered pot in the ashes by the hearth,
and Dame Mhari dozing in her box-bed, she sat down on one of the benches to
rest for a moment, and think.
She
had gained time. A swift visit to the outhouse showed her that her horse had
been unsaddled again and tied with hard knots; well, if a moment served to
escape, she must somehow have her dagger ready to cut the knots and flee;
choose a moment, perhaps, when Rory had his boots off, and hopefully his
breeches too. Her pack she could abandon if she must - the food was gone and
she could live without the other things - but her warm cloak she must have, her
boots and her saddle . . . though she could ride bareback better than many
women could ride saddled. Food, too, she must somehow have; it would not be
stealing, she had worked hard and cared for the old woman well, it was but her
just due.
Perhaps
tonight, when they were all asleep, she thought, and, hauling her weary body up
from the bench, set about washing the musty linens from the old woman's bed,
and the sheets from the bed in the inner room, which had been long unused -
Dame Mhari said that when the weather was warm, Rory slept in there, and only
in chilly weather did he sleep on the pallet before the fire. Well, that was
something - if she must bed that wretched animal of a man, at least it would
not be under the peering eyes of the old grandmother, as it might have been in
a poorer cottage with only one room. She shuddered suddenly - was this how folk
lived, away from the Great Houses?
Should
I give up, flee back to my family, exchange my freedom then for the protected
life I would live as the wife of Dom Garris? And for a moment, shivering at the
thought of what must lie before her, even if she escaped from Rory and his
grandmother, she was halfway tempted.
Like
a hawk on a block, chained, hooded and dumb, in exchange for being fed and
cherished, guarded preciously as a prize possession....
Oh,
Preciosa, and that was what I would have brought to you. . . . she thought, and was
fiercely glad she had freed the hawk. At least she would never be Darren's
possession. She could have kept it clear with her conscience to keep Preciosa
herself - the hawk had returned to her of its free will, out of love, after
being allowed to fly free. She would never return to Darren.
She
is free, she belongs to no man. Nor shall I. Rory might take her - once - as the
price of making him think her beaten and submissive. But she would never belong
to him; he could not enslave her. Like a hawk badly trained, the moment she was
tested in free flight, she would be away into the sky...
She
sighed, ferociously sousing the sheets in the harsh soap. Her hands were sore,
and ached, but the sheets were clean - at least she would not be taken in that
man's dirty bed!
She
hung the sheets on a rack near the fire to dry, took the bread from the oven,
and hunted in the rickety shelves of the kitchen; she found dried beans and
herbs, and put them in the empty kettle to make soup. Rory, stamping in
snow-covered from outside, saw her doing this and beamed, flinging down a sack
of mushrooms on the table.
"Here;
for the soup, girl. For our wedding supper," he said, and stooped to
enfold her in an awkward embrace, landing a damp kiss on the back of her neck.
She gritted her teeth and did not draw away, and he took her quiet endurance
for consent, pulled her round and mashed another kiss against her mouth.
"Tomorrow
you will not be so shy, heh, my fine lady - well, Granny, has she taken care of
you properly? If she hasn't, I'll teach her." He flung off his own rough
cloak and took up hers, slinging it around his shoulders with strutting pride.
"I'll
have this; you'll have no need to further out of doors than the outhouse, not
till the spring-thaw, and then you'll not need it," he said, and went out
again. Romilly swallowed her rage at seeing her brother's well-made, fur-lined
cape over his shoulders. Well, if she found a chance to escape, then, she must
snatch up Rory's cape; coarse as it was, it was warm enough to shelter her. The
few coins in the purse tied at her waist, those she must have too, few as they
were, for when she reached Nevarsin. Pitifully small the hoard was- The MacAran
was generous with his daughters and his wife, buying them whatever they wished,
but he felt they could have small need for ready money, and gave them only a
few small silver bits now and again to spend at a fair. But to Rory, she knew,
they would seem more; so she found a moment to conceal herself from Dame
Mhari's eyes behind the clothes-press and transfer the little hoard of coins
from the pocket tied at her waist, into a folded cloth hidden between her
breasts; surely, soon or late, he would take the pocket from her, and she
left one or two small pieces in it to satisfy his greed
- maybe
he would seek no further.
As
dark closed down from the short gloomy day, she sat with them at the crude
table to eat the soup she had made and the bread she had baked. Rory grumbled - the
bread was not very good - was this all the skill she
had at cooking? But Dame Mhari said peaceably that the girl was young, she
would learn, and the bread, however heavy, was at least a good change from
nut-porridge! When bedtime came he said sharply, looking away from her, that
tonight she might sleep in the box-bed with Dame Mhar', and that he would wait
four days, no more, for her return to health.
Now
she knew the limits of her time. But if she had had any idea that she might
escape while they slept, it vanished when Dame Mhari said, "Let you sleep
on the inside of the bed, my girl; do you think I don't know you would run away
if you could? You don't know when you are well off; but when you are Rory's
wife you will not wish to run away."
Oh,
won't I? Romilly
thought, gritting her teeth, and lay down fully resolved to try for an escape
as soon as the old woman slept. But she was weary from a day of heavy and
unaccustomed work, and fell asleep the moment she laid her head on the pillow;
and when she woke in the night, whenever she stirred, she saw by firelight the
old woman's eyes, wide awake and beady as a hawk's, watching her.
Three
days passed in much the same way. She cooked coarse meals, washed the old
woman's sheets and gowns, found a little time to wash her own clothes,
including the torn-up petticoat she had put to use . . . fortunately she was
not too closely observed at the wash-kettle, so she had a chance to dry the
cloths and fold them and hide them under her tunic.
If
she was ever to pass herself off as a boy - and she was more resolved
than ever that she would not travel as a woman in these mountains - she
must find some better way of concealing this personal necessity. She had heard
gossip about the woman soldiers, the Sisterhood of the Sword, who were pledged
never to wear women's gowns nor to let their hair grow. She had never seen one,
only heard gossip, but it was rumored that they knew of a herb which would keep
women from bleeding at their cycles, and she wished she knew their secret! She
had learned something of herb-lore for doctoring animals, and she knew of
herb-medicines which would bring a cow or bitch - or, for that matter - a
woman into
the fertile cycles, but none to suppress it, though there was a drug which
would keep a bitch, briefly, from going into heat when it was inconvenient to
breed her. Was that what they used? Maybe she could try it, but she was not a
dog, and a dog's cycle of heat was very different from the female human's. It
was all theoretical speculation at the moment anyhow, for she had no access to
the herb, and would not know how to recognize it in the wild state anyhow, but
only when prepared for use by a beast-healer.
On
the fourth day, when he rose, Rory said, smirking, "Tonight you shall
sleep with me in the inner room. We have shared meal and fireside; it needs
only now to bed you, to make the marriage legal in all ways."
And
in the mountains, she
had heard, a law would return a runaway wife to her husband. No matter
that she had been wedded without her consent, a woman had small recourse in law;
so if she escaped after Rory had bedded her, there would be two people
seeking her, her father and her husband; would a Tower even take her in under
those circumstances?
Well,
she would ride that colt when it was grown to bear a saddle. But she would try
very hard to find a way of escape today.
All
day, as she went about the drudgery of the household, she pondered a variety of
options. It was possible that she could wait till he had taken her . . . then
slip away when he slept afterward, as she had heard that men were likely to do.
Certainly the old woman could not follow her - but she might rouse Rory
from sleep. Somehow, one way or other, she must manage to prevent Rory from
following her....
And
if she did that, she might as well have let him take her on that first night.
Her throat closed in revulsion at the thought of being a passive victim,
letting him take her unchallenged.
Possibly,
when they undressed for bed, she might somehow contrive to hide his boots and
his leather breeches, so that he could not at once follow her; barefoot and
unbreeched, would even he manage to chase her, afoot - for she would also cut
loose his riding-chervine and drive it into the woods. By the time he found
boots and breeches, and rounded up his chervine, she and her horse would be
well on the way to Nevarsin.
But
she would have to submit to him first....
And
then she thought; when we are undressed for bed, a well-placed knee in the
groin would cripple him long enough to evade pursuit, certainly. Only she must
have the courage
to
kick hard; and hit her target at the first touch; otherwise, he would certainly
half kill her when he caught her, and would never trust her again. She
remembered what her own mother had taught her when she and Ruyven were very
small, that she must never hit or kick him there even in play, because a
relatively light blow to that area would cause serious and possibly permanent
damage; if the parts were ruptured, even death. And that made her stop and
think.
Was
she prepared to kill, if she must, to prevent him from taking her?
After
all, he had first tried to kill her; if she had truly been a boy, or if her
tunic had not torn, revealing her as a woman, he would have cut her throat for
her horse and her cloak. Yes, he had been kind to her after his own fashion
when he discovered she was a woman, but that was because he thought that rather
than a corpse, he would prefer to have a slave . . . for surely that was what
her life with him would be, drudging daylong at heavy work and waiting on the
whims of the old woman; he could get more from her, that way, and have horse
and fine cloak too.
No, she would not scruple.
In
early afternoon, Rory came in where she was listlessly kneading bread, and
dumped the carcass of a rabbithorn on the table.
"I
have it cleaned and skinned," he said. "Roast a haunch of it for
dinner tonight - I have not tasted meat this ten-day - and tomorrow we will
salt the rest; for tonight, hang it in the stables, well out of reach of
vermin."
"As
you wish, Rory," she said, and inwardly she gloated. The meat, frozen as
it would certainly be, would keep her for some time if she could manage to take
it with her on her way out. She would be careful to hang it near to her own
saddle.
The
roast meat soon began to fill the hut with a good smell; Romilly was hungry,
but even after she had fed the old woman, wiped her chin and settled her for
the night, she found that she could not chew and swallow without choking.
I
must be ready. I must be ready. It is tonight or never. She lingered at the table,
sipping nervously at a hot cup of bark-tea, until Rory came and wound his arms
around her from behind.
"I
have built a fire on the hearth in the inner room, so we will not be cold,
come, Calinda." She supposed the old woman had told him her assumed name.
Certainly she had not. Well, it was upon her; she could delay no longer. Her
knees felt weak and wobbly, and for a minute she wondered if she could ever
have the courage to carry out her resolve.
She
let him lead her into the inner room and close the door and fasten it with a
hook from inside. Not good. If she was to make her escape at all, she must have
a clear way outside. "Must you lock the door?" she asked.
"Certainly Gran-Dame Mhari cannot enter our room at any awkward time, for
she cannot walk at all."
"I
thought we would be more private this way," he said, smirking again, and
she said "But suppose-suppose-" she fumbled a moment, then said,
"But suppose Dame Mhari has need of me in the night, and I do not hear
her? Leave the door part way open so she can call me if she has a pain or wants
me to shift her to her other side."
"You
have a good heart, girl," Rory said, and pushed the door open a crack,
then sat heavily on the edge of the bed and began to draw off his boots.
"Here,
let me help you," she said, and came to draw them off, then deliberately
wrinkled her nose.
"Faugh,
how they stink, you must have stepped in the manure pile! Give them to me, my
husband," she used the word deliberately, "and I will clean them
before you rise in the morning. You might as well give me your leather breeches
too." and she stopped, had she gone too far? But Rory suspected nothing.
"Aye,
and I will have a clean shirt for the morning if you have one cleaned and
dried," he said, and piled his clothes into her arms. "Take them out
to the washpot to wait for morning, if they smell of manure they will be better
there than in our bridal chamber."
Better
and better! But
he could still be after her in a flash if he suspected; lingering by the wash
pot, half ready to make a dash for freedom then-naked, he could not chase her
very far - she heard his suspicious call. "Calinda! I am waiting for you!
Get in here!" "I am coming," she called, raising her voice, and
went back to him. Fate had decided it for her, then. She went back into the
bedroom and drew off her own shoes and stockings, her outer tunic and breeches.
He
turned back the covers of the bed and got into it. He reached for her as she
came and sat on the edge of the bed, and his hand closed on her breast in what
was meant, she supposed, for a caress, but his hand was so heavy that she cried
out in pain. He twisted his mouth down over hers and wrestled her own on the
bed.
"You
like to fight, do you? Well, if that's what you want, girl, I'll give it to you
that way-" he panted, covering her with his naked body; his breath was hot
and sour.
Romilly's
qualms were gone. She managed to draw away just a little, then shot out her
foot in the hardest kick she had ever given. It landed directly on target, and
Rory, with a howl of pain, rolled off the bed, shrieking with fury and outrage,
his hands clutched spasmodically between his legs.
"Augh!
Augh! Hellcat, tiger, bitch! Augh!"
She
heard Dame Mhari's voice anxiously crying out in question; but Romilly
scrambled from the bed, clutching her cloak about her, pulling on her tunic
with hasty fingers as she fled. She shoved the door open and was in the
kitchen, snatching up the remnants of the loaf and the roast meat, grabbing
Rory's boots and breeches and her own in an untidy armful, hastily fumbling at
the lock of the byre. Behind her Rory was still howling, wordless screams of
agony and wrath; they beat out at her, almost immobilizing her, but she fought
for breath, thrusting her way into the byre. With her dagger she slashed
through the knots which tied Rory's riding-chervine and slapped the animal hard
on the rump, driving it with a yell into the courtyard; slashed at her horse's
reins and fumbled to thrust on the bridle. Rory's howls and Dame Mhari's voice
raised in querulous complaint - she did not know what had happened and Rory was
not yet able to be articulate - blended in a terrifying duet, it seemed that
Rory's agony throbbed painfully in her own body, but that was laran, she
thought dimly that it was a small price to pay for that avenging blow.
He
would have killed me, he - would have
ravished me -
I need feel no guilt for him!
She
was about to fling his boots and breeches out in the snow; she fastened her
tunic carefully against the cold, bent to pick up Rory's boots, then had a
better thought. She flung open the door of the small outhouse and thrust them,
with a savage movement, down into the privy, thrust the breeches down on top of
them. Now let him find them and clean them before he can follow me, she
thought, flung herself on her horse, snatched up the hastily bundled
provisions, and dug her heels, with a yell, into her horse's side. The horse
plunged away into the woods and she took the steep path downward, giving her
horse his head in her haste to get away. She had to cling to the horse's neck,
so steep was the road, but there was no horse alive to whose back she could not
stick if she must, and she knew she would not fall. She remembered Dame Mhari's
words, you should have taken the left-hand fork at the bottom of the
mountain. Her heart was pounding so hard she could hardly hear the sharp
clatter of her horse on the path under her feet.
She
was free, and for a little time at least, Rory could not pursue her. No matter
that she was abroad on a dark night, with rain falling underfoot, and with
scant provision and no money except for the few coins in a cloth between her
breasts; she was at least out of the hands of Rory and the old woman.
Now
I am free. Now I must decide what to do with my freedom. She pondered, briefly,
returning to Falconsward - but that would be taken, by her father, as a sign of
abject surrender. Dom Garris might give her a slavery more comfortable
that she would find with Rory in the woods; but she had not used all her
ingenuity to get free of them, to go back to imprisonment.
No;
she would seek the Tower, and training of her laran. She told herself,
all the old tales of heroism and quests always begin with the hero having to
overcome many trials. Now I am the hero - why is a hero always a man? - of my
own quest, and I have passed the first trial.
And
she shivered at the thought that this might be, not a road to freedom, but only
the first of the main trials on her quest.
Romilly
did not slacken her speed till the moon had set; riding in the dark, letting
her horse have his head, she finally eased off the reins and let him slow to a
walk. She was not sure herself quite where she was; she knew she had not taken
the left-hand fork she should have taken at the bottom of the hill, to set her
on the way to Nevarsin - it would have been all too easy for Rory to trace her
that way. And now she knew that she was lost; she would not even be sure what
direction she was riding until the sun should rise and she could get her
bearings.
She
found an overhanging clump of trees, unsaddled her horse and tied him at the
foot of one tree, then wrapped herself in the cloak and the rough blanket she
had caught up in her flight, digging into a little hollow at the foot of the
tree. She was cold and cramped, but she slept, even though she kept starting
out of sleep with nightmares in which a faceless man who was both Rory and Dom
Garris - no, but he had a look of her father too - came down at her with
inexorable slowness, while she could not move hand or foot. It was certain that
if Rory ever set eyes on her again, she had better have her dagger ready. But
someone had thrown her dagger down into the privy pit, and she could not look
for it because her only clothing was one of her blood-stained rags, and somehow
or other they were holding the Festival dance in the meadow where her father
had his horse-fair. . . . She was wakened by the horse, restlessly snorting and
nuzzling; the sun was up and the ice melting from the trees.
She
had been lucky, in her breakneck flight last night, in the dark, that her horse
had not broken a leg on the frosty road. Now, soberly, she took stock.
Among
the things she had snatched up last night were a frozen quarter of rabbithorn
meat, which she could cook and smoke - she had no salt for it, but in this
weather it was not likely to spoil. At worst she could slice thin slivers away
from the frozen haunch and eat them raw, though she had little liking for raw
meat. She had lost flint and steel for firemaking . . . no, what a fool she
was, she had her dagger and could search for a flint when the ice was thawed
off the road. She had Rory's coarse cloak instead of her own fur-lined one, but
that was all to the good; it would keep her warm without exciting the same
greed as her finely woven and embroidered one, lined with rich fur. She had
boots and heavy leather breeches, her dagger, a few small hoarded coins in
their hiding-place between her breasts - she had abandoned the pocket with its
few bits; perhaps that and the good cloak would satisfy Rory's greed and he
would not pursue her. But she would take no chances, and press on. In her
saddle-pack she had still a few pieces of the dog-bread on which she could feed
her horse; she got out one of them, and gave it to the horse, letting him chew
on the coarse grain while she arranged her clothing properly - she had fled the
cottage half-dressed and all put together anyhow - and combed her short, ragged
hair with her fingers. Certainly she must look disreputable enough to be a
runaway hawkmaster's apprentice! Now the sun was high; it would be a fine day,
for already the trees were casting off their snow-pods and beginning to bud
again. She shaved a few thin slices of frozen rabbithorn and chewed on them;
the meat was tough and unsavory, but she had been taught that anything a bird
could eat, a human could digest, and since the hawks were fed on such fare it
would certainly not harm her, even if she really preferred cooked food.
She
got her bearings by the climbing sun, and set off again toward the north.
Sooner or later she must meet with someone who would give her the right road
for Nevarsin City, and from there she could inquire the way to Tramontana
Tower.
She
rode all that day without setting eyes on a single person or a single dwelling.
She was not afraid, for she could find food in this country and while the
weather kept fine, she would be safe and well. But before there was another
storm, she must find shelter. Perhaps she could sell the horse in Nevarsin,
bartering him for a stag-pony and enough in ready money to provide herself with
food and a few items of clothing she should have in this weather. She had
thrust her feet into her boots in such haste, she had left her warm stockings.
She
sighed, put her knife away, and swallowed the last of the tough meat. A few
withered winter apples clung to a bush; she pocketed them. They were small and
sour, but the horse would like them. High above in the sky she heard the cry of
a hawk; as she watched it, circling, she thought of Preciosa. It seemed to her
for a moment - but surely it was only memory or imagination? - that she could
feel that faint tenuous touch she had felt with Preciosa, as if the world lay
spread below her, she saw herself and her horse as tiny specks . . . Oh,
Preciosa, you were mine and I loved you, but now you are free and I too am
seeking freedom.
She
slept that night in a long-abandoned travel-shelter, which had not been kept up
since the Aldarans declared their independence of the Six Domains of the
lowlands; there was not much coming and going across the Kadarin between
Thendara and Nevarsin these days. But it kept the rain off, and was better than
sleeping under a tree. She managed to make a fire, too, so she slept warm, and
roasted some of the rabbithorn. She hoped she would find some nuts - she was
tired of meat - but while she was fed, however coarsely, she could not
complain. Even the dog-bread she could eat, if she must, but the horse would
get more good of it than she would.
So
she travelled alone for three more days. By now, she supposed, they must have
abandoned the search for her at home. She wondered if her father grieved, if he
thought her dead.
When
I come to Nevarsin, I will leave a message for him, I will get word to him
somehow that I am safe. But no doubt it will be with me as it was with Ruyven,
he will cast me off and say I am not his daughter. She felt a tightness in her throat,
but she could not cry. She had cried too much already, and had gained nothing
from her tears except an aching head and aching eyes, till she left off crying and
acted to help herself.
Women
think tears will help them. I think men have the right idea when they say tears
are womanish; yes, women cry and so they are helpless, but men act on their
anger and so they are never without power, not wasting time or anger in tears....
She
finished the last of the rabbithorn, and was not sorry - toward the end, she
supposed even a dog would have to be fiercely hungry to eat it, and certainly
any hawk would have turned up its beak at the stuff. On the fifth night she had
only some nuts, found on an abandoned tree, and some woody mushrooms, for her
supper. Perhaps tomorrow she could snare some birds, or she would meet with
someone who could tell her if she was again on the road to Nevarsin - but she
thought not, for this road grew ever poorer and worse-kept, and if she were
nearing the biggest city in these hills, she would certainly have come to some
travelled roads and inhabited parts before this!
The
dog-bread was gone too, and so she stopped several hours before sunset, to let
her horse graze for a while. Fortunately the weather kept fine, and she could
sleep in the open. She was very tired of travelling, but reflected that she
could not now return to her home even if she wished - she had no idea of the
road to Falconsward. Well, so much the better; now she could cut all ties with
her home.
She
slept poorly, hungry and cold, and waked early. The road was so poor . . .
perhaps she should retrace her steps for a distance and see if she could come
to more travelled parts? She tore some rags and bound her feet with them to
ease the chafing of her boots . . . heels and toe were raw and sore. High in
the sky, a single hawk circled - why was there never more than one in sight at
a single time? Did they keep territories like some other animals for their
hunting? And again that strange flash, as if she saw through the hawk's eyes -
was it her laran again? - and thought of Preciosa. Preciosa, gone, free,
lost. It is strange, I miss her more than father or brothers or home....
The
time for fruiting was past, but she found a few small fruits still clinging to
a bush, and ate them, wishing there were more. There was a tree which she knew
she could strip the outer bark and eat the soft inner part, but she was not
that hungry, not yet. She saddled her horse, weary in spite of her long sleep.
Slowly it was beginning to come over her that she could lose herself and even
die in these lonely and utterly uninhabited forests. But perhaps today she
would meet with someone and begin to find her way to Nevarsin, or some to some
little village where she could buy food.
After
an hour of riding she came to a fork in the road, and paused there, indecisive,
aching with hunger, exhausted. Well, she would let her horse graze for a bit
while she climbed to the top of a little knoll nearby and looked about, to see
if she could spy out any human habitation, the smoke of a woodcutter's fire, a
herder's hut even. She had never felt so alone in her life. Of course not. I
have never been so alone in all my life, she thought, with wry humor, and
clambered up the knoll, her knees aching.
I
have not eaten well for days. I must somehow find food and fire this night,
whatever comes of it. She
was almost wishing she had stayed with Rory and his abominable old grandmother;
at least there she had been warm and fed . . . would it really have been so
bad, to marry that oaf?
I
would rather die in the wilderness, she told herself fiercely, but she
was frightened and hungry, and from the top of the knoll she could see only
what looked like a wilderness of trees. Far away, at the furthest edge of her
sight, a high mountain loomed, to the Northwest, and pale shadows around it
which she knew to be snowcapped peaks . . . there lay the Hellers themselves,
to which these foothills were only little lumps in the land, and beyond them,
the Wall Around the World, which was, as far as she knew from traveller's
tales, impassable; at least no one she had ever known had gone beyond it, and
on every map she had ever seen, it delimited the very edge of known country.
Once she had asked her governess what lay beyond it.
"The
frozen waste," her governess told her, "No man knows. . . ." The
thought had intrigued Romilly, then. Now she had had enough of wandering in
unknown country, and felt that some human company would be welcome.
Although
what she had seen already did not make her feel very hopeful about what she
would meet with from men on the roads..
Well,
she had been unlucky, that was all. She sighed, and pulled her belt tighter. It
would not hurt her to go on fasting another day, though tonight she must find
some food, whatever happened. She looked around again, carefully taking the
bearings of the great peak - it seemed to her that there was something near the
top, a white building, some kind of manmade structure; she wondered if it was
castle, Great House or, perhaps, one of the Towers. Northwest; she must be
careful to keep track of the angle of the sun and the passage of time so that
she would not begin walking in circles. But if she followed where the road led,
she would be unlikely to do that.
She
should get back to her horse. She glanced up again. Strange. The hawk still
hovered. She wondered, on wild surmise, if it could be the same hawk ... no. It
was just that hawks were plentiful in these hills and wherever you cast your
eyes on the sky, there was sure to be some kind of bird of prey within sight.
For an instant it seemed as if she hovered, seeing the white pinnacle of the
Tower and a faint blue lightning that struck from within ... she felt faint and
dizzy, not knowing whether it was the hawk or herself that saw ... she shook
herself and pulled out of the rapport. It would be all too easy to lose herself
in that communion with sky and wind and cloud....
She
went back to her horse and painstakingly saddled him again. At least the animal
was fed. She said aloud, "I almost wish I could eat grass as you do, old
fellow," and was startled at the sound of her own voice.
It
was answered by another sound; the high, shrill crying of a striking hawk - yes,
the hawk had found some prey, for she could feel, somewhere in her mind, the
flow of warm blood, a sensation that made her mouth tickle and flood with
saliva, reawakening fierce hunger. The horse startled nervously away, and she
pulled on the reins, speaking softly - and then dark pinions swooped across her
vision. Without thought she thrust out her arm, felt the cruel grip of talons,
and fell blindly into the familiar rapport.
"Preciosa!"
She was sobbing as she spoke the name. How, why the hawk had followed her
through her wandering, she would never know. The shrill cry and the flapping
wings roused her from her tears and she was aware that there was a good-sized
bird, still warm, gripped in the bird's claws. With one hand she gripped the
bird's legs, lifting the claw away from her wrist - it was bleeding a little
where the claws had cut, it was her own fault, for she had no proper glove. She
set the bird on the saddle, her heart pounding, and pulled out her dagger; gave
head and wings to Preciosa, and while the hawk fed - praise to the Bearer of
Burdens, the horse knew enough to stand quietly when his saddle was made into
an impromptu perch - she plucked what was left of the carcass, struck flint and
steel and made a small fire where she roasted the carcass.
She
came to me when I was hungry. She knew. She brought me food, giving up her own
freedom. The
jesses were still clinging to Preciosa's legs. Romilly cut them free with her
dagger.
If
she wants to stay with me now it shall be of her free will. Never again will I
bind her with any mark of ownership. She belongs to herself. But her eyes were still
flooding with tears. She met the hawk's eyes, and suddenly awareness leaped
between hawk and girl, a strange, fierce emotion flooding her - not love as she
knew it, but pure emotion, almost jealousy. She is not my hawk. I am her
girl, Romilly thought, she has adopted me, not the other way round!
The
hawk did not stir when she moved toward it; balancing a little by shifting her
weight from foot to foot, she stared motionless into Romilly's eyes; then gave
a little upward hop and alighted on her shoulder. Romilly caught her breath
with the pain as the talons tightened on her flesh, even through tunic and
cloak, and immediately the grip slackened, so that Preciosa was holding her
just tightly enough to keep her balance.
"You
beauty, you wonder, you marvel," Romilly whispered, while the hawk craned
her neck and preened the set of her feathers.
Never
have I known of such a thing as this, that a hawk once set free should return.
. . . and
Romilly supposed it was the mark of her laran which had brought her
close to the hawk.
She
stayed quiet, in that wordless communion, for what seemed a long time, while
Romilly finished the roasted meat, covered the fire and resaddled the horse;
her hands moved automatically about her tasks, but her eyes kept coming back
and her mind dropping into silent closeness to the bird.
Will
she stay with me now? Or fly away again? It no longer matters. We are together.
At
last she cut a branch and trimmed it, fastening it to her saddle behind, as a
perch for Preciosa if she chose to stay there, and mounted, setting Preciosa on
the improvised perch. Preciosa stayed quiet for a moment, then flapped her
wings and rose high, wheeling just at the height of the treetop, hovering near.
Romilly drew a long breath. Preciosa would not leave her entirely.
Then
she drew on the horse's reins, for she heard voices; a rough man's voice
proclaiming, "I tell you, it was smoke I saw," and another one
protesting something. There were horse's hooves, too, and somewhere a sharp
barking.
Romilly
was off her horse, sliding down, leading him into the thickest part of the
trees at the edge of the road. She had no wish to meet with any travellers
before she could get a look at them and see what they were up to and what they
looked like.
Another
voice spoke, rough and male, but this time in the cultivated accents of an
educated man - a lowlander, Romilly thought; he spoke like Alderic. "If
anyone else travels on this road, Orain, he is no doubt in our own case, and
will be as glad as we are to see another human face." The riders came into
sight now, a tall man with flame-red hair, wearing ragged clothing but with a
certain look of elegance - this one was no yokel like Rory. Somehow he reminded
her of Lord Storn, or the elderly Lord Scathfell, though his dress was as rough
as her own, his beard and hair untrimmed. The man at his side was tall too,
almost gaunt, wearing a shirtcloak of antique fashion and boots that looked
hand-botched together from untanned leather. On a block before him, on his
saddle, a huge hooded bird, which did not look like any hawk Romilly had ever
seen before, moved uneasily from foot to foot, and Romilly, still partly in
rapport with Preciosa at treetop-height, felt a little shudder of anger and
something like fear. She did not know what sort of bird it was, but she knew
instinctively that she did not like to be around it.
Behind
the two men in the lead, five or six others rode. Only the two in the vanguard
had horses; the others rode an assortment of chervines, none of them
very large or very good, their coats ill-cared-for and their horns ragged and
rough; one or two of the stag-beasts had been crudely dehorned with a lack of
skill that made Romilly wince. Her father would have turned away any hired man
who kept his riding-animals in any such condition, and as for the dehorning,
she could almost have done better herself! She liked the look of the two men
who rode ahead, but she thought she had never seen such ruffians as the men
behind them!
The
gaunt, bearded man in the lead, riding at the side of the red-haired aristocrat
(so she immediately styled him in her mind) got off his horse and said,
"Here's trace of fire; and horse-droppings, too; there's been a rider
here."
"And
with a horse, in the wild?" the red-haired man inquired with a lift of his
eyebrows. He glanced around, but it was the gaunt, crudely dressed man whose
eyes lighted on Romilly where she stood by the horse in the thickest part of
the trees.
"Come
out, boy. We mean ye' no harm," he said, beckoning, and the red-haired man
slid from his horse and stood by the remains of her fire. He poked about the
carefully covered coals-like everyone brought up in the Hellers, Romilly was
over-cautious about fire in the woods-and finally extracted a few live sparks;
threw in a twig or two.
"You
have saved us the trouble of making fire," he said in his quiet, educated
voice, "Come and share it with us, no one will hurt you."
And
indeed Romilly felt no sense of menace from any of them. She led the horse from
the concealed thicket and stood with her hand on the bridle.
"Well,
lad, who are ye' and whereaway bound?" asked the gaunt man, and his voice
was kind. He was, she thought, not quite as old as her father, but older than
any of her brothers. She repeated the tale she had thought of.
"I
am a hawkmaster's apprentice - I was brought up in a Great House, but my mother
was too proud to claim me a nobleman's son, and I thought I could better myself
in Nevarsin; so I took the road there, but I am lost."
"But
you have horse and cloak, dagger and - if I make no mistake - a hawk too,"
said the redhead, his grey eyes lighting on the improvised perch, to which
Romilly had tied the cut-away jesses- her whole training had taught her never
to throw away a scrap of leather, it could always be used for something.
"Did you steal the hawk? Or what is an apprentice doing with a bird - and
where is she?"
Romilly
raised her arm; Preciosa swooped down and caught her lifted forearm. She said
fiercely, "She is mine; no other can claim her, for I trained her with my
own hand."
"I
doubt you not," said the aristocrat, "for in this wild, without even
jesses, she could fly away if she would, and in that sense at least, you own
her as much as anything human can own a wild thing."
He
understands that! Romilly
felt a sudden extreme sense of kinship with this man, as if he were a brother,
a kinsman. She smiled up at him, and he returned the smile. Then he looked
around at the men ringing the grove, and said, "We too are on our way to
Nevarsin, though the route we travel is somewhat circuitous - for reasons of
caution. Ride with us, if you will."
"What
Dom Carlo means," said the gaunt man at his side, "is that if
we rode the main roads, there are those who'd have the hangman on us,
quick!"
Were
they outlaws, bandits? Romilly wondered whether she had not, in escaping Rory
and taking up with these rough-looking men, walked from the trap to the
cookpot! But the redhead smiled, a look of pure affection and love, at the
other man and said, "You make us sound like a crew of murderers, Orain. We
are landless men who lost the estates of our fathers, and some of us lost our
kin, too, because we supported the rightful king instead of yonder rascal who thinks
to claim the throne of the Hasturs. He assured he would have supporters enough
by poison, rope or knife for all those who would not support him, and had
enough lands to reward his followers, by murdering, or sending into exile,
anyone who looked at him cross-eyed and did not bend the knee fast enough. So
we are bound for Nevarsin, to raise an army there - Rakhal shall not have the
Crystal Palace unchallenged! Him a Hastur?" The man laughed shortly.
"I'll shall his head rest in that crown while any of us are alive! I am
Carlo of Blue Lake; and this is my paxman and friend Orain."
The
word he had used for "friend" was one which could also mean cousin
or foster-brother; and Romilly saw that the gaunt Orain looked on Dom
Carlo with a devotion like that of a good hound for his master.
"But
if the lad is a hawk-trainer," Orain said, "I doubt not he could tell
ye what ails our sentry-birds, Dom Carlo."
Carlo
looked sharply at Romilly. "What's your name, boy?"
"Rumal."
"And
from your accent I can tell you were reared north of the Kadarin," said
he. "Well, Rumal, have you knowledge of hawks?"
Romilly
nodded. "I have, sir."
"Show
him the birds, Orain."
Orain
went to his horse, and took the great bird from the saddle. He beckoned to two
of the other men, who were carrying similar birds on their saddles; warily,
Orain drew the hood from the head of the bird, being careful to stay out of
reach; it jerked its head around, making pecking movements, but was too
listless to peck. There was a long feathered crest over the eye-sockets, but
the head was naked and ugly, the feathers unkempt and unpreened, even the
creature's talons scaly and dirty-looking. She thought she had never seen such
ugly fierce-looking birds; but if in good health they might have had the beauty
of any wild creature. Now they just looked hunched and miserable. One of them
cocked its neck and let out a long scream, then drooped its head between its
wings and looked disreputable again.
Romilly
said, "I have never seen birds of this kind." Though she thought they
looked more like kyorebni, the savage scavenger-birds of the high hills,
than any proper hunting-bird of prey.
"Still,
a bird is a bird," said Carlo, "We got these from a well-wisher and
we would take them as a gift to Carolin's armies, in Nevarsin, but they are
failing fast and may not live till we get there - we cannot make out what ails
them, though some of us have trained and flown hawks - but none of us know how
to treat them when they ail. Have you knowledge of their ills, Master
Rumal?"
"A
little," Romilly said, trying desperately to muster her small knowledge of
curing sick animals. These were sick indeed; any bird, from cagebird to verrin
hawk, who will not preen its feathers and keep its feet in trim is a sick
bird. She had been taught to mend a broken flight feather, but she knew little
of medicining sick birds, and if they had molt-rot or something of the sort,
she had not the faintest idea what to do about it.
Nevertheless
she went up to the strange, fierce-looking birds, and held out her hand to the
one Orain held, looking it into the eye and reaching out with that instinctive
rapport. A dullness spread through her, a sickness and pain that made her want
to retch. She pulled out of the rapport, feeling nauseated, and said,
"What have you been feeding them?"
That
was a good guess; she remembered Preciosa, sickened by insufficiently fresh
food.
"Only
the best and freshest food," said one of the men behind Orain,
defensively, "I lived in a Great House where there were hawks kept, and
knew them meat-eaters; when our hunting was poor, all of us went short to give
the damned birds fresh meat, for all the good it did us," he added,
looking distressedly at the drooping bird on his saddleblock.
"Only
fresh meat?" said Romilly, "There is your trouble, sir. Look at their
beak and claws, and then look at my hawk's. That's a scavenger-bird, sir; she
should be freed to hunt food for herself. She can't tear apart fresh meat, her
beak's not strong enough, and if you've been carrying her on your saddle and
not let her free, she's not been able to peck gravel and stones for her crop.
She feeds on half-rotted meat, and she must have fur or feathers too - the
muscle meat alone, and skinned as well - wasn't it?"
"We
thought that was the way to do it," said Orain, and Romilly shook her
head. "If you must feed them on killed meat, leave feather and fur
on it, and make sure she gets a chance to peck up stones and twigs and even a
bit of green stuff now and then. These birds, though I am sure you've tried to
feed them on the best, are starving because they can't digest what you've given
them. They should be allowed to hunt for themselves, even if you have to fly
them on a lure-line."
"Zandru's
hells, it makes good sense, Orain," said Dom Carlo, blinking,
"I should have seen it ... well, now we know. What can we do?"
Romilly
thought about it, quickly. Preciosa had wheeled up into the sky, and hovered
there; Romilly went quickly into rapport with the bird, seeing for a moment
through her eyes; then said, "There is something dead in the thicket over
there. I'm not familiar with your - what do you call them - sentry-birds; are
they territorial, or will they feed together?"
"We
daren't let them too near each other," said Orain, "for they fight;
this one I carry near pecked out the eyes of that one on Gawin's saddle
there."
Romilly
said, "Then there's no help for it; you'll have to feed them separately.
There-" she pointed, "is something dead for at least a couple of days
- you'll have to fetch it and cut it up for them."
The
men hesitated.
"Well,"
said Dom Carlo sharply, "What are you waiting for? Carolin needs
these birds, and no doubt at Tramontana they'll have a leronis who can
fly them, but we've got to get them there alive!"
"Ye
squeamish, lily-gutted, cack-handed incompetents," Orain swore,
"Afraid to get yer hands dirty, are ye? I'll set an example, then! Where's
this dead thing ye spied, lad?"
Romilly
began to walk toward the thicket; Orain followed and Dom Carlo said with
asperity, "Go and help him, you men, as many as he needs! Will you let one
man and a child drag carrion for three birds?"
Reluctantly,
a couple of the men followed. Whatever animal lay dead in the thicket - she
suspected it was one of the small multicolored woods chervines - it announced
its presence very soon by the smell, and Romilly wrinkled her nose.
Orain
said incredulously, "We're to feed that to those fine birds?"
He bent down and hauled gingerly at the smelly carcass; a stream of small
insects were parading in and out of the empty eye-holes, but it was not yet
disintegrated enough to come apart in their hands, and Romilly took one end of
the carcass and hoisted, trying to breathe through her mouth so she would not
have to breathe in much of the foul smell.
"A
kyarebni would think it fine fare," Romilly said, "I have
never kept a scavenger-bird, but their bellies are not like those of hawks, and
how would you like to be fed on grass?"
"I
doubt not that y're right," said Orain glumly, "But I never thought
to be handling stinking carrion even for the king's men!" The other men
came and lent a hand in the hauling; Romilly was glad when it was over, but
some of the men gagged and retched as they handled the stuff. Orain, however,
drew a formidable knife and began hacking it into three parts; even before he
was finished the hooded bird on his saddle set up a screaming. Romilly drew a
long breath of relief. She did not like to think what would have happened if
she had been wrong, but evidently she had been right. She took up a small
handful of fine pebbly dirt and strewed it over the cut hunk of the carcass,
then, hesitating - but remembering the moment of rapport with the sick bird -
went and unfastened the hood.
Orain
shouted, "Hey! Look out there, lad, she'll pick out yer eyes-"
But
the bird, under her light hands, seemed gentle and submissive. Poor hungry
thing, Romilly thought, and lifted the heavy weight - it took all her
strength to set it on the ground beside the hacked carcass. With a scream, the
bird plunged its beak into the carcass and tore hard, gulping down fur,
pebbles, the smelly half-decomposed meat.
"You
see?" said Romilly simply, and went to lift down the other bird. Orain
came to help her, but the strange bird thrust angry beak at him, and he drew
back, letting Romilly handle it.
When
all of the birds had fed and were preening their feathers, making little
croaking sounds of satisfaction, Dom Carlo lifted his eyebrow at Orain,
and Orain said, "Ride with us to Nevarsin, lad, and then to Tramontana to
deliver these birds to Carolin's men; and keep them healthy on the way. We'll
feed you and your horse, and give you three silver bits for every tenday ye're
with us while the birds stay healthy. Your hawk," he added with a droll
grin, "Can no doubt hunt for himself."
"Herself,"
Romilly corrected, and Orain chuckled.
"Be
a bird male or female, none cares except another bird of its own kind," he
said. "Otherwise with humankind, aye, Dom Carlo?" And he
laughed, though Romilly could not quite see the joke. "Well, what about
it, boy, will ye' have along of us and the sentry-birds?"
Romilly
had already made up her mind. She herself was bound, first to Nevarsin and then
to Tramontana to seek her brother or news of him. This would give her
protection and keep her fed. She said, "Gladly, Dom Carlo and
Master Orain."
"Bargain,
then," said Orain, and stuck out his calloused hand with a grin. "Now
the birds have fed, shall we move out of range of the smell of their feeding,
and have a bait of vittles for ourselves?"
"Sounds
good," Romilly said, and went to unsaddle her horse.
The
food was heavy dough, baked by the simple method of thrusting twists of the
dough on to sticks and baking over the fire; and a few thick tubers roasted in
the ashes. Romilly sat beside Orain, who offered her salt from a little pouch
drawn from his pocket. When the meal was done, the birds hooded and taken on
their saddles again - Orain asked Romilly for help with getting the hoods back
on the birds - she heard one or two of the men grumbling.
"That
lad rides a horse when we make do wi' a stag-pony each? What about it - shall
we have it from him?"
'Try
it," said Orain, turning, "and ye can ride alone in these woods,
Alaric - there are no thieves and bandits in our company, and if ye' lay one
finger on the boy's horse, it'll be for Dom Carlo to deal with
ye'!"
Romilly
felt a surge of gratitude; it seemed she had found a protector in Orain, and
for the moment, facing the ragged crew, she was a little frightened.
Soon
or late, though, she might have to face them on her own, without a
protector....
"What
are the birds' names?" she asked Orain. He grinned at her. "Does
anyone name uglies like these, as if they were a child's cagebird or the old
wife's pet cow?"
"I
do," Romilly said, "You must give any animal with which you wish to
work closely, a name, so that he will read it in your mind and know it is of
him - or her - that you speak, and to her you are directing your
attention."
"Is
it so?" Orain asked, chuckling, "I suppose you could call them
Ugly-mug One, Ugly-mug Two, and Ugly-mug Three!"
"By
no means," said Romilly with indignation. The bird on her first fluttered
restlessly, and she added, "Birds are very sensitive! If you are ever to
work with them, you must love them-" before the open derision in the men's
eyes she knew she was blushing, but went on nevertheless, "You must respect
them, and care for them, and feel a real kindness for them. Do you think
they do not know that you dislike them and are afraid of them?"
"And
you don't?" Dom Carlo asked. He sounded genuinely interested, and
she turned to him with relief. She said, "Would you mock your best
hunting-dog if you wanted to have a good hunt, with him working to your word or
gesture? Don't you think he would know?"
"I
have not hunted since I was a young lad," Dom Carlo said, "but
certainly I would not treat any beast I sought to tame to my service, with
anything but respect. Listen to what the lad says, men; he's got the right of
it. I heard the same from my own hawkmaster once. And surely-" he patted
the neck of the superb black mare he rode, "we all have love and respect
for our beasts, horse or chervine, who carry us so faithfully."
"Well,"
said Orain, again with that droll curl of his lip, looking down at the great
gross body of the sentry-bird, "We could call this one Beauty, that one
Lovely, and that one over there we might call Gorgeous. I doubt not they're
beautiful enough to one another - lovesome's as lovesome does, or so my old Ma
used to say."
Romilly
giggled. "I think that would be overdoing," she said. "Beauty
they may not have, but - let me think-I shall call them after the
Virtues," she added after a moment. "This one-" she lifted the
heavy bird on to its block on Orain's saddle, "Shall be Prudence. This
one-" she went, frowned at the dirty perch and thrust the hooded bird on
to Orain's gloved fist while she dug out her knife and scraped off a disgusting
accumulation of filth and droppings. "This one shall be Temperance, and
this one-" turning to the third, "Diligence."
"How
are we to tell them apart?" demanded one of the men, and she said
seriously, "Why, they are nothing alike. Diligence is the big one with the
blue tips on her wings - see? And Temperance - you can't see it now, it's under
the hood, but her crest is big and white-speckled. And Prudence is the little
one with the extra toe on her feet - see?" She pointed out the features
one by one, and Orain stared in amazement.
"Why,
so they are different - I never thought to notice."
Romilly
climbed into her saddle. She said seriously, "The first thing you have to
learn about birds is to think of each one as an individual. In their manners
and their habits, too, they are no more alike than you and Dom Carlo."
She turned in her saddle to the redhaired man and said, "Forgive me, sir,
perhaps I should have consulted you before naming your birds-"
He
shook his head. "I never thought of it. They seem good names, indeed . . .
are you a cristoforo, my lad?"
She
nodded. "I was reared as one. And you, sir?"
"I
serve the Lord of Light," he said briefly. Romilly said nothing, but was a
little startled - the Hali'imyn did not come all that often into these
hills. But of course, if they were Carolin's men in exile, they would serve the
Gods of the Hastur-kindred. And if Carolin's armies were massing at Nevarsin -
excitement caught in her throat. No doubt this was the reason Alderic was in
these hills, to join the king when the time was ripe. She speculated again,
briefly, about Alderic's real identity. If these were Carolin's men, perhaps
they knew him and were his friends. But that was not her business and the last
thing she should do was to entangle herself in any man's cause. Her father had
said it, and it was true, why should it matter which rascal sat on the throne,
so long as they left honest folk alone to do their own business?
She
rode in the line of men, keeping rather nervously close to Orain and Dom Carlo
- she did not like the way the man Alaric stared at her, and, no doubt, like
the villainous Rory, he coveted her horse. At least he did not know she was a
female and so he did not covet her body; and she could protect her horse, at
least while she had Dom Carlo's protection.
Come
to think of it, she hadn't done such a bad job of protecting her body, at that.
They
rode all day, stopping at noon for some porridge made by stirring cold well-water
into finely-ground porridge powder. This, with a handful of nuts, made a hearty
meal. After the meal they rested for a time, but Romilly busied herself with
her knife, trimming and balancing proper perches - the sentry-birds were, she
could see, in considerable distress from the poorly-balanced saddle-blocks. She
checked the knots in the jesses, too, and found that one of the birds had a
festered place in its leg from top-tight knots, which she treated with cold
water and a poultice of healing leaves. The other men were lying around in the
clearing, enjoying the sun, but when Romilly came back from checking the birds,
she saw that Dom Carlo was awake and watching her. Nevertheless she went
on with her work. One of the men's stag-ponies was poorly dehorned and the
horn-bud trickling blood at the base; she trimmed it and scraped it clean,
drying it with a bit of rag and packing it with absorbent moss, then went from
stag-pony to stag-pony, checking one which had been limping, and picking, with
her knife-point, a little stone from between the hoof-segments.
"So,"
said Dom Carlo at last, lazily, opening his eyes, "You go about
your self-appointed tasks well - you are not lazy, Rumal. Where got you your
knowledge of beasts? You have the skill of a MacAran with them-" and he
sat up and looked at her, "and I would say you had a touch of their laran
as well. And now I think of it, you've a look of that clan, too." His
grey eyes met hers, and Romilly felt a curious sense that he looked at her
inside and out, and she quailed - could he tell, if he was one of the Gifted
Hastur-kinfolk, that she was a girl? But he seemed not to be aware of her
dismay, only went on looking at her - it was, she thought, as if it never
occurred to him that anyone would refuse to answer him when he asked.
She
said, her words stumbling over themselves, "I was-I said-brought up-I know
some of them-"
"Born
the wrong side of the bed? Aye, it's an old enough story in these hills, and
elsewhere too," said Dom Carlo, "Which is why that ruffian Rakhal
sits on the throne and Carolin awaits us in Nevarsin."
"You
know the king well, sir? You seem one of the Hali'imyn."
"Why,
so I am," Dom Carlo said easily, "No, Orain, don't look like
that, the word's not the insult in these mountains that it would be South of
the Kadarin. The boy means no harm. Know the king? I have not seen him
often," Dom Carlo said, "but he is kin to me, and I hold by
him. As I said, a few too many bastards with ambitions put Carolin in this
difficulty - his father was too tender-hearted with his ambitious kinsmen, and
only a tyrant assures his throne by murdering all others with the shadow of a
claim to it. So I have sympathy with your plight, boy - if the usurper Rakhal
laid hands on me, for instance, or any of Carolin's sons, their heads would
soon be decorating the walls of his castle. I suppose you have some of the
MacAran donas, though, or you could not handle beasts as you do. There
is a MacAran laranzu in Tramontana - it is to him and his fellow workers
that we mean these birds to go, in the end. Know you anything of sentry-birds,
then, my boy?"
Romilly
shook her head. "Not until today did I ever set eyes on one, though I have
heard they are used for spying."
"True,"
said Dom Carlo, "One who has the laran of your family or something
like to it, must work with them, stay in rapport as they fly where you wish to
see. If there is an army on the road, you can spy out their numbers and report
their movements. The side with the best-trained spy-birds is often the side
that wins the battle, for they can take the other by surprise."
"And
these are to be trained for this?"
"They
must be trained so that they can be handled easily," said Carlo. "A
royal gift this was, from one of Carolin's supporters in these hills; but my
men knew little of them, which is why it is as if the very Gods sent you to us,
who can keep them in health and perhaps gentle them a little to working."
"The
one who will fly them at last should do that," Romilly said, "but I
will try hard to accustom them to human hands and human voices, and keep them
healthy and properly fed." And she wondered; for Ruyven was at Tramontana,
so she had heard, and perhaps he was the laranzu for whose hands these
birds were destined. How strangely Fate turned . . . perhaps, if she could make
her way to Tramontana, her gifts could be trained to the handling of such
birds. "If your men have any hunting skills, it would be well if they
could bring down some medium-small game and feed it to the birds, but not too
fresh, unless they can cut it up very fine and feed them skin and feathers with
it..."
"I'll
leave their diet to you," Dom Carlo said, "And if you have any
trouble with them, tell me. These are valuable creatures and I'll not have them
mishandled." He looked up into the sky, crimsoning as the great sun began
to decline somewhat from noon, where, just at the very edge of sight, Romilly
could see Preciosa, a tiny dark speck hovering near. "Your hawk stays near
even when she flies free? How did you train her to that? What is her name?"
"Preciosa,
sir."
"Preciosa,"
jeered
the man Alaric, coming to saddle Dom Carlo's horse, "Like a wee
girl naming her doll!"
"Don't
mock the lad," Dom Carlo said gently, "Till you can better his
way with the birds, we need his skills. And you should take better care of your
own beast - a chervine can be well-kept, even if he is not a horse. You should
thank Rumal for finding the stone in Greywalker's hoof!"
"Oh,
an' indeed I do," said Alaric with a surly scowl, and turned away. Romilly
watched with a faint frown of distaste. It seemed she already had an enemy
among these men, which she had done nothing to deserve. But perhaps she had
been tactless in caring for the chervine's hoof - perhaps she should simply
have warned Alaric that his beast was going lame. But couldn't he see, or
feel the poor thing limping? She supposed that was what it was to be
head-blind. He could not communicate with any dumb brute. And with the
intolerance of the very young, she thought, if he does not understand
animals better than that, he should not try to ride one!
Soon
after, they mounted and rode on through the afternoon. The trails were steeper
now, and Romilly began to lag behind somewhat - on these paths and roads, a
mountain-bred chervine was better than a horse, and there were places on the
narrow mountain paths where Romilly, Orain and Dom Carlo had to dismount
and lead their horses by the bridle while the men on the sure-footed stag-like
riding-beasts stayed in their saddles, secure as ever. She had lived in the
hills all her life and was in general not afraid of anything, but some of the
steep edges and sheer cliffs over abysses of empty space and clouds made her
gasp and catch her breath, biting her lip against showing her fear. Up they
went, and upward still, climbing through cold layers of mist and cloud, and her
ears began to ache and her breath grew shorter while her heart pounded so
loudly in her ears that she could hardly hear the hooves of the horses and
stag-ponies on the rocky path. Once she dislodged a stone with her foot and saw
it bouncing down the cliffside, rebounding every ten or fifteen feet until it
disappeared into the clouds below.
They
paused and drew close together in the throat of the pass, and Orain pointed to
a cluster of lights against the dusk of the next mountain. His voice was very
low, but Romilly lagging with the other horses, heard him.
"There
it lies. Nevarsin, The City of Snows, vai dom. Two or at the most, three
more days on the road, and you will be safe behind the walls of
St.-Valentine-of-the-Snows."
"And
your faithful heart can rest without fear, bredu? But all these men are
loyal, and even if they knew-"
"Don't
even whisper it aloud, my lord-Dom Carlo," Orain said urgently.
Dom
Carlo
reached out and gave the other man's thin shoulder an affectionate touch.
"You
have sheltered me with your care since we were children - who but you should be
at my side then, foster-brother?"
"Ah,
you'll have dozens and hundreds then to care for you, my-" again he
paused, "vai dom."
"But
none with your faithfulness," said Dom Carlo gently. "You'll
have all the rewards I can give."
"Reward
enough to see you where you belong again - Carlo," said Orain, and turned
back to oversee the descent of the others down through the narrow defile which
led away toward the bottom of the ravine.
They
camped in the open that night, under a crude tent pitched beneath a tree, just
a slanting sheet to keep the worst of the rain from them. As befitted a paxman,
Orain kept close to Dom Carlo, but as they were spreading their
blankets, and Romilly checking the birds and feeding them the last of the
carrion - the men grumbled and snarled about the smell, but no one would
gainsay Dom Carlo. Orain said briefly, "Rumal, you'd better spread
your blankets near to us - you haven't much in the way of blankets and even wi'
your cloak you'll freeze, lad."
Romilly
thanked them meekly and crawled in between the two men. She had taken off only
her boots - she did not want to be seen in fewer clothes than this - but even
with cloak and blanket she felt chilled, and was grateful for shared blankets
and warmth. She was vaguely aware, at the edge of sleep, when Preciosa swooped
down and roosted within the circle of the fires; and beyond that, something
else ... a faint awareness, the touch of laran - Dom Carlo's
thoughts, stirring, circling about the camp to make sure that all was well with
men, riding-beasts and birds.
Then
she slept.
In
the clear dawnlight, moving around the clearing to fetch water for the birds,
and taking stock - one of the men should hunt today, to kill something for the
sentry-birds, although already they looked better and were preening their
feathers and cleaning their feet - Romilly could see the walls of Nevarsin,
clear in the light as if they were made of snow or salt. An ancient city, built
into the side of the mountain, just below the level of the eternal snow; and
above them, like the very bones of the mountain projecting through the
never-ending snow, the grey walls of the monastery, carved from living rock.
One
of the men whose name she did not know was fetching water for porridge; another
was doling out grain for the horses and chervines. The one called
Alaric, a heavy glowering man, roughly clad, was the one she feared most, but
she could not avoid him completely, and in any case, he must have some feeling
for the sentry-birds, he had carried one of them on that crude perch before his
saddle.
"Excuse
me," said Romilly politely, "but you must go out and kill something
for the sentry-birds; if it is killed this morning, by night it will be
beginning to decay, and be right for them to eat."
"Oh,
so," snarled the man, "So after one night with our good leader you
now think yourself free to give orders to men who've been with him this whole
hungry year? Which of them had you, or did they take turns at you, little
catamite?"
Shocked
by the crudeness of the insult, Romilly recoiled, her face flaming.
"You've no right to say that to me; Dom Carlo put me in charge of
the birds and bade me see they were properly fed, and I obey the vai dom as
you do yourself!"
"Aye,
I may say so," the man sneered, "Maybe you'd like to put that pretty
girl-face and those little ladylike hands to-" and the rest of the words
were so foul that Romilly literally did not understand what he meant by them,
and was perfectly sure she did not want to know. Clinging to what dignity she
could - she honestly did not know how one of her brothers would have reacted to
such foulness except, perhaps, by drawing a knife, and she was not big enough
to fight on even terms with the giant Alaric - she said, "Perhaps if the vai
dom himself gives you his orders you will take them," and moved away,
clenching her teeth and her whole face tightly against the tears that
threatened to explode through her taut mouth and eyes. Damn him. Damn him! I
must not cry, I must not....
"Here,
here, what a face like a thundercloud, my lad?" said Orain, his lean face
twisted with amusement, "Hurt? What ails ye-"
She
clutched at the remnants of self-possession and said the first thing that came
into her head.
"Have
you a spare glove I can borrow, Uncle?" She used the informal term for any
friend of a father's generation. "I cannot handle the sentry-birds with my
bare fist, though I can manage a hawk; their talons are too long, and my hand
is bleeding still from yesterday. I think I must fly them on a line to try and
let them hunt for small animals or find carrion."
"A
glove you shall have," said Dom Carlo behind them, "Give him
your old one, Orain; shabby it may be, but it will protect his hand. There are
bits of leather in the baggage, you can fashion one for yourself tonight. But
why must you fly them? Why not give orders to one of the men to catch fresh
food for them? We have hunting-snares enough, and we need meat for ourselves
too. Send any of the men to fetch fresh food-" and as he looked on
Romilly, his reddish eyebrows went up.
"Oh,
is that the way of it?" he asked softly, "Which of them was it
Rumal?"
Romilly
looked at the ground. She said almost inaudibly "I don't wish to make
trouble, vai dom. Indeed, I can fly them, and they should have exercise
in any case."
"No
doubt they should," Carlo said, "So fly them for exercise, if you
will. But I'll not have my orders disobeyed, either. Give her a glove, Orain,
and then I'll have a word with Alaric."
Romilly
saw the flash of his eyes, like greyish steel striking fire from flint; she
took the glove and, head down, went to take down Temperance from her block,
attach the lure-lines and set them up to fly. She found a cast feather and used
it to stroke the bird's breast, at which the great wicked head bent and dipped
with something like pleasure; she was making a good beginning at accustoming
the large, savage birds to human touch and presence. When she had flown
Temperance and watched her pounce on some small dead thing in the grass, she
stood and watched the sentry-bird feed; standing on one foot, tearing with beak
and claw. Later she flew Diligence in the same way; then - with relief, for her
arm was growing tired - the smaller, gentler Prudence.
They
are ugly birds, I suppose. But they are beautiful in their own way; strength,
power, keen sight .
. . and the world would be a fouler place without birds like this, to clear
away what is dead and rotting. She was amazed at the way in which the birds
had found, even on lines like the lure-lines, their own food, small carcasses
in the grass, which she herself had not seen or even smelled. How had the men
managed to ignore their real needs, when it was so clear to her what they
wanted and needed?
I
suppose that is what it means to have laran, Romilly thought, suddenly
humbled. A gift which had been born in her family, for which she could claim no
credit because it was inborn, she had done nothing to deserve it. Yet even Dom
Carlo, who had the precious laran too - everything about the man
spoke of easy, accustomed power - could not communicate with the birds, though
he seemed able to know anything about men. The gift of a MacAran. Oh,
but her father was so wrong, then, so wrong, and she had been right, to insist
on this precious and wonderful Gift with which she had been dowered; to ignore
it, to misuse it, to play at it, untrained - oh, that was wrong, wrong!
And
her brother Ruyven had been right, to leave Falconsward and insist on the
training of his natural Gifts. In the Tower he had found his proper place, laranzu
for the handling of sentry-birds. One day that would be her place too...
Prudence's
scream of anger roused Romilly from her daydream and she realized that the
sentry-bird had finished feeding and was tugging again at the lure-line.
Romilly let her fly in circles on the line for a few moments, then made contact
with the bird and urged her gently back to the ground; she hooded her, lifted
her (grateful for the glove Orain had given her, for even through the glove she
could feel the fierce grip of the huge talons) and set her back on the block.
As
she made ready to ride, she thought soberly of the distance still ahead of
them. She would keep as close to Orain as she could; if Alaric should find her
alone. . . . and she thought, with terror, of the vast and empty chasms over
which they had come the day before. A false step there, a slight nudge, and she
would have followed that stone down over the cliff, rebounding again and again,
broken long before she reached the final impact at the bottom. She felt faint
nausea rising in her throat. Would his malice carry him so far as that? She
had done him no harm....
She
had betrayed his incompetence before Dom Carlo, whom he evidently held
in the highest respect. Remembering Rory, Romilly wondered if there were any
men anywhere, alive, who were motivated by anything other than malice and lust
and hatred. She had thought, in boy's clothing, she would be safe at least from
lust; but even here, among men, she found its ugly face. Her father? Her
brothers? Alderic? Well, her father would have sold her to Dom Garris
for his own convenience. Alderic and her brothers? She really did not know them
at all, for they would not have shown their real face to a girl whom they
considered a child. No doubt they too were all evil within. Setting her teeth
grimly, Romilly put the saddle on her horse, and went about saddling the other
horses for Orain and Dom Carlo. Her prescribed duties demanded only that
she care for the birds, but as things were now, she preferred the company of
horses to the company of humankind!
Dom
Carlo's
kindly voice interrupted her reverie.
"So
you have saddled Longlegs for me? Thank you, my lad."
"She
is a beautiful animal," Romilly said, giving the mare a pat.
"You
have an eye for horses, I can see; not surprising, if you are of MacAran blood.
This one is from the high plateaus around Armida; they breed finer horses there
than anywhere in the mountains, though I think sometimes they have not quite
the stamina of the mountain-bred. Perhaps it does her no kindness, to take
Longlegs on these trails; I have often thought I should return her to her
native country and get myself a mountain-bred horse, or even a chervine for
this wild hill country. Yet-" his hand lingered on the glossy mane,
"I flatter myself that she would miss me; and as an exile, I have not so
many friends that I would be willing to part with one, even if she is a dumb
beast. Tell me, my boy; you know horses, do you think this climate is too hard
on her?"
"I
would not think so," Romilly said after a minute, "Not if she is well
fed and well cared for; and you might consider wrapping her legs for extra
support on these steep paths."
"A
good thought," Dom Carlo agreed, and beckoned to Orain; they set
about bandaging the legs of their lowlands-bred horses. Romilly's own horse was
bred for the Hellers, shaggy-coated and shaggy-legged, with great tufts of
coarse hair around the fetlocks, and for the first time since she had fled from
Falconsward, she was glad that she had left her own horse. This one, stranger
as he was, had at least borne her faithfully.
After
a time they set off, winding downward into the valley, which they reached in
time for the midday meal, and then along the gradually broadening, well-travelled
road which led into Nevarsin, the City of the Snows.
One
more night they camped before they came to the city, and this time, noting what
Romilly had done the day before, Orain gave orders to the men that they should
groom and properly care for their riding-chervines. They obeyed
sullenly, but they obeyed; Romilly heard one of them grumble, "While we
have that damned hawk-boy with us, why can't he care for the beasts?
Ought to be his work, not ours!"
"Not
likely, when Orain's already made the brat his own pet," Alaric grumbled.
"Birds be damned - the wretch is with us for Orain's convenience, not the
birds! You think the Lord Carlo will deny his paxman and friend anything he
wants?"
"Hush
your mouth," said a third, "You've no call to go talking like that
about your betters. Dom Carlo's a good lord to us all, and a faithful
man to Carolin, and as for Orain, he was the king's own foster-brother. Haven't
you noticed? He talks all rough and country, but when he wishes, or when he
forgets, he can talk as fine and educated as Dom Carlo himself, or any
of the great Hastur-lords themselves! As for his private tastes, I care not
whether he wants women or boys or rabbithorns, so long as he doesn't come after
my wife."
Romilly,
her face burning, moved away out of earshot. Reared in a cristoforo family,
she had never heard such talk, and it confirmed her opinion that she liked the
company of men even less than the company of women. She was too shy, after what
she had heard, to join Orain and Dom Carlo where they spread their
blankets, and spent that night shivering, crouched among the drowsing
stag-ponies for their warmth. By morning she was blue with cold, and huddled as
long as she dared near the fire kindled for breakfast, surreptitiously trying
to warm her hands against the sides of the porridge-pot. The hot food warmed
her a little, but she was still shivering as she exercised and fed the birds -
Alaric, still grumbling, had snared a couple of rabbithorns, and they were
beginning to smell high; she had to overcome surges of nausea as she cut them
up, and afterward she found herself sneezing repeatedly. Dom Carlo cast
her a concerned glance as they saddled and climbed on their horses for the last
stage of the ride.
"I
hope you have not taken cold, my boy."
Romilly
muttered, eyes averted, that the vai dom should not concern himself.
"Let
us have one thing clearly understood," Dom Carlo said, frowning,
"The welfare of any of my followers is as important to me as that of the
birds to you - my men are in my charge as the birds are in yours, and I neglect
no man who follows me! Come here," he said, and laid a concerned hand
against her forehead. "You have fever; can you ride? I would not ask it of
you, but tonight you shall be warm in the monastery guest-house, and if you are
sick, the good brothers there will see to you."
"I
am all right," Romilly protested, genuinely alarmed now. She dared not be
sick! If she was taken to the monks' infirmary, certainly, in caring for her
sickness they would discover that she was a girl!
''Have
you warm clothing enough? Orain, you are nearer his size than I - find the lad
something warm," said Dom Carlo, and then, as he stood still
touching her forehead, his face changed; he looked down at Romilly sharply, and
for a moment she was sure - she did not know how; laran? - that he knew.
She froze with dread, shivering; but he moved away and said quietly,
"Orain has brought you a warm vest and stockings - I saw your blistered
feet in your boots. Put them on at once; if you are too proud to take them, we
shall have it from your wages, but I'll have noone riding with me who is not
warm and dry and comfortable. Go round the fire and change into them, this
minute."
Romilly
bowed her head in acquiescence, went behind the line of horses and stag-beasts,
and pulled on the warm stockings - heavenly relief to her sore feet - and the
heavy undervest. They were somewhat too big, but all the warmer for that. She
sneezed again, and Orain gestured to the pot still hanging over the fire, not
yet emptied. He dipped up a ladleful of the hot brew and took some leaves from
his pouch.
"An
old wives' remedy for the cough that's better than any healer's brew. Drink
it," he said, and watched while she gulped at the foul-tasting stuff.
"Aye, it's bitter as lost love, but it drives out the fever."
Romilly
grimaced at the acrid, musty-tasting stuff; it made her flush with inner heat,
and left her mouth puckered with its intense astringency, but, later that
morning, she realized that she had not sneezed again, and that the dripping of
her nose had abated. Riding briefly at his side, she said, "That remedy
would make you a fortune in the cities, Master Orain."
He
laughed. "My mother was a leronis and studied healing," he
said, "and went among the country-folk to learn their knowledge of herbs.
But the healers in the cities laugh at these country remedies."
And,
she thought, he had been the king's own foster-brother; and now served the
king's man in exile, Carlo of Blue Lake. What the men had said was true, though
she had not noticed it before; talking to the men, he spoke the dialect of the
countryside, while, speaking to Dom Carlo, and, increasingly, to her,
his accents were those of an educated man. Contrasted to the other men, she
felt as safe and comfortable near him as if she were in the presence of her own
brothers or her father.
After
a time she asked him, "The king -Carolin - he awaits us in Nevarsin? I
thought the monks were sworn to take no part in the strife of wordly men? How
is it that they take King Carolin's side in this war? I-I know so little about
what is going on in the lowlands." She remembered what Darren and Alderic
had said; it only whetted her appetite to know more.
Orain
said, "The brothers of Nevarsin care nothing for the throne of the
Hasturs; nor should they. They give shelter to Carolin because, as they say, he
has harmed none, and his cousin - the great bastard, Rakhal, who sits on the
throne - would kill him for his own ambition. They will not join in his cause,
but they will not surrender him to his enemies while he shelters there,
either."
"If
Carolin's claim to the throne is so just," Romilly asked, "Why has
Rakhal won so much support?"
Orain
shrugged. "Greed, no doubt. My lands are now in the hands of the chief of
Rakhal's councillors. Men support the man who enriches them, and right has
little to do with it. All these men-" he gestured behind them at the
followers, "are small-holders whose lands should have been inviolate; they
had done nothing but hold loyal to their king, and they should not have been
involved in the struggles of the highborn and powerful. Alaric is bitter, aye -
know you what was his crime? The crime for which he lost his lands, and was
flung into Rakhal's prison under sentence of losing a hand and his
tongue?"
Romilly
shuddered. "For such a sentence it must have been a great crime
indeed!"
"Only
before that cagavrezu Rakhal," said Orain grimly, "His crime?
His children shouted 'Long live King Carolin' as one of Rakhal's greatest
scoundrels passed by their village. They meant no harm - I do not think the
poor brats knew one king from the other! So the great scoundrel, Lyondri
Hastur, said that he must have taught his little children treason - he took the
children from Alaric's house, saying they should be reared by a loyal man, and
sent them to serve in his Great House, and flung Alaric into prison. One of the
children died, and Alaric's wife was so distraught with what had befallen her
man and her babies that she threw herself from a high window and died. Aye,
Alaric is bitter, and thinks good of no one, lad; it is not you he hates, but
life itself."
Romilly
looked down toward her saddle, with a deep breath. She knew why Orain had told
her this, and it raised still further her admiration of the man; he had
tolerance and sympathy even for the man who had spoken such ugly things of him.
She said quietly, "I will try not to think half so evil of him as he
thinks of me, then, Uncle."
But
still she felt confused. Alderic had spoken of the Haste-kin as descended from
Gods, great and noble men, and Orain spoke as if the very word
"Hastur" were an insult.
"Are
all the Hastur-kin evil men, then?"
"By
no means," Orain said vehemently, "A better man than Carolin never
trod this earth; his only fault is that he thought no evil toward those of his
kin who were scoundrels, and was all too kind and forgiving toward-" his
mouth stretched in what should have been a smile, "bastards with
ambition."
And
then he fell silent, and Romilly, watching the lines in his face, knew his
thoughts were a thousand leagues away from her, or his men, or Dom Carlo.
It seemed that she could see in his mind pictures of a beautiful city built
between two mountain passes, but lying low, in a green valley, on the shores of
a lake whose waves were like mist rolling up from the depths. A white tower
rose near the shores, and men and women passed through the gateways, tall and
elegant as if wrapped in a silken glamour, too beautiful to be real . . . and
she could sense the great sorrow in him, the sorrow of the exile, the homeless
man....
I
too am homeless, I have cast away all my kin . .. but it may be that my brother
Ruyven awaits me in Tramontana Tower. And Orain, too, is alone and without
kin....
They
rode through the great, frowning gates of Nevarsin just as dusk was falling and
the swift night of this time of year had begun to blur the sky with rain. Dom
Carlo rode at their head, his cowled hood drawn over his head concealing
his features; along the old cobbled streets of the city, and upward along steep
paths and narrow winding lanes toward the snow-covered paths that led to the
monastery. Romilly thought she had never felt such intense chill; the monastery
was situated among the glacier ice, carved from the solid rock of the mountain,
and when they paused before the inner gates, under the great statue of the
Bearer of Burdens bowed beneath the world's weight, and the smaller, but still
larger-than-life image of Saint-Valentine-of-the-Snows, she was shivering again
in spite of the extra warm clothing.
A
tall dignified man in the bulky brown robe and cowl of a monk gestured them
inside. Romilly hesitated; she had been brought up a cristoforo and knew
that no woman might enter into the monastery, even in the guest-house. But she
had chosen this disguise and now could not repudiate it. She whispered a prayer
- "Blessed Bearer of Burdens, Holy Saint Valentine, forgive me, I mean no
intrusion into this world of men, and I swear I will do nothing to disgrace you
here."
It
would create a greater scandal if she now revealed her real sex. And she
wondered why women were so strongly prohibited. Did the monks fear that if
women were there they could not keep to their vows of renunciation? What good
were their vows, if they could not resist women unless they never saw any? And
why did they think women would care to tempt them anyhow? Looking at the lumpy
little monk in the cowl, she thought, with something perilously near a giggle,
that it would take more charity than even a saint, to overlook his ugliness
long enough to try and tempt him!
There
were comfortable stables for all their riding-animals, and an enclosed stone
room where Romilly found blocks and perches for her birds.
"You
can go into the city and buy food for them," Orain said, and handed her
some copper rings, "But be back in good time for supper in the
guest-house; and if you will, you may attend the night prayers - you might like
to hear the choir singing."
Romilly
nodded obediently, inwardly delighted; Darren had spoken once of the fine
singing of the Nevarsin choir, which he had not, in his days as a student, been
musical enough to join; but her father, too, had spoken of one of the high
points of his life, when he had attended a solemn service in the monastery and
heard the singing of the monks. She hurried out into the city, excited and a
little scared by the strange place; but she found a bird-seller, and when she
made her wants known to him, he knew at once the proper food for the
sentry-birds; she had half expected to have to carry a stinking, half-rotted
carcass back through the city, but instead the seller said that he would be
pleased to deliver the food to the guest-house stables. "You'll be lodged
in the monastery, young man? If it is your will, I can have proper food
delivered every day for your birds."
"I
shall ask my master," she said, "I do not know how long they propose
to stay." And she thought this was a fine thing, that such services should
be provided; but when he told her the price she was a little troubled. Still,
there was no way she could go outside the walls and hunt for food for them
herself; so she arranged for the day and for tomorrow, and paid the man what he
asked.
Returning
through the city streets, grey and old, with ancient houses leaning over the
streets and the walls closing around her, she felt a little frightened. She
realized that she had lost contact with Preciosa before they entered the gates
of Nevarsin; the climate here was too cold for a hawk . . . had Preciosa turned
back to a more welcoming climate? The hawk could find no food in the city . . .
there was carrion enough in the streets, she supposed from the smell, but no
fresh living food for a hawk. She hoped Preciosa was safe....
But
for now her charge was the sentry-birds; she saw to their feeding, and there
was a large cobbled court where she could exercise them and let them fly. At
the edge of the court while she was flying them in circles on the long lines -
they screamed less, now, and she realized they were becoming accustomed to her
touch and her voice - she saw, crowded into the edges of the court, an assembly
of small boys. They all wore the bulky cowled robes of the monastery. But
surely, Romilly thought, they were too young for monks; they must be students,
sent as Ruyven, then Darren, had been sent. One day, perhaps, her brother Rael
would be among them. How I miss Rael!
They
were watching the birds with excited interest. One, bolder than the rest,
called out, "How do you handle the birds without getting hurt?" He
came to Romilly, leaving the clustered children, and stretched out his hand to
Temperance; Romilly gestured him quickly back.
"These
birds are fierce, and can peck hard; if she went for your eyes, she could hurt
you badly!"
"They
don't hurt you," the child protested.
"That
is because I am trained to handle them, and they know me," Romilly said,
Obediently, the boy moved out of reach. He was not much older than Rael, she
thought; ten or twelve. In the courtyard a bell rang, and the children went,
pushing and jostling, down the hallway; but the boy who was watching the birds
remained.
"Should
you not answer that bell with your fellows?"
"I
have no lesson at this hour," the boy said, "Not until the bell rings
for choir; then I must go and sing, and afterward, I must go to
arms-practice."
"In
a monastery?"
"I
am not to be a monk," the boy said, "and so an arms-master from the
village comes every other day to give lessons to me and a few of the others.
But I have no duties now, and I would like to watch the birds, if you do not
mind. Are you a leronis, vai domna, that you know their ways so
well?"
Romilly
stared at him in shock. At last she asked, "Why do you call me domna?"
"But
I can see what you are, certainly," the boy answered, "even though
you wear boy's clothes." Romilly looked so dismayed that he lowered his
voice and said in a conspiratorial whisper, "Don't worry, I won't tell
anyone. The Father Master would be very cross, and I do not think you are
harming anyone. But why would you want to wear boy's clothes? Don't you like
being a girl?"
Would
anyone? Romilly
wondered, and then asked herself why the clear eyes of this child had seen what
no one else could see. He answered the unspoken thought.
"I
am trained to that as you are trained to handle hawks and other birds: So that,
one day, I may serve my people in a Tower as a laranzu."
"A
child like you?" Romilly asked.
"I
am twelve years old," he said with dignity, "and in only three years
more I shall be a man. My father is Lyondri Hastur, who is a Councillor to the
king; the Gods have given me noble blood and therefore I must be ready to serve
the people over whom I shall one day be placed to rule."
Lyondri
Hastur's son! She remembered the story Orain had told her, of Alaric and the
deaths of his family. She pretended to be fussing over the bird's line; she had
never had to conceal her thoughts before, and knew only one way to do it - with
quick random speech.
"Would
you like to hold Prudence for a little while? She is the lightest of the birds
and will not be too heavy for your arm. I will keep her quiet for you, if you like."
He looked excited and pleased. Carefully hooding Prudence, and sending out
soothing thoughts - this little one is a friend, he will not harm you, be
still - she slipped the glove over the boy's arm with her free hand, set
the bird on it. He held her, struggling to keep his small arm from trembling,
and she handed him a feather.
"Stroke
her breast with this. Never touch a bird with your hand; even if your hands are
clean, it will damage the set of their feathers," she said, and he stroked
the bird's smooth breast with the feather, crooning to it softly.
"I
have never been so close to a sentry-bird before," he murmured, delighted.
"I heard they were fierce and not to be tamed - I suppose it is laran which
keeps her so calm, domna?"
"You
must not call me domna here" she said, keeping her voice low and
calm so as not to disturb the bird, "The name I use is Rumal."
"Is
it laran, then, Rumal? Do you think I could learn to handle a bird like
this?"
"If
you were trained to it, certainly," said Romilly, "but you should
begin with a small hawk, a ladybird or sparrow hawk so that your arm will not
tire and your fatigue trouble the bird. I had better take Prudence now,"
she added, for the small arm was trembling with tension. She set the bird on a
perch. "And laran can do nothing but help you to make your mind in
tune with the bird's mind. But the climate here is too cold for ordinary hawks;
for that you must wait till you return to the lowlands, I think."
The
boy sighed, looking regretfully at the bird on the perch. "These are
hardier than hawks, are they not? Are they akin to kyorebni?"
"They
are not dissimilar in form," Romilly agreed, "though they are more
intelligent than kyorebni, or than any hawk." It seemed disloyal to
Preciosa to admit it, but after the few days rapport with the sentry-birds, she
knew these were superior in intelligence.
"May
I help you, dom-Rumal?"
"I
have mostly finished," Romilly said, "but if you wish, you can mix
this green stuff and gravel with their food. But if you touch the carrion, your
hands will stink when you go to choir."
"I
can wash my hands at the well before I go to the choir, for Father Cantor is
very fat and always late to practice," said the boy solemnly, and Romilly
smiled as he began portioning the gamy-smelling meat, sprinkling it with the
herbs and gravel. The smile slid off quickly; this child was a telepath and the
son of Lyondri Hastur, he could endanger them all.
"What
is your name?" she asked.
"I
am called Caryl," the boy said. "I was named for the man who was king
when I was born, only Father says that Carolin is not a good name to
have now. Carolin was king, but he abused his power, they said, and was a bad
king, so his cousin Rakhal had to take the throne. But he was kind to me."
Romilly
told herself; the child was only repeating what he had heard his father say.
Caryl finished with the bird-food, and asked if he might give it to one of the
birds.
"Give
that dish to Prudence," said Romilly, "She is the gentlest, and
already, I can see, you have made friends."
He
carried the dish to the bird, stood watching as she tore greedily into it,
while Romilly fed the other two. A bell rang in the outer court of the
monastery, muted softly by the intervening walls, and the boy started.
"I
must go to choir," he said, "and then I must have my lesson. May I
come tonight and help you feed the birds, Rumal?"
She
hesitated, but he said earnestly, "I'll keep your secret, I promise."
At
last she nodded. "Certainly, come whenever you like," she said, and
the boy ran away. She noticed that he wiped his hands on the seat of his
breeches, like any active youngster, quite forgetting his promise to wash at
the well.
But
when he was out of sight, she sighed and stood motionless, ignoring the birds
for the moment.
Lyondri
Hastur's own son, here in the monastery - and it was here that Dom Carlo
was to meet with King Carolin, with his gift of valuable sentry-birds, and to
raise an army in the city. It was not impossible, she supposed, that he might
know the king by sight, so if Carolin was in the city in disguise and came near
the monastery, he might recognize him, and then...
What
do I care which rogue keeps the throne? Her father's words echoed in her
mind. But Alderic, who seemed quite the best young man she had ever known
beside her own brothers, was Carolin's sworn man, perhaps even his son. Carlo
and Orain, too, were loyal to the exiled king. And his councillor, Lyondri
Hastur, whatever his son might say, seemed to be one of the worst tyrants she
had ever heard about - or so the story of what he had done to Alaric's children
seemed to indicate.
And
she was Dom Carlo's man, at least while she took money in his service.
He should know of the danger to the man he called his rightful king. Perhaps he
could warn Carolin not to come near the monastery, while there was a child
there who would recognize him and penetrate whatever disguise he might wear.
Sharp indeed were the boy's eyes and his laran ... he had seen that
Romilly was a woman.
Though
I cannot tell Dom Carlo, nor his friend, how I know the child has laran....
She
went to the stables attached to the monastery, finding the horses in good
hands; spoke briefly to the stablemen about care for their horses, and tipped
them, as was proper, with the generous amount of silver and copper Orain had
given her for their expenses. After the encounter with young Caryl, she was on
her guard, but none of the stablefolk paid any attention to her; one and all
they accepted her as what she was, just another apprentice in the train of the
young nobleman staying in the monastery. Then she went in search of Dom Carlo,
to deliver her warning. In the rooms assigned to them in the guest-house,
however, she found only Orain, mending his crudely-sewn boots.
He
looked up as she came in.
"Is
anything gone wrong with birds or beasts, then, lad?"
"No,
they are all doing well," Romilly said, "Forgive me for intruding in
your leisure, but I must see Dom Carlo."
"You
can't see him now, or for some time," said Orain, "for he's closeted
with Father Abbot, and I don't think he's confessin' his sins - he's no cristoforo.
Can I do anything for ye', boy? There's no great urgency to work, now the
birds are cared for and in good health - take time to see some of the city, and
if ye need an excuse, I'll send you out on an errand; you can take these boots
to be mended." He held them out to her, saying with a droll grin,
"They're beyond my skill."
"I
will do your errand gladly," Romilly said, "but indeed I have an
important message for Dom Carlo. He-you-you are Carolin's men, and I
have just heard that - that someone who knows the king by sight, and might also
know some of his Councillors, is here in the monastery. Lyondri Hastur's son,
Caryl."
Orain's
face changed and his lips pursed in a soundless whistle. "Truly? The whelp
of that wolf is here, poisoning their minds against my lord?"
"The
boy is but twelve," protested Romilly, "and seems a nice child; he
spoke well of the king, and said he had always been kind - but he might know
him."
"Aye,"
said Orain grimly, "No doubt; a new-hatched serpent can sting like an old
snake. Still, I know no evil of the child; but I'll not let Alaric know he is
here, or he might let son pay for son - if he saw the Hastur-Lord's son, I
doubt he could keep his hands from his throat, and I know well how he feels. My
lord must know of this, and quickly."
"Would
Caryl recognize Dom Carlo, too? Was he around the court so much? Dom Carlo
is-" she hesitated, "Is he not one of Carolin's kin?"
"He's
of the Hastur-kin," said Orain, nodding. He sighed.
"Well,
I'll keep an eye out for the child, and put a word in Dom Carlo's ear.
It was thoughtful of you to warn me, Rumal, lad; I owe you one for that."
As if dismissing the thought deliberately, he bent and picked up the
much-patched boots. 'Take these into the city - and lest you get lost, I'll
come along and show you the way."
He
linked his arm carelessly through Romilly's as they went out of the monastery
guest-house and down through the streets of the old town. The mountain air was
biting and cold, and Romilly drew her cloak tighter about her, but Orain,
though he wore only a light jacket, seemed comfortable and at ease.
"I
like the mountain ah-," he said, "I was born in the shadow of High
Kimbi, though I was fostered on the shores of Hali; and still I think myself a
mountain man. What of you?"
"I
Was born in the Kilghard Hills, but north of the Kadarin," Romilly said.
"The
country around Storn? Aye, I know it well," Orain said, "No wonder
you have hawks in your blood; so have I." He laughed, ruefully.
"Though you're my master at that; I had never held a sentry-bird before,
nor will I think myself ill-used if I never set hand on one again." They
turned into the doorway of a shop, smelling strongly of leather and tan-bark
and rosin. The bootmaker raised supercilious eyebrows at the patched old boots
in Orain's hand, but quickly changed his tone when Orain took out his pocket
and laid down silver and even copper.
"When
would the vai dom be wanting these back?"
"I
think they're past mending," Orain said, "But they fit well; make me
a pair to the measure of these, for I may be going high into snow country. Have
you boots for the far Hellers, Rumal? Ye'll be riding with us to Tramontana, I
doubt not."
Why
not, after all? Romilly
thought. I have nowhere else to go, and if Ruyven is there, or I can get
news of him there, Tramontana is my best path.
"Those
boots the young sir is wearing, they will never hold up on the paths across the
glaciers," said the shoemaker, with an obsequious look at Orain, "I
can make your son a stout fine pair for two silver bits."
Only
now did Romilly realize how generously Dom Carlo had arranged to pay her
for her care and knowledge of hawks and birds. She said quickly "I
have-"
"Hush,
boy, Dom Carlo told me to see you had what you needed for the journey,
as I do for all his men," Orain said, "Let you sit there, now, and
let him measure your foot. . . son," he added, grinning.
Romilly
did as she was told, thrusting out her slender foot in its shabby too-large
stocking. The bootmaker hummed, whistling a little tune, as he measured,
scrawling down cryptic notes and numbers with a stump of chalk on the board by
his bench. "When do you want these ready?"
"Yesterday,"
growled Orain, "We may have to leave the city at a moment's notice."
The
bootmaker protested; Orain haggled a few minutes, then they agreed on a price
and the day after tomorrow.
"Should
be tomorrow," Orain said scowling as they left the shop, "but these
workmen have no more pride in their craft these days. Humph!" He snorted
as Romilly turned. "In a hurry to get back to the monastery, Rumal lad,
and dine on cold boiled lentils and smallbeer? After all these days on the
road, living on porridge-powder and journey-cake not much better than dogbread,
I'm for a roast fowl and some good wine in a cookshop. What reason have ye to
get back? The birds won't fly away, now, will they? The horses are warm in
their stable, and the monks will give them some hay if we don't get back. Let's
walk through the town, then."
Romilly
shrugged and acquiesced. She had never been in a city the size of Nevarsin
before, and she was afraid she would be lost if she explored alone, but with
Orain, she might learn her way about the confusing streets. In any case she
could hardly fail to find the way back to the monastery, she need only follow
any street straight up the mountain - the monastery was high above the town.
The
short winter day brightened, then faded again as they walked through the city,
mostly in a companionable silence; Orain did not seem inclined to talk much,
but he pointed out various landmarks, the ancient shrine of
Saint-Valentine-of-the-Snows, the cave high on the mountain where the saint was
said to have lived and died, a forge which, he said, did the best horse-shoeing
north of Armida, a sweetshop where, he said with a grin, the students at the
monastery chose to spend their pocketmoney on holidays. It was as if she was
one of her own brothers, here and free, unconstrained by any of the laws which
governed the behavior of women; she felt as easy with Orain as if she had known
him all her life. He had quite forgotten the country accent, and talked in a
pleasant, well-bred voice, with only the faintest trace, like Alderic's, of a
lowland accent.
She
could not guess his age. He was certainly not a young man, but she did not
think he was as old as her father. His hands were rough and calloused like a
swordsman's, but the nails were clean and well-cared-for, not grimy or broken
like the other men who followed Dom Carlo.
He
must be well-born enough, anyhow, if he had been foster-brother to the exiled
Carolin. Her father, she knew, would have welcomed him and treated him with
honor as a noble, and though Dom Carlo did not quite treat him as an
equal, he showed him affection and respect and sought his advice in everything.
As
the twilight gathered, Orain found a cookshop and commanded a meal. Romilly
felt inclined to protest.
"You
should not - I can pay my share-"
Orain
shrugged. "I hate to dine alone. And Dom Carlo made it clear he has
other fish to fry this night...."
She
bent her head, accepting graciously. She had never been in a public tavern or
cookshop before, and she noted there were no women present except for the
bustling fat waitress who came and slapped crockery hi front of them and fussed
away again. If Orain had known her true sex he would never have brought her
here; if a lady, unimaginably, came in here, there would have been all sorts of
deferential fuss made, they would never have taken her quite simply for
granted. Far less would she be able to lounge here at ease, her feet propped on
the bench across from her, sipping from a tankard of cider, while the good
smell of cooking gradually filled the room.
No,
it was better to remain a boy. She had respectable work, three silver bits for
a tenday; no cook-woman or dairymaid could hope to command such pay for any
work she could do, and she remembered that Rory's grandmother, telling of her
lost affluence, had spoken of the fact that when her husband did not seek her
bed, he was sent, quite without worrying about what the dairymaid thought about
it, to sleep with the dairymaid as a matter of course. Better to spend all her
life in breeches and boots than have that added to the regular duties of a
dairymaid's work!
She
found herself wondering if Luciella made such routine demands of her women.
Well, he must at some times - there was Nelda's son. It made Romilly
uncomfortable to think of her father that way, and she reminded herself that he
was a cristoforo . . . but would that make such a difference? In the
world where she had been brought up it was taken for granted that a nobleman
would have bastards and nedestro sons and daughters. Romilly had never
really thought about their mothers.
She
shifted uneasily in her seat, and Orain said with a grin, "Getting hungry?
Something smells good in the kitchen yonder." Half a dozen men were
flinging darts at a board hung at the back of the tavern, a few others playing
dice. "Shall we have a game of darts, lad?"
Romilly
shook her head, protesting that she did not know the game. "But don't let
me stop you."
"You'll
never learn younger, then," Orain said, and Romilly found herself
standing, urged to fling the darts.
"Hold
it this way," Orain instructed, "and just let it go - you don't have
to push it."
"That's
the way," said one of the men standing behind her in the crowd, "Just
imagine the circle painted on the wall is the head of King Carolin and you have
a chance at the fifty copper reis offered for his head!"
"Rather,"
said a bitter voice somewhere behind the first speaker, "that the head is
of that bloodthirsty wolf Rakhal - or his chief jackal Lyondri, the
Hastur-Lord!"
"Treason,"
said another voice and the speaker was quickly hushed, "That kind o'
talk's not safe even here beyond the Kadarin - who knows what kind of spies
Lyondri Hastur may be sending into the city?"
"I
say, may Zandru plague'em both with boils and the bald fever," said
another, "What matters it to free mountain men which great rogue plants
his backside on the throne or what greater rogue tries to pry his arse loose from
the seat? I say Zandru take'em both off to his hells and I wish 'im joy of
their company, so that they stay south o' the river and leave honest men to go
about their business in peace!"
"Carolin
must ha' done something or they'd never kicked him off the throne,"
someone said, "Down there, the Hali'imyn think the Hastur are kin
to their filthy Gods - I've heard some tales when I travel down there, I could
tell you-"
The
darts had been forgotten; no one came to take a turn from Romilly. She
whispered to Orain, "Are you going to let them talk that way about King
Carolin?"
Orain
did not answer. He said, "Our meat's on the table, Rumal. Neighbors, maybe
we'll have another round later, but the dinner's getting cold while we stand
here gabbing," and gestured to Romilly to put down the darts and go to
their seat. When the food arrived, and Orain was cutting the meat into
portions, he muttered under his breath, "We're here to serve Carolin, lad,
not defend him to fools in taverns. Eat your dinner, boy." And after a
moment, he added, still in a half-whisper, "Part of my reason for walking
about town is to hear how the folk think - see how much support there is here
for the king. If we're to raise men for him here, it's urgent there must be
popular support so no one will betray us - a lot of things can be done in
secret, but you can't raise an army that way!"
Romilly
put her fork into the roast meat, and ate in silence. She noted that when he
spoke to her, Orain had, without thinking, dropped the rough up-country accent
and spoken again like an educated man. Well, if he was the king's
foster-brother, as she had heard, that was not surprising. Carlo too must have
been high in those councils and one of his loyal men - no doubt he too had lost
lands and possessions when Carolin was deposed and fled to the hills. Which
reminded her again-
I
do not know if Carolin has enemies in the city, but he certainly has at least
one in the monastery. I do not think a child like Caryl would do him any great
harm, he said the king had shown him kindness; but if Carlo and Orain are
expecting to meet the king within monastery watts, there is at least one pair
of eyes who would recognize him. They must prevent him from coming there. And Romilly wondered why
it should matter to her what happened to the exiled king. As her father had
said so often, what did it matter what great rogue sat on the throne, or what
worse rogue tried to unseat him?
Orain
and Carlo could not follow an evil master. Whichever king they follow, he is my
king too! And
the story she had heard of the evil Hastur-lord Lyondri had filled her with
revulsion. She thought, wryly, that without knowing it, she had somehow become
a partisan of Carolin.
"Take
that last cutlet, lad; you're a growing boy, you need your food," Orain
said, grinning, and called to the serving-woman for more wine. Romilly reached
for another cup, but Orain slapped her hand away.
"No,
no, you've had enough - bring the boy some cider, woman, he's too young for
your rotgut here! I don't want to have to carry you home," he added,
good-naturedly, "and lads your age have no head for this kind of
thing."
Her
face burning, exasperated, Romilly took the huge mug of cider the woman set
before her. Sipping it, she acknowledged to herself that she liked it better
than the strong wine, which burned her mouth and her stomach and made her head
swim. She muttered, "Thank you, Orain."
He
nodded and said, "Think nothing of it. I wish I'd had a friend to knock my
head out of the winepot when I was your age! Too late now," he added with
a grin, and lifting his tankard, drank deep.
Romilly
sat listening, full and sleepy, as Orain went back to the dart board; when
asked to join him, she shook her head, feeling drowsy, listening to the talk
around the bar.
"Well
thrown! Whang in the eye of whichever king you don't favor!"
"I
heard Carolin's in the Hellers because the Hairimyn are too soft to
search for him up here - they might freeze their dainty tailbones!"
"Whether
Carolin's here or no, there are enough supporters for his rule - he's a good
man!"
"Whatever
Carolin's like, I'll join anything which gets that bastard Lyondri the rope's
end he deserves! Did ye' hear what he did to old Lord di Asturien? Burned over
his head, poor old man, and him and the old lady by the side of the road in
their night-gear and bedslippers, if one of their woodsmen hadn't taken 'em in
and given 'em a place to lie down in...."
After
a time Romilly fell into a doze, in which Carolin and the usurper Rakhal
wandered in dreams with the faces of great mountain cats, slinking through the
woods and tearing at one another, and the shrill cry of hawks, as if she were
soaring far above and watching the battle. She flew over a white Tower, and
Ruyven was waving to her from the summit, and then he somehow took wing and was
flying beside her, telling her gravely that Father would not approve of it. He
said solemnly, "The Bearer of Burdens said that it is forbidden for man to
fly and that is why I have no wings." and saying it, he fell like a stone;
Romilly started awake, to feel Orain lightly shaking her.
"Come,
lad, it's late, they're closing the doors - we must go back to the
monastery!"
His
breath was heavy with wine, his speech slurred; she wondered if he was able to
walk. However, she laid his cloak over his shoulders, and they went out into
the crisp, frosty darkness. It was very late; most of the houses were dark.
Somewhere, a dog barked in a frenzy, but there was no other sound, and little
light in the street; only the pale and frosty light of blue Kyrrdis, low on the
rooftops of the city. Orain's steps were unsteady; he walked with one hand on
the nearest house-wall, steadying himself, but when the narrow streets opened
into a stair, he tripped on the cobbles and went flailing down full-length on
the stone, howling with drunken surprise. Romilly helped him up, saying in
amusement, "You had better hold on to my arm." Had he made certain
his companion would stay sober, so that he would have someone to guide him back
to the monastery? Romilly was fairly good at finding a path she had once
travelled; she managed to direct their steps upward into the shadow of the
monastery.
"Do
you know if Carolin is truly in the city, Orain?" she asked at last in a
low voice, but he peered with drunken suspicion into her face and demanded,
"Why d'ye' ask?" and she shrugged and let it go. When he was sober
she would talk to him about that; but at least the wine he had drunk would not
unseal his mouth and he would not babble of his mission or plans. As they
climbed the last steep street, which led into the courtyard of the monastery
guest-house, he held tightly to her arm, sometimes putting a drunken arm around
her shoulders; but Romilly edged away - if he held her too close he might, as
Rory had done, discover that she was a woman beneath the heavy clothes she
wore.
I
like Orain, I would rather respect him, and if he knew I were a woman he would
be like all the others. ...
As
they climbed he leaned on her arm more and more heavily. Once he turned aside
from her, and, unbuttoning his trousers, relieved himself against a house wall;
Romilly was, not for the first time, grateful for her farm upbringing which had
made this something she could accept unblushing - if she had been a housebred
woman like Luciella or her younger sister, she would have been outraged a dozen
times a day. But then, if she had been a housebred woman, she would probably
never have thought to protest the marriage her father had arranged, and she
would certainly never have been able to travel with so many men without somehow
revealing herself.
At
the monastery gates Orain tugged at the bell-pull which announced their
presence to the porter at the guest-house. It was very late; for a moment
Romilly wondered if they would be admitted at all, but finally the Brother
Porter appeared at the gates and, grumbling, let them inside. He frowned and
sniffed disapprovingly at the reek of wine which hung around them, but he did
let them in, and shook his head when Orain offered him a silver bit.
"I
am not allowed, friend. I thank you for the kind thought. Here, your door is
this way," he said, and added audibly to Romilly, "Can you get him
inside?"
"This
way, Orain," said Romilly, shoving him to the door of his room. Inside,
Orain looked around, fuzzily, like an owl in daylight "Whe-"
"Lie
down and go to sleep," Romilly said, pushed him down on the nearer of the
two beds and hauled at his heavy boots. He protested incoherently ... he was
drunker than she had realized.
He
held her by one wrist. "You're a good boy," he said, "Aye, I
like you, Rumal - but you're cristoforo. Once I heard you call on the
Bearer of Burdens . . . damn . . ."
Gently
Romilly freed her hand, pulled his cloak around him, went quietly away,
wondering where Dom Carlo was. Not, surely, still closeted with the
Father Master? Well, it was none of her affair, and she must be up early to
care for the animals and the sentry-birds. She shrank from sharing the sleeping
quarters of the men who attended on Carlo and Orain, so she had chosen to sleep
on the hay in the stables - it was warm and she was unobserved; she need not be
quite so careful against some accidental revealing of her body. She had not
realized, until she was alone again, quite what a strain it was to be always on
guard against some momentary inadvertent word or gesture which might betray
her. She pulled off her boots, glad of the thick stockings under them, rolled
herself into a bundle in the hay and tried to sleep again.
But
she found herself unexpectedly wakeful. She could hear the stirring of the
birds on their perches, the soft shifting hooves of horses and chervines; far
away inside the depths of the monastery she heard a small bell and a faraway
shuffle of feet as the monks went their way to the Night Offices, when all the
world around them slept. Had Orain some feud with the cristoforos that
he would say he liked her, but she was cristoforo! Was he bigoted
about religion? Romilly had never really thought much about it, she was cristoforo
because her family was, and because, all her life, she had heard tales of
the good teachings of the Bearer of Burdens, whose teachings had been, so the cristoforos
said, brought from beyond the stars in days before any living man could
remember or tell. At last, hearing the muffled chanting, far away, she fell
into a restless sleep, burrowing herself into the hay. For a time she dreamed
of flying, soaring on hawk-wings, or on the wings of a sentry-bird; not over
her own mountains, but over a lowland country, green and beautiful, with lakes
and broad fields, and a white tower rose above a great lake. Then she came half
awake as a bell rang somewhere in the monastery. She thought, a little
ruefully, that if she had had supper within the monastery she would have heard
the choir singing-perhaps the only woman who would ever do so.
Well,
they would be there for days, it seemed; there would be other nights, other
services to hear. How lucky Darren was no longer here at the monastery - even
from his seat within the choir, he would have seen and recognized her.
If
King Carolin comes to the monastery, young Caryl will recognize him - Dom Carlo must warn
him....
And
then she slept again, to dream confused dreams of kings and children, and
someone at her side who spoke to her in Orain's voice and drowsily caressed
her. At last she slept, deep and dreamlessly, waking at first light to the
screams of the sentry-birds.
Life
in the monastery quickly fell into routine. Up at early light to tend the
animals, breakfast in the guest-house, occasionally an errand to be done for Dom
Carlo or Orain. Two days later she had her new boots, made to her own
measure, and with the pay they gave her - for now she had been in their service
ten days - she found a stall where warm clothing was sold, and bought warm
stockings so that she could wash and change the ones she had been wearing since
Orain had given them to her. In the afternoon she wandered alone around the
city of Nevarsin, enjoying a freedom she had never had in the days when she was
still the ladylike daughter of The MacAran; in the evenings, when the birds had
been tended and exercised again, after a frugal supper in the guesthouse, she
would slip into the chapel and listen to the choir of men and little boys.
There was one soprano among the boys, with a sweet, flutelike voice; she
strained her eyes to see the singer and realized at last that it was small
Caryl, the son of Lyondri Hastur.
He
wished King Carolin no ill. Romilly hoped that Orain had passed along his
message to Dom Carlo and that he, somehow, had gotten word to the king,
that Carolin had not come to the city.
Once
or twice during the tenday that followed, she went again with Orain to the
tavern, or to another, though never again did he drink more than a mug or two
of the local wine, and seemed not even a little befuddled by it. Dom Carlo
she had not seen again; she supposed he was about whatever business for King
Carolin had brought him to this city. For all she knew to the contrary, he had
left Nevarsin and gone to warn Carolin not to come here - there was one who
would recognize him. She did not think the child would betray Carolin - he had
said the king had been kind to him - but his loyalties, naturally, would be to
his own father. She did not question Orain. It was none of her business, and
she was content to have it that way.
Shyly,
she began to wonder; if her father had chosen to marry her to one like Orain,
would she have refused him? She thought not. But that was conflict too.
For
then would I have stayed at home and been married, and never known this
wonderful freedom of city and tavern, woods and fields, never have worked free
and had money in my pockets, never really known that I had never been free,
never flown a sentry-bird.
She
was growing fond of the huge ugly birds; now they came to her hand for their
food as readily as any sparrow-hawk or child's cagebird. Either her arm grew
stronger or she was more used to it, for now she could hold them for a
considerable time and not mind the weight. Their docility and the sweetness she
felt when she went into rapport with them, made her think with regret of
Preciosa; would see ever see the hawk again?
She
seldom saw the other men; she slept apart from them, and encountered them only
morning and night, when they all came together for meals in the monastery
guest-house. She was quite content that it should be so; she was still a little
afraid of Alaric, and the others seemed strange and alien too. It seemed
sometimes that the only person to whom she spoke these days, aside from the man
who delivered the bird-food and fodder for horses and chervines, was
young Caryl, who came whenever he could escape for a few minutes from his
lessons, to look at the birds, hold them, croon lovingly to them. With Caryl
she was always a little troubled, lest he should forget and thoughtlessly
address her again as vai domna - it was a heavy weight of secrets for a
child to bear. Once Orain came to the chapel to hear the singing; he took a
seat far back and in the shadows, and she was sure that the little boy, in the
lighted choir, could not see the face of a solitary man in the darkest part of
the chapel, but she remembered that the child knew Carolin and would certainly
recognize one of the king's men; she was so agitated that she rose quietly and
went out, afraid that the telepathic child would sense her agitation and know
its cause.
Midwinter-night
was approaching; stalls of spicebread trimmed with copper foil, and gaily
painted toys, began to appear in the marketplace, and sweet-sellers filled
their displays with stars cut from spicebread or nut-paste. Romilly, homesick
at the smell of baking spicebread - Luciella always baked it herself, saying
that the servants should not be given extra work at this season - almost
regretted leaving her home; but then she remembered that in any case she would
not have spent this holiday at her home, but at Scathfell as the wife of Dom
Garris - and by now, no doubt, she would have been like Darissa, swollen
and ugly with her first child! No, she was better here; but she wished she
could send a gift to Rael, or that he could see these bright displays with her.
On
the morning before the Festival, she woke to snow blowing into the cracks of
the room where she slept, though she was warm in the deep-piled hay. A
midwinter storm had blown down, wailing, from the Wall Around the World, and
the monastery courtyard was knee-deep in fresh powdery snow. She put on both
pairs of warm stockings when she dressed, and her extra tunic, and even so she
shivered as she went out into the yard to wash at the well; but the little
novices and students were running about barefoot in the snow, and she wondered
how they could do it, laughing and gossiping and tossing snowballs at one
another. They looked rosy and warm, whereas her own hands were blue with cold!
She
went in to care for the riding-animals, and stopped in dismay; Dom Carlo's
horse was not in the stable! Had it been stolen? Or had Dom Carlo gone
out, into this bitter storm? It was still snowing, a few flakes drifting down
now and again from the overburdened sky. As she was lifting forkfuls of
fragrant hay to the beasts, Orain came in, and she turned to him in distress.
"Dom
Carlo's horse-"
"Hush,
lad," he said in a low tone, "Not even before the men. His life could
be in your hands; not a word!"
Romilly
nodded, and he said, "Good boy. After midday, walk to the town with me;
perhaps, who knows, I shall have a Midwinter gift for you, away as you are from
home and family."
It
seemed as if he must be reading her mind, and she turned away. "I expect
no gifts, sir," she said stiffly. Did he know, had he guessed? But he only
grinned and said, "Midday, remember." and went away.
At
midday Romilly was trying, in the deep snow, to get the sentry-birds to fly a
little - they got little enough exercise, in this weather - before they were
fed. They screamed rebelliously as she snapped them on lure-lines and tried to
encourage them to fly - they were temperamental and did not like the
still-falling snow. The snow in the cobbled court, too, was so deep that it
came over her boot-tops and trickled down inside, and her feet were cold and
her fingers stiff. She was chilled and cross, and even little Caryl's cheerful
face could not lighten her mood. She thought, it might, in this weather, be
just as well to be a lady by the fire, with nothing to do but make embroidery
stitches and bake spicebread! Caryl was wearing only a thin tunic, his arms
bare, and his feet were bare in the snow, and she asked crossly, "Aren't
you freezing?"
He
shook his head, laughing. "It is the first thing the monks teach us,"
he said, "How to warm ourselves from within, by breathing; some of the
older monks can bathe in the water of the well and then dry their clothes by
their body heat when they put them on, but that seems a little more than I
would want to try. I was cold for the first tenday before I learned it, but I
have never suffered from the cold since then. Poor Rumal, you look so cold, I
wish I could teach it to you!" He held out his arm to take Prudence,
saying seriously, "Come, birdie, you must fly, I know you do not like the
snow, but it is not good for you to sit all the time on your perch, you must
keep your wings strong."
Prudence
flapped away and circled at the end of the line, while Caryl cast out the lure,
watching her swoop down. "See, she likes to play with it, even in the
snow! Look at her!"
"You
are happy," Romilly said sourly, "Do you like the storm as much as
that?"
"No,
I would like to go out, but in this weather I have to stay indoors, and the
arms-master cannot come, so I will miss my lesson at sword-play," said the
boy, "but I am happy because tomorrow is a holiday, and my father will
come here to visit me. I miss my father and my brothers, and father is sure to
bring me a fine gift - I am twelve years old and he promised me a fine sword,
perhaps he will give it to me for a Midwinter-gift. And he always takes me
walking in the town, so that I can buy spicebread and sweets, and my mother
always sends me a new cloak at Midwinter. I have been working very hard at all
my lessons, because I want him to be pleased with me."
Lyondri
Hastur? Here in the monastery? Her first thought was of Orain and Dom Carlo; the
second of their king. Quieting her thoughts carefully, she asked, "Is your
father here now?"
"No,
but he will come for the holiday, unless this weather should keep him
housebound a day's journey away," the boy said, "and Father is never
afraid of storms! He has some of the old Delleray Gift, he can work a little on
the weather; you'll see, Father will make it stop snowing before it is
night."
"That
is a laran of which I have not heard," Romilly said, keeping her
voice steady, "Do you have it?"
"I
don't think so," the child said, "I have never tried to use it. Here,
let me fly Temperance while you take Diligence, will you?"
She
handed the lure-line to the child, trying to conceal her agitation. Alaric,
too, should be warned - or would he try to take vengeance on his enemy, whom he
regarded as murderer of his wife and child? She could hardly make conversation
with the little boy. And halfway through feeding the birds, she saw the door
from the stables open and Orain came into the court. She tried to motion to him
to withdraw, but he came into the courtyard, saying, "Not finished with
the birds yet, my boy? Make haste, I want your company for an errand in the
town," and Caryl turned and saw him. His eyes widened a little.
"My
lord," he said, with a courtly little bow, "What are you doing
here?"
Orain
flinched, and for a moment did not answer. Then he said, "I have come here
for sanctuary, lad, since I am no longer welcome at the court where your father
rules the king. Will you give the alarm, then?"
"Certainly
not," said the boy with dignity, "Under the roof of Saint Valentine,
even a condemned man must be safe, sir. All men are brothers who shelter here -
this much the cristoforos have told me, Master Rumal, if you wish to go
with your master, I will put the birds on their perches for you."
"Thank
you, but I can manage them," said Romilly, and took Temperance on her
fist; Caryl trailed her with the other bird on his two hands. He said in a
whisper, "Did you know he was one of Carolin's men? They are really not
safe here."
Romilly
pretended gruffness and said, "I don't ask questions about my betters. And
you should run along to choir, Caryl."
He
bit his lip, flushing, and turned away, dashing barefoot through the snow.
Romilly drew a long breath; she would have turned and spoken to Orain, but his
hand closed with an iron grip on her shoulder.
"Not
here," he said. "Outside these walls; I am not sure, now, that they
have not ears, and the ears are those of a certain lord."
Silent,
Romilly finished her work with the sentry-birds and followed Orain through the
gates of the monastery. The street was white and silent, muffled with the thick
snow. At last Orain said, "The Hastur-whelp?"
She
nodded. After a moment she said in an undertone, pitching her voice so that
Orain had to lean close to listen, "That's not the worst of it. His father
- Lyondri Hastur - is outside the city and will be visiting him for the
holiday."
Orain's
clenched fist drove into his other hand. "Damnnation! And Zandru knows, he's
not one to observe sanctuary-law! If he sets eyes-" Orain fell silent.
"Why did Dom Carlo have to go away at this time of all
times-" he said at last. "Ill-luck dogs us. I'll try and get a
message to him."
Silence;
even their footsteps were silent in the snow-muffled street. At last Orain
said, dismissing it, "Let's go down to the tavern. With such news as this
I need a drink, and they have spiced cider in honor of the holiday, so you may
drink too."
Romilly
said soberly, "Shouldn't Alaric and the others be warned to watch
themselves, if the Hastur-Lord is likely to be about?"
"I'll
pass a word to them," Orain said, "But for now, no more talk."
In
the tavern where Orain had taught her, some days ago, to play at darts, he
commanded wine, and hot cider for Romilly; it smelled sweet with spices, and
she drank it gratefully and accepted his offer of a second mug. He said,
"I have a gift for you - that filthy cloak you wear is hardly worthy of a
stable-man's son. I found this in a stall - it's old and worn but suits you, I
think." He beckoned to the serving-woman, said "Bring me the bundle I
left here yesterday."
He
tossed it across the table at her. "A good Midwinter-night to you, and
Avarra guard you, son."
Romilly
untied the strings; took out a green cloak, spun of rabbithorn-wool, finely
embroidered and trimmed with clasps of good leather. It must have been very
old, for it had sleeves cut in one with the cape, in a fashion she had seen in
portraits of her great-grandsire in the Great Hall at Falconsward; but it was
richly lined and comfortable. She flung aside the shabby old cloak she had
taken when she fled from Rory's house in the woods, and put on the new one,
saying after a moment, embarrassed, "I have no gift for you, Master
Orain."
He
put his arm round her shoulders. "I want nothing from you, son; but give
me the hug and kiss you'd give your father if he were here today,"
Blushing,
Romilly embraced him, and touched her lips gingerly to his cheek. "You are
very good to me, sir. Thank you."
"Not
at all - now you are dressed as befits your red hair and the manner you have of
a nobleman's son," he said. There was just enough irony in the words that
Romilly wondered; did he know she was a woman? She had been sure, at one
time, that Dom Carlo knew.
"That
old thing, you can make into a horse-blanket," said Orain, motioning the
tapster's boy to make it up into a bundle. Romilly would rather have thrown it
away where she need never touch it again, but in this weather horses could not
go unblanketed, and the horse-blanket she had, had been meant for warmer
climates. Her horse would be grateful for the extra warmth, with this midwinter
storm.
There
were but few patrons in the tavern this evening; the approaching storm, and the
morrow's holiday, contrived to keep most of the men at home, Romilly supposed,
by their own hearths.
Orain
asked, when she had finished her meal, "Will we have a game of darts,
then?"
"I
am not a good enough player to make it worth your trouble," she said, and
Orain laughed. "Who cares? Come along, then."
They
stood, alternately flinging the darts and sipping from their tankards, as the
evening passed. Suddenly Orain stiffened, went silent.
"Your
turn," Romilly said.
"You
throw - I'll be back in a moment," Orain said, his speech slurred, and
Romilly thought, he cannot possibly be drunk so early. Yet as he walked
away he reeled drunkenly, and one of the sparse patrons of the tavern yelled
jovially, "Drunk so early on midwinter-night? You'll not hold your wine on
the holiday, then, man!"
She
wondered; is he sick? Should I go and help him? One of the things
Romilly had carefully avoided, during her weeks in the town, was going inside
the common latrine behind any of the taverns - it was the one place where she
might possibly be discovered. Yet Orain had been good to her, if he was in
trouble, surely he deserved help.
A
small voice in her mind said; No. Stay where you are. Act as if everything
were normal. Since Romilly was not yet accustomed to the use of her own laran
- and it was rare for her to be so much in touch with the feelings of any
human, though she now took rapport with her birds for granted - she was not
sure whether this were actually a message reaching her, or her own projected
feelings; but she obeyed it. She called out, recklessly drawing attention to
herself, "Who'd like a game, then, since my friend's overcome with
drink?" And when two townsmen came up to her, she challenged them, and
played so badly that she soon lost and had to pay the forfeit of buying them a
round of drinks. It seemed that at the very edge of the room she could see
movement in the shadows - had Orain not left the room after all, but only
withdrawn? Who was he talking to? She kept the game going, and by a great effort
did not turn to try and see the other figure, tall and graceful, a hood
shrouding face and head, moving softly near Orain. But as if she had eyes in
the back of her head, it seemed that she could see it, hear whispers .. . her
spine prickled and at every moment she thought she would hear an outcry,
voices, shouts. Holy Bearer of Burdens, whose day this is, tell me, how did
I become entangled in this intrigue, as if it mattered to me which king sat on
the throne of the Hali'imyr? Damn them both, outcast king and usurper
king. Why should a good man like Orain risk a noose for his neck because one
king or another holds the throne of the Hasturs?
If
any harm comes to my friend, I will . . . and she stopped there. What could she
do? Unlike her brothers, she had no knowledge of arms, she was defenseless. If
I escape this night's intrigue, she thought, I will ask Orain to teach
me something of the arts of fighting . . . but she laughed and shouted,
"Well thrown, whang in the cat's eye," and flung her own dart almost
at random, surprised when it landed anywhere near the target.
"Drink
up, young'un," said the man who had lost, setting a mug of wine before
her, and Romilly drank recklessly. Her head felt fuzzy, and she stopped halfway
through the mugful, but they were all looking at her, and against her better
judgment, she finished the drink.
"You'll
have another game? My turn to win," said one of the men, and she shrugged
and gave up the dart. Her neck felt that cold, vulnerable prickle that she knew
meant she was
being
watched, somewhere undercover. What is going on in that room? Damn these
intrigues!
Then
Orain was at her side again, clapping her on the shoulder. "Aye, now you
have the way of it, but you can't yet teach an old dog how to gnaw a bone -
gi'me the darts, lad." He took the feathered darts, poised them, called
for wine all around; she saw the excited glitter of his eyes. When the next
pair took the darts, he muttered next her ear, "Next round we must get
away; I've a message."
She
nodded to let him know she understood. The next moment Orain shouted,
"What in nine hells do you there, man, your big feet halfway over the line
- I won't play darts with a cheating bastard like that, not even at
Midwinter-gifts. I will make but not be cheated out of a drink or a silver
bit!" and shoved angrily against the man who was throwing. The man whirled
drunkenly and swung at him.
"Here,
you lowland bugger, who do you call cheat? You'll swallow those words with your
next drink or I'll ram them down your throat-" He connected with Orain's
chin, and Orain's head went back with a crack; he staggered against the wall,
came out swinging furiously. Romilly flung her dart, and it landed in the man's
hand as he swung again at Orain; the attacker turned, howling, and barged
toward her, hands out as if to strangle her. She moved away, tripped on a
barrel and went sprawling in the sawdust. Orain's hand grabbed her, pulled her
upright.
"Here,
here-" the barman came over, scowling, separating them with rough hands.
"No brawling, friends! Drink up!"
"The
rotten little bastard threw a dart at me," growled the man, shoving up his
sleeve to reveal a red mark.
"You're
a baby to bawl at a bee-sting?" demanded Orain, and the barman shoved them
apart.
"Sit
down! Both of you! The penalty for fighting is a drink for the house, from each
of you!"
With
a show of reluctance, Orain pulled out his purse, flung down a copper piece.
"Drink up and be damned to you, and I hope you all choke on it! We'll be
off to a quieter place for drinking!" he snarled, grabbed Romilly's elbow
and steered a drunken path toward the door. Outside he straightened up and
demanded in a low, quick voice, "Are you hurt?"
"No,
but-"
"That's
all right, then. Let's make tracks!" He set a pace up the hill that
Romilly could hardly follow. She knew she had had too much to drink and
wondered, as she staggered dizzily after him, if she was going to throw it up.
After a moment he turned and said, gently, "Sorry - here, lad, take my
arm," and supported her. "You shouldn't have drunk that last cup."
"I
couldn't think of anything else to do," she confessed.
"And
you saved my neck by it," he said in a whisper. "Come, perhaps you
can get a bit of rest at the monastery before - look," he gestured at the
clearing sky, "The snow's stopped. We'll be expected to show at the
Midwinter-eve service, any guest at the monastery who's not abed with a broken
leg is expected to be there for their damned hymn-singing! And with the weather
cleared, that rat Lyondri-" he clenched his fists. "He may well be
there, large as life and twice as filthy, sitting smug in the choir and singing
hymns like a better man."
Romilly
asked, troubled, "Would he recognize you, then, Uncle?"
"That
he would," said Orain grimly, "and others than me."
She
wondered; can it be that Carolin himself is somewhere in the monastery? Or
did he speak of Alaric, whose family had been condemned to death by the
Hastur-lord? Or of Carlo, who was certainly an exiled man and high in Carolin's
confidence? Orain's hand was beneath her arm.
"Here,
lean on me, lad - I'd pretend to be sick and hide in the guest-house, but then
they'd hale me off to the infirmary, and find out soon there's nothing wrong
with me but a cup too many of their wine."
She
looked at the settled snow, cringing in the keen wind that came as the snow had
quieted. "Is there truly a laran which can work sorcery on the
weather?"
"So
I have heard," Orain muttered, subsiding into gloom again. "Would
that you had some trace of it, son!"
The
Midwinter-night service in St. Valentine-of-the-Snows was famous throughout the
Hellers; people came from all through Nevarsin, and from the countryside round,
to hear the singing. Romilly had heard some of the music before this, but never
sung so well, and she would have enjoyed the service, had she not been so
troubled by Orain's obvious worried state. He insisted that they should sit at
the back, and when she asked where Dom Carlo was, and why he had not
come to the service, scowled and refused to answer. He had cautioned Alaric,
too, not to enter the chapel at all. But toward the end of the service, when
there was a moment's lull, he whispered "No sign yet of Lyondri Hastur. We
may be lucky." His face twisted and he muttered, "We'd be luckiest if
he fell off a cliff somewhere and never made it to Nevarsin at all!"
And,
as Caryl said, same weather magic has been done. I did not think the weather
would clear so quickly.
She
saw Caryl, scrubbed and shining, in the front row of the choir, his mouth
opening like a bird as he sang; it seemed to Romilly that his voice soared out
over all the choir. It was as well, perhaps, that Dom Carlo was not
here, except for Orain's dread; it seemed that the big gaunt man could hardly
sit still, and no sooner was the service ended than he was up and out of his seat,
pushing for the back of the chapel. He walked with her to the stable, and
busied his hands checking on the sentry-birds, so that Romilly would have been
annoyed - did he think she could not care for them properly, then? Later she
knew what he had been looking for, why he had arranged everything close
together so that they could be snatched up and ready to ride at a moment's
notice, but at the moment she was only exasperated and wondered if he was still
drunk, or believed she was too drunk to handle them properly. He checked
on the chervines and horses too, turning up each hoof, arranging
saddle-blankets and saddles, until she thought she would scream with
nervousness at his fiddling. Or was he lingering so that he would see it, if
Lyondri Hastur actually arrived at the monastery?
But
at last he sighed and turned away. He said, "A good Festival to you,
lad," and gave Romilly a rough hug. "If it's too cold here in the
stable, you can sleep in Dom Carlo's bed, no one will know the
difference."
"I
think I should stay near the birds," Romilly said, avoiding his gaze. It
was not that she did not trust him, exactly; she had lived in camp among them,
and if her real sex had not yet been discovered, he was unlikely to discover it
now, even should they share a sleeping room. And if he should - she discovered
that she felt shaky and weak when she thought about that - Orain was not a cristoforo
and would not be bound by their Creed of Chastity - she had heard stories
all her life, of how licentious were the lowlanders and the Hali'imyn -
but somehow she could not imagine that he would attempt to force himself upon
her. Still, she was uncomfortable at his touch, and pulled away as quickly as
she could, remembering the dream she had had ... in the dream he had held and caressed
her as if she was the woman he did not know her to be. ...
She
burrowed into the hay, still a little dizzied with the wine she had drunk, and
after a time she slept. She dreamed, as she had dreamed before, that she was
flying on the wings of hawk or sentry-bird, that there was someone flying at
her side, who spoke to her in Orain's voice, and drowsily caressed her . . .
she sank into the dream, never thinking to resist...
She
came abruptly awake in the half-light, hearing the clamor of bells - was it
some observance of the cristoforo monks for the Festival? She sat up to
see Orain, white as death, standing at the door of the little chamber.
"Rumal,
lad! Is Dom Carlo with you? This is no time for modesty-"
"Dom
Carlo? I
have not seen him in days! What do you mean, Orain?"
"There
was a time-no, I see you know not even what I mean. Damnation!" He
staggered, reeled against the wall. "I hoped against hope - it cannot be
that he has been taken! Aldones grant he has already been warned and made his
escape - listen!" He gestured and again she heard the alarm-bell ringing.
"We have been betrayed, someone has recognized him, or recognized me - I
knew he should not have ventured down there today!" He swore, striking the
wall with his fist. "Quick, up, boy, search the guest-house! They know
that where I appear, Carolin - or his men - cannot be far away! And while the
Father Master might not violate sanctuary, I would not trust the Hastur-lord to
keep it, not if the Lord of Light appeared before his nose and bade him."
Orain
was dead sober now; he looked ill and haggard, his gaunt face sunken, but his
eyes blazing with anger.
"That
child of Lyondri's - did he babble, do you think, to his playfellows? Lyondri's
son - like dog, like pup! I'd run the boy through with my skean and think the
world a safer place lest the whelp grow up like his abominable father!"
Romilly
shrank back and Orain scowled. "No, I'd not harm a child, not even
Lyondri's, I suppose - get your boots on, boy! We must make haste out of here,
out of the city - if we are caught here, none of our lives are worth a
feather's weight! Go and call - no, I will rouse Alaric and the others! You
make the horses ready."
It
seemed suddenly as if Dom Carlo's face swam in the air before her - but
he was not there! Still it seemed she could hear him saying to her, Bring
the birds, go through the monastery to the highest gate, to the secret pass
above the hidden cells on the glacier.
"Move,
lad!" Orain snarled, "What are you staring at?" Her voice
shaking, Romilly repeated Dom Carlo's words. "He was here, I heard
him; his very voice-"
"Dreams,"
Orain said, jerking his head impatiently, and it seemed that Carlo's voice said
in Romilly's mind, Bid him remember a certain belt of red leather over which
we fought and bloodied both our noses.
Romilly
caught at Orain's sleeve as he turned to go. "I swear, Orain, I heard Dom
Carlo - something of a red leather belt over which you both bloodied your
noses."
Orain
blinked. He made a quick, superstitious gesture. Then he said, "You have laran;
no? I thought as much. Aye, that belt was a jest between us for a hand-span
of years. I will go rouse the men. Make ready, as quick as you can."
Romilly
found that her hands were steady as she got the saddles on the animals, wrapped
herself in the cloak that had been Orain's Midwinter-gift - grateful for the
fur lining - and stuffed a couple of saddlebags with grain and fodder for the
riding-beasts and another with the smelly food for the sentry-birds. She hooded
them - it would have been impossible to handle them in the middle of the night
this way without rousing the whole monastery, but hooded they would at least be
quiet - and fastened their blocks to her own saddle and to Orain's, and gave
the third to Alaric's chervine.
After
a bit she looked up and found Alaric working at her side. "Some bastard
betrayed us," he said shakily, listening to the distant clamor of bells -
it was growing nearer and nearer now, "They're searching the city house to
house, when the time comes they reach the monastery, they'll search every
cranny, the monk's cells, the very chapel! What is it, lad, you know Orain's
counsel - are we to ride them down at the gates?"
"I
am not in their counsels," Romilly said, "But something of a secret
gate at the highest part-"
"And
while we waste time looking for the secret paths, Lyondri's men find us and I
dance on a rope's end?" demanded Alaric. Romilly said steadily, "I do
not think Dom Carlo will abandon us like that. Trust him."
"Aye;
but the vai dom is Hastur, when all's done, and blood's thicker than
wine, they say.. .." Alaric grumbled.
"Alaric!"
she turned round to him, shocked beyond speech. After a moment she found her
voice and said, "Surely you can't believe Carlo would side with the
Hastur-lord against - Well, - against us, and Orain-"
"Well,
not against Orain," he said, "Get that saddle on, boy, if there's a
chance...but how do I know? Likely ye're of the gentlefolk yourself. . .
." his voice trailed away, uncertain.
"Finish
with the saddling, and don't talk nonsense," she said sharply. "Will
you lift that grain-bag to the saddle? I can't lift it alone-"
He
helped her to hoist the heavy pack to the back of the chervine, and led the
beast out of the stable. A hand seized her wrist in a hard grip and she started
to cry out before, not knowing how, she recognized Orain's grip, even in the
darkness.
"This
way," he whispered, and, knowing his voice even in the silenced whisper,
she relaxed and let him lead them into the dark passageway. She heard the other
men, trying to move silently, only small creaks and rustles; someone bashed a
toe against a rock wall and cursed softly. Then, she heard a soft childish
voice.
"My
lord Orain-"
"Ah
- it's you, ye devil's pup-"
Caryl cried out, a muffled squeak. "I
won't hurt you," he said, gasping - Romilly could not see in the dark, but
sensed, from the pain in the small voice, that Orain had grabbed him harshly.
"No, I only - I meant to guide you on the secret path - I don't want
my father to find the vai dom - he will be angry, but-"
"Let
him go, Orain," Romilly muttered, "he's telling the truth!"
"Ah
- I'll trust your laran, boy," said Orain, and she heard a little
whimper of relief as, evidently, he loosed his punishing grip on the child.
"A path you know? Lead us. But if you play us false-" he added
through clenched teeth, "Child or no, I'll run my skean into you."
They
followed through the narrow passage, crowding together, bumping, the
sentry-birds making uneasy squealing noises in the darkness. Someone cursed in
an undertone and Romilly saw the flash of flint on steel, but Orain commanded
harshly, "Put that out!" and the light subsided, with someone
grumbling and swearing.
"Silence,"
Alaric commanded harshly, and there was no sound except the uneasy sounds of
animals crowded in the narrow stone passages. There was a place where they had
to go single file in the dark and one of the loaded chervines stuck between the
stone walls. Alaric and one of the other men had to off-load the beast,
hastily, swearing in whispers, while they hauled and shoved. Later they came to
a place where the air was bad, coming up as if from the sulphurous center of
the earth, and even Romilly could not stifle her coughing. Caryl murmured,
"I am sorry - this is only a little bit, but watch your steps here, there
are cracks and fissures, someone might break a leg."
Romilly
groped her way along in the dark, scuffling her feet slowly against the
possibility of an unseen crack underfoot. At last they were all through, and
there was a breath of icy air from the glacier, a little riffling wind, and
they stood out of doors in chilly starlight. The pallid face of a single moon,
the tiny pearl-colored Mormallor, hung just above the hill, hardly bright
enough to lighten the darkness at all; and underfoot was pale slippery ice.
"No
one travels this path," whispered Caryl, "except for a few of the
brothers who practice their mastery of the ordeals by living here, naked, and
even if they knew you were here, they would not know or care who you were, they
think only of the things of the heavenly realms, not of kings and wars. But oh,
go carefully, my lords - there are dangers-"
"What
dangers?" demanded Alaric, grabbing his throat Caryl squeaked softly, but
did not cry out.
"No
dangers of man; banshee-birds live here, though our Brothers have a pact with
them, as they say the holy Saint Valentine-of-the-Snows had a pact when he
preached to them and called them God's little brothers."
"You
led us into a nest of banshee-birds, ye devil's pup?" Alaric demanded, but
Orain said, "Let him go, damn you, man; touch the boy again and I'll give
you something you'll remember! The banshees are not of his calling, he thought
to warn us, which is more than even the Father Master thought to do!"
"Take
your hands from the boy, Alaric! Are you mad?" demanded a new voice, and Dom
Carlo stood among them. Romilly did not see from whence he had come; he was
simply there. Later she realized he must have come through another secret
tunnel or path, but at the moment it was as if he jumped up among them like
magic. Caryl gave a little startled cry; Romilly's eyes were adjusting to the
darkness now, and she could see the child's face. He held out his arms to Dom
Carlo for a kinsman's embrace, saying simply, "Uncle. I am glad you
are safe."
"It
makes my heart glad to know you are not my enemy," said Carlo, not as if
he spoke to a child, but as if he spoke to another noble, his equal in rank and
age. He kissed the boy on either cheek. "Walk in the Light, lad, till we
meet again."
"Vai
dom-"
Caryl's young high voice suddenly wavered, "I am your friend, not your
enemy. But - I beg you - if my father is in your hands - spare him for my
sake-"
Dom
Carlo
held Caryl's shoulders gently between his hands. He said, "I wish I could
promise you that, son. I do swear this, by the Lord of Light, whom I serve as
you the Bearer of Burdens; I will make no quarrel with Lyondri while he makes
none with me. For the rest, I will hope with all my heart that Lyondri stays
afar from me; I wish him far less ill than he wishes me. He was once my friend,
and the quarrel was none of my making." He kissed Caryl again, and
released him. "Now get you back to your bed, child, before your father
hears that you have been abroad this night, or Father Master seeks to punish you,
May the Gods walk with you, chiyu."
"And
with you, my lord." Caryl turned and started back into the dark mouth of
the passage. Then Alaric grabbed him around the waist. He struggled, but one
quick blow from Alaric sent him sagging softly, with a little sigh, into the
man's arms.
"Are
you mad, vai dom?' he demanded, "Lyondri's own son in our hands for
hostage, and you'd let him free? With this whelp in our hands, we could bargain
our way out of Rakhal's very clutches, to say nothing of being secure against
Lyondri Hastur!"
"And
you would reward him like this for guiding us to safety?" Romilly cried in
outrage, but Alaric's face was hard and set.
"You're
a fool, boy. And you too, under favor, my lords," he said to Orain and Dom
Carlo. "The boy may have led us honestly - who'd seek to distrust a
little one with angel face like this? But his elders have laran even if he
means us no harm, how do we know they haven't trailed us through the
boy's laran! I won't hurt the least hair on his head, but he stays with
us till we're safe from glacier and Lyondri's men! We can leave him in Caer
Bonn, or some such place!"
"If
you've hurt him-" Dom Carlo said with soft menace, and Romilly
hoped his wrath would never be turned on her. He felt the boy's
forehead. "I wouldn't reward the child's loyalty like this! But we can't
leave him here unconscious, to die of the cold," he added. "Bring him
with you, then, if you must; we dare not delay for him to recover. But you'll
hear of this after, Alaric," he said angrily, and turned his back on the
man. "Set the boy on one of the horses, and you, young Rumal," he
added, beckoning to Romilly, "Ride behind him, for he cannot keep his
saddle as he is now, and I am reluctant to tie him as if he were a prisoner.
Now come, make haste!"
The
limp unconscious form of Caryl was lifted into the saddle and Romilly, mounting
behind him, had all she could do to hold the child from falling on the uneven,
icy path. They went upward and upward in silence, with no sound but the small,
uneasy cries of the hooded sentry-birds. Riding in the dark, holding Caryl,
small and limp, in her arms, Romilly thought of Rael, sleeping against her
shoulder; missed him, sharply and with bitterness. Would she ever see her
little brother again?
The
narrow path was steep, so steep that Romilly had to lean forward in the saddle
as they climbed; it was narrow, and icy underfoot, and it was all she could do
to hold Caryl's
unconscious
weight against her so that he would not fall from the saddle. But the men, too,
had all they could do to manage the nervous chervines and the sentry-birds, who
were uneasy, and, even hooded, kept making little squealing sounds and trying
to flap their wings and hop around restlessly on their blocks. This made horses
and chervines even more nervous; she wondered what their sharper senses saw,
and would have tried rapport to find out, but it was all she could do, on the
steep path, to hold herself and the unconscious child in the saddle without
falling.
Once
there sounded a high screaming wail, a paralyzing sound that seemed to turn
Romilly's blood to ice. Her horse started and snorted nervously under her, and
she fought to control it. The sentry-birds fidgeted on their blocks, flapping
their wings in panic. Romilly had never heard such a cry before, but she needed
no one to tell her what it was; the cry of a banshee, the huge flightless birds
who lived above the snow-line; all but blind, but sensing the body warmth of
anything that lived, and their powerful claws that could disembowel horse or
man with a single stroke. And it was night, when they actually could see a
little, blind as they were in the light of the red sun. Their terrible cries,
she had heard, were intended to paralyze prey with fright; hearing it now in
the distance, she hoped she would never actually see one.
At
the sound Caryl made a small pained noise and stirred, his hands going up to
feel the lump on his head. The movement made the horse startle; his hooves all
but slipped on the icy path. Romilly bent forward and whispered urgently,
"It's all right, but you must be quiet; the road is dangerous just here,
and if you frighten the horse, he may fall - and so would we. Be still,
Caryl."
"Mistress
Romilly?" he whispered, and she said crossly "Hush!" He
subsided, looking up at her. Her eyes had adjusted now to the darkness so that
she could see his small frightened face. Still gingerly feeling the lump at his
temple, he blinked and she hoped he would not cry.
He
whispered, "How did I get here? What happened?" And then,
remembering, "Someone hit me!" He sounded more surprised than
angry. She supposed that he, a pampered lowland child, had never been struck
before, that no one had spoken to him other than gently. She held him tight in
her arms.
"Don't
be afraid," she whispered, "I won't let them hurt you." She
knew, as she said it, that if Alaric offered any further violence to the child
she would set herself between them.
He
wriggled himself into a more comfortable position on the saddle; now that he
could sit upright, and was no longer a dead weight who must be held to keep him
from falling, it was easier to control her horse.
"Where
are we?" he whispered.
"On
the road to which you guided us; Dom Carlo brought you with us because
he could not leave you lying unconscious to die of the cold, but he means you
no harm. Alaric wanted you as a hostage; but Orain won't let him hurt you
again."
"Lord
Orain has always been kind to me," said Caryl after a moment, "even
when I was very small. I wish my father had not quarreled with him. And Father
Master will be very angry with me."
"It
wasn't your fault."
"Father
Master says whatever happens to us is always our fault, one way or
another," said the child, keeping his voice low, "If we have not
deserved it in this life, we have certainly done so in another. If it is good
we have earned it and may enjoy it, but if it is bad, we must also believe that
somehow we have deserved the bad too, and it is not always easy to know which
is which. I am not sure what that means," he added naively, "but he said
I would understand when I was older."
"Then
I must be very young too," said Romilly, unable to keep back a laugh -
talking elevated cristoforo philosophy on this dangerous road, with the
king's men, for all they knew, hard at their heels! "For I confess I do
not understand it at all."
Orain
heard the laugh; he pulled his horse aside and waited for them to come up with
bun, where the path widened just a fraction. "Are you awake, young
Caryl?"
"I
wasn't asleep," the boy protested, scowling, "Somebody hit me!"
'True,"
said Orain seriously, "And he has heard about it, believe me, from Dom Carlo.
But now, I fear, you must ride with us to Caer Donn; you cannot possibly return
alone over this road. I would have trusted you not to betray us willfully, but
I know from old that Lyondri has laran and might read in your thoughts
which way we had gone. I give you my word, which, unlike your father, I have
never broken, that when we reach Caer Donn you will be sent back to him under a
flag of truce. He-" with an eloquent shrug of his caped shoulder, he
indicated Dom Carlo, riding ahead, "wishes you no ill. But in this
company I should warn you to guard your tongue."
"My
lord-" Caryl began, but Orain gave a slight, warning shake of his head,
and said quickly, "If you would be more comfortable riding behind me, you
may, when we have gotten through this path; this is no place to stop and change
horses. Or if you will give me the word of a Hastur that you will not try to
flee from us, I will arrange it that one of the pack-animals can carry you, and
you may ride alone."
"Thank
you," the boy said, "but I would rather stay with-" he paused
and swallowed and said, "with Rumal." She was astonished at his
presence of mind; no other youngster, she was sure, could have remembered, even
in this extremity, not to blurt out her secret.
"Ride
carefully, then," Orain said, "and guard him well, Rumal." He
turned back to his own riding, and Romilly, settling Caryl as comfortably as
she could in front of her - it would indeed be easier if he could sit behind
her and hang on, but there was no way to stop and change now - reflected that
he had protected her even when he had nothing to gain by keeping her secret,
and when he might have made trouble among his captors. An unusual youngster
indeed, and cleverer than Rael, disloyal as she felt to her own little brother
to think so.
He
knew she was a woman. Though, she had thought sometimes that Dom Carlo
knew and kept his counsel for his own reasons, whatever they were. And then,
for the first time - so swiftly had affairs moved since she was awakened - she
remembered Orain's exact words when he came seeking her. Is Carlo with you?
This is no time for modesty! Had Carlo, then, confided to Orain - or been
told by him, perhaps? - that he knew her a woman, and, knowing that, did he
think her such a woman as might be free of her favors, so that he might have
found Carlo in her bed? Even in the bitter cold, Romilly felt the hot flush of
shame on her cheeks. Well, riding with them in men's clothes, what sort of
woman could he think her?
Well,
if he knew, he knew, and if he thought that of her, he must think what
he liked. At least he had been gentleman enough not to spread it among these
roughnecks. But she had begun to like Orain so much!
Again
from the crags above them came the eerie scream of a banshee; it was closer
now, and Romilly felt the throbbing, eldritch wail going all through her, as if
her very bones were shuddering at the sound. She knew how the natural prey of
the bird must feel; it seemed to stop her in her tracks, to wipe out the world
around so that there was nothing except that dreadful vibration, which seemed
to make her eyes blur and the world go dark around her. Caryl moaned and dug
his hands over his ears with an agonized shiver, and she could see the men
ahead of them fighting to control their terrified horses while the sentry-birds
flapped, and the chervines made their odd bawling cry and stepped around,
almost prancing with terror, on the icy path. One of them stumbled and went
down and the rider fell, sliding some way before he could dig his heels into
the ice and stand up, scrambling to catch his riding-animal; another beast
piled into him and there was a clumsy sprawling collision. Swearing, they
fought with the reins. The screaming of the hooded sentry-birds, their bating
wings, added to the dismay, and again the eerie terror-filled banshee scream
shuddered out from the crags above, and was answered by yet another.
Romilly
gave Caryl a little shake. "Stop that!" she demanded furiously.
"Help me, help me quiet the birds!" Her own breath was coming ragged,
she could see it steaming in the icy air, but she put her mind swiftly to
reaching out with that special sense of hers, and sending thoughts of calm,
peace, food, affection. She could reach them still; as she felt Caryl's
thoughts join with hers, one after another the great birds quieted, were still
on their blocks on the saddles, and Carlo and his men could get the
riding-animals under control again. Carlo gestured to them to gather close -
the path widened here just enough that three or four of the animals could stand
abreast, and they gathered in a little bunch.
The
crags above them were beginning to stand out stark against the paling sky; pink
and purple clouds outlined the blackness of the rocks of the pass. Dawn was
near. The trail above them narrowed and led across the glacier; and even as
they looked, a clumsy shadow moved on the face of the rocks, and again there
came the terrible wailing scream, answered by another from higher up. Orain compressed
his narrow lips and said wryly, "Just what we needed; two of the damned
things! And daylight still a good hour away - and even when the sun comes up,
we might not escape them. And we can't wait anyway; if there's pursuit we
should be away and across the path before full daylight, and well to the other
side where the woods will conceal our traces! A blind man would be able to read
our tracks on ice, and Lyondri's sure to have half a dozen of his damned leroni
with him!"
"We're
in the very mouth of the trap," Carlo muttered, his face going silent and
distant. He said at last, into the silence, "No pursuit, at least not yet
- I need no leronis to tell me so
much.
You were a damned fool to bring the boy, Alaric - with him to follow, Lyondri
will follow us though the track led through all nine of Zandru's hells! Now he
has a second and personal grudge!"
"If
the boy's with us," Alaric said, his teeth set tight, "we can buy our
lives, at least!"
Caryl
drew himself upright on the saddle and said angrily, "My father would not
compromise his honor for his son's life, and I would not want him to!"
"Lyondri's
honor?" growled one of the men, "The sweet breath of the banshee, the
welcoming climate of Zandru's ninth hell!"
"I
will not hear you say-" Caryl began, but Romilly caught him around the
waist before he could physically climb down the saddle and attack the speaker,
and Carlo said quietly, "Enough, Caryl. A sentiment seemly for Lyondri's
son, lad, but we have no time for babble. Somehow we must get across the path,
and though I have no will to hurt you, if you can't keep your tongue behind
your teeth, I fear you must be gagged; my men are in no mood to hear a defense
of one who has set a price on our heads. And you, Garan, and you, Alaric, you
shut your faces too; it's not well done to mock a child about his father's
honor, and there's harder work ahead of us than quarreling with a little
boy!" He looked up again as the. shrilling shriek of the banshee drowned
their voices, and Romilly saw his whole body tense in the effort to conquer the
purely physical fear that screaming cry created in their minds. Romilly hugged
Caryl tight, not sure whether it was to comfort the child or to still her own
fears, whispering, "Help me quiet the animals." It was well to give
him something to think about except his own terror.
Again
the soothing vibration spread out, and she knew her own talent, laran or
whatever they called it, enhanced by the already-powerful gift of the young
Hastur child. As it died into silence, Alaric said, his hand on his dagger,
"I have hunted banshees before this, vai dom, and slain them
too."
"I
doubt not your courage, man," said Carlo, "but your wit, if you think
we can face two banshees in a narrow pass, without losing man or horse. We have
no deaf-hounds, nor nets and ropes. Perhaps, if we keep between the horses and
chervines, we may manage to escape with a horse for each, but then would we be
afoot in the worst country in the Hellers! And if we stand here, we will be
taken in the jaws of the trap."
"Better
the beak of the banshee than the tender mercies of Lyondri's men," said
one of the riders, edging uneasily away from his place at the head of the
little cavalcade. "I'll face what you face, my lord."
"Too
bad your skill with birds extends not to such creatures as those" said
Orain, looking at Romilly with a wry grin, "Could you but calm those birds
as you worked with hawk and sentry-bird, then should we be as well off as any
Hastur-lord with his pet leronis!"
Romilly
shuddered at the thought ... to enter into the minds of those cruel carnivores,
prowling the heights? She said weakly "I hope you are joking, vai
dom."
"Why
should that laran not be as workable against banshee as against
sentry-bird, or for that matter, barnyard fowl?" asked Caryl, sitting upright
on the saddle, "They are all creatures of Nature, and if Rom - Rumal's
Gift can quiet the sentry-birds, with my own laran to help, why, perhaps
we can reach the banshees too, and perhaps convince them that we are not
destined for their breakfast."
Romilly
felt again a perceptible shudder run through her. But before young Caryl's
eager eyes, she was ashamed to confess her fear.
Carlo
said quietly, "I am reluctant to leave our safety in the hands of two
children, when grown men are helpless. Yet if you can help us - there seems no
other way, and if we delay here, we are dead men, all of us. Your father would
not harm you, my young Carolin, but I fear the rest of us would die, and not
too quickly or easily."
Caryl
was blinking hard. He said, "I do not want any harm to come to you, sir. I
do not think my father understands that you are a good man; perhaps Dom Rakhal
has poisoned his mind against you. If I can do anything to help, so that he may
have time to think more sensibly about all this quarrel, I will be very glad to
do what I can." But Romilly noticed that he too looked a little
frightened. And as they moved slowly forward he whispered, "I am afraid,
Rumal - they look so fierce it is hard to remember that they too are the
creations of God. But I will try to remember that the blessed
Valentine-of-the-Snows had a pact of friendship with them and called them
little brothers."
I
do not think I truly wish to be brother to the banshee, Romilly thought, urging
her horse forward with a little cluck and the pressure of her knee, trying to
throw out soothing thoughts to calm the animal's fear. But she must not think
that way. She must remember that the same Force which created the dogs and
horses she loved, and the beloved hawks, had created the banshee for its own
purposes, even if she did not know what they were. And the sentry-birds, who
looked so fierce, were gentle and loving as cagebirds, when she had gotten to
know them; she truly loved Prudence, and even for Temperance and Diligence she
felt a genuine affection.
If
the banshee is my brother . . . and for a moment she felt an amusement bubbling up that
she recognized as all but hysterical. Her gentle brother Ruyven, timid Darren,
dear little Rael, in the same breath with the screaming horrors on the crag?
She
heard Caryl whispering to himself; the only words she caught were, Bearer of
Burdens and Blessed Valentine . . . and she knew the child was
praying. She caught him tight against her, burying her face against his caped
shoulder, closing her eyes. Was this true goodness, or a mad presumption, to
think that somehow their minds could reach the mind of a banshee - if the
banshees have any mind, she thought, and again forced the rising hysteria
down. No one knew she was a girl, she could not cry and scream with terror! She
thought, grimly, that both Orain and Dom Carlo looked frightened too;
where they were afraid, she had no need to feel shame for her fear!
She
shut her eyes again and tried to form a prayer, but could not remember any. Bearer
of Burdens, you know what I want to pray, and now I have to try and do what I
can to save us all, she said in a half-voiced whisper, then sighed and
said, "We will try, Caryl. Come, link with me-"
Her
mind reached out, just aware enough of her body to keep it upright in the
saddle, moving with the horse's uneasy step. Reached out - she was aware of the
horses, shuddering inwardly yet moving on, step by slow step, out of loyalty to
their riders; of the sentry-birds, frightened at the noise, but calm because
she and Caryl, whose mental voices they trusted, had bidden them be calm. She
reached farther, felt something cold and terrifying, felt again the shrilling
scream, shuddering through all creation, but, her hands clasped tightly in
Caryl's, she stayed with it, moved into the alien mind.
At
first she was conscious only of tremendous pressures, a hunger so fierce that
it cramped her belly, a restless cold driving toward warmth, that seemed like
light and home and satisfaction, the touch of warmth driving inward and
flooding her whole body with a hunger almost sexual, and she knew, with a tiny
fragment that was still Romilly, that she had reached the mind of the banshee. Poor
hungry, cold thing, . . it is only seeking warmth and food, like the
whole of Creation. . . . Her eyes blotted out, she could not see, only
feel, she was the banshee and for a moment she fought a raging battle,
her whole mind alive with the need to fling herself upon the warmth, to rend
and tear and feel the exquisitely delicious feel of warm blood bursting ... she
felt her own hands tighten on Caryl's warmth, and then with a leftover part of
herself she knew she was human, a woman, with a child to protect, and others
dependent on her skill.
Linked
tightly to Caryl, she felt his soothing mental touch, like a soft murmur, Brother
banshee, you are one with all life and one with me. The Gods created you to
rend and tear at your prey, I praise and love you as the Gods made you, but
there are beasts in this wilderness who know not fear because the Gods have
given them no consciousness. Search for your prey among them, my little
brothers, and let me pass. . . . In the name of the blessed Valentine, I bid
you, bear your own burdens and seek not to end my life before the time
appointed. Blessed is he who preys and blessed is he who gives life to
another....
I
mean you no harm, Romilly
added her quiet mental appeal to the child's, seek elsewhere for your food.
And
for a moment, in the great flooding awareness that she, and the horse she rode,
and the child's soft body in her arms, and the banshee's wild hunger and
seeking for warmth, were all one, a transcendent wave of joy spread through
her; the red streaks of the rising sun filled her with heat and wonderful
flooding happiness, Caryl's warmth against her breast was an overflow of
tenderness and love, and for a dangerous moment she thought, even if the
banshee takes me for its prey, I shall be even more one with its wonderful
life-force. But I too want to live and rejoice in the sunlight. She had
never known such happiness. She knew that there were tears on his face, but it
did not matter, she was part of everything that lived and had breath, part of
the sun and the rocks, even the cold of the glacier was somehow wonderful
because it heightened her awareness of the heat of the rising sun.
Then
somehow the magical link shattered and was gone. They were on the downward side
of the pass, and high above them, the lumbering form of a banshee was shambling
toward a cavemouth in the rocks, without paying them the slightest heed. Caryl
was crying in her arms, hugging her tight. "Oh, it was hungry and we
cheated it out of its breakfast"
She
patted him, too shaken to speak, still caught up in the experience. Carlo said
huskily, "Thank you, lads. I don't really want to be the banshee's
breakfast, even if the poor thing was hungry, it can take its breakfast
elsewhere."
The
men were looking at them in awe. Orain said shakily, trying to break the spell,
"Ah, you're too big and tough a boy for a banshee's delicate appetite - it
would rather have a tender young ice-rabbit, I'm sure," and they all
guffawed. Romilly felt weak, still under the spell of the wide-ranging
enchantment they had woven with their laran.
Dom
Carlo
rummaged in his saddle-bags. He said roughly, "I can't say what I owe you
two. I remember the leroni were starving after they did such work -
here." He thrust dried meat, dried fruit, wafers of journey-bread at them.
Romilly began to sink her teeth into the meat, and then somehow her gorge rose.
Once
this was living, breathing flesh, how can I make it my prey? Or I am no better
than the banshee. Once this dried flesh was the living breath of all my
brothers. She
gagged, thrust the meat from her and thrust a dried fruit into her mouth.
This
too is of the life of all things, but it had no breath and it does not sicken
me with the consciousness of what once it was. The Bearer of Burdens created
some life with no purpose but to give up its life that others might feed . . . and as she felt the
sweetness of the fruit between her teeth, briefly, the ecstasy returned, that
this fruit should give up its sweetness so that she might no longer hunger....
Caryl,
too, was chewing ravenously at a hunk of the hard bread, but she noted that he,
too, had put the meat away, though a piece had small sharp toothmarks in it. So
he had shared her experience. Distantly, like something she might have dreamed
a long time ago, she wondered how she could ever again eat meat.
Even
when they made brief camp, with the sun high in the sky, to give grain to the horses
and meat to the sentry-birds, she ate none of the dried meat, but only fruit
and bread, and stirred some water into the dried porridge-powder, eating a
bowlful. Yet, to her own surprise, it did not trouble her when the sentry-birds
tore greedily at the somewhat gamy meat they carried for them; it was their
nature, and they were as they were meant to be.
She
noticed that the men still kept a wary distance. She was not surprised. If she
had seen two other people quiet an attacking banshee, she would have been
silent in awe, too. She still could not believe she had done it.
As
they finished their meal and resaddled the horses, she looked at Dom Carlo,
standing straight and tall at the edge of the clearing, with his face distant
and listening. She was now skilled enough in the use of laran to know
that he was extending his mental awareness along the trail behind them, toward
the pass.
"So
far we are not pursued," he said at last, "And the paths are so many,
unless Lyondri has a horde of leroni with him, I do not truly think he
will be able to pick up our trail. We must keep ordinary caution; but I think
we can ride for Caer Donn in safety now." He held out his arms to Caryl.
"Will
you ride behind my saddle, kinsman?" he asked, as if he spoke to a grown
man and his equal, "There are things I would say to you."
Caryl
glanced at Romilly, then collected himself and said courteously, "As you
wish, kinsman." He scrambled up into the saddle. As they rode away, she
could see that they were talking together in low tones, and Romilly found that
she missed the child's warm weight in front of her. Once she saw Caryl shaking
his head, seriously, and a word or two reached her ears.
"...
oh, no, kinsman, I give you my word of that...."
Suddenly
jealous of this closeness, Romilly wished she could hear what they were saying.
So near, now, was her laran to the surface, that it occurred to her; Perhaps
I need only reach out and know.
And
then she was shocked at herself. What was she thinking, she who had been reared
in a Great House and taught proper courtesy toward both equals and inferiors?
Why, that would be no worse than eavesdropping at doors, snooping like a nasty
child, that would be completely unworthy of her.
Having
the power of laran, certainly, did not mean that she had a right to know
what did not concern her! And then, frowning as she fell into line - she had
taken the sentrybird Prudence on her own saddle, so that Dom Carlo could
carry Caryl behind him - she found herself pondering the proper manners
associated with laran. She had the power, and perhaps the right, to
force her will on the hawks she trained, on the horses she rode, even, to save
her life, on the wild banshee of the crags. But how far did this power go? How
far was it right to use it? She could urge her horse to bear saddle and bridle,
because he loved her and willingly learned what would bring him closer to his
master. She had felt Preciosa's deep love, so that the hawk returned of her
free will when Romilly had set her free. (And that was pain. Would she ever
see Preciosa again?) But there were limits to this power. It was right,
perhaps, to quiet the dogs who loved her, so they would not awaken the
household to her going.
But
there was trouble, too, and a deep conflict. She could urge the prey into the
beak of the hawk she hunted, she could perhaps force the young and stupid
ice-rabbit into the waiting mouth of the dogs . . . surely that was not
intended, that was not part of nature, that was a distinctly unfair advantage
to have in hunting!
Her
eyes stinging, she bent her head, and for the first time in her life found herself sincerely
praying.
Bearer
of Burdens! I did not ask this power. Please, please, help me use it, not for
wrong purposes, but only to try and be one with life. . . . Confusedly, she added, As
I was, for a little while, this morning, when I knew that I was one with all
that lived. As you must be, Holy one. Help me decide how to use this power
wisely. And after a moment she added, in a whisper, For now I know I am
a part of life ... but such a small part!
All
the long road to Caer Donn, it continued to trouble her. When she hunted meat
for the sentry-birds, she thought of her laran and feared to use the
power for evil, so that sometimes she let game escape them and was roundly
scolded by the men. She did use her awareness to seek out dead things in hill
and forest which she could use to feed the birds - they had no further use for
their bodies, surely it could not be wrong to use a dead creature to feed a
living one. She felt as if she wanted to close up her new skill where it would
never be touched again, though she had to use it in handling the birds - surely
it could not be wrong to show her fondness for them? Or was it, since she used
it to keep them quiet for her own convenience?
There
were times when she tried to handle them without calling on the MacAran Gift
which she now knew to be laran, and when they screamed and rebelled, Dom
Carlo demanded, "What's gotten into you, youngster? Do the work you're
paid to do, and keep those birds quiet!" She had to use her laran then,
and again suffer the conflicts as to whether she did right or wrong.
She
wished she could talk to Dom Carlo; he had laran and had perhaps
suffered some of these same worries when he was her age and learning to use it.
Was this what Ruyven had had to overcome? No wonder he fled from a
horse-training ranch and took refuge behind Tower walls! She found herself
envying Darren, who had none of the MacAran Gift and though he feared and hated
hawks and horses, at least he was not tempted to meddle with their minds in
order to show his power over them! She could not talk to Caryl, he was only a
child, and used his power with pleasure, as she had always used it since she
found out she had special skill with horses and used it in training them. And
whenever she tried to eat fresh-killed game, it seemed that she could feel the
life and the blood of the dead animal pounding through her mind, and she would
gag and refuse to eat; she made her meals of porridge and fruit and bread, and
was fiercely hungry in the bitter, aching cold of the mountain trails, but even
when Dom Carlo commanded her to eat, she could not, and once when he
stood over her until she reluctantly swallowed part of a haunch of the wild
chervine they had killed for their meal, she felt such terrible revulsion that
she went away and vomited it up again.
Orain
saw her coming back from the thicket, white and shaking, and came over to where
she was, with fumbling hands, trying to cut up offal and remainder of the
chervine for the sentry-birds. It was hard to find gravel in this snowy
country, and so she had to mix skin and slivers of bone with the meat, or they
would have further trouble in digesting. He said, "Here, give me
that," and carried the mess over to the birds where they were fastened on
their blocks, safely above the snow. He came back leaving them to tear into it,
and said, "What's the matter, lad? Off your feed, are you? Carlo means
well, you know, he just was worried that you weren't eating enough for this
rotten climate."
"I
know that," she said, not looking at him.
"What's
ailing you, youngster? Anything I can do to help?"
She
shook her head. She did not think anyone could help. Unless she could somehow
talk to her father, who must somehow have fought this battle himself in his
youth, or how could he have come to terms with his own Gift? He might hate the
very word laran and forbid anyone to use it in his hearing, but he
possessed the thing, whatever he chose to call it or not to call it. With a
sudden, homesick force, she remembered Falconsward, the face of her father,
loving and kindly, and then his contorted, wrathful face as he beat her. . . .
She put her face in her hands, trying desperately to stifle a fit of sobs which
must surely reveal her as a girl. But she was so tired, so tired, she could
hardly keep back her tears....
Orain's
hand was gentle on her shoulder. "There, there, son, never mind - I'm not
one to think tears all that unmanly. You're ill and tired, that's all. Bawl if
you want to, I'll not be telling on you." He gave her a final reassuring
pat, and moved back to the fire. "Here; drink this, it'll settle your
stomach," he said, sifting a few of his cherished herbs into a cup of hot
water, and shoving the mug into her hand. The drink was aromatic, with a
pleasant faint bitterness, and indeed made her feel better. "If you can't
eat meat just now, I'll bring you some bread and fruit, but you can't go hungry
in this cold." He gave her a chunk of hard bread, liberally spread with
the fat of the chervine; Romilly was so hungry that she gulped it down,
chewed on the handful of fruits he gave her as they were settling the horses
for the night. He spread their blanket rolls side by side; Caryl had none, so
he had been sleeping in Romilly's cloak, tucked in her arms. As she was pulling
off her boots to sleep, she felt an ominous dull pain in the pit of her belly,
and began secretly to count on her fingers; yes, it had been forty days since
she had escaped from Rory's cabin, she must once again conceal this periodic
nuisance! Damn this business of being a woman! Lying awake between Caryl and
Orain, still shivering, she wondered grimly how she could manage to conceal it
in this climate. Fortunately it was cold enough that nobody undressed at all in
the camp, and even to sleep piled on all the clothes and blankets they had.
Romilly had been sleeping, not only in the fur-lined cloak Orain had given her,
but in the rough old one she had taken from Rory's cabin, rolling herself up in
them both, with Caryl in her arms.
She
must think. She had no spare rags, or garments which could be made into them.
There was a kind of thick moss, which grew liberally all through the higher
elevations, here as well as at Falconsward; she had seen it, but paid no attention
- though she knew the poorer women, who had no rags to spare, used this moss
for babies' diapers, packing them in it, as well as for their monthly sanitary
needs. Romilly's fastidious soul felt a certain disgust, but it would be easier
to bury moss in the snow than to wash out rags in this climate. Tomorrow she
would find some of it; here in snow country it would, at least, not be covered
with mud or dirt and need not be washed. What a nuisance it was, to be a woman!
It
was so bitterly cold that they all rolled close together, like dogs sleeping in
heaps; when the camp was awakening in the morning, Alaric jeered, as Orain
unrolled himself from Caryl and Romilly, "Hey, man, are you running a
nursery for the children?" But Orain's presence was comforting to her,
and, she felt, to Caryl as well; he was gentle and fatherly, and she was not
afraid of him. In fact, if it came to necessity, she did not doubt she could
confide in Orain without real danger; he might be shocked at finding she was a
girl in this rough country and climate, but he would not make that kind of
trouble for her, any more than her own father or brothers. Somehow she knew,
beyond all doubt, that he was not the kind of man ever to ravish or offer
any offense to any woman.
She
went away to attend to her personal needs in private - she had been jeered at,
a bit, for this, they said she was as squeamish as a woman, but she knew they
only thought it was because she was a cristoforo; they were known to be
prudish and modest about such things. She was sure none of them suspected, and
Caryl, who know - and Dom Carlo, who, she felt, knew perfectly well -
chose to say nothing.
But
she could keep her secret as long as she could. When she came to Caer Donn, it
might not be so easy as in Nevarsin to find work as hawk-keeper or
horse-trainer, but certainly it could be done, and certainly Orain, or Dom Carlo
himself, could give her a good reference as a willing and skilled worker.
She
still felt a certain revulsion against eating meat, though she knew it was
foolish - it was in the way of nature that some animals were prey to others,
but though she knew the
intense
immediacy of her revulsion was beginning to fade a little, she still preferred
porridge and bread to the meat, and Carlo, (she wondered if Orain had spoken to
him about it?) no longer urged her to eat it, but simply gave her a somewhat
larger ration of porridge and fruit. Alaric jeered at her once, and Dom Carlo
curtly bade him be silent.
"The
less there is of meat for him, the more for the rest of us, man. Let him have
such food as he likes best, and you do the same! If all men were alike, you
would long since have been meat for the banshee; we owe it to him to let him
have his way."
They
had been, she thought, nine days on the road from Nevarsin when, circling high
above them, they saw a bird winging from the range of hills. Romilly was
feeding the sentry-birds, and they strained at their jesses as the small bird
flew down into their camp; then she saw Dom Carlo standing motionless,
his arms extended, his face the blank, silent stare of laran-focused thoughts.
The bird darted down; alighted and stood quivering on his hand.
"A
message from our folk in Caer Donn," Carlo said, sought for the capsule
under the wing and tore it open, scanning the finely-written lines. Romilly
stared - she knew of message-birds who could fly back to their own loft across
trackless wilds, but never of one which could seek out a particular man whose
whereabouts were unknown to the sender!
Carlo
raised his head, smiling broadly.
"We
must make haste to Caer Donn, men," he cried out, "A tenday hence we
will gather beneath Aldaran, and Carolin will be at the head of the great army
which is massing there, to march on the lowlands. Now let Rakhal look to
himself, my faithful fellows!"
They
cheered, and Romilly cheered too. Only Caryl was silent, lowering his head and
biting his lip. Romilly started to ask what was wrong, then held her tongue. He
could hardly rejoice at an army massed against his father, who was Rakhal's
chief advisor. It would be unfair to expect it Yet she had seen that he loved Dom
Carlo as a kinsman - in fact, she was sure they were kinsmen, though
perhaps distant; she had heard that all of the lowland Hasturs were kin, and
she was sure now, recalling Carlo's red hair, the look he had which reminded
her of Alderic, that he was one of the Hastur-kin-folk, and higher in rank than
any of his men knew. If Orain, who was the king's foster-brother, treated him
with such deference, he must be noble indeed.
They
rode into Caer Donn late in the evening, and Dom Carlo turned, just
inside the gates of the city, to Orain.
"Take
the men and the birds to a good inn," he said, "and command all my
faithful people the best dinner money can buy; they have had a hard journey and
paid dearly for their following of the exiles. You know where I must be
going."
"Aye,
I know," said Orain, and Carlo smiled faintly and gripped his hand. He
said, "A day will come-"
"All
the Gods grant it," said Orain, and Carlo rode away through the streets of
the city.
If
she had never seen Nevarsin, Romilly might have thought Caer Donn a big city.
High on the side of the mountain above the town, a castle rose, and Orain said
as they rode, "The home of Aldaran of Aldaran. The Aldarans are Hastur-kin
from old days, but they have no part in lowland strife. Yet blood-ties are
strong."
"Is
the king there?" asked Romilly, and Orain smiled and drew a deep breath of
relief. "Aye, we are back in country where that beast Rakhal is not
admired, and Carolin is still true king of these lands," he said.
"And the birds we've brought will be in the hands of the lung's leroni in
a few days. Pity you've not the training of a laranzu, lad, you have the
touch. You've done Carolin's men a service, believe me, and the king will not be
ungrateful when he comes to his throne."
He
looked down the streets. "Now, if memory fails me not, I recall an inn
near the city wall, where our birds may be housed and our beasts fed, and that
good meal Carlo commanded may be found," he said, "Let's go and find
it."
As
they rode through the narrow street, Caryl pushed close to his side.
"Lord
Orain, you - the vai dom pledged me I should be sent back to my father
under a truce-flag. Will he honor that pledge? My father-" his voice
broke, "My father must be wild with fear for me."
"Good
enough!" Alaric said harshly, "Let him feel some o'what I feel, with
my son and his mother dead - at your father's hands-"
Caryl
stared at him with his eyes wide. Finally he said, "I did not recognize
you, Master Alaric; now I recall you. You wrong my father, sir; he did not kill
your son, he died of the bald fever; my own brother died that same summer, and
the lung's healer-women tended them both as carefully. It was sad that your son
died away from his father and mother, but on my honor, Alaric, my father had no
hand in your son's death."
"And
what of my poor wife, who flung herself from the window to death when she heard
her son had died far away from her-"
"I
did not know that," Caryl said, and there were tears in his eyes, "My
own mother was beside herself with grief; when my brother died. I was afraid to
be out of my mother's sight for fear she would do herself some harm in her
grief. I am sorry - oh, I am sorry, Master Alaric," he said, and flung his
arms around the man, "If my father had known this, I am sure he would not
pursue you, nor blame you for your quarrel with him!"
Alaric
swallowed; he stood without moving in the boy's embrace and said, "God
grant my own son would have defended me like to that. I canna' fault you for
your loyalty to your father, my boy. I'll help Lord Orain see ye get back safe
to him."
Orain
heaved a great sigh of relief. He said, "Well not send you into danger in
the lowlands without an army behind you, Alaric; ye'll stay here with the army.
But here in this city is a hostel of the Sisterhood of the Sword; my cousin is
one of the swordswomen, and we can hire two or three of these women to go south
to Thendara and take the lad safe there. I'll speak to Dom Carlo about
it, Caryl, and perhaps you can leave day after tomorrow. And perhaps a
message-bird could be sent to your father at Hali, to tell him you are well and
safe, and to be escorted safe back to him."
"You
are kind to me, Lord Orain," said Caryl simply. "I have enjoyed this
trip, but I do not like to think of my father's grief, or my mother's if she
knows I am not safe in Nevarsin where she thought me."
"I'll
see to it, soon as we reach the inn," said Orain, and led the way toward a
long, low building, with stables at the back, and a sign with a crudely-painted
hawk. "Here at the Sign of the Hawk we can dine well and rest after that
miserable trip through the snows. And how many of you would like to order a
bath, as well? There are hot springs in the city and a bath-house not ten doors
away."
That
roused another cheer, but Romilly thought, a little glumly, that it did her no
good; she certainly could not risk a man's bath-house, though she felt grubby
and longed to be clear! Well, there was no help for it. She saw the horses and
chervines properly stabled, cared for the sentry-birds, and after washing her
face and hands as well as she could, went in for the good meal Orain had
commanded in the inn. He had ordered rooms for them all to sleep, saying that
he had taken the best room the inn offered for young Caryl, as his rank
demanded.
"And
you are yourself welcome to share my own quarters, Rumal, lad."
"It
is kind of you," Romilly said warily, "but I will stay in the stable
with my charges, lest the sentry-birds be restless in a strange place."
Orain
shrugged. "As you will," he said. "But another thing I would ask
you over dinner."
"What
you wish, sir."
They
went in to the dining-room; there was fresh-baked bread and baked roots, plump
and golden, as well as some roasted birds and a stew of vegetables; everyone
ate hugely after the long spartan fare of the travelling, and Orain had
commanded plenty of wine and beer as well. But he refused Caryl wine, in a kind
and fatherly way, and frowned at Romilly when she would have taken her second
mug of it
"You
know very well you've no head for it," he scolded, "Waiter! Bring the
boys some cider with spiceroot in it."
"Aw,"
Alaric teased good-naturedly, for once, "Old Mammy Orain, will ye put them
to bed and sing 'em a lullabye, while the rest of us are all off to soak out
our long travel in the bath-house?"
"Nay,"
said Orain, "I'm for the baths with the rest of you."
"And
for a house of women soon after that," called out one of the man, taking a
great spoonful of the stewed fruits that had finished the meal, "I haven't
looked at a woman for Zandru knows how long!"
"Aye,
and I mean to do more than look," called another one, and Orain said,
"Do what you like, but this is ill talk before the children."
"I
hope for a bath too," said Caryl, but Orain shook his head.
"The
bath-house here in the city is not like the one in the monastery, my boy, but a
place of resort for whores and such like as well; I can take care of myself,
but it's no place for a respectable lad of your years. I'll order you a tub of
water in your own room, where you may wash and soak and then to bed and rest
well. You too," he said, scowling faintly at Romilly, "You're young
for the rough folk at the bath-house; see you that the lad here washes his feet
well, and then call for a bath for yourself; you'd be too easy prey for the
lowlife folk who hang about such places, as much so as if you were a young and
respectable maiden."
"Why
coddle the boy?" demanded Alaric, "Let him see something of life, as
no doubt you did when you were of his years, Lord Orain!"
Orain
scowled. "What I may have done is not to the point; the boy's in my
charge, and so is Lyondri's son here, and it's not fit a Hastur should go
without service. You stay here, Rumal, and look after the lad, see him into his
bed. You'll get a bath to yourself then."
"Stand
up to him for your rights, lad, you don't have to be treated like a
child," said one of the men, who had drunk more than enough wine,
"You're no servant to the Hastur-pup!"
Romilly
said, relieved at this solution, "Indeed I would as soon stay here; I am a
cristoforo and have no taste for such adventures."
"Oh
ah, a cristoforo bound to the Creed of Chastity," jeered Alaric,
"Well, I did my best for ye, boy, if ye'd rather be a little boy hiding
behind the skirts of the holy Bearer of Burdens, that's for you to say! Come
along! Who's for the bath-house, men?"
One
after another, they rose and went, not too steadily, into the street. Romilly
took Caryl upstairs and sent for the promised bath; when the serving-woman
brought it, she would have bathed him as she had done with Rael, but he turned
on her, his face pink.
"I
won't say anything before the men," he said, "but I know you're a
girl, and I'm too big for my mother or my sister, even, to wash me, and I can
bathe myself! Go away, mistress Romilly. I'll have them send you a bath too,
shall I? Lord Orain is away and doubtless hell be at the baths half the night,
he may be looking for a woman too - see, I'm old enough to know about such
things. So you can bathe in his room and go to your own bed afterward."
Romilly
could not help but laugh. She said "As you will, my lord."
"And
don't make fun of me!"
"I
wouldn't dream of it," Romilly said, trying to keep her face straight.
"But Lord Orain charged me with the task of seeing that you wash your feet
well."
"I
have been bathing myself in the monastery for more than a year," said
Caryl, exasperated, "Go away, mistress Romilly, before my bath water gets
cold, and I will have them send a bathtub to you in Lord Orain's room."
Romilly
was grateful for this solution - indeed she had longed for a hot bath, and went
to the stable for her saddlebags while the bath - women were hauling the wooden
tub into the room and pouring out steaming water into it, laying out great
fluffy towels and a wooden cask of soapweed. One of the bath-women lingered,
widening her eyes at Romilly and saying in a suggestive voice, "Would you
like me to stay and help you, young sir? Indeed, it would be a pleasure to wash
your feet and scrub your back, and for half a silver bit I will stay as long as
you like, and share your bed as well."
Romilly
had to struggle again to hide a smile; this was embarrassing. Was she such a
handsome young man as that, or was the woman only looking for her silver bit?
She shook her head and said, "I am tired with riding; I want to wash and
sleep."
"Shall
I send you a masseur, then, young sir?"
"No,
no, nothing - go away and leave me to bathe," Romilly said sternly, but
she gave the woman a small coin and thanked her for her trouble. "You can
come and take the tub away in an hour."
Assured
at last of privacy, she stripped and climbed into the tub, scrubbing herself
vigorously with soapweed, lying back in the hot water with a sigh of luxurious
content. She had last washed herself all over in the old woman's cabin, when
she was pretending she would be married to Rory. At Nevarsin she had washed as
best she could, but had not, of course, dared to use the bath-house in the
monastery, nor had she dared to try and find a woman's bath-house in Nevarsin,
though there must have been some of them, lest she be seen coming from the
place.
What
a splendid thing a bath was! She lay in the hot water, soaking and enjoying it,
till the water finally cooled and she got out, dried her hair carefully, and
put on her cleanest underclothing. She looked longingly at Orain's bed, spread
up for him by the maids; no doubt he was finished at the bathhouse and had
found a woman somewhere for the night, and this good bed would be wasted, while
he slept in some street-woman's bed. She realized that she felt a twinge of
jealousy - she remembered her dream, where Orain had caressed her, sleeping,
and she had been happy that he should touch her - did she really envy the
unknown woman in whose bed he was spending this night?
Well,
she should ring for the bath-woman to take away the tub and go to her own
quarters in the stables; there was plenty of hay to keep her warm, and
blankets, and she could even command hot bricks and more blankets if she
wished. She pulled on her breeches and rang for the bath-woman, and went,
knocking softly at Caryl's door. He was in bed and already half asleep, but he
sat up in bed to hug her as if she were his own sister, wishing her a good
night, and slid down, asleep already in the big bed. It was a big bed, big
enough for three or four, she was tempted to lie down and sleep beside the
child, they had slept curled up together often enough on the road. But she
realized that he would be embarrassed if he found her there in the morning - he
was just old enough to be aware that she was a woman. It would not matter so
much, she thought, yawning and reluctant to go out to the stable, if she lay
down to sleep a little - no doubt Orain would not return home before morning,
and if he did he would be so drunk that he would not notice her there, nor care
whether she was a boy or a dog; he would never know she was a woman, if he had
travelled with her all this time and not known, and he had none of the
inconvenient laran which had betrayed her to Caryl and perhaps to Dom
Carlo.
She
would sleep here a little, at least - she could wake and be away to the stable
if she heard Orain coming up the stairs. The bed looked so good, after all this
time on the road. The bath-woman, when she took the tub away, had warmed the
sheets with a pan of hot coals, and they smelled fresh and inviting. Romilly
hesitated no more, but lay down in her tunic and drawers, pulling up the covers
and drowsing. At the edge of her mind, wary, she thought, I must not entirely
go to sleep, I should go out to the stable, Orain may be coming back before I
expect him ... and then she was asleep.
The
door creaked, and Orain, stepping quietly, was in the room, throwing off his
clothes and yawning, sitting on the edge of the bed. Romilly sat up, shocked
and startled that she had slept so long. He grinned at her.
"Ah,
stay where you are, boy," he said drowsily, "Bed's big enough for
two." He had been drinking, she could tell, but he was not drunk. He
reached out and ran his hand lightly across her hair. "So soft, you must
ha' had a nice bath too."
"I
will go now-"
He
shook his head. "The outside door o' the inn's locked; ye couldna' get
out." His voice was again overlaid with the soft low-country accent.
"Stay here, lad - I'm half asleep a'ready." He drew off his boots and
outer garments; Romilly, rolling to the far edge of the bed, tucked her head
down under the blanket and fell asleep.
She
never knew what waked her, but she thought it was a cry: Orain tossed, turned
over, cried out, and sat bolt upright. "Ah - Carolin, they will have
ye'-" he cried, staring into the empty room, his voice so full of terror
that Romilly knew he dreamed. She tugged at his arm and said, "Wake up!
It's only a nightmare!"
"Ah-"
he drew a long breath and sanity came into his face again. "I saw my
brother, my friend, in the hands of Rakhal, Zandru send him scorpion
whips-" His face was still troubled, but he lay back down, and Romilly,
curling her feet up, sought to go back to sleep. After a time, however, she was
aware that Orain's arm was around her, that he was gently drawing her to him.
She
pulled away, frightened. He said in his gentlest voice, "Ah, lad, don't
you know how I feel? You're so like Carolin, when we were boys together - red
hair - and so timid and shy, but so brave when there's need."
Romilly
thought, shaking, but there's no need for this, I am a woman-he does
not know, but it's all right, I will tell him it's all right- She was
trembling with embarrassment, shy, but still the very real warmth and kindness
she felt for Orain made her feel, this was not at all as it had been when Dom
Garris sought to paw her, nor when Rory sought to force himself on her.
She
sat upright and put her arms around him, laying her head on his shoulder.
"It's all right, all right, Orain," she whispered, close to his
cheek, "You knew all the time, didn't you? I-I-" she couldn't say it
She took his hand and put it inside her tunic, against her breast.
He
sat upright, jerking away, his face flaming.
"Hell's
fire," he whispered, in incredulous embarrassment, shock, and, Romilly
realized with horror, real dismay, "Hell's fire, you're a girl!" And
he actually leaped out of bed and stood staring at her, pulling his nightshirt
together over his body with shock and modestly looking away from her.
"Mistress
- damisela, a thousand pardons, I most humbly beg your pardon - never,
never, I did not guess for a moment - Avarra's mercy, mistress, I cannot
believe it. Who are you?"
She
said, shaking with cold and her whole body trembling with the shock of the
rejection, "Romilly MacAran," and burst into tears.
"Oh,
blessed Gods," Orain implored, bending to wrap the blanket round her,
"I - don't cry, someone will hear you, I wouldna' hurt you for the world,
lady-" and he gulped and stood back, shaking his head in dismay.
"What
an unholy mess this is, and what a damnable fool I've made of myself! Forgive
me, lady, I wouldn't lay a finger on you-" Romilly cried harder than ever,
and he bent, urgently hushing her.
"Ah,
don't cry, little lady, there's nothing to cry about - look, hush, we're
friends anyway, aren't we, I don't care if ye're a girl, you must have some
reasons-" and as she sought to stifle her weeping, he wiped her nose
gently with the sheet and sat down beside her. "There now, there now,
that's a good girl, don't cry - sweeting, I think you'd better tell me all
about it, hadn't you?"
Snow
had fallen toward morning, and the streets of Caer Bonn were piled high with
trackless white. All the same, there was a softness in the air which told the
country-bred Romilly that the spring thaw was nearing and this was the last
blow of the winter.
Father
always said that only the mad or the desperate travel in the winter; now I have
crossed the worst of the Hellers after Midwinter-night. Why am I thinking of
that now?
Orain
patted her shoulder with the same clumsy deference he had shown since last
night. It made her want to weep for the old, lost, easy companionship. She
should have known he would not have liked her half so well as a woman; it was,
when she really took thought, written clear all over him and must have been
evident to everyone in the company except herself.
"Here
we are, damisela,n he said, and Romilly snapped, raw-edged,
"My name is Romilly, Orain, and I have not changed so much as all that."
His
eyes, she thought, looked like a dog's that had been kicked. He said,
"Here is the hostel of the Sisterhood," and went up the steps,
leaving her to follow.
Once
he knew - certainly he could not allow her to face the dangers of life in camp
and trail. He would always be aware, now, of her unwelcome womanhood. This was,
after all, the best answer.
A
hard-faced woman, with heavy hands which would have seemed more appropriate
holding a hayfork, welcomed them to the front hall - or, Romilly thought,
welcome was not quite the right word, but she did let them in. Orain said,
"Kindly inform Mistress Jandria that her cousin has come to visit
her." His voice was again the impeccably courteous, well-bred voice of the
courtier, with the last trace of the soft country accent carefully hidden. The
woman stared suspiciously, and said, "Sit there," pointing to a bench
as if they were a pair of street urchins come a-begging. She went away down the
hall and Romilly heard women's voices at the far end of the building. Somewhere
there was the noise of a hammer on an anvil - at least that was what it sounded
like - and the small, familiar, friendly, chink-chink-chinking sound made
Romilly a little less rigid with apprehension. All the doors along the hallway
were closed, but as they sat there, two young women, wearing crimson tunics,
their hair all tucked under red caps, went through the hallway arm in arm. They
were obviously not what Romilly's stepmother would have called ladies; one of
them had great red hands like a milkmaid's, and were wearing loose long
trousers and boots.
At
the back of the hall another woman appeared. She was slender and pretty, and,
Romilly thought, about Orain's own age, forty or more, though her dark,
close-cropped hair had faded, with streaks of grey at the temples.
"Well,
kinsman," she said, "What's that ye've got wi' ye'?" She had the
country accent Orain had learned to conceal "And what brings ye' into this
country in winter? King's business, I hear - and how's himself?" She came
and gave him a quick, breezy embrace and a haphazard kiss somewhere on the side
of his face.
"The
king is well, Aldones be praised," said Orain quietly, "and with the
Aldarans at the moment. But I have two charges for you, Janni."
'Two?"
Her salt-and-pepper eyebrows went up in a comical grimace. "First of all,
what's this, boy or girl or hasn't he or she made up its mind?"
Romilly,
with a scalding blush, bent her eyes on the floor; the woman's good-natured
mockery seemed to take her in and sort her out and discard her as useless.
"Her
name is Romilly MacAran," said Orain quietly, "Don't mock her, Janni,
she travelled with us through the worst climate and country in the Hellers and
not one of us, not even myself, knew her for a girl. She did her full share and
cared for our sentry-birds, which I'd never known a woman could do. She brought
them through alive and in good condition, and the horses too. I thought she was
a capable lad, but it's even more extraordinary than I thought. So I brought
her to you."
"Having
no use for her, once ye' found she wasna' one of your lads," said Jandria,
with an ironical grin. Then she looked straight at Romilly.
"Can't
you speak for yourself, girl? What led you into the mountains in men's clothes?
If it was the better to seek a man, take yerself off again, for we want no
girls among us to give us the name of harlots in disguise! We travel with the
armies, but we are not camp-followers, be that understood! Why did ye' leave
home?"
Her
sharp tone put Romilly on the defensive. She said, "I left my home because
my father took the hawk I trained myself, with my own hands, and gave it to my
brother; and I thought that not fair. Also, I had no will to marry the Heir to
Scathfell, who would have wanted me to sit indoors and embroider cushions and
bear his ugly children!"
Jandria's
eyes were sharp on her. "Afraid of the marriage-bed and childbirth,
hey?"
"No,
that's not it," Romilly said sharply, "but I like horses and hounds
and hawks and if I should ever marry-" she did not know she was going to
say this until she said it, "I would want to marry a man who wants me as I
am, not a pretty painted doll he can call wife without ever thinking what or
who she is! And I would rather marry a man who does not think his manhood
threatened if his wife can sit in a saddle and carry a hawk! But I would rather
not marry at all, or not now. I want to travel, and to see the world, and to do
things-" she broke off. She was saying this very badly. She sounded like a
discontented and disobedient daughter, no more. Well, so she was and no
otherwise, and if Mistress Jandria did not like her, well, she had lived as a
man before in secret and could do so again if she must! "I am not asking
charity of you, Mistress Jandria, and Orain knows me better than that!"
Jandria
laughed. "My name is Janni, Romilly. And Orain does not know anything
about women."
"He
liked me well enough till he found out I was a woman," Romilly said,
prickled again by that thought, and Janni laughed again and said, "That is
what I mean. Now that he knows, he will never see anything about you except
that you should be wearing skirts and sending out signs, so that he will not be
led unwitting into trusting you. He let down his guard before you, I doubt not,
thinking it safe, and now he will never forgive you for it - isn't that
it?"
"You
are too hard on me, Janni," said Orain uneasily, "But sure you must
see that Mistress MacAran cannot travel with men and live rough in a camp with
hard men such as I command!"
"In
spite of the fact that she has done so for a span of ten-days," said
Jandria, with that flicker of a wry grin. "Well, you are right, this is
the place for her, and if she is good with horses and birds, we can always make
use of her, if she is willing to live by our rule."
"How
do I know until I know what that is?" demanded Romilly, and Jandria
laughed. "I like her, cousin. You can go and leave her to me, I won't bite
her. But wait, you said you had another charge for me."
"Yes,"
Orain said, "Lyondri Hastur's son; Carolin. He was a student in Nevarsin
monastery, and he came into our hands as a hostage - never mind how, it's
better if you don't know. But I have given my word I will have the boy sent
back to Thendara under truce-flag when the passes are open, and unharmed. I
cannot go myself."
"No,"
Jandria said, "You certainly cannot; for all your head's stuffed with old
rubbish and ugly as sin, it adorns your shoulders better than it would adorn a
pike outside Lyondri's den! Yes, we'll take the lad to Thendara for you; I may
even go myself. Lyondri has certainly not seen my face since we danced together
at children's parties and would not remember it without long curls and bows in
my hair." She chuckled as at a secret joke. "How old is young Carolin
now? He must be eight or nine."
'Twelve,
I think," Orain said, "and a nice child; it's pity he got himself
mixed up in this, but he saved my neck and my men's and Carolin has cause to be
grateful to his godson, so guard him well, Janni."
She
nodded. "I'll take him south as soon as the passes are open, then; you can
send him to me here." She chuckled and gave Orain another of her quick,
offhand hugs. "And now you must go, kinsman - what of my reputation, if it
is known I entertain a man here? Worse, what of yours, if it is found out you
can speak civilly to a woman?"
"Oh,
come, Janni-" protested Orain, but he rose to take his leave. He looked,
embarrassed, at Romilly, and stuck out his hand. "I wish you well, damisela."
This
time she did not bother to correct him. If he could not see that she was the
same whether in boy's clothes or the name of a Great House, well, so much the
worse for him; he did not sound like her friend Orain at all, and she could
have cried again, but she did not, for Janni was staring appraisingly at her.
After
the door closed behind Orain, she said, "Well, and what happened? Did he
try and lure ye' to bed, and recoil in unholy horror when he found out you were
a woman?"
"That's
not quite how it happened," said Romilly, moved to defend Orain without
knowing why, "It was - he had been kind to me, and I thought he knew I was
a woman, and wanted me so - I am not a wanton," she defended herself,
"Once I came near to killing a man who would have had me against my
will." She shivered and shut her eyes; she had thought she was free of the
nagging horror of Rory's attempted rape, but she was not. "But Orain was
good, and I-I liked him well, and I only thought to be kind to him, if it was
what he wanted so much."
Janni
smiled, and Romilly wondered, defensively, what was funny. But the older woman
only said, quite kindly, "And you are a maiden still, I doubt not."
"I
am not ashamed of it," Romilly flared.
"How
prickly you are! Well, will you live by our rule?"
"If
you will tell me what it is, I will answer you," she said, and Janni
smiled again.
"Well
then; will you be sister to all of us, whatever rank we may bear? For we leave
rank behind us when we come into the Sisterhood; you will not be My Lady or
damisela here, and no one will know or care that you were born in a
Great House. You must do your share of whatever work falls to us, and never ask
quarter or special consideration because you are a woman. And if you have love
affairs with men, you must conduct them in decent privacy, so that no man can
ever call the Sisterhood a company of camp-followers. Most of us are sworn to
live celibate while we follow the armies and the sword, though we do not force
it upon anyone."
It
sounded exactly like what Romilly would have wished for. She said so.
"But
will you swear it?"
"Gladly,"
Romilly said.
"You
must swear, as well, that your sword will always be ready to defend any of your
sisters, in peace or war, should any man lay a hand on one who does not wish
for it," said Jandria.
"I
would be glad to swear to that," Romilly said, "but I do not think my
sword would be any good to them; I know nothing about swordplay."
Now
Janni smiled and hugged her. She said, "We will teach you that. Come,
bring your things into the inner room. Did that dolt Orain remember to give you
breakfast, or was he in so much of a hurry to hustle you away from the camp
that he forgot that women get hungry too?"
Romilly,
still sore with rejection and pain, did not want to join Janni in making fun of
Orain, but it sounded so much like what had actually happened, that she could
not help but laugh. "I am hungry, yes," she confessed, and Janni
hoisted one of her bundles.
"I
have a horse in the stable of the inn," Romilly said, and Janni nodded.
"I will send one of the sisters for it, in your name. Come into the
kitchen - breakfast is long over, but we can always find some bread and honey -
and then we will pierce your ears so that you can wear our sign and other women
will know that you are one of us. Tonight you may take the oath. Only for a
year at first," she warned, "and then, if you like the life, for
three; and when you have lived among us for four years, you may decide if you
wish to pledge for a lifetime, or if you wish to go on your own, or to return
to your family and marry."
"Never!"
Romilly said fervently.
"Well,
we will fly that hawk when her pinions are grown," said Janni, "but
for now you may take the sword with us, and if you have some skill with hawks
and horses, we will welcome you all the more; our old horse-trainer, Mhari,
died of the lung-fever this winter, and the women who worked with her are all
away with the armies to the south. None of the girls in the hostel now are even
much good at riding, let alone for breaking them to the saddle - can you do
that? We have four colts ready to be saddle-broken, and more at our big hostel
near Thendara."
"I
was raised to it at Falconsward," Romilly said, but Janni raised a hand in
caution.
"None
of us have any family or past beyond our names; I warned you, you are not my
lady or Mistress MacAran among us," she said, and, rebuked,
Romilly was silent.
Yet,
whatever I call myself, I am Romilly MacAran of Falconsward. I was not boasting
of my lineage, only telling her how I came to be so trained - I would hardly have
learned it at some croft in the hills! But if she chooses to think I was boasting,
nothing I would say can change it, and she must think what she likes. Romilly
felt as if she were old and cynical and worldly-wise, having arrived at this
much wisdom. She followed Janni silently along the corridor, and through
the large double doors at the end of the hall.
Her
lineage too must be good, for all her refusal to speak of it, since she spoke
of dancing with Lyondri Hastur at children's parties. Maybe she too has been
warned against speaking of her past.
It
was a long and busy day. She ate bread and cheese and honey in the kitchen, was
sent to practice some form of unarmed combat among a group of young girls, all
of whom were more adept than she - she did not understand a single movement of
the ones they were trying to teach her, and felt clumsy and foolish - and later
in the day, a hard-faced woman in her sixties gave her a wooden sword like the
ones she and Ruyven had played with when they were children, and tried to teach
her the basic defensive moves, but she felt completely hopeless at that too.
There were so many women - or it seemed like many, though she found out at
dinner - time that there were only nineteen women in the hostel-that she could
not even remember their names. Later she was allowed to make friends with the
horses in the stable, where her own was brought - she found it easier to
remember their names - and there were a few chervines too. Then
Janni pierced her ears and put small gold rings into them. "Only while
they are healing," she said, "Later you shall have the ensign of the
Sisterhood, but for now you must keep twisting the rings so that the holes will
heal cleanly, and bathe them three times a day in hot water and
thornleaf." Then, in front of the assembled women, only a blur of faces to
Romilly's tired eyes, she prompted her through the oath to the Sisterhood, and
it was done. Until spring-thaw of the next year, Romilly was oath-bound to the
Sisterhood of the Sword. That finished, they crowded around and asked her
questions, which she was hesitant to answer in the face of Janni's prohibition
that she must not speak of her past life, and then they found her a
much-patched, much-worn nightgown, and sent her to sleep in a long room lined
with half-a-dozen beds, tenanted by girls her own age or younger. It seemed
that she had hardly fallen asleep before she was wakened by the sound of a
bell, and she was washing her face and dressing in a room full of half a dozen
young women, all running around half-dressed and squabbling over the
washbasins.
For
the first few days it seemed to Romilly that she was always gasping behind a
group of girls who were running somewhere just ahead of her and she must
somehow keep up. The lessons in unarmed combat frightened and confused her -
and the woman who taught them was so harsh and angry of voice. Although, one
afternoon, when she had been sent to help in the kitchens, where she felt more
at home, the woman, whose name was Merinna, came in and asked her for some tea,
and when Romilly brought it, chatted with her so amiably that Romilly began to
suspect that her harshness in class was assumed to force them all to pay strict
attention to what they were doing. The lessons in swordplay were easier, for
she had sometimes been allowed to watch Ruyven's lessons, and had sometimes
practiced with him - when she had been eight or nine, her father had been
amused by her handling of a sword, though later, when she was older, he forbade
her even to watch, or to touch even a toy sword. Gradually those early lessons
came back to her, and she began to feel fairly confident at least with the
wooden batons which served in practice.
Among
the horses in the stable, she felt completely at home. This work she had done
since she was old enough to rub soapweed on a saddle and polish it with oil.
She
was hard at work polishing saddle-tack one day when she heard a noise in the
street outside, and one of the youngest girls in the house ran in to call her.
"Oh,
Romy, come - the king's army is passing by at the end of the street, and
Merinna has given us leave to run out and see! Carolin will march southward as
soon as the passes are open-"
Romilly
dropped the oily rag and ran out into the street with Lillia and Marga. They
crowded into an angle of the doors and watched; the street was filled with
horses and men, and people were lining the streets and cheering for Carolin.
"Look,
look, there he goes under the fir-tree banner, blue and silver - Carolin, the
king," called someone, and Romilly craned her neck to see, but she could
catch only a glimpse of a tall man, with a strong ascetic profile not unlike
Carlo's, in the instant before his cloak blew up and she could see only his
russet hair flying.
"Who
is the tall skinny man riding behind him?" someone asked, and Romilly, who
would have known him even in darkness with his face hidden, said, "His
name is Orain, and I have heard he is one of Carolin's foster-brothers."
"I
know him," said one of the girls, "he came to visit Jandria, someone
told me that he was one of her kin, though I don't know whether to believe it
or not."
Romilly
watched the horses, men, banners moving by, with detachment and regret. She
might still have been riding with them, had she gone to her own bed in the
stable that night, still at Orain's side, still treated as his friend and
equal. But it was too late for that. She turned about sharply and said,
"Let's go inside and finish our work - I have seen horses enough before
this and a king is a man like other men, Hastur or no."
The
armies, she heard, were being moved to a great plain outside Caer Donn. A few
days later, she was summoned to Janni, and when she went out into the main room
where she had met Janni first, she saw Orain again, with Caryl at his side.
Orain
greeted her with some constraint, but Caryl rushed at once into her arms.
"Oh,
Romilly, I have missed you! Why, you are dressed like a woman, that is good,
now I will not have to remember to speak to you as if you were a boy," he
said.
"Dom
Carolin,"
Janni said formally, and he turned his attention respectfully to her.
"I
listen, mestra," he said, using the politest of terms for a female
inferior in rank.
"The
Lord Orain has commissioned me to escort you to Hali and return you, under
safe-conduct, to your father," she said, "and there are two choices
before you; I am prepared to treat you as a man of honor, and to ask your
preference, instead of making the decision for you. Are you old enough to
listen to me seriously, and to answer sensibly and keep your word?"
His
small face was as serious as when he had sung in the chapel at Nevarsin.
"I am, mestra Jandria."
"Well,
then, it is simple. Shall I treat you as a prisoner and have you guarded - and,
make no mistake, we are women, but we shall not be careless with you and allow
you to escape."
"I
know that mestra," he said politely, "I had a governess once
who was much harsher with me than any of the masters and brothers in the
monastery."
"Well,
then," said Janni, "Will you be our prisoner, or will you give us
your parole, not to attempt to escape our hands, so that you may ride beside us
and take such pleasure in the trip as you can? It will not be an easy journey,
and it will be simpler if we can allow you to ride without watching you every
moment of the night and day, nor have you tied up at night. I will have no
hesitation in taking the word of a Hastur, if you give me your parole of
honor."
He
did not answer at once. He asked, "Are you my father's enemies?"
"Not
particularly," said Janni, "Of your father, my lad, I know only what
I have been told; but I am Rakhal's enemy, and your father is his friend, so I
trust him not. But then, I have not asked for his word of honor, either. I am
dealing with you, Dom Carolin, not with him."
He
said, "Is Romilly coming with us?"
"I
thought to put you in her charge, since she has travelled with you before, if
that is agreeable to you, young sir."
He
smiled then, and said, "I would like to travel with Romilly. And I will
gladly give you my word of honor not to try and escape. I could not travel
through the Hellers alone, whatever happened. I promise you, then, mestra, to
be at your orders until I am returned to my father's hands."
"Very
well," Janni said, "I accept your word, as you may accept mine, that
I will treat you as I would one of my own sisters, and offer you no indignity.
Will you give me your hand on it, Dom Carolin?"
He
held out his hand and took hers. Then he said, "You need not call me Dom
Carolin, mestra. That is the name of the former king, who is my
father's enemy, though he is not really mine. I am called Caryl."
"Then
you shall call me Janni, Caryl," she said, smiling at last, "and you
shall be our guest, not our prisoner. Romy, take him to the guest-room and make
him comfortable. Orain-" she raised her eyes to her cousin, "we shall
set out tomorrow, if the weather allows."
"I
thank you, cousin. And you," he added, turning to Romilly, bending
ceremoniously - like a courtier, she thought - over her hand. She thought,
heart-sore, that a few days before, he would have taken leave of her with a
rough hug. She hoped, suddenly and passionately, that she and Orain would never
meet again.
They
rode out of Caer Donn very early in the morning, and had been more than an hour
on the road before the red sun rose, huge and dripping with mist. Caryl rode on
the pony Jandria had found for him, side by side with Romilly's horse; behind
them were six women of the Sisterhood, leading, on long pack-reins, a dozen
good horses which, they said, were for the armies in the South. They did not
say which armies, and Romilly carefully did not ask.
It
was good to be riding free again in the sunlight, without the cold and storms
of her earlier journey through the Hellers. They stopped at noon to feed the
horses and rest them for a little, then rode on. In late afternoon they made
camp, and at Jandria's command, one of the pack-horses was offloaded, and as
two women sat about making fire, Janni called to Romilly.
"Come
here and help me, Romy, with this tent."
Romilly
had no notion of how to set up a tent, but she obediently hauled ropes and
drove in pegs where Janni ordered, and within a minute or two a large and roomy
shelter of waterproof canvas was ready for them. Blanket-rolls were spread out
within it, and under its hanging flap the evening drizzle could not dampen
their fire or their supper. Very soon porridge was cooked, hot and savory with
sliced onions frizzled in the fat of a roast fowl, and the women sat
cross-legged on their bed-rolls, eating their food out of wooden bowls which
had come out of the same pack.
"This
is nice," said Caryl admiringly, "Men never make a camp as comfortable
as this."
Janni
chuckled. "There is no reason they should not," she said, "They
are as good at cookery and hunting as we women are, and they would tell you so
if you asked them; but maybe they think it unmanly to seek for comfort in the
fields, and enjoy hard living because it makes them feel tough and strong. As
for me, I have no love for sleeping in the rain, and I am not ashamed to admit
I like to be comfortable."
"So
do I," said Caryl, gnawing on the ends of his bone, This is good, Janni.
Thank you."
One
of the women, not one that Romilly knew well, whose name was Lauria, took a
small hand-harp from her pack and began to play a tune. They sat around the
fire, singing mountain ballards, for half an hour or so. Caryl listened,
bright-eyed, but after a time he fell back, drowsily, half asleep.
Janni
signed to Romilly, and said, 'Take off his boots, will you, and get him into
his sleeping-roll?"
"Of
course," Romilly said, and began to pull off Caryl's boots. He sat up and
protested sleepily. Lauria said, grumbling, "Let the boy wait on himself,
Romy! Janni, why should one of our sisters wait on this young man, who is our
prisoner? We're no subjects or servants to the Hastur-kind!"
"He's
only a boy," Janni said, placatingly, "and we're being well-paid to
care for him."
"Still,
the Sisterhood are no slaves to one of these men," grumbled Lauria,
"I wonder at you, Janni, that for money you'd take a commission to escort
some boy-child through the mountains."
"Boy
child or girl, the boy cannot travel alone," said Janni, "and needs
not be drawn into the quarrels of his elders! And Romilly is willing to care
for him."
"I
doubt not," said one of the strange women with a sneer, "One of those
women who still think her duty in life is to wait on some man, hand and foot
-she would disgrace her earring-"
"I
look after him because he is sleepy, too sleepy to wait on himself,"
Romilly flared, "and because he is about the age of my own little
brothers! Didn't you look after your own little brother if you had one, or did you
think yourself too good to look after anyone but yourself? If the Holy Bearer
of Burdens could carry the World-child on his shoulders across the River of
Life, shall I not care for any child who comes into my hands?"
"Oh,
a cristoforo" sneered one of the younger women, "Do you recite
the Creed of Chastity before you sleep, then, Romy?"
Romilly
started to fling back an angry retort - she made no rude remarks about the Gods
of others, they could keep their mouths off her own religion - but then she saw
Janni's frown and said, mildly, "I can think of worse things I might be
saying." She turned her back on the angry girl, and went to spread out
Caryl's blanket beside her own.
"Are
we to have a male in our tent to sleep with us?" the girl who had
protested asked angrily, "This is a tent for women."
"Oh,
hush, Mhari, the boy can hardly sleep out in the rain with the horses,"
Janni said crossly. "The rule of the Sisterhood is intended for common
sense, and the boy's no more than a baby! Are you fool enough to think he'll
come into our blankets and ravish one of us?"
"It
is a matter of principle," said Mhari sullenly, "Because the brat is
a Hastur, are we to let him intrude into a place of the Sisterhood? I would
feel the same if he were no more than two years old!"
"Then
I hope you will never have the bad taste to bear a son instead of a
daughter," said Janni lightly, "or will you, out of principle, refuse
to feed a male at your breast? Go to
sleep,
Mhari; the child can sleep between me and Romilly, and we'll guard your
virtue."
Caryl
opened his mouth; Romilly poked him in the ribs, and he subsided without
speaking. She saw that he was trying not to giggle aloud. It seemed a little
silly to her, but she supposed they had their rules and principles, just as the
brothers of Nevarsin did. She lay down beside Caryl, and slept.
She
found herself dreaming, clear vivid dreams, as if she flew, linked in mind with
Preciosa, over the green, rolling hills of her own country. She woke with a
lump in her throat, remembering the view of the long valley from the cliffs of
Falconsward. Would she ever see her home again, or her sister or brothers? What
had they to do with a wandering swordswoman? Her ears ached where they had been
pierced. She missed Orain and Carlo and even the rough-tongued Alaric. As yet
she had made no friends among these strange women. But she was pledged to them
for a year, at least, and there was no help for it. She listened to Caryl,
sleeping quietly at her side; to the breathing of the strange women in the tent.
She had never felt so alone in her life, not even when she fled from Rory's
mountain cabin.
Five
days they rode southward, and came to the Kadarin river, traditional barrier
between the lowland Domains and the foothills of the Hellers. It seemed to Romilly
that they should make more of it, going into strange country, but to Janni it
was just another river to be forded, and they crossed with dispatch, at a
low-water ford where they hardly wetted their horses' knees. The hills here
were not so high, and soon they came to a broad rolling plateau. Caryl was
beaming; all the trip he had been in good spirits, and now he was ebullient.
She supposed he was glad to be coming home, and glad of the long holiday that
had interrupted his studies.
Yet
Romilly felt uneasy without mountains surrounding her; it seemed as if she rode
on the flat land, under the high skies, like some small, exposed thing,
fearfully surveying the skies here as if some bird of prey would swoop down on
them and carry her away with strong talons. She knew it was ridiculous, but she
kept uneasily surveying the high pale skies, filled with rolling violet cloud,
as if something there was watching her. At last Caryl, riding at her side,
picked it up with his sensitive laran.
"What's
the matter, Romy? Why do you keep looking at the sky that way?"
She
really had no answer for him and tried to pass it off.
"I
am uneasy without mountains around me - I have always lived in the hills and I
feel bare and exposed here. . . ." she tried hard to laugh, looking up
into the unfamiliar skies.
High,
high, a speck hovered, at the edge of her vision. Trying to ignore it, she bent
her eyes on the rough-coated grass, only lightly frosted, at her feet.
"What
sort of hawking is there on these plains, do you know?"
"My
father and his friends keep verrin hawks," he said, "Do you
know anything of them? Do they have them across the river, or only those great
ugly sentry-birds?"
"I
fly a verrin hawk," Romilly said, "Once I trained one-"
and she looked uneasily around again, her skin prickling.
"Did
you? A girl?"
The
innocent question nibbed an old wound; she snapped at him, "Why should I
not? You sound like my father, as if because I was born to wear skirts about my
knees I had neither sense nor spirit!"
"I
did not mean to offend you, Romy," said Caryl, with a gentleness which
made him seem much older than his years. "It is only that I have not known
many girls, except my own sister, and she would be terrified to touch a hawk.
But if you can handle a sentry-bird, and calm a banshee as we did together,
then surely it would take no more trouble to train a hawk." He turned his
face to her, watching with his head tilted a little to one side, something like
a bird himself with his bright inquisitive eyes. "What are you afraid of,
Romy?"
"Not
afraid," she said, uneasy under his gaze, then, "Only - as if someone
was watching me," she blurted out, not knowing she was going to say it
until she heard her own words. Realizing how foolish they were, she said
defensively, "Perhaps that is only because -the land is so flat - I feel -
all exposed-" and again her eyes sought the sky, dazzled by the sun,
where, wavering at the very edge between seen and unseen, a speck still hovered
... I am being watched!
"It
is not uncommon, that," said Janni, coming up beside them, "When
first I rode into the mountains, I felt as if they were closing in, as if,
while I slept, they might move in and jostle my very skirts. Now I am used to
them, but still, when I ride down into the plains, I feel as if a great weight
has been lifted and I can breathe more easily. I think that, more than
all kings or customs, divides hillman from lowlander; and I have heard Orain
say as much, that whenever he was away from his mountains, he felt naked and
afraid under the open sky...."
She
could almost hear him say it, in that gentle, half-teasing tone. She still
missed Orain, his easy companionship, it seemed she was like a fish in a tree
among all these woman! Their very voices grated on her, and it seemed to her
sometimes that in spite of their skill with sword and horsemanship, they were
far too much like her sister Mallina, silly and narrow-minded. Only Janni
seemed free of the pettiness she had always found in women. But was that only
because Janni was like Orain, and so less like a woman? She did not know and
felt too sore to think much about it. .
Yet,
she thought with annoyance at herself, forty days ago I was thinking that I
liked the company of men even less than that of women. Am I content nowhere?
Why can't I be satisfied with what I have? If I am going to be always
discontented, I might as well have stayed home and married Dom Garris
and been discontented in comfort among familiar things!
She
felt the gentle, inquiring touch of the boy's laran on her mind; as if
he asked her what was the matter. She sighed and smiled at him, and asked,
"Shall we race across this meadow? Our horses are well-matched, so it win
only be a matter of which is the better horseman," and they set off side
by side, so rapidly that it took all her attention not to tumble off headlong,
and she had to stop thinking about what troubled her. She reached the appointed
goal a full length ahead of him, but Janni, coming up more slowly, scolded them
both impartially - they did not know the terrain, they might have lamed their
horses on some unseen rock or small animal's burrow in the grass!
But
that night, as they were making camp - the days were lengthening now
perceptibly, it was still light when they had eaten supper - she had again the
sharp sense that she was being watched, as if she were some small animal, prey
huddling before the sharp eyes of a hovering hawk - she scanned the darkening
sky, but could see nothing. Then, incredulous, a familiar sense of wildness,
flight, contact, rapport - hardly knowing what she did, Romilly thrust up her
hand, felt the familiar rush of wings, the grip of talons.
"Preciosa!"
she sobbed aloud, feeling the claws close on her bare wrist. She opened her
eyes to look at the bluish-black sheen of wings, the sharp eyes, and the old
sense of closeness enveloped her. Against all hope, beyond belief, Preciosa had
somehow marked her when she came out of the glacier country, had trailed her
even through these unfamiliar hills and plains.
She
was in good condition, sleek and trim and well-fed. Of course. There was better
hunting on these plains than even in the Kilghard Hills where she was fledged.
Wordless satisfaction flowed between them for a long space as she sat
motionless, the hawk on her hand.
"Well,
will you look at that!" the voice of one of the girls broke through the
mutual absorption, "Where did the hawk come from? She is bewitched!"
Romilly
drew a long breath. She said to Caryl, who was watching silently, rapt,
"It is my hawk. Somehow she has followed me here, so far from home, so
far-" and broke off because she was crying too hard to speak. Troubled by
the emotion, Preciosa bated, trying to balance on Romilly's fist; flapped her
wings and flew to the branches of a nearby tree, where she sat looking down at
them without any sign of fear.
Mhari
demanded, "Is it your own hawk - the one you trained?" and Janni said
in a quiet voice, "You told me your father took her from you, and gave her
to your brother."
With
an effort, Romilly controlled her voice. She said, "I think Darren found
out that Preciosa was not my father's to give." She looked up through her
tears to the tree branch where Preciosa sat, motionless as a painted hawk on a
painted tree, and again the thread of rapport touched her mind. Here, among
strange women in a strange country, with all she had ever known behind her and
past the border of a strange river, as she looked at the hawk and felt the
familiar touch on her mind, she knew that she was no longer alone.
Three
days more they rode, and came into a warm country, green, rolling hills and the
air soft, without the faintest breath of frost. To the end of her life Romilly
remembered that first ride across the Plains of Valeron - for so Caryl told her
they were called - green and fertile, with crops blooming in the field and
trees without even snow-pods for their night-blossoms. Along the roadside,
flowers bloomed, red and blue and silver-golden, and the red sun, warm and huge
in these southern skies, cast purple shadows along the road. The very air
seemed sweet, euphoric.
Caryl
was ecstatic, pointing out landmarks as he rode beside Romilly. "I had not
expected to be home before mid-summer after this! Oh, I am so glad to be coming
home."
"And
your father sent you from this warm and welcoming country into the snows of
Nevarsin? He must indeed be a good cristoforo."
Caryl
shook his head, and in that moment his face looked distant, closed-in, almost
adult. He said quietly, "I serve the Lord of Light, as fits a Hastur
best."
Then
why -
Romilly almost burst out with the question, but she had learned not to speak
any question of his father to the boy. But he picked up the question in her
mind.
"The
cristoforos at Nevarsin are learned men, and good men," he said at
last "Since the Hundred Kingdoms were made, there has been war and chaos
in the lowlands, and such learning as can be gotten is small indeed; my father
wished me to learn in peace, away from the wars and safe from the feuds that
beset the Hastur-kinfolk. He does not share the worship of the Brotherhood, but
respected their religion and the knowledge that they are men of peace."
He
fell silent, and Romilly, respecting that silence - what scenes of war and
pillage had that child seen, far from the sheltering hills which kept men safe
in their own fortressed homes? - rode on, thoughtfully. She had heard tales of
war, far away in her own peaceful mountains. She called to mind the battles by
which this green and peaceful country had been laid waste. It now seemed, to
her hypersensitive consciousness, bestrewn with the black of blood under the
crimson sun, all dark, the very ground crying out with the slaughter of
innocents and the horrors of armies treading the crops into the soil from which
they sprung. She shuddered, and abruptly the whole scene winked out and Romilly
knew she had been sharing the child's consciousness.
Indeed
his father did well to send his son to safety among the cold and untroubled
crags of the City of Snows; a time of rest, a time to heal the wounds of a
child with laran,
sensitive and aware of all the horrors of war. With sudden passionate
homesickness, Romilly was grateful for her childhood of peace and for the
stubbornness that had kept The MacAran his own man, taking no part in the
factions that swept the land with their lust to conquer. What was his
watchword? To their own God Zandru's deepest forges with both their
households.
Oh,
Father, will I ever see you again?
She
looked up at Caryl but he rode silent beside her, unseeing, and she knew he
rode enclosed in his own pain, unable to see hers, or at least blinded with the
effort to block it away from himself. Have I come to this, then, that 1
would turn to a child of twelve, a baby no older than my little brother, for
comfort when I cannot suffer my own lot, which I chose for myself? She rode
among strangers, and wondered for a moment if each of the women around her rode
like this, each closed in with her own weary weight, each bearing her share of
the burdens laid upon mankind. Is this why men call upon the Bearer of
Burdens as if he were not only a great teacher of wisdom, but also a God - that
we may have Gods to bear our burdens because otherwise they are too heavy for
mankind to bear?
She
could not endure the sorrow in Caryl's small face. She at least was a woman
grown and could bear her own burden, but he was a child and should not have to.
She broke in upon him, gently, asking, "Shall I call Preciosa from the sky
to ride with you? I think she is lonely-" and as she whistled to the hawk,
and set her upon Caryl's saddle she was rewarded by seeing the unchildlike
weight disappear from the childish face, so that he was only a boy again,
gleefully watching a hawk fly to his hand.
"When
this war is over, Romy, and the land is at peace again, shall I have you for my
hawkmaster, and will you teach me all about training hawks? Or no, a girl
cannot be a hawkmaster, can you? You will then be hawkmistress to me,
one day?"
She
said gently, "I do not know where any of us will be when this war is over,
Caryl. It would be a pleasure to teach you what I know about hawks. But
remember that much of what I know cannot be taught. You must find it somewhere
within you, your heart and your laran-" and at the edge of her
consciousness she realized that now she felt quite comfortable with that alien
word-"to know the birds and to love them and to be aware of their
ways."
And
she found it easy to believe that this small wise boy, with his sensitive
awareness of men and beasts, the gravity of the monks among whom he had been
reared and the charm of the Hastur-kin, would perhaps one day be king. It
seemed for a moment that she could see the luminous glimmer of a corona about
his reddish curls - and then she shut away the unwanted sight. She was learning
fast, she reflected, to handle the Gift given to her, or to shut it away.
Was
this how her father had learned to survive, outside a Tower, she wondered, by
closing away all the laran he could not use in his work of training
horses? And could she stand to shut away all this new part of herself? Could
she bear to have it - or not to have it, now? It was a terrifying gift
and bore its own penalties. No wonder, now, that there were old tales in the
mountains of men driven mad when their laran came upon them....
And
how could Caryl be a king? His father was no king but sworn liegeman to Dom Rakhal,
and whether Rakhal won this war, or Carolin, Lyondri Hastur was no king. Or
would he prove false to Rakhal as he had been false to Carolin, in the ambition
to form a dynasty of his own blood?
"Romilly-Romy!
Are you asleep riding there?" Caryl's merry voice broke in on her
thoughts. "May I see if Preciosa will fly for me? We should have some
birds for supper - should we not?"
She
smiled at the boy.
"If
she will fly for you, you shall fly her," she agreed, "though I
cannot promise that she will fly for anyone but me. But you must ask Dame
Jandria if we have need of birds for supper; she, not I, is in charge of this
company."
"I
am sorry," Caryl said, unrepentant, the words mere formality, "But it
is hard to remember that she is a noblewoman, and it does not come naturally to
me to remember to ask her, while when I am with you I am always aware that you
are one of the Hastur-kind."
"But
I am not," said Romilly, "and Janni is Lord Orain's own cousin, if
you did not know, so her blood is as good as mine."
Suddenly
Caryl looked scared. "I wish you had not told me that," he blurted
out, "for that makes her one of my father's greatest enemies and I do not
want him to hate her. . . ." Romilly berated herself; he looked stricken.
She said quickly, "Rank has no meaning among the Sisterhood, and Jandria
has renounced the privileges brought with noble both. And so have I,
Caryl." And she realized that he looked relieved, though she was not sure
why.
"I
will ask Jandria if we have need of game for the pot," she said quickly,
"and you shall fly Preciosa if she will fly at your command; surely
Jandria could not object if you want to get a bird for your own supper, unless
you try to make one of us pluck and cook it for you."
"I
can do that myself," Caryl said proudly, then grinned, lowering his eyes.
"If you will tell me how," he said in a small voice, and Romilly
giggled, Caryl giggling with her.
"I
will help you cook the bird for a share of it - is that a bargain, then?"
Three
nights later they began to ride along the shore of a lake, lying in the fold of
the hills, and Caryl pointed to a great house, not quite a castle, situated at
the head of the long valley.
"There
lies Mali, and my father's castle."
Romilly
thought it looked more like a palace than a fortress, but she said nothing.
Caryl said, "I shall be glad to see Father again, and my mother," and
Romilly wondered; how glad would his father be, to see a son held hostage by
his worst enemy's men, and taken from the safety of Nevarsin whence he had sent
him? But she said nothing of this. Only that morning, flying through Preciosa's
eyes, she had seen out over the whole vast expanse of the Plains of Valeron,
armies massing and moving on the borders. The war would soon be upon the green
lowlands again.
And
all that day they rode through a country scoured clean by war; farmsteads lay
in ruins, great stone towers with not one stone left upon another, only
scattered rubble as if some monstrous disruption like an earthquake had shaken
them from their very foundations; what army, what dreadful weapon had done
that? Once they had to turn aside, for as they came to the top of the rise,
they saw in the valley before them a ruined village. A strange silence hung
over the land, though houses stood undamaged, serene and peaceful, no smoke
rose from the chimneys, no sound of horses stamping, children playing, hammers
beating on anvils or the work-songs of women weaving or waulking their cloth.
Dread silence lay over the village, and now Romilly could see a faint greenish
flickering as if the houses were bathed in some dreadful miasma, an almost
tangible fog of doom. They lay, pulsing faintly greenish, and she knew suddenly
that when night fell the street and houses would glow with an uncanny
luminescence in the dark.
And
even as she looked, she saw the lean, starved figure of a predator slinking
silently through the streets; and while they looked, it moved more slowly,
subsided, lay down in its tracks, still stirring feebly, without a cry.
Jandria
said curtly, "Bonewater-dust. Where that stuffs been scattered from the
air, the land dies, the very houses die; should we ride through there, we would
be in no better case than that woods-cat before many nights. Turn about - best
not come too near; this road is closed as if a nest of dragons guarded it; or
better, for we might somehow manage to fight even dragons, but against this
there's no fighting, and for ten years or more this land will lie accursed and
the very beasts of the forests be born awry. Once I saw a mountain-cat with
four eyes and a plains chervine with toes for hooves. Uncanny!" She
shuddered, pulling her horse around. "Make as wide a circle as we can
around this place! I've no wish to see my hair and teeth fall out and my blood
turn to whey in my veins!"
The
wide detour added two or three days to their ride, and Janni warned Romilly not
to fly Preciosa.
"Should
she eat of game tainted by that stuff of war, she would die, but not soon
enough to save her great suffering; and should we eat of it, we too might lose
hair and teeth if no worse. The taint of the foul stuff lingers long in all the
country round, and spreads in the bodies of predators and harmless beasts who
wander through the blighted countryside. She can fast for a day or two more
safely than she can risk hunting too close to that place."
And
so for two days Romilly carried Preciosa on her saddle, and, though she had
sworn to herself that she could never again confine her freed bird, she yielded
to fear at last and tied jesses about her legs.
I dare not let you fly
or you would eat of game which would kill you, she tried miserably to form
a picture in her mind which the hawk could clearly see, of the game glowing
with that unhealthy and poisonous glow, and although she was not sure she had
made contact with the bird's mind, for the hawk sulked and brooded on the
saddle, she did not fight the bonds, and rode with her head tucked under her
whig; Romilly could feel the fierce hunger pulsing within her, but she seemed
willing to ride thus chained for her own protection.
At
last it seemed that they were out of danger, though Janni warned all the women
that if they should begin to comb out handfuls of hair, or their teeth should
loosen, they should tell her at once; she thought they had made a wide enough
circle around the tainted land; "But none can be sure with that deadly
stuff," she warned, and rode on, her jaw clenched hard. Once she said to
Romilly, with a brief glance that made Romilly think of her hawk, closed-in and
brooding, her eyes swiftly hooded, "Orain was fostered in that village.
And now no man will be able to live in it for a span of years and perhaps more.
All the Gods blast Lyondri and his devil weapons!"
Romilly
cast a quick glance at Caryl, but either he had not heard, or concealed it. How
heavy a weight the boy must carry!
They
camped a little early that night, and while the women were setting up the tent,
Janni called Romilly away from the camp.
"Come
with me, I need to talk to you. No, Caryl, not you," she added, sharply,
and the boy fell back like a puppy that had been kicked. Janni led Romilly a
little away from the camp, and motioned to her to sit down, lowering herself
crosslegged to the rough soft grass.
"Any
sign of loosening teeth, falling hair?"
Romilly
bared her teeth in a smile, then raised her hand and rugged graphically at her
abort hair. "Not a bit of it, Janni," she said, and the woman
breathed a sigh of relief.
"Evanda
be praised," she said, "Who has guarded her maidens. I found some
loose hair this morning when I combed my hair, but I am growing old and must
look to falling hair as a woman's lot in age. Still I could not help fearing
that we had not ridden wide enough round that cursed site. What madman will
destroy the very land of his own vassals? Oh, yes, I have ridden to war, I can
see burning a croft - though I like it not to kill the humble folk because of
the wars of the great and mighty - but a croft, burned, can be rebuilt, and
crops trampled down can be grown again when the land is at peace. But to
destroy the very land so no crops will grow for a generation? Perhaps I am too
squeamish for a warrior," she said, and fell for a moment into silence. At
last she asked, "Have you had trouble with your prisoner?"
"No,"
said Romilly, "he is glad to be coming home, but he has scrupulously
minded his parole."
"I
thought as much, but I am glad to hear you say it," said Jandria. She
loosened the cheap silver buckles on her cloak and flung it back, sighing as
the wind ruffled her thick hair. Her face seemed lined and weary. Romilly said with
swift sympathy, "You are so tired, Jandria. Let me take your part in the
camp work tonight, and go to rest in your tent now. I will bring your evening
meal to you in your blanket-roll."
Janni
smiled. "It is not weariness which weighs on me, Romilly; I am old and
hardened to travel and camp, and I have slept in places far more comfortless
than this without a whimper. I am troubled, that is all, for good sense tells
me one thing and honor tells me another."
Romilly
wondered what trouble lay on Janni, and the woman smiled and reached for her
hand. She said, "Young Carolin is in my care, and honor bids that I be the
one to convey him to his father. Yet I thought perhaps I would send you to
deliver the lad within the walls of Hali city to the hands of the Hastur-lord."
Romilly's
first thought was that she would have a chance to see within the walls of the
great lowland city; her next, that she would be very sorry to part with Caryl.
Only after that did she realize that she would also have to meet with that great
rogue Lyondri Hastur.
"Why
me, Janni?"
Jandria's
heavy sigh was audible. "Something you know of courtly ways and the
manners of a Great House," she said. "I feel traitor to the
Sisterhood to say as much, having sworn to leave rank behind me forever. Mhari,
Reba, Shaya - all of them are good women, but they know no more than the clumsy
manners of their fathers' crofts, and I cannot send
them
on such a mission of diplomacy. More than this, for the safety of all of
us." Her strained smile was faint, hardly a grimace. "Whatever I said
to Orain, Lyondri Hastur would know me if I wore banshee-feathers and did the
dance of a Yaman in a Ghost Wind! I have no wish to hang from a traitor's
gallows. Carolin, and Orain too, were among those Lyondri loved best, and those
whom he pursues with the greater fury now. Carolin, Orain, Lyondri and I - we
four were fostered together." She hesitated, sighed again and at last
said, "Orain does not know this; he never wished to see what befell
between man and maiden, and he did not know - hell's fire," she burst out,
"Why does it shame me to say that Lyondri and I lay together more than
once, before I was even fully a woman. Now I have turned from him to my own
kindred, I think it would give him pleasure to hang me, if my death would give
pain to Carolin or to Carolin's sworn man! Nor can I bear to meet him - Avarra
comfort me, I cannot but love him still, almost as much as I hate!" She
swallowed and looked at the ground, holding tight to Romilly's hand. "So
now you know why I am too cowardly to meet with him, however sworn he may be
with his flag of truce - he might spare me for our old love, I do not
know."
"It
is not needful, Janni," said Romilly gently, feeling the woman's pain,
"I will gladly go. You must not risk yourself."
"Seeing
you - do you understand this, Romilly? - Lyondri and Rakhal see only a
stranger, and more than that, one Caryl loves well, someone who has been kind
to his son; and they know only that you are an envoy of the Sisterhood, not a
rebel or one sworn to Carolin. Be clear, Romilly, I send you into danger - it
may be that Lyondri will not honor his pledged word of safety for the courier
who brings his son; but you may risk nothing worse than imprisonment. Lyondri may
kill you; he would certainly lose no chance for revenge against me."
Danger
for her, against certain death for herself? Romilly hesitated just a moment,
and Janni said wearily, "I cannot command you to this risk, Romilly. I can
only beg it of you. For I cannot send Caryl alone into the city; I pledged he
should be safely delivered into his father's very hands."
"I
thought he had sworn safe-conduct."
"Oh,
and so he has," said Janni, "But I trust that no further than Lyondri
sees his advantage, which he saw ever. . . ." and she covered her face with
her hands. Romilly felt weak and frightened. But the Sisterhood had taken her
in when she was alone, sheltered and fed her, welcomed her with friendliness.
She owed them this. And she was a sworn Swordswoman. She said, tightening her
hand on Janni's, "I will go, my sister. Trust me."
Before
they rode into the city, Caryl washed himself carefully at a stream, begged a
comb from one of the women and carefully combed his hair and trimmed his nails.
He dug from his saddlebags his somewhat shabby clothes - for the last few days
he had been wearing bits and pieces, castoff trousers and tunic of one of the
women, so that he could wash his own in one of the streams and have them clean
for his return to court, though nothing could make them look like proper attire
for a prince.
He
said with regret, "Father sent me a new festival costume before
Midwinter-night, and I had to leave it in the monastery when I left so
suddenly. Well, it can't be helped, this is the best I have."
"I
will cut your hair, if you like," Romilly offered, and trimmed his curling
hair to an even length, then brushed it till it shone. He laughed and told her
he was not a horse to be currycombed, but he looked at himself with
satisfaction in the stream.
"At
least I look like a gentleman again; I hate to be shabby like a ruffian,"
he said. "Mestra Jandria, will you not come with us? My father
could not be angry with anyone who had been so kind to his son."
Jandria
shook her head. "There were old quarrels between Lyondri and me before you
were hatched or Rakhal sought out Carolin's throne, dear boy; I would rather
not come under your father's eye. Romilly will take you."
"I
will be glad to ride with Romilly," said Caryl, "and I am sure my
father will be grateful to her."
"In
the name of all the Gods of the Hastes, boy, I hope so," said Jandria, and
when Caryl bent over her hand in his courtly manner, she pressed it. "Adelandeyo,"
she said after the manner of the hill women, "Ride on with the Gods,
my boy, and may They all be with you, and with Romilly."
Only
Romilly, seeing the tensing in Janni's jaw, the tremble in her eyes, knew that
Janni was thinking, Gods protect you, girl, and may we see you again safe
out of Lyondri Hastur's hands.
Romilly
clambered into her saddle. With a clarity not usual to her unless she was in
rapport with her hawk and seeing all things through her laran and not
her eyes, she saw the clear pale sky, the tent of the Sisterhood; heard thwacks
where Mhari and Lauria were practicing with the wooden batons they used for
swords, saw two other women slowly working through the careful training moves
of unarmed combat, the dancelike ritual which trained their muscles to work
without thought in defensive movement. She could still see smoke from the
breakfast fire and felt alerted and frightened - smell of smoke when no food
was cooking? - before she remembered that they were not now in the forest and
there was, in this green meadow, no chance of wildfire.
She
had made herself tidy, with her best cloak, the one Orain had bought for her in
the Nevarsin market - though now she felt sore and raw-edged about his gift,
she had nothing else nearly so good or so warm - and had borrowed the cleanest
tunic she could find in the camp from one of the swordswomen. She was conscious
of the still-stinging earrings in her ears, mercilessly revealed by her short
hair. Well, she told herself defensively, I am what I am; a woman of the
Sisterhood of the Sword - even though I am not very good with it yet - and
Lyondri Hastur can just accept me as an emissary under safe-conduct; why should
I worry about whether I look like a lady? What is Lyondri to me? And yet a
little voice that sounded like Luciella's was saying in her mind, with prim
reproach, Romy, for shame, boots and breeches and astride like a man, what would
your father say? Mercilessly she commanded the voice to be quiet.
She
clucked briefly to her horse and nodded to Caryl, who drew his horse into an
easy trot beside her own.
Hali
was an unwalled city, with broad streets which were uncannily smooth under
foot; at her puzzled look, Caryl smiled and told her they had been laid down by
matrix technology, without the work of human hands. At her skeptical glance he
insisted, "It's true, Romy! Father showed me, once, how it can be done,
laying the stones with the great matrix lattices under ten or twelve leroni or
laranzu'in. One day I will be a sorcerer as well and work among the
relays and screens!"
Romilly
was still skeptical, but there was no use at all in challenging what a child's
father had told him, so she held her peace.
He
directed her through the streets, and it was all she could do to keep from
staring about her as if she were the freshest of country bumpkins, hardly away
from the farmyard; Nevarsin was a fine city, and Caer Donn as well, but Hali was
wholly different. In place of steep, cobbled streets and stone houses crowded
together as if huddling under the great crags of the Hellers or of Castle
Aldaran, there were broad streets and low open dwellings - she had never seen a
house which was not built like a fortress to be defended, and wondered how the
citizens could sleep secure in their beds at night; not even the city was
walled.
And
the people who walked in these streets seemed a different race than the
mountain people - who were strongly built, clad in furs and leather against the
bitter chill, and seemed hard and fierce; here in this pleasant lowland city,
finely dressed men and women strolled the broad streets, wearing colorful
clothing, embroidered tunics and brightly dyed skirts and veils for the women,
colorful long coats and trousers for the men, and thin cloaks of brilliant
colors, more for adornment than for use.
One
or two of the people in the streets paused to stare at the blazing red head of
the boy, and the slender, trousered, earringed young woman who rode at his side
in the scarlet of the Sisterhood and the old-fashioned mountain-cut cloak of
fur and homespun. Caryl said under his breath, "They recognize me. And
they think you, too, one of the Hastur-kind because of your red hair. Father
may think so too. You must be one of our own, Romilly, with red hair, and laran
too."
"I
don't think so," Romilly said, "I think redheads are born into
families where they have never appeared before, just as sometimes a bleeder, or
an albino, will appear marked from the womb, and yet no such history in their
family. The MacArans have been redheads as far back as I can remember - I
recall my great-grandmother, though she died before I could ride, and her hair,
though it had gone sandy in patches, was redder than mine at the roots."
"Which
proves that they must at one time have been kin to the children of Hastur and
Cassilda," the boy argued, but Romilly shook her head.
"I
think it proves no such thing. I know little of your Hastur-kind-"
tactfully she bit back the very words on her tongue, and what little I know
I do not much like. But she knew that the boy heard the unspoken words as
he had heard the spoken ones; he looked down at his saddle and said nothing.
And
now, as they rode toward a large and centrally situated Great House, Romilly
began to be a little frightened.
Now,
after all, she was to meet that beast Lyondri Hastur, the man who had followed
the usurper Rakhal and exiled Carolin, killed and made homeless so many of his
supporters.
"Don't
be frightened," said Caryl, stretching out his hand between their horses,
"My father will be grateful to you because you have brought me back. He is
a kind man, really, I promise you, Romy. And I heard that he pledged a reward
when the courier from the Sisterhood should bring him to me."
I
want no reward, Romilly
thought, except to get safe away with a whole skin. Yet like most young
people she could not imagine that within the hour she might be dead.
At
the great doors, a guard greeted Caryl with surprise and pleasure.
"Dom
Caryl ...
I had heard you were to be returned today! So you've seen the war an' all! Good
to have you home, youngster!"
"Oh,
Harryn, I'm glad to see you," Caryl said with his quick smile. "And
this is my friend, Romilly, she brought me back-"
Romilly
felt the man's eyes travel up and down across her, from the feather in her
knitted cap to the boots on her trousered legs, but all he said was "Your
father is waiting for you, young master; I'll have you taken to him at
once."
It
seemed to Romilly that she sensed a way of escape now. She said, "I shall
leave you, then, in the hands of your father's guardsman-"
"Oh,
no, Romilly," Caryl exclaimed, "You must come in and meet Father, he
will be eager to reward you..."
I can just imagine, Romilly
thought; but Janni had been right. There was no real reason for Lyondri Hastur
to violate his pledged word and imprison a nameless and unknown Swordswoman
against whom he had no personal grudge. She dismounted, saw her horse led away,
and followed Caryl into the Great House.
Inside,
some kind of soft-voiced functionary - so elegantly clothed, so smooth, that
calling him a servant seemed unlikely to Romilly - told Caryl that his
father was awaiting him in the music room, and Caryl darted through a doorway,
leaving Romilly to follow at leisure.
So
this is the Hastur-lord, the cruel beast of whom Orain spoke. I must not think
that, like Caryl himself he must have laran, he could read it in my
mind.
A
tall, slightly-built man rose from the depths of an armchair, where he had been
holding a small harp on his knee; set it down, bending forward, then turned to
Caryl and took both his hands.
"Well,
Carolin, you are back?" He drew the boy against him and kissed his cheek;
it seemed that he had to stoop down a long way to do it. "Are you well, my
son? You look healthy enough; at least the Sisterhood has not starved
you."
"Oh,
no," said Caryl, "They fed me well, and they were quite kind to me;
when we passed through a town, one of them even bought me cakes and sweets, and
one of them lent me a hawk so I could catch fresh birds if I wanted them for my
supper. This is the one with the hawk," he added, loosing his father's
hands and grabbing Romilly to draw her forth. "She is my friend. Her name
is Romilly."
And
so at last Romilly was face to face with the Hastur-lord; a slight man, with
composed features which, it seemed, never relaxed for a second. His jaw was set
in tight lines; his eyes, grey under pale lashes, seemed hooded like a hawk's.
"I
am grateful to you for being good to my son," said Lyondri Hastur. His
voice was composed, neutral, indifferent. "At Nevarsin I thought him
beyond the reach of the war, but Carolin's men, I have no doubt, thought having
him as hostage was a fine idea."
"It
wasn't Romilly's idea, father," said Caryl, and Romilly knew that he had
thought about, and rejected, telling his father that Orain had been angry about
it; it was no time to bring Orain's name up at all. And Romilly knew, too, from
the almost-imperceptible added clenching of the Hastur-lord's jaw, that he
heard perfectly well what his son had not said, and it seemed that a shadow of
his voice, faraway and eerie, said almost aloud in Romilly's mind, Another
score against Orain, who was my sworn man before he was Carolin's. I should
keep this woman hostage; she may know something of Orain's whereabouts, and
where Orain is, Carolin cannot be far.
But
by now the boy could read the unspoken thought, and he looked up at his father
in real horror. He said in a whisper, "You pledged your word. The word of
a Hastur," and she could almost see his shining image of his father crack
and topple before his eyes. Lyondri Hastur looked from his son to the woman. He
said, in a sharp dry voice, "Swordswoman, know you where Orain rides at
this moment?"
She
knew that with his harsh eyes on her she could not lie, he would have the truth
from her in moments. With a flood of relief she knew that she need not lie to
him at all. She said, "I saw Orain last in Caer Bonn, when he brought
Caryl -Dom Carolin - to the hostel of the Sisterhood. And that was more
than a tenday ago. I suppose by now he is with the Army." And, though she
tried, she could not keep from her mind the picture of the army passing at the
end of the street, the banner of the Hasturs, blue and silver, and Orain riding
at the side of the unseen king. Lyondri would not consider him king but
usurper....
I
have made promises I could not keep ... I knew not what manner of man
I served, that I have become Rakhal's hangman and hard hand . . . and with
shock, Romilly realized that she was actually receiving this thin trickle of
thoughts from the man before her; or was this true at all, was she simply
reading him as she read animals, in the infinitesimal movements of eyes and
body, and somehow co-ordinating them with his thoughts? She was acutely
uncomfortable with the contact and relieved when it stopped abruptly, as if
Lyondri Hastur had realized what was happening and closed it down.
I have read thoughts,
more or less, much of my life, why should it disturb and confuse me now?
The
Hastur-lord said with quiet formality, "I owe you a reward for your care
of my son. I will grant anything save for weapons which might be used against
me in this unjust war. State what you wish for his ransom, with that one
exception."
Jandria
had prepared her for this. She said firmly, "I was to ask for three sacks
filled with medical supplies for the hostels of the sisterhood; bandage-linen,
the jelly which helps the clotting of blood, and karalla powder."
"I
suppose I could call those weapons, since no doubt they will be used to aid
those wounded in rebellion against their king," Lyondri Hastur mused
aloud, then shrugged. "You shall have them," he said, "I will
give my steward the orders, and a pack-animal to take them back to your camp."
Romilly
drew a soft sigh of relief. She was not to be imprisoned, then, or held
hostage.
"Did
you believe that of me?" asked Lyondri Hastur aloud, dryly, then gave a
short, sharp laugh. She saw it in his mind again, two telepaths could not lie
to one another. She was fortunate that he did not wish his son disillusioned
about his honor.
Romilly
found herself suddenly very grateful that she had not encountered Lyondri
Hastur when Caryl was not by, and when he did not wish to keep his son's
admiration.
"But,
father," Caryl said, "This is the woman with the hawk, who let me fly
her - can I have a hawk of my own? And one day, I wish Mistress Romilly to be
my hawkmistress."
Lyondri
Hastur smiled; it was a dry, distant smile, but nevertheless, a smile, and even
more frightening than his laugh. He said, "Well, Swordswoman, my son has
taken a fancy to you. There are members of the Sisterhood in my employment. If
you would care to stay here and instruct Carolin in the art of falconry-"
She
wanted nothing more than to get away. Much as she liked Caryl, she had never
met anyone who so terrified her as this dry, harsh man with the cold laughter
and hooded eyes. Grasping for an honorable excuse, she said, "I am - I am
pledged elsewhere, vai dom."
He
bowed slightly, acknowledging the excuse. He knew it was an excuse, he knew
what she thought him, and he knew she knew. He said, "As you wish, mestra.
Carolin, say goodbye to your friend and go to greet your mother."
He
came and gave her his hand in the most formal way. Then, impulsively, he hugged
her. He said, looking up to her with earnest eyes, "Maybe when this war is
over I will see you again, Romilly - and your hawk. Give Preciosa my
greetings." Then he bowed as if to a lady at court, and left the room quickly,
but she had seen the first traces of tears in his eyes. He did not want to cry
in front of his father; she knew it.
Lyondri
Hastur coughed. He said, "Your pack-animal and the medical supplies will
be brought to you at the side door, near the stable. The steward will show you
the way," and she knew that the audience with the Hastur-lord was over. He
gestured to the functionary, who came and said softly, "This way, mestra."
Romilly
bowed and said, "Thank you, sir."
She
turned, but as she was about to follow the steward, Lyondri Hastur coughed
again.
"Mistress
Romilly-?"
"Vai
dom?"
'Tell
Jandria I am not quite the monster she fears. Not quite. That will be
all."
And
as she left the room, Romilly wondered, shaking to her very toenails, what
else does this man know?
When
Romilly delivered the message from Lyondri Hastur to Janni - "Tell her I
am not the monster she thinks me, not quite," Jandria said nothing for a
long time. Romilly sensed, from her stillness, (although she made a deliberate
effort, her first, not to use her laran at all) that Jandria had several
things she would have said; but not to Romilly. Then, at last, she said,
"And he gave you the medical supplies?"
"He
did; and a pack animal to carry them."
Janni
went and looked them over, saying at last, tight-lipped, "He was generous.
Whatever Lyondri Hastur's faults, niggardliness was never one of them. I should
return the pack animal - I want no favors from Lyondri - but the sober truth is
that we need it. And it is less to him than buying his son a packet of sweets
in the market; I need suffer no qualms of conscience about that." She sent
for three of the women to look over the medical supplies, and told Romilly she
might return to her horses. As an afterthought, as Romilly was going out the door,
she called her back for a moment and said, "Thank you, chiya. I
sent you on a difficult and dangerous mission, where I had no right at all to
send you, and you carried it off as well as any diplomatic courier could have
done. Perhaps I should find work better suited to you than working with the
dumb beasts."
Romilly
thought; I would rather work with horses than go on diplomatic missions, any
day! After a minute or two she said so, and Jandria, smiling, said, "Then
I will not keep you
from
the work I know you love. Go back to the bones, my dear. But you have my
thanks."
Freed,
Romilly went back to the paddock and led out the horse she was beginning to
break to the saddle. But she had not been at the work very long when Mhari came
out to her.
"Romy,"
she said, "saddle your own horse and two pack animals, at once, and
Jandria's riding-horse. She is leaving the hostel tonight, and says you must go
with her."
Romilly
stared, with one hand absent-mindedly quieting the nervous horse, who did not
at all like the blanket strapped to his back. "To leave tonight?
Why?"
"As
for that, you must ask Janni herself," said Mhari, a little sullenly,
"I would be glad to go wherever she would take me, but she has chosen you
instead, and she bade me make up a packet of your clothes, and four days
journey-rations too."
Romilly
frowned with irritation; she was just beginning to make some progress in
gentling this horse, and must she interrupt the work already? She was sworn to
the Sisterhood, but must that put her at the mercy of some woman's whim?
Nevertheless she liked Jandria very much, and was not inclined to argue with
her decisions. She shrugged, changed the long lunge-line for a short
leading-rope and took the horse back into the stable.
She
had finished saddling Jandria's horse, and was just putting a saddle-blanket on
her own, when Jandria, cloaked and booted for riding, came into the stable.
Romilly noticed, with shock, that her eyes were reddened as if she had been
crying; but she only asked "Where are we going, Janni? And why?"
Jandria
said, "What Lyondri said to you, Romy, was a message; he knows that I am
here; no doubt he had you followed to see where the Sisterhood's hostel was
located outside the walls of Hali. Simply by being here, I endanger the
Sisterhood, who have taken no part in this war; but I am kin to Orain and he
might somehow think to trace Orain through me, might think I know more of
Orain's plans - or Carolin's - than I really do. I must leave here at once, so
that if Rakhal's men under Lyondri come here to seek me, they can say
truthfully, and maintain, even if they should be questioned by a leronis who
can read their thoughts, that they have no knowledge of where I have gone, or
where Carolin's men, or Orain, may be gathered. And I am taking you with me,
for fear Lyondri might try to lay hands on you, too. These other women - he
knows nothing of them and cares less; but you have come under his eyes, and I
would just as soon you were out of his field of notice ... I would rather not
have you at the very gates of Hali. Besides-" her smile was very faint,
"Did you not know? A woman of the Sisterhood does not travel alone, but
must be companioned by one, at least, of her sisters."
Romilly
had not thought of that - Jandria was Orain's kin, and Lyondri Hastur could use
her for hostage, too, even if he did not, as Jandria had feared, mean to put
her to death. She said formally, "A ves ordres, mestra," and
finished saddling her horse.
"Go
into the hostel and get yourself some bread and cheese," Jandria said,
"We can eat as we ride. But be quick, little sister."
Is
there need for such haste as that, or is Jandria afraid without reason? But Romilly did not
question her; she did as she was told, returning with a loaf of bread and a
great hunk of coarse white new cheese, which she stowed in her saddlebag - she
was not hungry now, Jandria's message had effectively destroyed her appetite,
but she knew she would be glad of it later. She had a bag of apples, too, which
the cook had given her.
She
did ask, as they led out their horses to mount, "Where are we going,
Janni?"
"I
think it would be safer if you did not know that, not just yet," said
Jandria, and Romilly saw real fear in her eyes. "Come, little sister, let
us ride."
Romilly
marked that they rode northward from the city, but the trail soon curved, and
Jandria took a small, little-travelled road, hardly more than the track left by
mountain chervines, which wound upward and upward into the hills. Before
long Romilly had lost all sense of direction, but Jandria seemed never to
hesitate, as if she knew precisely where she was going.
Before
long they began to ride under the cover of heavy forested slopes, and Jandria
seemed to relax a little; after an hour or so she asked for some of the bread
and cheese, and ate it with a good appetite. Romilly, chewing on the coarse
crust, began to wonder again, but did not ask.
At
last Jandria said, mounting again and taking the lead-rope of the pack animal,
"Even a sentry-bird cannot spy us out here. I know not if Lyondri has such
birds trained to his use - they are not really all that common - but I thought
it better to keep under cover till the trail was well and truly lost; all Gods
forbid I should lead him straight to Carolin's armies."
"Is
that where we are going?"
"The
Sisterhood has a cohort of soldiers there," said Jandria, "and your
skills may be needed to train horses for the army. And I doubt not that the
Sisterhood with Carolin's army can make use of me, somehow or other. If Lyondri
knew I was in the hostel - as he must have known or he would not have sent that
message - then he might think, or Rakhal might think for him, that if he kept
watch on me, I might lead him straight to Carolin's rendezvous; even if he
could not tear the knowledge of that rendezvous straight from my mind without
even a leronis to aid him. So I hastened to get out of there, and into
the cover of the forest, so that he could not set watch on the hostel and give
orders to have me followed. I may possibly have moved faster than he, for once;
and it may be that we are already safe." But she glanced apprehensively
down the trail where they had come, and then, even more apprehensively, at the
sky, as if even now Lyondri's sentry-birds could be hovering there to spy them
out And her fear made Romilly frightened too.
That
night they camped still within the shelter of the forest, and Jandria even
forbade a cooking-fire; they ate the cold bread and cheese, and tethered the
animals under a great tree. They spread their blankets beneath another, doubled
for warmth (although the mountain-bred Romilly found it reasonably warm) and
Romilly slept quickly, tired from riding. But she woke once in the night to
hear soft sounds as if Jandria was crying. She wished, wretchedly, that she
could say something to comfort the other woman, but it was a trouble far beyond
her comprehension. At last she slept again, but woke early to find Jandria
already up and saddling the horses. Her eyes were dry and tearless, her face
barricaded, but the eyelids were red and swollen.
"Do
you think we can risk a fire this morning? I would like some hot food, and if
we are not pursued by now, surely we must have gotten away," Romilly said,
and Jandria shrugged.
"I
suppose it makes no difference. If Lyondri truly wishes to find me, I am sure
he would not need trackers, seeing that he read my thoughts of him so far away.
It would not be Lyondri who pursued us, but Rakhal, in any case." She was
silent, sighing. "Build us a fire, and I will cook some hot porridge,
little sister. I have no right to make this trip harder for you with my
causeless fears and dreads; you have travelled so long and hard already, Romy,
and already I have you off again when you thought you had found a place of
repose."
"It's
all right," Romilly said, not knowing what to say. She would rather travel
with Jandria than remain in the hostel with the strange women among whom she
had made no friends as yet. She knelt to kindle a fire. But when they were
eating hot porridge, and their horses munching at ease in the grass, Romilly
asked, hesitantly, "Do you grieve for Lyondri?" What she was
wondering, was this; Lyondri had been her lover, was she still bound to him?
Jandria seemed to know what she meant, and sighed, with a small sad smile.
"My
grief, I suppose, is for myself," she said at last. "And for the man
I thought Lyondri was - the man he might have been, if Rakhal had not seduced
him with the thought of power. That man, the man I loved, is dead - so long
dead that even the Gods could not recall him from whatever place our dead hopes
go. He still wants my good opinion - so much the message, or warning, meant -
but that could be no more than vanity, which was always strong in him. I do not
think he is all evil," she said, and stumbled a little over it, "The
fault is Rakhal's. But by now he must know what Rakhal is, and still follows
after him. So I cannot hold him guiltless of all the atrocities done in
Rakhal's name."
Romilly
asked, shyly, "Did you know them both - Carolin and Rakhal? How did Rakhal
come to seize his throne?"
But
Jandria shook her head. "I do not know. I left court when Rakhal still
professed to be Carolin's most loyal follower, accepting all the favors Carolin
showered on him as his dearest cousin who had been fostered with him."
"Carolin
must be a good man," said Romilly at last, "to inspire such devotion
in Orain. And-" she hesitated, "in you."
She
said, "But surely when you were with Orain, you met with Carolin?"
Romilly
shook her head. "I understood the king was at Nevarsin; but I did not meet
with him."
Jandria
raised her eyebrows, but all she said was, "Finish your porridge, child,
and rinse the dish in the stream, and we shall ride again."
Silently,
Romilly went about her work, saddling the horses, loading what was left of
their food. But as they mounted, Jandria said, so long after that Romilly had
almost forgotten what she asked, "Carolin is a good man. His only fault is
that he trusts the honor of the Hasturs without reason; and he made the mistake
of trusting Rakhal. Even Orain could not tell him what Rakhal was, nor could I;
he thought Orain was only jealous. Jealous - Orain!"
"What
is Rakhal like?" asked Romilly, but Jandria only shook her head.
"I
cannot speak of him fairly; my hate blinds me. But where Carolin loves honor
above all things, and then he loves learning, and he loves his people, Rakhal
loves only the taste of power. He is like a mountain-cat that has had a taste
of blood." She climbed into her saddle, and said, "Today you will
take the pack-animal's leading-rope, and I will ride ahead, since I know where
we are going."
When
they had come out from under the cover of the forest, Romilly had again the
faint far sense of being watched; that trickle of awareness in her mind that
told her Preciosa was watching her; the hawk did not descend to her hand, but
once or twice Romilly caught a glimpse of the bird hovering high in the sky,
and knew she was not alone. The thought warmed her so deeply that she was no
longer aware of fear or apprehension.
She
and I are one; she has joined her life to mine. Romilly was dimly aware that this
must be something like marriage, indissoluble, a tie which went deep into the
other's body and spirit. She had no such tie for instance with her present
horse, though he had carried her faithfully and she wished him well and thought
often of his welfare.
The
horse is my friend. Preciosa is something else, something like a lover.
And
that made her think, shyly and almost for the first time, what it might be like
to have a lover, to have a bond with someone as close to her as the hawk, tied
in mind and heart and even in body, but someone with whom she could
communicate, not as the MacArans did with their horses and hounds and hawks,
across the vast gulf that lay between man and horse, women and hawk, child and
dog, but with the close bonding of species. Dom Garris had wanted her,
but his lecherous glances had roused nothing in her but revulsion; revulsion
doubled when it was Rory, who would as soon have cut her throat for her horse
and cloak and a few coppers, but had wished to bed her as well.
Orain
had wanted her - at least while he still believed her to be a boy. And . . .
deliberately facing something she had not even clearly understood at the time .
. . she had wanted him. Although, when it was happening, she had not realized
what her own strange feelings meant. Even so, she would rather have had Orain
as a friend than a lover; she had been willing to accept him as a lover, when
she thought he knew her a woman and wanted her, in order to keep him as a
friend. But had she never seriously thought of any man in that way? Certainly
none of the boys she had grown up knowing, her brothers' friends - she could no
more envision them as lovers than as husbands, and a husband was the last thing
she would have wanted.
I
think I could have married one like Alderic. He spoke to me as a human being,
not only as his friend Darren's silly little sister. Nor was he the kind of man
who would feel he must control me every moment, fearing I would fly away like
an untamed hawk if he let go of the jesses for a moment.
Not
that I wanted him as a husband, so much. But perhaps I could make up my mind to
marry if the husband had first been my friend.
All
during that day and the next, whenever she took her eyes from the trail, she
could see, at the furthest range of her vision, that Preciosa still hovered
there, and feel the precarious thread of communication from the hawk, strange
divided sight, seeing the trail under her feet, aware of her own body in the
saddle, and yet some indefinable part of her flying free with the hawk, far
above the land and hillside slopes. Jandria had told her that they were
travelling now in what was called he Kilghard Hills.
They
were not like her home mountains - bleak and hare with great rock cliffs and
poor soil of which every arable scrap must be carefully reclaimed and put under
cultivation for food; and even less were they like the broad and fertile Plains
of Valeron which they had crossed enroute to Hali. These were hills, high and
steep and with great deserted tracts of wild country set with virgin forest and
sometimes overgrown in thick brush-tangles so that they must cut their way
through or, sometimes, retrace their steps tediously and go round. But there
was no lack of hunting. Sometimes, before sunset, drowsing in her saddle,
Romilly would feel something of her fly free with the hawk, stoop down and
feel, sharing with Preciosa, the startle of the victim, the quick killing
stroke and the burst of fresh blood in her own veins. . . . Yet every time it
came freshly to her as a new experience, uniquely satisfying.
Once,
she thought it was the sixth day of their journey, she was flying in mind with
the hawk when her horse stepped into a mudrabbit-burrow and stumbled, fell; lay
thrashing and screaming, and Romilly, thrown clear of the stirrups, lay
gasping, bruised and jarred to the bone. By the time she was conscious enough
to sit up, Jandria had dismounted and was helping her to rise.
In
the name of Zandru's frozen hells, where was your mind, you who are so good a
horseman, not to see that burrow?" she demanded crossly. Romilly, shocked
by the horse's screams, went to kneel by his side. His eyes were red, his mouth
flecked with the foam of agony, and, quickly sliding into rapport with him, she
felt the tearing pain in her own leg, and saw the bare, white, shattered bone
protruding through the skin. There was nothing to be done; weeping with horror
and grief, she fumbled at her belt for her knife and swiftly found where the
great artery was under the flesh; she thrust with one fast, deep stroke. A
final, convulsive struggle, a moment of deathly pain and fear - then it was
quiet, all around her stunned and quiet, and the horse, with his fear, was
simply gone, gone from her, leaving her empty and cold.
Stunned,
fumbling, Romilly wiped her knife on a clump of. grass and put it again into
its sheath. She could not look up and meet Jandria's eyes. Her damned laran had
cost the horse his life, for had she been attending to her riding, she would
surely have seen the burrow....
Jandria
said, at last, "Was it necessary?"
"Yes."
Romilly did not elaborate. Jandria did not have laran enough to
understand, and there was no reason to burden her with all Romilly's own
feelings of guilt, the rage at her own Gift which had tempted her to forget the
horse beneath her in straining for the hawk above. Swallowing hard against the
tears still rising and making a lump in her throat, she cursed the Gift.
"I am sorry, Janni. I - I should have been more careful-"
Jandria
sighed. "I was not reproaching you, chiya; it is ill fortune, that
is all. For here we are shy of a horse in the deepest part of the hills, and I
had hoped we could reach Serrais by tomorrow's nightfall."
"Is
that where we are going? And why?"
"I
did not tell you, in case we were followed; what you did not know, you could
not tell-"
So
Jandria does not trust me. Well enough; it seems I am not trustworthy . . .
certainly my poor horse did not find me so.... yet she protested. "I
would not betray you-"
Gently,
Jandria said, "I never thought of that, love. I meant only what you did
not know could not be wrung from you by torture, or ravished from your mind by
a leronis armed with one of their starstones. They could find out
quickly that you knew nothing. But now you would know in a day or two,
anyhow."
She
knelt beside Romilly and began to tug at the saddle straps. "You can ride
one of the pack chervines; they cannot travel at the speed of your horse, but
we can put both the packs on the back of the other. We will travel less swiftly
by chervine-pace than we would with two good horses, but it can't be
helped."
She
began to off-load the nearer of the chervines, saw Romilly standing stone-still
and snapped, "Come and help me with this."
Romilly
was staring at the dead horse. Insects were already beginning to move in the
clotted blood around the smashed leg. "Can't we bury him?"
Jandria
shook her head. "No time, no tools. Leave him to feed the wild
things." At Romilly's look of shock she said gently, "Dear child, I
know what your horse meant to you-"
No
you don't, Romilly
thought fiercely, you never could.
"Do
you think it matters even a little to him whether his body is left to feed the
other wild things, or whether he has a funeral fit for a Hastur-lord? He is not
in his body any more."
Romilly
swallowed hard. "I know it makes sense when you say it like that,
but-" she broke off, gulping. Jandria laid a gentle hand on her arm.
"There
are beasts in this forest who depend on the bodies of the dead things for their
food. Must they go hungry, Romy? This is only sentiment You feel no pain when
your hawk kills for her food."
To
Romilly's sore senses it seemed that Jandria was taunting her with her
inattention, that she was away somewhere sharing the kill with her hawk and
thus leading her horse to its death. She wrenched her arm free of Jandria's and
said bitterly, "I don't have any choice, do I? A ves ordres,
mestra," and began wrenching at the pack-loads of the other chervine.
In her mind, aching, accusing, was the memory of the sentry-birds for whom she
had spied out carrion. Now her horse would fall prey to the kyorebni, and
perhaps that was as it should be, but she felt she could not bear to see it,
knowing her own carelessness had cost the faithful creature his life.
As
if for comfort she looked into the sky, but Preciosa was nowhere in sight.
Perhaps
she too has left me...
Toward
nightfall the land changed; the green fields gave way to sandy plateaus, and
the roads were hard-baked clay. The chervines were forest and hill creatures,
and walked laggingly, little rivulets of sweat tracing vertical lines down
their thick coats. Romilly wiped her forehead with her sleeve and took off her
thick cloak and tied it in a bundle on her saddle. The sun was stronger here,
it seemed, and blazed with cloudless intensity from a clear, pale sky. Twilight
was beginning to fall when Jandria pointed.
"There
lies Serrais," she said, "and the hostel of the Sisterhood where we
shall sleep tonight, and perhaps for a span of tendays. I shall be glad to
sleep in a proper bed again - won't you?"
Romilly
agreed, but secretly she was sorry that the long journey was coming to an end.
She had grown fond of Jandria, and the thought of living in a houseful of
strange women really frightened her. Furthermore, she supposed, now she was in
a regular dwelling-place of the Sisterhood, she would be required to go back to
the frightening lessons in swordplay and unarmed combat, and she dreaded it.
Well,
she had chosen to swear to the Sisterhood, she must do her best in that place
in life to which she had been guided by providence. Bearer of Burdens, help
me to bear mine then as you bear the world's weight! And then she felt
surprised at herself. She could not remember, before this, thinking much about
prayer, and now it seemed that she was forever turning to such little prayers.
I wonder, is this what the Book of Burdens calls Dhe shaya, a grace of
God, or is it only a kind of weakness, a sense born of loneliness, that I have
nowhere else to turn? Jandria was her friend, she thought, but she would not
share her fears, Janni enjoyed the life of the Sisterhood and was not terrified
at the very thought of wars and battles; such things as the village blighted
with bonewater-dust enraged and horrified her, but they did not fill her with
that kind of terror; Janni seemed quite free of that kind of personal fear!
They
rode into the city when dusk had already fallen, and made their way through the
strange wide street, the old houses of bleached stone that shone with pallid
luminescence in the moonlight. Romilly was almost asleep in her saddle,
trusting the path to the steady plodding pace of her chervine. She roused up a
little when Jandria stopped before a great arched gate with a rope and bell
hanging from it, and pulled on it. Far away inside, she heard the sound, and
after a time a drowsy voice inquired, "Who is it?"
"Two
women of the Sisterhood come from Hali," Janni called, "Jandria,
Swordswoman, and Romilly, apprentice Swordswoman, oathbound and seeking shelter
here."
The
door creaked open, and a woman peered out into the street
"Come
in, Sisters," she said. "Lead the beasts into the stable there, you
can throw them some fodder if you wish. We are all at supper." She pointed
to a stable inside the enclosure, and they dismounted, leading the tired
animals into the barn. Romilly blinked when she saw the place by the faint
lanternlight; it was not large, but in a couple of loose-boxes at the back she
saw crowded horses, some of the finest horses she had ever seen. What was this
place, and why did they crowd so many horses into so small a stable? She felt
full of questions, but was too shy to speak any of them. She put her chervine
into one of the smaller stalls, led Jandria's horse into another, then
shouldered her pack and followed the strange woman into the house.
There
was a good smell of fresh-baked bread, and the spicy, unfamiliar smells of some
kind of cooking food. In a long room just off the hall where they left their
packs, at a couple of long tables, what looked like four or five dozen women
were crowded together, eating soup out of wooden bowls, and there was such a
noise of rattling bowls and crockery, so much shouting conversation from one
table to another and from one end to the other of the dining tables that
Romilly involuntarily flinched - after the silence of the trails through forest
and desert, the noise was almost deafening.
"There
are a couple of seats down there," said the woman who had admitted them.
"I am Tina; after supper I will take you to the housemother and she can
find you beds somewhere, but we are a little crowded, as you can see; they have
quartered half the Sisterhood upon us here, it seems, though I must say they're
good about sending army rations here to feed them. Otherwise we'd all be living
on last year's nuts! You can go and sit down and eat - you must be wanting it
after that long ride."
It
did not seem that there was any room at all at the table she indicated, but
Jandria managed to find a place where the crowding was a little less intense,
and by dint of some good-natured pushing and squeezing, they managed to wriggle
into seats on the benches, and a woman, making the rounds of the tables with a
jug and ladle, poured some soup into their bowls and indicated a couple of cut
loaves of bread. Romilly pulled her knife from her belt and sawed off a couple
of hunks, and the girl squeezed in next to her - a good-natured smiling woman
with freckles and dark hair tied back at her waist -shoved a pot of fruit
spread at her. "Butter's short just now, but this goes pretty good on your
bread. Leave the spoon in the jar."
The
spread tasted like spiced apples, boiled down to a paste. The soup was filled
with unidentifiable chunks of meat and strange vegetables, but Romilly was
hungry and ate without really caring what it was made of.
As
she finished her soup, the woman next to her said, "My name is Ysabet;
most people call me Betta. I came here from the Tendara hostel. And you?"
"We
were in Hali, and before that, in Caer Donn," Romilly said, and Betta's
eyes widened. "Where the king fled? Did you see his army there?"
Romilly
nodded, remembering Orain and a banner in a strange street.
"I
heard Carolin was camped north of Serrais," Betta said, "and that
they will march, before snow falls, on Hali again. The camp is full of rumors,
but this one is stronger than most. What is your skill?"
Romilly
shook her head. "Nothing special. I train horses and sometimes hawks, and
I have handled sentry-birds."
Betta
said, "They told us that an expert in horse-training was to come from
Hali! Why, you must be the one, then, unless it is your friend there - what is
her name?"
"She
is Jandria," Romilly said, and Betta's eyes widened.
"Lady
Jandria! Why, I have heard of her, if it is the same one, they said she is
cousin to Carolin himself - I know we are not supposed to think of rank, but
yes, I see she has red hair and a look of the Hasturs - well, they said they
would send a Swordswoman from Hali, and a woman adept at horse-training. We
will need it - did you see all the horses in the stable? And there are as many
more in the paddock, and they were taken as a levy from the Alton country in
the Kilghard Hills . . . and now they are to be broken for Carolin's armies, so
that the Sisterhood will ride to battle for Carolin, our true king . . ."
Then she looked at Romilly suspiciously. "You are for Carolin, are you
not?"
"I
have ridden from before daylight till after dark, today and for the last seven
days," Romilly said, "By now I hardly know my own name, let alone
that of the king." It seemed very hot in the room, and she could hardly
keep her eyes open. But then, remembering that they had fled from the
possibility of being followed by Lyondri Hastur, she added, "Yes; we are
for Carolin."
"As
I said, half the Sisterhood seems to be quartered on us here," Betta said,
"and there are so many rumors in this place. Two nights ago we had women
sleeping on the tables in here, and even under them, even though we who live
here in the hostel slept two to a bed and gave up the emptied beds to the
newcomers."
"I
have slept on the ground often enough;" Romilly said, "I can sleep
somewhere on the floor." At least this was out of the rain, and under a
roof.
"Oh,
I am sure that for the Lady Jandria they can find a bed somewhere," Betta
said. "Are you her lover?"
Romilly
was too tired and confused even to know for certain what Betta meant. "No,
no, certainly not." Although, she supposed, the question was reasonable.
Why would a woman seek the life of a Swordswoman, when she could just as well
marry? There had been a time or two, since she had come among the Sisterhood,
when she had begun to wonder if her constant rejection of the idea of marriage
meant that at heart she was a lover of women. She felt no particular revulsion
at the thought, but no particular attraction to it either. Fond as she had
grown of Jandria during these days, it would never have occurred to her to seek
her out as she had sought Orain. But now her attention had been forcibly drawn
to the subject, she wondered again. Is this why I have never really wanted
it man, and even with Orain, it was a matter of liking and kindness, not any
real desire?
I
am too tired to think clearly about anything, let alone anything as important
as that! But
she knew she must consider it some day, especially if her life was to be spent
among the Sisterhood.
One
by one, or in little groups of three and four, the women of the Sisterhood were
leaving the table and going to seek their various beds. Blanket rolls stowed in
a corner of the big room were unrolled on the floor, with some good-natured
bickering for places near the log-fire; Tina came and found them and led them
to a room with three beds, two of which were already occupied.
"You
can sleep there," she told them, "And the Housemother wants to see
you, Lady Jandria."
Janni
said to Romilly, "Go to bed and sleep; I will be along later."
Romilly was so tired that, although she told herself it would be difficult to
sleep in a room with four other women, some of whom were certain to snore, she
was fast asleep even before her head hit the pillow, and did not remember,
afterward, at what hour Jandria had come in.
But
the next morning, when they were dressing, she said to Jandria, "They
seemed to know who you were, and to be expecting us. How could you send a
message that would come faster than we did ourselves?"
Jandria
looked up, a stocking in her hand. She said, "There is a leronis of
my acquaintance with Carolin's army; this is why I dared not fall into the
hands of Lyondri. I know too much. I sent word, and asked that news be sent to
the hostel of the Sisterhood; so that they were ready to admit us. Do you
really think they would open their doors after dark in a city full of soldiers,
and readying for war?"
It
seemed to Romilly that every day she learned something new about Jandria. So
she had laran too? Laran of that curious kind which could link to
send messages over the trackless miles? She felt shy and confused again - could
Janni read what she was thinking, know all her rebellion, her fears? She kept
her mind away from the implications of that.
"If
I am to break horses here," she said, "I suppose I should go at once
to the stables and begin."
Jandria
laughed. "I think there will be time to have breakfast first," she
said, "The Housemother told me to sleep as long as I could after the long
ride; and I think we have slept long enough that we can find someplace to eat
in the dining-room without kicking the sleepers off tables. That was the only
reason I did not want to sleep on the floor there - I knew the cooks and
servers for this tenday would come in and rouse us at daybreak so they could
get to their breakfast kettles!"
And
indeed by the time they were dressed, the dining-room was empty, with only a
few old women lingering over cups of hot milk and bread soaked in them. They
helped themselves to porridge from the kettle and ate, after which Betta came
in search of them.
"You
are to go to the Housemother, Lady Jandria," she said, "And Mistress
Romilly to the stables."
Jandria
chuckled good-naturedly and said, "Just Jandria or Janni. Have you
forgotten the rule of the Sisterhood?"
"Janni,
then," Betta replied, but she still spoke with residual deference.
"Practice in unarmed combat is at noon in the grass-court; swordplay at
the fourth hour after. I will see you there."
In
the stables and paddock, Romilly found a number of horses; black horses from
the Kilghard Hills, the finest she had ever seen. It would be, she thought, a
pleasure and a privilege to train these to the saddle.
"They
are needed by the Army, in as much haste as possible," said Tina, who had
brought her here, "And they must be trained to the saddle, to a steady
pace, and to stand against loud noises. I can get you as many helpers as you
need, but we have no expert, and Lady Jandria told us that you have the MacAran
Gift. So you will be in charge of the work of training them."
Romilly
looked at the horses; there were a good two dozen of them. She asked,
"Have any of them been trained to pacing on a lunge-line?"
"About
a dozen," Tina said, and Romilly nodded.
"Good;
then find a dozen women who can try their paces, and take them out in the
paddock," she said, "and I will begin getting to know the
others."
When
the women came she noticed that Betta was among them, and greeted her with a
nod and smile. She sent them out to work for a few minutes at running the
horses in circles on the lunge-lines, steadying their paces, and went into the
stable to choose the horse which she would herself work with.
She
decided to give each horse into the charge of the woman who had exercised it
today; it was easier if they formed a close tie with the horse.
"For
then the animal will trust you," she told them, "and will do things
to please you. But it cannot be a one-way connection," she warned,
"Even as the horse loves and trusts you, you must love him - or, if it is
a mare, love her - and be completely trustworthy, so that the horse can
read in your mind that you love; you cannot pretend, for he will read a lie in
moments. You must be open to the horse's feelings, too. Another thing-"
she gestured to the short training-whips which were in their hands, "You
can snap the whips if you like, to get their attention. But if you hit any
horse enough to mark it, you are no trainer; if I see a whip in serious use,
you can go and practice your swordplay instead!"
She
sent them to work and listened for a moment to the chattering as they went out.
"Not
to use our whips? What are they for, then?"
"I
don't understand this woman. Where is she from, the far mountains? Her speech
is so strange. ..."
Romilly
would have thought it was their speech which was strange, slow and
thoughtful, as if they chewed every word a dozen times before speaking; while
it seemed to her that she talked naturally. Still, after she had heard a dozen
women say they they could not understand her, she tried to slow her own speech
and speak with what seemed to her an affected, unnatural slowness.
If
they were at Falconsward, everyone would think their speech silly, foreign,
affected. I suppose it is a matter of what they are used to.
She
turned to the horses with definite relief. At least, with them, she could be
herself and they, at any rate, would not be critical of her speech or manners.
The
horses, at least, speak my language, she thought with pleasure.
There
were so many of them, and of all kinds, from sturdy shaggy mountain ponies like
the one she had killed on the way here, to sleek blacks such as her own father
bred. She went into the loose-box among them (to the distinct horror of Betta,
who seemed as troubled as if she had gone into a cage full of carnivorous
mountain-cats) and moved through them, trying to find the right horse to begin
with. She must do a splendid job of training, because she knew that there was
some grumbling - she looked so young, they said, and they would be quick to
spot any mistakes.
I
am not so young, and I have been working among horses since I was nine years
old. But they do not know that.
As
she moved through the box, one horse backed up against the wooden rails and
began kicking; Romilly noticed the wide rolling eyes, the lips drawn back over
the teeth.
"Come
out and away from that one, Romilly, he's a killer - we are thinking of
returning him to the Army, who can turn him out to pasture for stud; no one
will be able to ride that one - he's too old for breaking to saddle!" Tina
called it anxiously, but Romilly, lost and intent, shook her head.
He
is frightened almost to death, no more. But he won't hurt me.
"Bring
me a lead-rope and bridle, Tina. No, you needn't come into the box if you are
afraid, just hand it to me across the rails," she said. Tina handed it
through, her face pale with apprehension, but Romilly, rope in hand, had her
eyes only on the black horse.
Well,
you beauty, you, do you think we can make friends, then?
The
horse backed nervously, but he had stopped kicking. What fool put him into
this crowded box, anyhow? Softly, softly, Blackie, 1 won't hurt you; do you
want to go out in the sunshine? She formed a clear image of what she meant
to do, and the horse, snorting uneasily, let him pull her head down and slip
bridle and lead-rope over it. She heard Tina catch her breath, amazed, but she
was so deeply entwined now with the horse that she had no thought to spare for
the woman.
"Open
the gate," she said abstractedly, keeping close contact with the mind of
the stallion. "That's wide enough. Come along now, you beautiful black
thing. . . . See, if you handle them right, no horse is vicious; they are
only afraid, and don't know what's expected of them."
"But
you have laran," said one of the watchers, grudgingly, "We
don't; how can we do what you do?"
"Laran
or
no," Romilly said, "if your whole body and every thought in it is
stiff with fear, do you expect the horse not to know it, to smell it on you,
even? Act as if you trusted the animal, talk to him, make a clear picture in your
mind of what you want to do - who knows, they may have some land of laran of
their own. And above all, let him know absolutely that you won't hurt him. He
will see and feel it in every movement you make, every breath, if you are
afraid of him or if you wish him ill." She turned her attention back to
the horse. "So, now, lovely fellow, we're going into the sunshine in the
paddock . . . come along, now . . . no, not that way, silly, you don't want to
go back in the stable," she said half aloud, with a little tug on the
ropes. In the paddock half a dozen women were running horses in circles on the
long lunge-lines, calling to them, and in general keeping the pace smooth.
Romilly made a quick check of what was going on - none of them were doing
really badly, but then no doubt they had chosen the more docile animals for
training first - and found a relatively isolated place of paddock; one or more
of the mares might be in season and she did not want him distracted. She backed
away on the lunge-line and clucked to him.
He
was strong, a big, heavy horse, and for a moment Romilly was almost jerked off
her feet as he began to lope, found the line confining him, then explored its
limits and began to run in a circle at its limit. She pulled hard and he slowed
to a steady walk, around and around. After a little, when she was sure he had
the idea, she began to let him move a little faster.
His
paces are beautiful; a horse fit for Carolin's self. Oh, you glorious
thing, you!
She
let him run for almost an hour, accustoming him to the feeling of the bridle,
then called for a bit. He fought it a little, in surprise - Romilly half
sympathized with him; she did not much blame him, she did not think she would
care to have a cold metal thing forced into her mouth, either.
But
that's the way it is, beauty, you'll get used to it, and then you can ride with
your master. .. .
At
noon she led him back, suggesting to one of the women they put her more docile
horse into the loose-box and leave her own small stall for the black stallion.
Already, it seemed, she could see the nebulous figure of King Carolin riding
into Hali on this splendid horse.
From
this work, which she found easy - well, not exactly easy, but familiar and
pleasant - she was sent to practice unarmed combat. She did not especially mind
having to learn to fall without hurting herself - she had, after all, fallen
from a horse more times than she could remember while she was learning to ride,
and she supposed the skill was similar - but the series of holds, thrusts, jabs
and throws seemed endlessly complex, and it seemed that every woman there,
including the beginners with whom she was set to practice basic movements, knew
more of it than she did. One of the older women, watching her for a moment,
finally motioned her away, signalled to the others to go on, and said,
"How long have you been pledged to the Sisterhood, my girl?"
Romilly
tried to remember. Things had been happening so swiftly in the last few moons
that she really had no notion. She shrugged helplessly. "I am not sure.
Some tendays-"
"And
you do not see much cause for this kind of training, do you?"
She
said, carefully trying to be tactful, "I am sure there must be some reason
for it, if it is taught in every hostel of the Sisterhood."
"Where
were you brought up - what's your name?"
"Romilly.
Or I'm called Romy sometimes. And I was brought up in the foothills of the
Hellers, near Falconsward."
The
woman nodded. "I would have guessed that much from your speech; but you
grew up in outland country, then, not near to a big city, where you never met a
stranger?"
"That's
true."
"Well,
then. Suppose you are walking down a city street, one of the more crowded and
dirty sections." She beckoned and the girl who had sat next to Romilly at
supper last night, Betta, came and joined them.
"You
are walking along a duty street where thieves cluster and men think all women
like the doxies of the taverns," the older woman said. Betta shrugged,
began to walk along the wall and the older woman suddenly leaped at her with a
strangling grip. Romilly gasped as Betta twisted her upper body, jerked the
woman forward and flung her to her knees, her arm immobilized behind her back.
"Ow!
Betta, you are a little rough, but I think Romy sees what is meant. Now, come
at me with a knife."
Betta
took up a small wooden stick, about the size of a clasp-knife, and came at the
woman with 'knife' lowered to stab. So rapidly that Romilly could not see what
happened, the 'knife' was in the other woman's hands and Betta lying on her
back on the floor, where the older woman pretended to kick her.
"Careful,
Clea," Betta warned, laughing and moving out of the way, then suddenly
jerked at the woman's foot and pulled her down.
Laughing
in her turn, Clea scrambled up. She said to Romilly, "Now do you see what
good this might be to you? Particularly in a city like this, where we are at
the edge of the Drylands, and there are likely to be men who think of women as
possessions to be chained and imprisoned? But even in a civilized city like
Thendara, you are likely to meet with those who will have neither respect nor
courtesy for man or woman. Every women taken into the Sisterhood must learn to
protect herself, and-" her laughing face suddenly turned deadly serious,
"When you are life-pledged to the Sisterhood, like myself, you will wear
this." She laid her hand on the dagger at her throat "I am pledged to
kill rather than let myself be taken by force; to kill the man if I can, myself
if I cannot."
A
shiver ran down Romilly's back. She did not know whether she would be able to
do that or not. She had been prepared to injure Rory seriously, if she must.
But to kill him? Would that not make her as bad as he was?
I
shall face that if, and when, I am sworn for life to the Sisterhood, should
that day ever come. By then, maybe, I will know what I can do and what I
cannot.
Clea
saw her troubled look and patted her shoulder. "Never mind, you will
learn. Now get over there and practice. Betta, take her and show her the first
practice moves so she won't be so confused; time enough later to throw her into
a group of beginners."
Now
that somebody had bothered to inform Romilly what they were doing and why, it
went better. She began to realize, then and in the days that followed, that
when she faced another woman in these sessions, she could read, by following
tiny body and eye movements, precisely what the other was going to do, and take
advantage of it. But knowing was not enough; she also had to learn the precise
movements and holds, jabs and thrusts and throws, the right force to use without
actually damaging anyone.
And
yet, in men's clothing, I travelled all through the Hellers. I would rather
live in such a way that I need not be prey to any man.
Yet
there was pride, too, in knowing that she could defend herself and need never
ask for mercy from anyone. Later the lessons in swordplay seemed easier to her,
but they brought another fear to the surface of her mind.
It
was all very well to practice with wooden batons where the only penalty for a
missed stroke was a bad bruise. But could she face sharp weapons without
terror, could she actually bring herself to strike with a sharp weapon at
anyone? The thought of slicing through human flesh made her feel sick.
I
am not a Swordswoman, no matter what they call me. I am a horse trainer, a bird
handler .
. . fighting is not my business.
The
days passed, filled with lessons and hard work. When she had been there for
forty days, she realized that Midsummer was approaching. Soon she would have
been absent from her home for a whole year. No doubt her father and stepmother
thought her long dead, and Darren was being forced to take his place as Heir to
Falconsward. Poor Darren, how he would hate that! She hoped for her father's
sake that little Rael was able to take her place, to learn some of the MacAran
gifts,- if Rael was what her father would have called "true MacAran",
perhaps Darren would be allowed to return to the monastery. Or perhaps he would
go as she had done, without leave.
A
year ago her father had betrothed her to Dom Garris. What changes there
had been in a year! Romilly knew she had grown taller - she had had to put all
the clothes she had worn when she came here, into the box of castoffs, and find
others which came nearer to fitting her. Her shoulders were broader, and
because of the continuous practice at swordplay and her work with the horses,
her muscles in upper arms and legs were hard and bulging. How Mallina would
jeer at her, how her stepmother would deplore it - You do not look like a
lady, Romilly. Well, Romilly silently answered her stepmother's imagined
voice, I am not a lady but a Swordswoman.
But
all her troubles disappeared every day when she was working with the horses,
and especially for the hour every day when she worked with the black stallion.
No hand but hers ever touched him; she knew that one day, this would be a mount
fit for the king himself. Day followed day, and moon followed moon, and season
followed season; winter closed in, and there were days when she could not work
even with the black stallion, let alone the other horses. Nevertheless, she
directed their care. Time and familiarity had changed the strange faces in the
hostel to friends. Midwinter came, with spicebread, and gifts exchanged in the
hostel among the Sisterhood. A few women had families and went home to visit
them; but when Romilly was asked if she wished for leave to visit her home, she
said steadily that she had no kin. It was simpler that way. But she wondered;
how would her father receive her, if she came home for a visit, asking nothing,
a professional Swordswoman in her tunic of crimson, and the ensign of the
Sisterhood in her pierced ear? Would he drive her forth, say that she was no
daughter of his, that no daughter of his could be one of those unsexed women of
the Sisterhood? Or would he welcome her with pride, smile with welcome and even
approve of her independence and the strength she had shown hi making a life for
herself away from Falconsward?
She
did not know. She could not even guess. Perhaps one day, years from now, she
would risk trying to find out. But in any case she could not travel into the
depths of the Hellers at the midwinter-season; most of the women who took leave
for family visits lived no further away than Thendara or Hali, which was,
perhaps, seven days ride.
In
this desert country there were few signs of spring. One day it was cold, icy
winds blowing and rain sweeping across the plains, and the next day, it seemed,
the sun shone hot and Romilly knew that far away in the Hellers the roads were
flooding with the spring-thaw. When she could work the horses, she took off her
cloak and worked in a shabby, patched tunic and breeches.
With
the spring came rumors of armies on the road, of a battle far away between
Carolin's forces and the armies of Lyondri Hastur. Later they heard that
Carolin had made peace with the Great House of Serrais, and that his armies
were gathering again on the plains. Romilly paid little heed. All her days were
taken up with the new group of horses brought in to them early in the spring -
they had put up a shelter for them and rented a new paddock outside the walls
of the hostel, where Romilly went with the women she was training, every
afternoon. Her world had shrunk to stables and paddock, and to the plain
outside the city where they went, two or three days in every ten, to work and
exercise the horses. One afternoon when they left the city and went out through
the gates, leading the horses, Romilly saw tents and men and horses, a
bewildering crowd.
"What
is it?" she asked, and one of the women, who went out every morning to
shop for fresh milk and fresh fruits, told her, "It is the advance guard
of Carolin's army; they will establish their camp here, and from here they will
move down again across the Plains of Valeron, to give battle to King Rakhal,"
her face twisted with dislike, and she spat.
"You
are a partisan of Carolin, then?" Romilly asked.
"A
partisan of Carolin? I am," the woman said vehemently, "Rakhal drove
my father from his small holding in the Venza Hills and gave his lands to a
paxman of that greedy devil Lyondri Hastur! Mother died soon after we left our
lands, and Father is with Carolin's army - I shall ride out tomorrow, if Clea
will give me leave, and try to find my father, and ask if he has word of my
brothers, who fled when we were driven from our lands. I am here with the
Sisterhood because my brothers were with the armies and could no longer make a
home for me; they would have found a man for me to marry, but the man they
chose was one Lyondri and his master Rakhal had left in peace, and I would not
many any man who sat snug in his home while my father was exiled!"
"No
one could blame you, Marelie," said Romilly. She thought of her travels in
the Hellers with Orain and Carlo and the other exiled men; Alaric, who had
suffered even more from Lyondri Hastur than Marelie's family. "I too am a
follower of Carolin, even though I know nothing about him, except that men
whose judgment I trust, call him a good man and a good king."
She
wondered if Orain and Dom Carlo were in the camp. She might go with
Merelie, when she went to seek her father in the camp. Orain had been her
friend, even though she was a woman, and she hoped he had come safe through the
winter of war.
"Look,"
said Clea, pointing, "There is the Hastur banner in blue with the silver
fir-tree. King Carolin is in the camp - the king himself."
And
where Orain is, Carolin is not far away, Romilly remembered. That night in the
tavern, when he had wanted her to make a diversion - had that shadowy figure to
whom he spoke, been Carolin himself?
Would
he welcome a visit from her? Or would he only find it an embarrassment? She
decided that when next Jandria visited the hostel - she had been coming and
going all year, on courier duty between Serrais and the cities to the south,
Dalereuth and Temora - she would ask what Jandria thought.
She
should have remembered that when a telepath's mind was drawn unexpectedly to
someone she had not seen for a time, it was not likely to be coincidence. It
was the next day, when she had finished working with the black stallion, and
finally led him back into the stable - after a year of work, he was perfectly
trained, and docile as a child, and she had spoken to the housemother of the
hostel about, perhaps, presenting him to the king's own self - she saw Jandria
at the door of his stall.
"Romy!
I was sure I would find you here! He has come a long way from that first day
when I saw you bridle him, and we were all sure he would kill you!"
Jandria
was dressed as if she had just come from a long journey; dusty boots, dust-mask
such as the Drylanders used for travel hanging unfastened at the side of her
face. Romilly ran to embrace her.
"Janni!
I didn't know you were back?"
"I
have not been here long, little sister," Jandria said, returning her hug
with enthusiasm. Romilly smoothed back her flying hair with grubby hands, and
said, "Let me unsaddle him, and then we will have some time to talk before
supper. Isn't he wonderful? I have named him Sunstar - that is how he thinks of
himself, he told me."
Jandria
said, "He is beautiful indeed. But you should not give the horses such
elaborate names, nor treat them with such care - they are to go to soldiers and
they should have simple names, easy to remember. And above all you should not
grow so fond of them, since they are to be taken from you very soon - they are
for the army, though some of them will be ridden by the women of the Sisterhood
if they go with Carolin's men when they break camp. You have seen the camp? You
know the time is at hand when all these horses are to go to the army. You
should not involve yourself so deeply with them."
"I
can't help growing fond of them," Romilly said, "It is how I train
them; I win their love and trust and they do my will."
Jandria
sighed. "We must have that laran of yours, and yet I hate to use
you like this, child," she said, stroking Romilly's soft hair. "Orain
told me, when first he brought you to us, that you have knowledge of
sentry-birds. I am to take you to Carolin's camp, so you can show a new handler
how to treat them. Go and dress yourself for riding, my dear."
"Dress
for riding? What do you think I have been doing all morning?" Romilly
demanded.
"But
not outside the hostel," Jandria said severely, and suddenly Romilly saw
herself through Janni's eyes, her hair tangled and with bits of straw in it,
her loose tunic unfastened because it was hot and sweaty, showing the curve of
her breasts. She had put on a patched and too-tight pair of old breeches she
had found in the box of castoffs which the Sisterhood kept for working about
the house. She flushed and giggled.
"Let
me go and change, then, I'll only be a minute or so."
She
washed herself quickly at the pump, ran into the room she shared now with Clea
and Betta, and combed her tousled hair. Then she got swiftly into her own
breeches and a clean under-tunic. Over her head she slipped the crimson tunic
of the Sisterhood and belted it with her dagger. Now she looked, she knew, not
like a woman in men's clothes, nor yet like a boy, or a street urchin, but like
a member of the Sisterhood; a professional Swordswoman, a soldier for Carolin's
armies. She could not quite believe it was herself in that formal costume. Yet
this was what she was.
Jandria
smiled with approval when she came back; Janni too wore the formal Swordswoman
tunic of crimson, a sword in her belt, a dagger at her throat, her small ensign
gleaming in her left ear. Side by side, the two swordswomen left the gates of
the hostel and rode toward the city wall of Serrais.
Now
Romilly had a closer look at the encampment of Carolin's men, the silver and
blue fir-tree banner of the Hasturs King above the central tent which, Romilly
imagined, must be either the king's personal quarters or the headquarters of
his staff. They rode toward the encampment, past orderly stable-lines, a
cookhouse where army cooks were boiling something that smelled savory, and a
field roped off, where a Swordswoman Romilly knew only slightly was giving a
group of unshaven recruits a lesson in unarmed combat; some of them looked
cross and disgruntled and Romilly suspected that they did not like being
schooled by a woman; others, rubbing bumps and bruises where she had tossed
them handily on the ground, were watching with serious attention.
A
guard was posted near the central part of the camp, and he challenged them.
Jandria gave him a formal salute.
"Swordswoman
Jandria and Apprentice Romilly," she said, "and I seek the Lord
Orain, who has sent for me."
Romilly
tried to make herself small, supposing that the guard would say something
sneering or discourteous, but he merely returned her salute and called a
messenger, a boy about Romilly's age, to request Lord Orain's attention.
She
would have recognized the tall, gaunt figure, the lean hatchet-jaw, anywhere;
but now he was dressed in the elegant Hastur colors and wore a jewelled pendant
and a fine sword, and Romilly knew that if she had met him first like this, she
would have been too much in awe of him to speak. He bowed formally to the
women, and his voice was the schooled accent of a nobleman, with no trace of
the rough-country dialect.
"Mastra'in,
it is
courteous of you to come so quickly at my summons," he said, and Jandria
replied, just as formally, that it was her pleasure and duty to serve the
king's presence.
A
little less formally, Orain went on "I remembered that Romilly was
schooled in the training, not only of hawks but of sentry-birds. We have a laranzu
come with us from Tramontane, but he has had no experience with
sentry-birds, and these are known to you, damisela. Will it please you
to introduce the skills of handling them to our laranzu?"
"I'd
be glad to do it, Lord Orain," she said, then burst out, "but only if
you stop calling me damisela in that tone!"
A
ragged flush spread over Orain's long face. He did not meet her eyes. "I
am sorry - Romilly. Will you come this way?"
She
trailed Jandria and Orain, who walked arm in arm. Jandria asked, "How's
Himself, then?"
Orain
shrugged. "All the better for the news you sent ahead, love. But did you
see Lyondri face to face?"
Romilly
saw the negative motion of the older woman's head. "At the last I was too
cowardly; I sent Romilly in my place. If I had met him then-" she broke
off. "I do not know if you saw those villages last year, along the old
North road. Still blighted, all of them . . ." she shuddered; even at this
distance, Romilly could see. "I am glad I am an honest Swordswoman, not a leronis!
If I had had to have a part in the blighting of the good land, I know not
how I could ever again have raised my eyes to the clean day!"
Was
this, Romilly wondered, the reason why The MacAran had quarreled with the
Towers, why Ruyven had had to run away, and he had driven the leronis from
his home without giving her leave to test Romilly and Mallina for laran!
Laran warfare, even the little she had seen of it, was terrifying.
Orain
said soberly, "Carolin has said he will not fight that kind of war unless
it is used against him. But if Rakhal has laranzu'in to bring against
his armies, then he must do what he must; you know that as well as I,
Janni." He sighed. "You had better come and tell him what you learned
in Hali, though the news will make him sorrowful. As for Romilly-" he
turned and considered her for a moment, "The bird-handlers' quarters are
yonder," he said, pointing. "The bird-master and his apprentice have
that tent there, and no doubt you will find them both around behind it. This
way, Janni."
Jandria
and Orain went off arm-in-arm toward the central tent where the banner flew,
and Romilly went on in the indicated direction, feeling shy and afraid. How was
she to talk to a strange laranzu? Then she straightened her back and
drew herself up proudly. She was a MacAran, a Swordswoman, and a hawkmistress;
she need not be afraid of anyone. They had summoned her to their aid, not the
other way round. Behind the tent she saw a roughly dressed lad of thirteen or
so, carrying a great basket, and if she had not seen him she could have smelled
him, for it stank of carrion. On heavy perches she saw three familiar,
beautiful-ugly forms, and hurried to them, laughing.
"Diligence!
Prudence, love!" She held out her hands and the birds made a little
dipping of their heads; they knew her again, and the old, familiar rapport
reached out, clung. "And where is Temperance? Ah, there you are, you
beauty!"
"Don't
get too close to them," a somehow-familiar voice said behind her,
"Those creatures can peck out your eyes; the apprentice there lost a
finger-nail to one of them yesterday!"
She
turned and saw a slight, bearded man, in the dark robes not unlike those of a
monk at Nevarsin, scowling down at her; then it seemed as if the strange
bearded face dissolved, for she knew the voice, and she cried out, incredulous.
"Ruyven!
Oh, I should have known, when they said it was a laranzu from Tramontana
- Ruyven, don't you know me?"
She
was laughing and crying at once, and Ruyven stared down at her, his mouth open.
"Romy,"
he said at last. "Sister, you are the last person in the world I would
have expected to see here! But - in this garb-" he looked her up
and down, blushing behind the strangeness of the beard. "What are you
doing? How came you-"
"I
was sent to handle the birds, silly," she said, "I bore them all the
way from the foothills of the Hellers into Nevarsin, and from Nevarsin to Caer
Donn. See, they know me." She gestured, and they made little clucking
noises of pleasure and acknowledgement. "But what are you doing here,
then?"
"The
same as you," he said. "The Lord Orain's son and I are bredin; he
sent word to me, and I came to join Carolin's army. But you-" he looked at
the dress of the Sisterhood with surprise and distaste, "Does Father know
you are here? How did you win his consent?"
"The
same way you won consent from him to train your laran within the walls
of Tramontana Tower," she said, grimacing, and he sighed.
"Poor
father. He has lost both of us now, and Darren-" he sighed. "Ah,
well. Done is done. So you wear the earring of the Sisterhood, and I the robes
of the Tower, and both of us follow Carolin - have you seen the king?"
She
shook her head. "No, but I travelled for a time with his followers, Orain
and Dom Carlo of Blue Lake."
"Carlo
I know not. But you handle sentry-birds? I remember you had always a deft hand
with horses and hounds, and . I suppose hawks as well, so the MacAran Gift
should fit you to handle these. Have you had laran training then,
Sister?"
"None;
I developed it by working with the beasts and the birds," she said, and he
shook his head, distressed.
"Laran
untrained
is a dangerous thing, Romy. When this is ended, I will find a place for you in
a Tower. Do you realize, you have not yet greeted me properly." He hugged
her and kissed her cheek. "So: you know these birds? So far I have seen
none but Lord Orain who could handle them."
"I
taught him what he knows of sentry-birds," Romilly said, and went to the
perches, holding out her hand; with her free hand she jerked the knot loose,
and Prudence made a quick little hop to sit on her wrist. She should have
brought a proper glove. Well, somewhere in Carolin's camp there must be a
proper falconer's glove.
And
that made her think, with sudden pain, of Preciosa. She had had no sight of the
hawk since they came into this drylands country. But then, Preciosa had left
her before they came to the glaciers, and rejoined her again when she had
returned to the green hills. It might be that Preciosa would return to her,
some day ...
.
. . and if not, she is free ... a free wild thing, belonging to the
winds of the sky and to herself. ...
"Can
you get me a glove?" she asked, "I can, if I must, handle Prudence
with my bare hands, because she is small and gentle, but the others are heavier
and have not such a delicate touch."
"That
creature, delicate?" Ruyven said, laughing, then the smile slid off as he
saw how serious she was. "Prudence, you call her? Yes, I will send my helper
for a glove for you, and then you must tell me their names and how you tell
them apart."
The
morning passed quickly, but they spoke only of the birds; not touching at all
on their shared past, or on Falconsward. At midday a bell was rung, and Ruyven,
saying that it was dinnertime in the army mess, told her to come along.
"There
are others of the Sisterhood in the camp," he said, "They sleep in
their hostel in the city - but I dare say you know more about them than I. You
can eat at their table, if you will - and I suppose it would be better, since
they do not mix with the regular soldiers except when they must, and you cannot
explain to the whole army that you are my sister."
She
joined the long lines of the army mess, taking her bread and stew to the
separate table with the seven or eight women of the Sisterhood who were
employed with the army - mostly as couriers, or as trainers of horses or
instructors in unarmed combat - one, in fact, as an instructor in swordplay.
Some of the women she had met in the hostel and none of them seemed even
slightly surprised to see her there. Jandria did not appear. Romilly supposed
that she had been kept with Lord Orain and the higher officers, who evidently
had their mess apart.
"What
are you doing?" one asked her, and she replied briefly that she had been
sent for to work with sentry-birds.
"I
thought that was work for lerosin," one of the women remarked,
"But then you have red hair, are you too laran-gifted?"
"I
have a knack for working with animals," Romilly said, "I do not know
if it is laran or something else." She did not want to be treated
with the distant awe with which they regarded the leroni. When she had
finished her meal she rejoined Ruyven at the bird-handlers' quarters, and by
the end of the day he was handling the birds as freely as she did herself.
Dusk
was falling, and they were settling the birds on then' perches, to be carried
in under the tent-roof, when Ruyven looked up.
"King
Carolin's right-hand man," he said briefly, "We see Carolin's self
but seldom; word comes always through Lord Orain. You know him, I
understand."
"I
travelled with him for months; but they thought me a boy," Romilly said,
without explaining. Orain came to them and said to Ruyven, ignoring Romilly,
"How soon will the birds be ready for use?"
"A
tenday, perhaps."
"And
Derek has not yet arrived," said Orain, scowling. "Do you think you
could persuade the leronis ..."
Ruyven
said curtly, "The battlefield is no place for the Lady Maura. Add to that,
Lyondri is of her kin; she said she would handle the birds but she made me
promise to her that she would not be asked to fight against him. I blame her
not; this war that sets brother against brother, father against son, is no
place for a woman."
Orain
said, with his dry smile, "Nor for a man; yet the world will go as it
will, and not as you or I would have it. This war was not of my making, nor of
Carolin's. Nevertheless, I respect the sentiments of the Lady Maura, so we must
have another to fly the sentry-birds. Romilly-" he looked down at her, and
for a moment there was a trace of the old warmth in his voice, "Will you
fly them for Carolin, then, my girl?"
So
when he wants something from me, he can be halfway civil, even to a woman? Anger made her voice cold.
She said, "As for that, vai dom, you must ask my superiors in the
Sisterhood; I am apprentice, and my will does not rule what I may do."
"Oh,
I think Jandria will not make trouble about that," Orain said, smiling.
"The Sisterhood will lend you to us, I have no doubt at all."
Romilly
bowed without answering. But she thought, not if I have anything to say
about it.
They
rode back to the hostel in the light of the setting sun, the sky clear and
cloudless; Romilly had never ceased to miss the evening rain or sleet in the
hills. It still seemed to her that the country here was dry, parched,
inhospitable. Jandria tried to talk a little of the army, of the countryside,
to point out to Romilly the Great House of Serrais, perched on the low
hillside, where the Hastur-kind had established their seat, as at Thendara and
Hali and Aldaran and Carcosa in the hills; but Romilly was silent, hardly
speaking, lost in thought.
Ruyven
is no longer the brother I knew; we can be friendly now but the old closeness
is gone forever. I had hoped he would understand me, the conflicts that drove
me from Falconsward -
they are like his own. Once he could see me simply as Romilly, not as his
little sister. Now - now all he sees is that I have become a
Swordswoman, hawkmistress ...no more than that.
Even
when I lost Falconsward, father, mother, home- I thought that when I again met
with Ruyven we would be as we were when we were children. Now Ruyven too is
forever gone from me.
I
have nothing now; a hawk and my skills with the sword and with the beasts. They reached the hostel,
where supper was long over, but one of the women found them something in the
kitchens. They went to their beds in silence; Jandria, too, was wrapped in
thoughts which, Romilly thought, must be as bitter as her own.
Damn
this warfare! Yes, that is what Ruyven said, and Orain too. It may be that
father was right . . . what does it matter which great rogue sits on the throne
or which greater rogue seeks to wrest it from him?
Every
day, Romilly worked first with the other horses, who were simpler to handle
because they were less intelligent; they seemed to have less initiative.
Sunstar she saved as a reward for herself at the end of a long morning of
working with the other horses, directing her assistants in exercising them and
personally supervising their gaits and the speed with which they had been
broken to saddle and riding gear. She knew that she was only one of the army
horsetrainers in Serrais who had been engaged by Carolin to produce the cavalry
for his armies - she saw some of the others, sometimes, come out from the city
of Serrais and working on the plains. But she would have been a fool not to
know that her horses were trained fastest and best.
Now,
at the near end of a long morning, she walked around her little domain, with a
pat and a touch on the nose, blissful moment of emotional rapport with each of
her horses. She loved every one, she felt the bittersweet knowledge that soon
she would have to part with them; but every one of them would carry some of
herself wherever Carolin's armies might ride. Touch after touch, a hug around a
sleek neck or a stroking of a velvety nose, and each moment of rapport building
her awareness higher, higher yet, till she was dizzied with it, with the sense
of racing in the sun, the awareness of running at full stretch on four legs,
not two, the mastery of the burden of the rider with its own delight, and
somewhere at the back of her mind Romilly felt as if each of these beasts
bearing its rider knew something of the inward lightness of the Bearer of
Burdens who, said in the writings of the sainted Valentine, bore alone the
weight of the world. She was each horse in turn, knowing its rebellions,
its discipline and submission, the sense of working in perfect unity with what
was allotted to it.
Blurrily,
she thought, perhaps only horses know what true faith may be as they share
with the Bearer of Burdens . . . and yet I, only human, have been chosen to
share and to know this. ... it was easier to be carried away in union and
rapport with the horses than with hawks or even the more brilliant
sentry-birds, because, she thought, horses had a keener intelligence. The
birds, sensitive as they were, blissful as it was to share the ecstasy of
flight, still had only limited awareness, mostly focused in their keener
eyesight. The sensual awareness was greater in the horses because they were
more organized, more intelligent, a human style of awareness and yet not quite
human.
And
now at the end of her morning, when the other horses had been led away, she
brought out Sunstar from his place. He worked so closely with her now that a
bare word summoned him, and a part of her flooded out in love, she was the
horse, she felt the saddle slipped over her own back as she caressed the
leather straps of it, she was in a strange doubled consciousness.
She
did not know whether she climbed into the saddle or accepted the grateful
weight on her own back. Part of her was sunk joyously into her own body
awareness, but that was all swallowed up in the larger consciousness of
striding free, racing with the wind ... so balanced, so fused into the horse
that for a long time she was hardly aware of which was herself, which Sunstar.
Yet for all the blurring she felt she had never been so precisely and wholly
herself, flooded with a kind of reality she had never known. The heat of the
sun, sweat streaming down her flanks, her exquisite leaning to balance from
above the weight she felt from below, from within. Time seemed divided
into infinitesimal fragments, to each of which she gave its true weight, with
no thought of past or future, all gathered up into the absolute present.
And,
then, regretfully, she came back and separated herself from Sunstar, sliding
down at the paddock rail, falling against him and flinging her arms around his
glossy neck in an absolute ecstasy of love, wholly giving, wholly aware. It
needed no words. She was his; he was hers; even if they never again knew this
ecstasy of consummation, this delicious flooding delight, if she never mounted
him again nor he raced with her toward an endless plain of oblivious pleasure,
they would always, in some part of their being, be fused together; this moment
was eternal and would go on happening forever.
And
then, with faint regret - but only faint, for in her exalted state she knew
that all things had their proper moment and this one could not be prolonged too
far - she let herself slide down another level of awareness and she was Romilly
again, giving the horse's silken shoulders a final pat of love and leading him,
separate now but never far, to his own paddock. She could hardly feel her feet
beneath her as she walked back toward the hostel, but she felt distinct
annoyance at Clea's friendly voice.
"How
beautiful he is - is that is the black stallion they told me about? Is he too
fierce, will they have to turn him out to stud again?" Then alerted by
something in Romilly's face, she asked, "You - you've been riding
him?"
"He
is gentle as a child," said Romilly absently. "He loves me, but a
child could ride him now." Absurdly, she wished she could give this
beautiful creature over to Caryl, who would surely love him as she did, for he
had more than a trace of her own kind of laran. Since she could not keep
this imperial creature herself, it would be finest if he could go to that
sensitive boy. Who was, she reminded herself with a sharp coming-down-to-earth,
the son of Lyondri Hastur and her sworn enemy. "What did you want,
Clea?"
"I
was coming to speak to you about your unarmed-combat lesson," the other
woman said, "but on the way I met with Jandria, who says that you have
been sent for again to the king's camp; you are to work with sentry-birds, I
hear. You are to take all your things; you will not be coming back here, I
understand."
Not
coming back? Then
she must say farewell to Sunstar even sooner than she had believed. But in her
aware state she knew it really did not matter. They would always be part of one
another. For now she was to be mistress of hawks to Carolin's armies - she did
not stop to think how she knew that - and she, like Sunstar, must carry her
appointed share of the world's weight. She said, "Thank you, Clea. And
thank you for everything, all you have taught me."
"Romy,
how your eyes shine! It has been a pleasure to teach you; it is always a
pleasure to teach anyone who is so apt and quick to learn," Clea said, and
hugged her with spontaneous warmth. "I am sorry to lose you. I hope you
come back to our hostel some day, but if not, we will meet at another.
Swordswomen are always travelling and we are sure to come across one another
somewhere on the roads of the Hundred Kingdoms."
Romilly
kissed her with real warmth and went into the hostel to pack her few
possessions.
By
the time she was finished, she found Jandria in the hallway ready to ride, she
too bearing a rolled pack with all her possessions.
"I
had Sunstar brought out," Jandria said, "The other horses are being
brought along later in the day; but you have spent so much time, and so much
love, on this one, that I thought you should have the privilege of handing him
over yourself to King Carolin."
So
it has come quicker than I thought. But after this morning, Sunstar and I will
always be one.
He
did not take kindly to the leading rein; Romilly wished that she could ride him
herself, but that was not suitable for a horse to be presented to the king. She
soothed him in soft words with her voice, and even more, with the outreaching
of contact, so that, guided by her soothing flood of tenderness and
reassurance, he came along, docile, feeling her concern and her touch guiding
him.
You
are to be a king's mount, did you know that, my beauty?
The
contact between them needed no words; it meant nothing to Sunstar, who knew
nothing of kings, and Romilly knew that while he might, and probably would,
come to love and trust Carolin, no other would ever ride Sunstar with that same
sense of close oneness with the horse. Suddenly she felt sorry for Carolin. The
beautiful black stallion might be his. But she, Romilly, would always own him
in both their hearts.
There
was a subtly different feel to the army camp today. The great central tent
where the Hastur banner had flown was being pulled down by what looked like a
horde of workmen, there was confusion coming and going through the length and
breadth of the camp. Leaving Sunstar with Jandria and the others who had come
to help her with the stallion, Romilly hurried off to the bird-handlers
quarters. She found Ruyven there, fussing with the perches installed for the
sentry-birds atop pack-animals. The chervines, disliking the carrion smell that
clung to the birds, were stamping restlessly and moving around with little,
troubled snorts and pawings.
"I
imagine," Romilly said, "that this all means that the army is about
to move southward and I am to go with you."
He
nodded. "I cannot handle or fly three birds alone," he said,
"and there is not another qualified handler for these sentry-birds within
a hundred leagues, except, God help us, for the ones who may be among Rakhal's
scouts or advance guard. We have had intelligence from Hali that Rakhal is
massing his own armies under Lyondri Hastur, and if he moves as we think - and
that will depend to some degree upon how well you and I use the eyes of our
birds - we will meet him near Neskaya in the Kilghard Hills. In fact, Lord
Orain has asked if we can fly the birds out today and see what we can spy
out."
"And,
of course, when Orain speaks, all the army jumps to attention," said
Romilly dryly. Ruyven stared at her.
"What
is the matter with you, Romy? Lord Orain is a good and kindly man, and Carolin's
chief adviser and friend! Do you dislike him? And with what reason?"
That
recalled Romilly to herself. It was only wounded vanity; while he thought her a
boy, Orain had admired her and trusted her, and when he knew her a woman, all
that went into discard and she was just another nonentity, another woman,
perhaps a danger to him. But that was Orain's problem and not hers; she had
done nothing to deserve being ruthlessly cast out of his affections like that.
And
he is the loser by it. Not I.
She
said steadily, "I value Orain's gifts better than you know; I travelled
with him and worked close to him for many moons. I do not think he should look
down on me simply because I am a woman; I have shown I can do my work as well
and skillfully as any man."
"No
one doubts that, Romy," said Ruyven, in a note so conciliating that
Romilly wondered how much of her hidden anger had actually shown in her face,
"But Orain loves not women, and he has not had Tower teachings - we know
in Tramontana that women's strengths and men's are not so different, after all.
We are the first Tower who experimented with a woman for Keeper in one of our
circles, and she is as skillful with the work as any man, even a Hastur. I
think you, too, could benefit by such training."
"I
used to think so," said Romilly, "But now I know what my laran is
and my Gift. Father too must have some of this Gift, or he could not train
horses as he does, and now I know how well I have inherited it."
"I
would not be too quick to decide against Tower training," said Ruyven,
"I too thought I had mastered my laran even in Nevarsin, but I
discovered that while I kept all at bay on the front lines of the war with
self, I had left undefended fortresses at my back, and through these I was
almost conquered."
Romilly
made an impatient gesture; the symbolism of the warrior struck her as
far-fetched and unnecessary. "If we are to take the birds out and fly
them, let us be about it, then. After all, if Lord Orain has given orders,
Carolin's chief adviser cannot be kept waiting."
Ruyven
seemed about to protest the sarcasm, but he sighed and was still. In his black
robe he looked very much like a monk, and his narrow face had the detached,
impassive look she associated with the Nevarsin brothers. "They will come
for us when they want us. Will you make sure that Temperance's jesses are not
too tight? I was afraid they were tearing an old scar on her leg, and Orain
said that before you came to them, she had suffered some damage. I think your
eyes are keener than mine."
Romilly
went to examine the bird's leg, soothing Temperance with her ready thoughts.
She found no serious trouble, but she did shift the location of the jesses
around the bird's leg; the old scar did indeed look red and raw. She sponged it
with a solution of karalla powder as a precaution, then turned the three
hoods inside out and dusted them lightly inside with the same powder as a
preventive against any dampness or infection, or the tiny parasites which
sometimes got on birds and caused trouble at molting.
Ruyven
said at last, "I am sorry to use my talents this way, at war, when I would
rather stay peacefully in the Tower and work for our own people in the hills.
But otherwise, all the Kingdoms may fall, one by one, to the tyranny of Lyondri
Hastur and that wretch Rakhal, who has neither honor nor laran nor any
sense of justice, but only a vicious will to power. Carolin, at least, is an
honorable man."
"You
say so and Orain says so. I have never seen him."
"Well,
you shall see him now," said Orain, standing at the back of the enclosure;
he had evidently heard the exchange. "Jandria told me of your hostel's
gift to the king, and she thought it only right, Mistress Romilly, that you
should present it with your own hands, so come with me."
Romilly
glanced at Ruyven, who said, "I will come to," and, replacing his
glove, came after them.
Why
is Ruyven the king's hawkmaster and I regarded only as his helper? I am a
professional Swordswoman and it is I who have the greater skill. Ruyven would
rather be in his Tower, and this work is life to me. He says himself that in
the Tower women are allowed to hold high offices, yet it never seems to occur
to him that I, his little sister, should be treated with that kind of fairness.
Carolin's armies, then, are ruled by the old notion that a man must always do
any work better than the most skilled of women?
But
her rebellious thoughts were interrupted by the sight of Jandria, who stood
holding Sunstar by the reins. He was saddled and bridled, and as he raised his
silken nose and whickered softly in recognition of Romilly, she reached out
again to touch the horse's mind in greeting and love.
Jandria
said, "It is an honor to the Sisterhood that we can make this splendid
gift to the king, and for their sake I thank you."
"I
am the one who is honored," Romilly answered in a low voice, "It has
been a pleasure to work with Sunstar."
"There
he is, with Lord Orain," said Jandria, and Romilly saw Orain, dressed for
riding, next to a hooded and cloaked man who was walking toward them. She
gripped Sunstar's reins in excitement.
"High-lord,
you lend us grace," Jandria began with a deep bow. "The Sisterhood of
the Sword is honored and pleased to present you with this magnificent horse,
trained by our finest horse-woman. Romilly?"
She
did not raise her eyes to the king's, though she was conscious of Orain's
glance. She said, looking only at the horse's sleek nose, "His name is
Sunstar, Your Majesty, and he is trained to all paces and gaits. He will carry
you for love; he has never felt whip or spur."
"If
you had his training, Mistress Romilly, I know he is well trained," said a
familiar voice, and she looked up at the hooded form of the king, to look into
the eyes of Dom Carlo of Blue Lake. He smiled at her surprise. "I
am sorry to have the advantage of you, Mistress MacAran; I knew who you were
long ago. . . ." and she remembered the moment when she had felt the touch
of his laran.
"I
wish you had told me, vai dom," said Orain, "I had no notion
she was a girl and I made a precious fool of myself!"
Dom
Carlo - no,
Romilly reminded herself, King Carolin, Hastur of Hastur, Lord of
Thendara and Hali - looked at Orain with open, warm affection. He said,
"You see only what you want to see, bredu," and patted Orain's
shoulder. He said to Romilly, "I thank you, and the Sisterhood, for this
magnificent gift, and for your loyalty to me. Both are precious to me, believe
me. And I have heard, too, that you are to continue with your handling of the
sentry-birds whose lives you saved when we met with you on the trail to Nevarsin.
I shall not forget, my-" he hesitated a moment, smiled and said,
"Swordswoman. Thank you - thank you all."
Romilly
touched Sunstar again, a loving and final gesture of leave-taking. "Serve
him well," she whispered, "Carry him faithfully, love him as I - as I
love you." She moved away from the animal, watching as the king gathered
up the reins and mounted.
He
has some touch of that gift. I remember well. Sunstar, then, does not go to a
brutal or insensitive man, but to one who will reckon him at his true worth.
Still
she was troubled. Dom Carlo had known she was a girl and had not
betrayed her among the men; but he might have spared her humiliation at Orain's
hands, too, by warning his friend. But then, remembering to be fair, she told
herself that he might have had no notion of her feelings for Orain, and he
certainly could never have guessed that she would throw herself at Orain's head
- or into his bed - in that way.
Well,
it did not matter; done was done. Ruyven came toward her and she presented him
to Jandria.
"My
brother Ruyven; the Lady Jandria."
"Swordswoman
Jandria," corrected the older woman, laughing. "I have told you; rank
we leave behind us when we take the sword. And your brother is-"
"Ruyven
MacAran," he told her, "Fourth in Tramontana, Second Circle. Have you
finished with my sister, domna?" Romilly noted that, as if
automatically, he called Jandria by the formal title given an equal or
superior, domna - Lady - rather than the simpler mestra which he
would have used to a social inferior.
"She
is free to go," Jandria said, and Romilly, frowning, followed Ruyven.
She
had hoped that some time that day it would seem natural to speak to Ruyven of
her departure from Falconsward. She had intended, then-how long ago it
seemed!-to seek the Tower where he had taken refuge. Somehow she had expected
that he would welcome her there. But this quiet, monkish stranger seemed to
bear no relation whatever to the brother who had been so close to her in
childhood. She could not imagine confiding in him. She felt closer now to
Jandria, or even to Orain, stranger that he had now become!
She
looked back briefly at Sunstar, pacing along at a stately gait with Dom Carlo
- no, she must remember, King Carolin - in the saddle. A brief mental touch
renewed the old communication, and she felt herself smile.
I
am closer to that horse than to anything human; closer than I have ever been to
anything human.
When
they had done for the day, Jandria came for her.
"At
the edge of the camp, there is a tent where the Swordswomen who follow Carolin
are to sleep," she said. "Come with me, Romilly, and I will show
you."
"I
should sleep here with the birds," Romilly said with a shrug, "No
hawkmaster goes out of earshot of his trained birds - I will roll myself in my
cloak, I need no tent."
"But
you cannot sleep among the men," said Jandria, "it is not even to be
thought of."
"The
king's hawkmaster is my own brother born," said Romilly, impatient now,
"Are you saying that he is likely to be any damage to my virtue? Surely
the presence of my older brother is protection enough!"
Jandria
said with a touch of sharpness, "You know the rules for Swordswomen
outside their hostels! We cannot tell everyone in the army that he is your
brother, and if it becomes known that an oath-bound Swordswoman has slept alone
in the tent with a man-"
"Their
minds must be like the sewers of Thendara," said Romilly angrily. "I
am to leave my birds because of the dirty minds of some soldiers I do not even
know?"
"I
am sorry, I did not make the rules and I cannot unmake them," said
Jandria, "but you are sworn to obey them."
Fuming
with wrath, Romilly went along with Jandria to supper and to bed in the tent
allotted to the dozen women of the Sisterhood who were assigned to Carolin's
army. She found Clea there, along with a strange woman from another hostel; the
two were to train Carolin's men in close-quarters unarmed combat. The others
were not well known to Romilly; they were among the women who had been
quartered in the hostel but did not really belong to it. They were horse-handlers,
quartermasters and supply clerks, and one, a short, sturdy, dark woman who
spoke with the familiar mountain accent of the Hellers, was a blacksmith, with
arms like whipcord, and great swelling muscles across back and shoulders that
made her look almost like a man.
I
cannot believe that one's virtue would be in danger if she slept naked among a
hundred strange soldiers -
she looks as if she could protect herself, as the Hali'imyn here say,
against all the smiths in Zandru's forges!
And
then she thought, resentfully, that she had been more free when she travelled
in men's clothes through the Hellers with Orain and Carlo - Carolin -
and their little band of exiles. She had worked along with the men, had walked
alone in the city, drunk in taverns. Now her movements were restrained to what
the rules of the Sisterhood thought suitable to avoid trouble or gossip. Even
as a free Swordswoman, she was not free.
Still
grumbling a little, she made ready for bed. It struck her again; even these
free women, how petty their lives seemed! Jandria she loved, and she could
speak freely with Jandria without stopping to censor her thoughts; but even
Jandria was trammeled by the question of, what would the men in the army think,
if the Swordswomen were not bound by their rules to be as proper and ladylike
as any marriageable maiden in the Hellers? Clea, too, she respected and
genuinely liked, but still she had few friends in the Sisterhood. Yet when I
came among them, I thought I had found, at last, freedom to be myself and still
let it be known that I was a woman, not the pretense of male disguise.
I
do not want to be a man among men, and hide what I am. But I do not care much
for the society of women -
not even Swordswomen - either. Why can I never be contented, wherever
I am?
Nevertheless,
at last she was doing work for which she was fitted, and if any man offered her
any insult she need not fear him as she had feared Rory. And the king himself
had complimented her work with horses. Before she climbed into her bedroll, she
reached out drowsily, as she had done every night of her year in the hostel,
and sought for Sunstar's touch. Yes, he was there, and content King Carolin
would be good to him, certainly, would appreciate his intelligence, his
wondrous speed, his beauty. She reached out again, a little further, seeking
for the sentry-birds on their perches. Yes, all was well with them, too, and if
it was not, Ruyven at least slept near them as a proper hawkmaster should.
Sighing, Romilly slept.
She
had returned to the bird-handlers's tent the next morning, and with Ruyven's
young apprentice, a boy of fourteen or so called Garen, they set about feeding
the birds. As she was examining the bandaged spot on Temperance's leg, she
sensed a stranger's presence, and in the next moment, confirming it, the birds
set up the high shrilling sound they had to indicate uneasiness in the presence
of a stranger.
It
was a young officer, in a green-gold cape; his hair was a light
strawberry-blonde, his face narrow and sensitive.
"You
are the hawkmaster?"
"Do
I look like it?" Romilly snapped, "Swordswoman Romilly, para
servirte. Carolin's hawkmistress."
"Forgive
me, mestra, I meant no insult. I am Ranald Ridenow, and I came to give
orders from His Majesty; I am to lead the detachment which will move ahead of
the main army this morning." His voice was crisp, but without arrogance,
and he smiled a little nervously. "I was also to seek my kinswoman, Domna
Maura Elhalyn." He had to raise his voice over the shrilling noise the
sentry-birds were making.
"As
you can see, the lady is not in my pocket," said Romilly tartly,
"Nor, as far as I know, abed with my brother, but you can ask him. Now, Dom
Ranald, if you would kindly move away from the birds, since they will keep
up this god-forgotten noise until you are out of their sight..."
He
did not move. "Your brother, mestra! Where will I find him?"
He managed to sound anxious even while he was yelling to make himself heard
over the noise of the nervous birds, and Romilly came and physically shoved him
out of range. The sound slowly quieted to soft churring noises, then silence.
She
said, "Now that we can hear ourselves think, I know nothing about your
kinswoman, though my brother, the hawkmaster, spoke of a Lady Maura, now I come
to think of it. I will go and - no, I need not, for here he is."
"Romy?
I heard the birds - is someone bothering them?" Ruyven suddenly sighted
the Ridenow officer.
"Su
servo, Dom ... may
I help you?"
"Lady
Maura-"
"The
lady sleeps in that tent yonder," said Ruyven, indicating a small pavilion
nearby.
"Alone?
Among the soldiers?" Ranald Ridenow's nostrils narrowed in distaste, and
Ruyven smiled.
"Sir,
the lady is better chaperoned by these birds than by a whole school of
lady-companions and governesses," he said, "for you yourself have
heard that any stranger coming near will rouse them, and if I hear them
aroused, I would come to her aid, and could rouse the camp if there was
danger."
Ranald
Ridenow looked at the young man in the ascetic dark robe, and nodded with
approval "Are you a cristoforo monk?"
"I
have not that grace, sir. I am Ruyven MacAran, Fourth in Tramontana, Second
circle," he said, and the young officer in the green and gold cloak
acknowledged him with another nod.
"Then
my cousin is safe in your hands, laranzu. Forgive my question. Do you
know if the lady is yet awake?"
"I
was about to awaken her, sir, as she asked, or better, send my sister to do
so," said Ruyven. "Romy, will you tell Lady Maura that a kinsman
seeks her?"
"It
is not urgent, not at this moment," said the Ridenow lord, "But if
you could awaken her, Carolin has sent orders that we are to ride as soon as
possible. I have orders-"
"I
will need no more than thirty minutes to be ready," said Ruyven,
"Romy, you are ready for riding? Awaken the Lady Maura, and tell
her."
His
offhand assumption of authority nettled Romilly; so, for this arrogant lowland
lordlet, she was to become errand-girl to some plains lady? "It's not that
easy," she snapped, "the birds must be fed, and I'm nae servant to
the lady; if ye' want her fetched and carried for, me lord, ye' can even do it
yerself." She realized with horror that her strong mountain accent was
back in her speech when her year in the plains had almost smoothed it away.
Well, she was a mountain girl, let him make of it what he wanted. She was a
swordswoman and no lowlander to bow and scrape before the Hali'imyn! Ruyven
looked scandalized, but before he could speak a soft voice said;
"Well
spoken, Swordswoman; I, even as you, am servant to Carolin and to his
birds.." A young woman stood at the door of the small tent, covered from
neck to ankle in a thick night-gown, her flame-red hair loose and curling
halfway to her waist. "I did not have the pleasure of meeting you
yesterday, Swordswoman; so you are our bird-handler?" She bowed slightly
to Ranald. "I thank you for your concern, cousin, but I need nothing,
unless Carolin has summoned me - no? Then, unless you wish it; lace up my gown
for me as you used to do when you were nine years old, you may tell Carolin
that we will be ready to ride within the hour, as soon as the birds are
properly fed and tended. I will meet you in good time, kinsman." She
nodded in dismissal, and as he turned away, she laughed gaily.
"So
you are Romy?" she said, "Ruyven spoke to me of you on the way here,
but we had no idea you would be our handler. Perhaps while we are on the road,
you can get leave from your Swordswoman company to share my tent, so that we
can both be near the birds at night? I am Maura Elhalyn, leronis, monitor
in Tramontana to the Third Circle, and my mother was a Ridenow, so that I have
some of the Serrais Gift... do you know that laran?"
Romilly
said, "I do not. I know little of laran."
"Yet
you must have it, if you can handle sentry-birds," Lady Maura said,
"for they can be handled only with laran; they are almost
impossible to work with otherwise. You have the old MacAran Gift, then? In
which Tower were you trained, mestra? And who is your Keeper?"
Romilly
shook her head silently. She said, "I have never been in a Tower, domna."
She
looked surprised, but her manners were too good to show it. She said, "If
you will excuse me for five minutes, I will go and put on my gown - I was only
teasing my cousin Ranald, I can perfectly well dress myself - and I will do my
part in tending the birds, as I should do; I had no intention of leaving all
their care to you, Swordswoman."
She
went quickly to the tent, her fingers already busy at the fastenings of her
night-gown, and pushed it shut behind her. Romilly went to examine the bandages
of Temperance's leg, seeing with approval that the sore spot was smooth and not
at all festered. While Ruyven went to tend Diligence she said, with a frown,
"Are we to have this lady to rule over us, then?"
Ruyven
said, "The leronis knows better than that, Romilly. She is not
familiar with sentry-birds, so she told me; yet you noted that they did not
scream at her approach either. She helped to care for them on the trip from the
mountains - surely you did not think I handled three birds alone?"
"Why
not?" Romilly asked, "I did." Yet Maura's frank friendliness had
disarmed her. "What is this Serrais laran of which she spoke?"
"I
know very little about it," said Ruyven, "even in the Towers it is
not common. The folk of Serrais were noted, in the days of the breeding-program
among the Great Houses of the Hastur kinfolk, because they had bred for a laran
which could communicate with those who are not human . . . with the
trailfolk, perhaps, or the catmen, or ... others beyond them, summoned from
other dimensions by their starstones. If they can do that, communicating with
sentry-birds should be no such trouble. She said to me once that it was akin to
the MacAran Gift, perhaps had been bred from it."
"You
knew her well in the Tower?" Romilly asked with a trace of jealousy, but
he shook his head.
"I
am a cristoforo. And she is a pledged virgin. Only such a one would come
among soldiers with no more fuss or awareness than that."
He
might have said more, but Lady Maura came from her tent, dressed in a simple
gown, her sleeves rolled back. Without a moment's hesitation she took the
smelly basket of bird-food and took a handful, without any sign of distaste,
holding it out to Prudence, crooning to the bird.
"There
you are, pretty, there is your breakfast - speaking of which, Romilly, have you
breakfasted? No, you have not, like a good handler, you see to your beasts
first, do you not? We need not exercise them, they will have exercise enough
and more today. Ruyven, if you will send an orderly to the mess, we should have
breakfast brought to us here, if we are to ride as soon as all that." As
she spoke, she was feeding the bird tidbits of carrion, smiling to it as if
they were fragrant flowers, and Prudence churred with pleasure.
Well,
she is not squeamish, she does not mind getting her hands dirty.
Ruyven
picked up the thought and said in an undertone, "I told you so. In
Tramontana she flies a verrin hawk and trained it herself. To the great
dismay, I might add, of Lady Liriel Hastur, who is highest in rank there, and
of her Keeper, Lord Doran; who both love hawking but would rather leave their
training to the professional falconer."
"So
she is not some soft-handed lady who wishes to be waited on hand and
foot," Romilly said, grudgingly approving. Then she went to finish her
work with Temperance, and when she had done, an orderly had brought food and
small-beer from the mess, and they sat on the ground and breakfasted, Lady
Maura, with no fuss, tucking her skirt under her and eating with her fingers as
they did.
When
they had finished, Ranald Ridenow appeared with half a dozen men, and the three
of them loaded the sentry-birds on to blocks on their horses; the little
detachment moved through the just-wakening camp, and took the road east across
the desert lands toward the Plains of Valeron.
The
Ridenow lord set a hard pace, though Romilly and Ruyven and the soldiers had no
trouble keeping up with them. Lady Maura was riding on a lady's saddle, but she
did not complain and managed to keep up. Although she did say to Romilly, at one
stop to breathe the horses, "I wish I could wear breeches as you do,
Swordswoman. But I have already scandalized my friends and my own Keeper, and I
should probably not give them more cause for talk."
"Ruyven
told me you trained a verrin hawk," Romilly said.
"So
I did; how angry everyone was," Maura said, laughing, "but now,
knowing you, Swordswoman, I know I am not the first nor yet the last woman to
do so. And I would rather have her trained to my own hand than to a strange
falconer's and then try to transfer her loyalty to me. Sometimes I have
actually felt that I am flying with the bird; though perhaps it is my
imagination."
"And
perhaps not," Romilly said, "for I have had that experience."
Suddenly, and with poignant grief, she remembered Preciosa. It had been more
than a year that she had dwelt in that damned desert town, and Preciosa had no
doubt gone back to the wilds to live, and forgotten her.
Yet,
even if I see her no more in life, the moments of closeness we have known are
part of me now as then, and there is no such thing as future or past. . . . For a moment her head
swam, and she confused the moment of ecstasy with Preciosa's flight with that
all-consuming moment in which she had ridden Sunstar, joined absolutely with
the horse, she flew, she raced, she was one with sky and earth and stars....
"Swordswoman-?"
Lady Maura was looking at her, troubled, and Romilly swiftly jerked her
awareness back to the moment. She said the first thing that came into her head.
"My
name is Romilly, and if we are to work together you need not say Swordswoman,
so formally, every time . . ."
"Romilly,"
Maura said with a smile, "and I am Maura; in the Tower we do not think of
rank separating friends, and if you are a friend to these birds I am your
friend too."
Then
the Towers have something in common with the Sisterhood, she thought, but then
Ranald called the men together and they rose to ride again. She wondered why
they were going so far ahead of the main army.
All
day they rode, and at night made camp; the men and Ruyven slept under the
stars, but there was a little tent for Lady Maura, and she insisted that
Romilly must share it. They were tired from riding at a hard pace all day, but
before they slept, Lady Maura asked quietly, "Why did you never go to a
Tower for training, Romilly? Surely you have laran enough."
"If
you know Ruyven, and how he had to come there," said Romilly, "then
you will know already why I did not."
"Yet
you left your home, and quarreled with your kin," said Maura, quietly
insistent, "After that, I should think you would have come at once."
And
so I had intended, Romilly
thought. But I made my way on my own, and now have no need of the training
the leronis told me I must have. I know more of my own laran than
any stranger. She fell into a stubborn silence, and Lady Maura forbore to
question her further.
Two
days they rode, and they came out of the desert land and into green country;
Romilly breathed a sigh of relief when they were able to see hills in the
distance, and the evening breath of cool rain. It was high summer, but at this
season frost lay on the ground at morning, and she was glad of her fur cloak at
night. On the third day, as the road led over a high hill which commanded a
view for many leagues around, Ranald Ridenow drew them to a halt.
"This
will be the right place," he said, "Are you ready with the
birds?"
Maura
evidently knew what was wanted, for she nodded, and asked, "Who will you
link with? Orain?"
"Carolin
himself," said the Ridenow lord quietly. "Orain is not head-blind, but
has not laran enough for this. And they are his troops."
Maura
was blinking rapidly and looked as if she was about to cry. She said in an
undertone, more to herself than Romilly, "I like this not at all, spying
upon Rakhal's movements. I - I swore not to fight against him. But Lyondri has
brought all this upon himself, for he too is oath-forsworn! After what he has
done . . . kinsman or no . . ." and she broke off, pressing her lips tight
together and saying, "Romy, will you fly first?"
"But
I know not what to do," Romilly said.
"Yet
you are hawkmistress . . ."
"I
know the sentry-birds, habits, diet and health," said Romilly, "I
have not been schooled to their use in warfare. I do not know-"
Maura
looked startled, but quickly covered it, and Romilly was amazed; she is
being polite to me? She said quietly, "You need only fly the bird and
remain in rapport with her, seeing what she sees through her eyes. Ranald will
make the link with you and so relay what you have seen to Carolin, so that he
can spy out the land ahead and know what are Rakhal's movements in the
land."
The
name sentry-birds suddenly made sense to her, she had never really
thought about it before. She took Prudence from the block, loosing with one
hand the knots which secured her jesses, and lifted her free; watched her soar
high into the sky. She arranged her body carefully in the saddle, leaving a
part of her consciousness ... a very small part ... to make certain she did not
fall from the saddle, and then....
.
. . high into the sky, on long, strong winds, rising higher and higher. ...
All
of the land lay spread out below her, like a map. She could see the curve of
water below, and was dimly aware of a presence within her mind, seeing what she
saw through her link with the bird. Through this mind, which she recognized as
Carolin's, she began to make sense out of what she saw, although this was very
distant and almost unconscious . . . most of her was soaring with the
bird, seeing with keen sharpness everything which lay below.
.
. . There the shores of Mirin Lake, and beyond that, Neskaya to the north, at
the edge of the Kilghard Hills. And there . . . ah, Gods, another circle of
blackness, not the scar of forest-fire, but where Rakhal's men have rained
clingfire from the sky from their infernal flying machines! My people and they
burn and die beneath Rakha's fires when it was given to me and I swore with my
hand in the fires of Hali that I would protect them against all pillage and
rapine while they were loyal to me, and for that loyalty they burn ...
.
. . Rakhal, as Aldones lives, I shall burn that hand from you with which you
have sown disaster and death on my people . . . and Lyondri I shall hang like a
common criminal for he has forfeited the right to a noble death; the life he
now lives as Rakha's sower of death and suffering is more ignoble than death at
the hands of the common hangman....
Over
the Kilghard Hills now, where the hills lie green with summer, and the
resin-trees blaze in the sun ... there again a Tower rises . . . quickly, fly to
the North, little bird, away from the spying eyes of Lyondri's own forsworn laranzu'in..
And
there they lie, Rakhal's armies, where I can march to the East and take them
unawares, unless they can spy with eyes like mine . . . and I think there are
no sentry-birds now except in the far Hellers. . . .
Romilly
heard the shrill crying of the bird as if from her own throat; the contact
melted and for a moment she sat on her horse again, Carolin gone from her mind,
Ranald Ridenow suddenly jolted out of contact, staring at her. She lurched in
the saddle, swayed, and Maura said quietly, "Enough. Ruyven, your turn, I
think. . . ."
Romilly
had not noticed; Ruyven had loosed Temperance at the same time as Prudence.
Diligence, too, was gone from Maura's saddle. She saw Ruyven slump . . . as
she had done? .. . and for an instant she was part of Ruyven/Ranald/Carolin
flying in rapport with the bird, swooping low over the armies, something inside
her counting . . .
Horsemen
and foot soldiers, so many . . . wagons of supplies, and archers, and . . . ah
Gods . . . Evanda guard us, that smell I know, somewhere within their ranks
they are again making clingfire
. . .
By
sheer force of will Romilly tore herself, exhausted, from the rapport. She was
not interested in the details of Rakhal's armies. She would rather not know;
the horror she had felt in Ruyven's mind, or was it Carolin's, made her feel
dizzy and sick. Spent, she collapsed in her saddle, almost asleep where she
sat, weak, light-headed. She noticed at the edge of her consciousness that the
sun was substantially lowered, almost at the edge of the horizon, and the light
was dimming enough so that the great violet disk of Liriel could be seen rising
from the eastern horizon, a few nights before its full. Her mouth was dry, and
her head ached and throbbed as if a dozen tiny smiths were beating on their
forge-anvils inside it.
Darkness
descended so swiftly that Romilly wondered if she had been asleep in her
saddle; it seemed to her that one moment she looked on sunset and the next, on
violet moonlight, with Liriel floating in the sky. As she came aware, she
realized Ruyven was looking at her anxiously.
"You're
back?"
"For
some time," he said, surprised. "Here, the soldiers have food ready
for you," He gestured, and she slid from her horse, aching in every
muscle, her head throbbing. She did not see Maura at all. Ranald Ridenow came
and said, "Lean on me, if you wish, Swordswoman," but she
straightened herself proudly.
"Thank
you, I can walk," she said, and Ruyven came and motioned her to sit beside
them on the grass. She protested "The birds-"
"Have
been seen to; Maura did it when she saw the state you were in," he said.
"Eat."
"I'm
not hungry," she said, shrugging it off, and rose swiftly to her feet.
"I had better see to Prudence-"
"I
tell you, Maura has the birds and they are perfectly all right," Ruyven
said impatiently, and thrust a block of sticky dried fruit into her hand.
"Eat this."
She
took a bite of it and put it aside with a grimace. She knew that if she
swallowed it she would be sick. From somewhere her little tent had been put up,
the one she shared with Maura, and she shoved into it, aware from somewhere of
Ranald Ridenow's face, white and staring, troubled. Why should he care? She
flung herself down on her pallet in. the tent and fell over the edge of a dark
cliff of sleep.
She
knew she had not really wakened, because she could somehow see through the
walls of the tent to where her sleeping body lay, all thin like gauze so that
she could see through it to beating heart and pulsing veins. She waved a hand
and the heart speeded up its beat slightly and the veins began to go in
swirling circles. Then she flew away and left it behind her, rising over plains
and hills, flying far away on long, strong wings toward the Hellers. Ice cliffs
rose before her, and beyond them she could see the walls of a city, and a woman
standing on a high battlement, beckoning to her.
Welcome
home, dear sister, come here to us, come home...
But
she turned her back on them too, and flew onward, higher and higher, mountain
peaks dropping away far below, as she flew past the violet disk ... no, it was
a round ball, a sphere, a little world of its own, she had never thought of the
moon as a world. Then a green one lay beneath her, and the peacock crescent of
Kyrrdis, dark, lighted only at the rim by the red sun, which somehow was still
shining at midnight. She flew on and on, until she left the blazing sun behind
and it was only a star among other stars, and she was looking down from
somewhere on the world with four moons like a jeweled necklace, and someone
said in her mind, Hali is the constellation of Taurus, and Hali the ancient
Terran word for necklace in the Arabic tongue, but the words and the worlds
were all meaningless to her; she dropped down, down slowly, and the great ship
lay smashed against the lower peaks of the Kilghard Hills, and a Ghost wind
blew across the peaks . .. and a little prim voice in her mind remarked, racial
memory has never been proven, for there are parts of the brain still
inaccessible to science . . . and then she began to fly along the rim of
the Hellers. But the glaciers were breathing their icy breath at her, and her
wings were beginning to freeze, the dreadful cold was squeezing her heart,
slowing the wing-strokes, and then one wing, hard like ice, broke and
splintered, with a dreadful shock of pain in her head and heart, and the other
wing, white and frozen and stiff, would no longer beat, and she sank and sank,
screaming....
"Romilly!
Romilly!" Lady Maura was softly slapping her cheeks. "Wake up! Wake
up!"
Romilly
opened her eyes; there was a soft lantern-glow in the tent, but through it she
was still freezing among the glaciers, and her wings were broken .. . she could
feel the sharp jagged edges near her heart where they had shattered in the cold
and splintered away....
Maura
gripped her hands with her own warm ones, and Romilly, confused, came back to
her own body's awareness. She felt the unfamiliar, intrusive touch . . .
somehow Maura was within her body, touching it with mental fingers,
checking heart and breathing . . . she made a gesture of refusal, and Maura
said gently, "Lie still, let me monitor you. Have you had many attacks of
this kind of threshold sickness?"
Romilly
pushed her away. "I don't know what you're talking about; I had a bad
dream, that is all. I must have been tired. I've never done that before with
the birds, and it was exhausting. I suppose the leroni are accustomed to
it."
"I
wish you would let me monitor you and be sure."
"No,
no. I'm all right.'' Romilly turned her back to the other woman and lay still,
and after a moment Maura sighed and put out the lantern, and Romilly picked up
a fragment of her thought, stubborn, but I should not intrude, she is no
child, perhaps her brother . . . before she slept again, without dreams
this time.
In
the morning she still had a headache, and the smell of the carrion for
bird-food made her as queasy - she told herself impatiently - as if she were
four months pregnant! Well, whatever ailed her, it was not that, for she was as
virgin as any pledged leronis. Perhaps it was her woman's cycles coming
on her - she had lost track, with the army coming and her intense work with
Sunstar. Or perhaps she had eaten something that did not agree with her;
certainly she had no mind for breakfast. After caring for the birds, she got
into her saddle without enthusiasm; for the first time in her life she thought
it might be rather pleasant to sit inside a house and sew or weave or even
embroider.
"But
you have eaten nothing, Romilly," Ruyven protested.
She
shook her head. "I think I caught a chill yesterday, sitting so still
after sunset in my saddle," she said. "I don't want anything."
He
surveyed her, she thought, as if she were Rael's age, and said, "Don't you
know what it means when you cannot eat? Has Lady Maura monitored you?"
It
was not worth arguing about. She said sharply, "I will eat some bread in
my saddle as we ride," and took the hunk of bread, smeared with honey,
that he handed her. She ate a few bites and surreptitiously discarded it.
Ranald
was riding with the blank look Romilly knew enough, now, to associate with a
telepath whose mind was elsewhere. At last he came out of it and said, "I
should know how far it is to the main branch of the armies; Carolin will join
with us sometime today, though they are some way behind us. Romilly, will you
take your bird and see if you can spy out Carolin's armies, and see how far
they are behind us?"
She
felt some alarm after her last experience with the flight with birds. Yet when
she flung the bird in the air and followed it with her linked mind, she found
that there was none of the disquieting disorientation; to her intense relief,
it was only like flying Preciosa; she could see with a strange doubled sight,
but that was all. The bird's sight, keener than her own a hundred times, told
her that Carolin's armies lay half a day's ride behind where she rode with
their little advance party, and she could sense, but with no sense of
intrusion, that Ranald had picked up then: position and relayed it to Carolin
himself.
"We
will camp here and wait for them," Maura said with authority, "We are
all weary, and our hawkmistress needs rest."
I
should not let them pamper me. I do not want Ruyven, nor Orain, nor Carolin
himself, to think that because I am a woman I must be favored. Orain will
respect me if I am as competent as a man. ...
Lord
Ranald yawned. He said, "I too feel as if I had been dragged backward over
a waterfall, after these days of hard riding. I shall be glad of the rest. And
the birds need not be moved more." He gestured to the soldiers to set up
the camp.
Romilly
knew the main army was approaching, not from what she heard - though, when she
listened quietly, where she lay inside the tent she shared with Domna Maura,
she could hear a soft distant sound in the very earth which she knew to be the
noise of the great column of men on the march. But what really told her of
Carolin's approach was a growing awareness within her mind, a sense of oneness,
an approaching that she knew....
Sunstar.
Her mind
was within and surrounded by the black stallion, it seemed that it was not on
his but her back that the king rode, surrounded by his men, and for a moment
her mind strayed to touch his too, to see Orain for a moment through his eyes,
with love and warmth. Once she had seen them together, unguarded, wishing
somehow that she had such a friend. Now she shared, for a moment, the quick
unconscious touch between the king and his sworn man, something not sexual but
deeper than that, a closeness which went back through their lives, mind and
heart and somehow encompassed even a picture of their first meeting as young
children, not yet in their fourth year ... all three dimensions of time as
somehow she was aware of Sunstar as a colt running hi the hills of his native
country....
She
jerked herself away from the extended contact and back into her own body,
shocked and startled. She did not know what was happening, but she supposed it
was some new dimension of her laran, opening of itself - what did she
need, after all, of a Tower?
But
the first person who came to her, when she was working around the birds,
picking up little tags and fringes of the sight-awareness she had known
yesterday when she flew them, was Jandria. After the two Swordswomen had
greeted one another with a hug, Jandria said, "We had your message through
the birds; it was Himself who told me." Romilly remembered that this was
always how she spoke of King Carolin when he was not actually present. "You
are doing well, Romy. And I have permission from the Swordswomen here for you
to go on sharing Lady Maura's tent, if you will. I will go and speak to her; we
were girls together."
Romilly
held her peace - she had long known that Jandria was of higher rank than she had
ever realized, though she had left it behind her when she took the oath of the
Sisterhood. She turned her attention to the birds, though she could hear, with
a tiny pang she recognized as jealousy, the two women talking behind her
somewhere.
And
1 have no friend, no lover, 1 am alone, done as any monk in his solitary cell
in the ice caves of Nevarsin ... and wondered what she was thinking about, for even
now her mind was filled with the awareness of the great stallion racing in the
sun, and Carolin with him, riding....
She
made her reverence before she ever looked up at the king's face and then was
not really sure whether she had bowed to Carolin or to Sunstar, his black mane
disordered with the hill-country wind. Carolin slid from his back and greeted
her graciously.
"Swordswoman
Romilly, I came myself to bring you my thanks for your message; you and your
companions with the sentry-birds. We are to march tomorrow on Rakhal's armies
and you and the laranzu must do this, for I have pledged to my kinswoman
Maura that she need not take part in any battle against her kinsman." He
smiled at her. "Come, child, you were not so tongue-tied when you rode
with me to Nevarsin. You called me 'Uncle' then."
Romilly
blurted, "I did it in ignorance, sir. I meant no disrespect, I thought you
were only Carlo of Blue Lake."
"And
so I am," said Carolin gently, "Carlo was my childhood nickname, as
my little cousin is called Caryl. And my mother gave me the country estate
called Blue Lake when I was a boy of fifteen. And if I was not what you thought
me, why, neither were you, for I thought you a stable boy, some MacAran's
bastard, and not a leronis, and now I find you."
She
remembered that he had seen her in boy's clothes, and she sensed that he had
known her a girl quite soon, and for his own reasons had kept silent. That
silence had allowed Orain to befriend her, and for that she was grateful. She
said, "Your Majesty-"
He
waved that aside. "I stand on no ceremony with friends, Romilly, and I
have not forgotten that if it had not been for you, I would have been the
banshee's breakfast. So; you will fly the sentry-birds to keep my advisers
ahead of Rakhal's - or Lyondri's - movements into battle?"
She
said, "I shall be honored, sir."
"Good.
Now I must speak with my kinswoman and relieve her fears," he said.
"Dame Jandria, too, I think, still has enough love for Lyondri."
"For
what he was," said Jandria quietly, standing in the door of Maura's tent,
"not for what he is, Carlo. It goes against me to raise my own hand to
him, but I will not lift a single hand to hold back his fate. If I had laran
enough, I would be among your leroni today, to hold back what he has
become. If he still holds enough of what he was to know what he is now, he
would pray for clean death."
Maura's
eyes were wet with tears. She said, "Carlo, I swore I would never raise
hand or laran against my Hastur kin. I am Elhalyn, and they are blood of
my blood. But like Jandria, I will not hinder you from what you must do,
either." She went to the perch where Temperance sat and bent her head
before the bird, and Romilly knew it was because she was crying.
This
war that sets brother against sister and father against son . . . what matters
it which rogue sits on the throne or which greater rogue seeks to wrest it from
him . . .
? she was not sure whether it was Ruyven's thought she heard, or whether
her father spoke in her memory, for it seemed that time had no more
existence....
Carolin
said, looking at them sadly, "Still, I swore to protect my people, even if
I must protect them from the Hastur kin who are unmindful of that oath. I wish
you could know how little I want Rakhal's throne, or how gladly would I cede it
to him if only he would treat my people as a king must, respecting them and
protecting them. . . ." But at seemed he spoke to himself, and afterward
Romilly was not sure whether he had spoken aloud or if she had imagined it all.
Her laran, it seemed, was playing strange tricks on her, it seemed as if
her mind was too small to enclose everything that wanted to crowd into it, and
she felt somehow stretched, violated, crammed with strangenesses, as if her
head were bursting with it. She said to Carolin, "May I greet my good
friend, your horse, my lord?"
"Indeed,
I think he is missing you," Carolin said, and she went to Sunstar, where
Carolin had flung his reins around a rail when he dismounted, and flung her
arms around the horse.
You
are a king's mount but still are you mine, she said, not in words, and felt
Sunstar in her mind, reaching out, mine, love, together, sunlight/sunstar/always
together in the world. ...
She
discovered that she was clinging to the rail alone; Sunstar was gone and Ruyven
was touching her hesitantly. "What ails you, Romy? Are you sick?"
She
said brusquely, "No," and went to the birds. Again, somehow, it
seemed, she had lost track of time. Could this be some new property of her laran
that she did not understand? Maybe she should ask Maura about it. She was a
leronis and would certainly be willing to help. But she could hear Maura
in her mind now, weeping for Rakhal who had once sought her hand, so that
afterward Maura had become leronis and a pledged virgin . . . mourned
for Rakhal as Jandria mourned for Lyondri . . . and she for Orain's old
comradeship . . . no, that was gone, what was wrong with her mind these
days?
There
was no need of the sentry-birds this day, and Romilly, still weak and confused
after yesterday's fierce efforts and the evil dreams of the night, was glad of
it. Yet as she rode, in the favored place near Carolin and his advisers, she
was not really conscious of herself or of her own horse, so much was she riding
with Sunstar at the head of the troops. Orain was riding near them, and she
heard him talking easily and as equals with Lady Maura and Lord Ranald.
"You
have the Serrais laran, Ranald, it would be no trouble to you, I dare
say, to learn to handle the birds; it is near enough the MacAran Gift, which I
saw in Mistress Romilly all those weeks when we travelled together." From
her distance Romilly could sense the memory of how Orain had watched her, with
tenderness not unmixed with something else, something akin to love. She knew
now why Orain avoided her, because he could not see Romilly now without me
painful memory of the boy Rumal who he had thought he knew, and he felt like a
fool, layers of awareness overlapping and blurring.
Ranald
said, "I am willing to try. And perhaps Mistress Romilly would be willing
to school me. Though like all she is arrogant and harsh of tongue-" and
Maura's merry laughter, saying that he was not used to women who did not regard
him, a Ridenow lord, as a special creation for their delight.
"Oh,
come, Maura, I am not all that much of a womanizer, but if women were made by
the Goddess Evanda for the delight of men, why should I refuse the Lady of Light
her due by failing to worship Her in her creation, the loveliness of
women?" he laughed. "No doubt She will punish you, one day,
Orain, that you deny her due." And Orain's good-natured laughter, and
Romilly knew that she was listening to a conversation not meant for her ears.
She tried to shove it away but she did not know how, except by turning her
attention elsewhere, and then she was riding again with Sunstar and too aware
of Carolin. It was not a comfortable day, and when that evening Ranald came and
asked if he could assist her to dismount, and said that he wished to learn the
ways of the birds, so that he could fly one while Lady Maura was oath-bound not
to do so, she was short with him.
"It
is not so simple as all that. But you may try to approach them; however, do not
complain to me if you should lose a fingernail or even an eye!"
She
did not like the way he looked at her. It reminded her all too much of Dom Garris,
or even Rory, as if he had physically fingered her young breasts with rude
hands; she was painfully aware of his look - I have never felt this way
before - and of the open desire in it. But he had done nothing, said
nothing, how could she make any objection to it? She drew her cloak about her
as if she was cold, and gestured him toward the birds.
He
lowered his eyes and she knew he had picked up some sense of her unease. He
said quietly, "Forgive me, mestra, I meant no offense." No
more than Carolin could he seek to force any attentions on a woman unwilling,
since he would share the victim's shock and distress, her sense of violation
even at a rude look. But he was not used to women who were not of his own
Hastur-kind who would be aware of this sensitivity.
Yet
a woman who has not laran
- it is like coupling with a dumb beast, hardly alive . . . she saw the
scalding crimson on his turned-away neck and wished she knew how to tell him
that it was all right. He approached the birds; she sensed the way in which he
reached out to them, trying to echo the sense of harmlessness; to extend his
senses toward the birds with nothing but the friendliest feelings. For a moment
Romilly waited . . . then Temperance lowered her head and rubbed it against the
scratching-stick in the Ridenow lord's hand.
So
he will be flying them, and he will be one with us, as Maura was . . . she did not know why
the thought troubled her.
Maura
must be still with the army, Romilly thought, they could not have left her
behind, with the country alive with War; but Romilly had not seen her that day.
When they rode out ahead with the birds, it was Lord Ranald who came with them,
Temperance on his saddle; Romilly had yielded her own favorite, Prudence, to
Ruyven, so that she could take Diligence, who was the most difficult of the
birds to handle, on her own saddle. Diligence fussed and shrilled restlessly,
but quieted when Romilly touched her mind.
Yes,
you're a beauty too, Romilly
told the bird, and saw nothing incongruous in so addressing the huge, ugly
creature.
But
there was no call for their services that day, and Romilly was glad, for it
would give Lord Ranald extra time to be completely familiar with the bird, to
create close rapport with her. After an hour or so, when Romilly felt sure
there would be no trouble and no need for her service, Romilly let her mind
drift again into close contact with Sunstar, where he rode with Carolin at the
head of the army.
Now
it seemed that the countryside was deserted, with great open tracts of deserted
lands, and now and again a quiet farmstead lying empty, wells broken, houses
burnt or fallen away with time. Romilly, riding with Sunstar, was really not
aware that she was eavesdropping on Carolin and Orain, riding together with
Lady Maura close to them. Maura was wrapped in her cloak and spoke little, but
Carolin said, looking at the deserted country, "When I was a child I rode
through here and this was all settled land with farmers and crops. Now it is a
wasteland."
"The
war?" Maura asked.
"War
in my father's time, before I was old enough to hold a sword - still I remember
how green and fertile was this country. And now the settled lands are nearer to
the edge of the hills; in the aftermath of war there are always bandits, men
made homeless by war and conscienceless by the horrors they have seen; they
ravaged this country, what the war had left of it, until the folk settled
nearer to the protection of the forts and soldiers near Neskaya."
But
Romilly, her mind submerged in Sunstar, thought only, how green and fertile
were the fields, how lovely the pastures. They camped that night by a watercourse,
a narrow brook which rolled and tumbled down a cascade of old piled rocks, then
flowed smooth and lovely across a fertile meadow starred with little blue and
golden flowers.
"It
will be a perfect night in High Summer," said Carolin lazily, "Before
the night is past, three of the moons will appear in the sky, and two of them
near the full."
"What
a pity we will not have Midsummer-Festival here," Maura laughed, and
Carolin said, suddenly sober, "I vow to you, Maura - and to you, bredu,"
he added, turning to Orain with a smile of deep warmth, "that we shall
hold our Midsummer-Festival within the walls of Hali, at home. What say you to
that, cousins?"
"Evanda
grant it," Maura said seriously, "I am homesick."
"What,
none of the young men in that faraway tower beyond the mountains-"
lightly, Carolin punned on the name of Tramontana - "have shaken your
resolve to remain maiden for the Sight, Maura?"
Maura
laughed, though the sound was strained.
"On
the day when you invite me to be queen at your side, Carolin, I shall not send
you away disappointed."
Sunstar
jigged sidewise, restlessly, as Carolin leaned from his saddle to touch Maura's
cheek lightly with his lips. He said, "If the Council will have it so,
Maura, so be it. I had feared your heart was dead when Rakhal turned away from
you."
"Only
my pride was wounded," she said quietly. "I loved him, yes, as
cousin, as foster-brother; but his cruelty slew my heart. He thought he could
come to me over the bodies of my kinfolk, and I would forgive him all when I
saw the crown he offered, like a child forgetting a bruise when she is given a
sweetnut. I would not have it said that I turned from Rakhal to you because I
would have the one who could bring me the crown-" her voice faltered,
and Sunstar tossed his head indignantly at the jerk on the reins which brought
him to a halt so that Carolin could lean again toward Maura's saddle; but this
time he felt it as his rider lifted the slight from of the leronis bodily
from her saddle to his own, and held her there. There were no more words, but
Sunstar, and Romilly with him, sensed an outflow, an outpouring of emotion that
made him restless, made him prance until Carolin chided him with a tug on the
reins, and in Romilly's mind were flooding images of sleek flanks and satiny bodies,
of swift running in moonlight, which made her rub her head as if she were
feverish, with unfamiliar sensations flooding her whole body, so that she
retreated abruptly into herself, away from the great stallion's unfamiliar
emotions and touch.
What
has come aver me, that I am so filled with emotion, that I laugh and cry
without a word spoken or a touch?
Carolin
said in her mind, and she was not conscious that he was not at her elbow, We
can leave the horses for tonight in this field; you are a leronis, can
you keep them there without fencing, which we have no time to set up? And
Romilly was about to answer when she heard Maura's voice as dear as if spoken
aloud, I have not Romilly's gift, but if you will summon her to help me, I
will do what I can.
Romilly
tugged the reins a little and pulled her own horse to a stop. Ruyven turned
startled eyes on her, but she said, "We are to stop here for the night and
I am summoned to the king and the leronis."
It
was Orain who brought her the word, riding through the mass of men and horses
and equipment flowing along the road, calling out, "Where are you off to,
Romilly? The vai dom has requested you to attend him!"
"I
know," said Romilly, and went on toward the king, leaving Orain staring
and surprised behind her.
Carolin
extended his arm toward the broad field. He said, "We are to make camp
here for the night. Can you help Maura to set pastures here for the horses so
that they will not stray?"
"Certainly,"
she said, and the men set about making camp, turning the best horses into the
field, Sunstar among them.
Maura
said, when they were done, "Now we shall set a chasm across which they
will see, though we cannot; horses are afraid of heights, so we need only make
them see it."
Romilly
linked minds with the young leronis, and together they wove an illusion;
a great chasm between horses and men, surrounding the pasture . .. Romilly,
still partly linked in mind with Sunstar and her senses extending to her own
horse and to the others in the field . . . and aware with them of the great
black stallion - saw it and physically flinched, great spaces down which she
might fall, shrinking back....
"Romilly,"
said Maura seriously, breaking away from the link, "You are what we call a
wild telepath, are you not?"
She
turned, filled with a prickly awareness of the critical sound in Maura's voice.
"I don't know what you mean," she said stiffly.
"I
mean, you are one whose laran has been developed of itself, without the
discipline of a Tower," Maura said. "Do you know that it can be dangerous?
I wish you would let me monitor you, and make certain that you are under
control. Laran is no simple thing."
She
said, even more stiffly, "The people of MacAran have been animal trainers,
working with birds and horses and dogs, since time unknown; and not all of them
have been supervised by the Towers either." A trace of the mountain accent
crept back in her speech, as if the echo of her father's voice, saying,
"The Hairimyn would have it that a man's own mind must be ruled
over by their leronyn and their Towers!"
Maura
said placatingly, "I have no wish to rule over you, Romilly, but you look
feverish, and you are still of an age where you might be subject to some of the
dangers of laran improperly supervised and developed. If you cannot
allow me to monitor you and see what has happened to you, your brother-"
Still
less, Romilly thought, could she allow her stern and ascetic brother, so like a
cristoforo monk, to read the thoughts she hardly dared acknowledge to
herself. She twisted away impatiently, fumbling at a barrier against Maura.
"It is generous of you, vai domna, but truly you need not concern
yourself about me."
Maura
frowned a little, and Romilly sensed that she was weighing the ethics of a
Tower-trained telepath, never to intrude, against a very real concern for the
girl. It annoyed Romilly - Maura was not so much older than she was
herself, why did she think she was needed to straighten out Romilly's laran?
I
was left on my own with it, and now when I need it no longer they are eager to
offer help! I was not offered help when my father would have sold me to Dom Garris, and there
was none to help me when I would have been raped by Rory, or when I made an
idiot of myself forcing my way into Orain's bed. I have won these battles alone
and unhelped, what makes them think I need their damned condescension now?
Maura
still looked at her uneasily, but at last, to Romilly's relief, she sighed and
turned away.
"Look,"
Carolin said, and pointed, "Are you sure that your illusion has
worked?"
Romilly
looked up, her breath almost stopping; Sunstar was rushing toward them, his
head flung up, his legs seeming hardly to touch the ground as he bolted. Maura
lifted her hand. "Wait," she said, and as Sunstar reached the corner
of the meadow he stopped short, placing all four feet together as if truly on
the edge of a cliff, his head lowered, foam dripping from his teeth as if in
mortal terror. He shuddered with fear, then snorted, backed away, tossed his
head and raced away in the other direction.
"The
illusion will hold them tonight, at least," Maura said.
"But
he is so frightened," Romilly protested; she was dripping with the
stallion's sweat of fear.
"Neither
memory nor imagination," said Maura quietly. "You have both, Romy,
but look at him now." And, indeed, Sunstar was quietly cropping grass; he
stopped, sniffed the wind and began to move closer to a group of mares silently
grazing in the meadow.
"He
will improve the quality of your royal stables," said Orain jocularly,
"and any mare he covers tonight will have a foal worthy of those same
stables, I doubt not."
Carolin
chuckled. "He is welcome to his sport, old friend. We who are responsible
for this war-" he touched Maura gently, only on the shoulder, but the look
that passed between them made Romilly blush, "must wait for a while for
our satisfactions; but they will be all the dearer for that, will they not, my
love?"
She
only smiled, but Romilly physically turned her eyes from the intensity of that
smile.
That
night Jandria came and asked Romilly if she wished to join the Swordswomen's
mess again, now that she was not riding ahead of her special detachment with
the birds. It was evident from Jandria's voice that she expected Romilly to be
overjoyed at being allowed again to join her sisters, but Romilly was too weary
and raw-edged for the chatter, the noise and giggling of the young women of the
Sisterhood, eager to sleep away from their communal tent. She made the excuse
that she was still needed among the birds.
"And
you need not fear that I am improperly guarded," she said sourly,
"for between the Lady Maura and my monkish brother, I might as well be a
priestess of Avarra on her guarded isle where no man may come without the Dark
Mother's death-curse!"
She
could see that Jandria was still troubled, but the older woman only embraced
her. She said, "Rest well, then, little sister. You look so weary; they
have demanded much of you in very little time, and you are still young. Be sure
to eat a good supper; I have known leroni before this, and to replenish
their energies after their work, a fragile little girl will eat enough to
satisfy three wood-cutters! And sleep long and soundly, my dear."
She
went away; Romilly fed the birds, with Ruyven's help, and even Lord Ranald, she
noted with satisfaction, did not shirk his share of the tending. But the smell
of their carrion food which the army hunters had brought her, made her feel
queasy again, and although Carolin had sent a good haunch of roast chervine from
his own tables, with his compliments to his bird-handlers, she could hardly eat
and only shoved the food around on her plate.
By
the time the camp was completely settled for the night, it was well past
sunset, but the night was lighted with three full moons, and the fourth was a
half-filled crescent.
"Four
moons," said Lord Ranald, laughing, "What madness shall we do? They
say in Thendara, What is done under four moons need not be remembered or
regretted...
Ruyven
said with frozen courtesy, "Such nights are sacred, friend; I shall spend
much of my night in sacred silence and meditation, if Carolin's soldiers-"
he gestured to where, faintly and downwind, he could hear the sound of a rryl
and loud, untuneful voices all shouting the chorus of a popular drinking
song, "will allow me a little peace."
"The
king's quartermasters have given the soldiers an extra ration of wine,"
Lord Ranald said, "but not enough to make them drunk; they will sit round
their fires and sing in the moonlight, that is all." He offered Romilly
his arm. "Shall we join them at their fires? There are three or four men
in my old unit who have fine voices and sing together in taverns; they sing
well enough to get all the beer they want, and more. And be assured they will
offer a Swordswoman no discourtesy, but be pleased to know you have come to
hear their music."
"They
sound not like such fine voices," said Romilly, listening to the
discordance of the faraway song, and Ranald laughed.
"They
are but amusing themselves; it would not be worth the trouble of the Windsong
Brothers - for so they call themselves, though they are not brothers but
four cousins - to sing before all are assembled and calling for entertainment.
We will be in plenty of time to hear them, and the soldiers like it if the
gentry come to their fires to hear their amusements."
Put
like that, Romilly could not refuse, though she felt dull and headachy and
wished she could go quietly to bed. But with the camp filled with song and
laughter she knew she would not sleep anyhow; perhaps Ruyven had the discipline
for quiet meditation in such a racket, but she did not. She took his offered
arm.
The
moonlight made it almost as bright as day - well, perhaps a grey and rainy day;
she did not think she could have read print, and the colors of Ranald's garish
cloak and her own crimson tunic, were indistinct, but there was plenty of light
to make out where they were going. A part of Romilly, unawares, was cropping
grass in the meadow with Sunstar, and yet she was filled with a strange
restlessness. As they neared the fires they could hear the soldiers roaring out
a song whose words were far from decorous, about some scandalous goings-on
among the nobility.
"O,
my father was the Keeper of the Arilinn Tower, He seduced a chieri with a
kireseth flower; From this union there were three; Two were emmasca and
the other was me..."
"That
song," said Ranald, "would have them torn to pieces if they sang it
anywhere on the Plains of Arilinn. Here it is different, there is an old
rivalry between Arilinn and Neskaya Towers ..."
"Curious
goings-on for a Tower," said Romilly, whose picture of a Tower was still
colored by what she had seen in Ruyven's disciplined and austere thoughts.
He
chuckled. "I spent a few years in a Tower - just enough to learn control
of my laran. You must know how it is. When it began, when I was thirteen,
I sometimes could hardly tell myself from a crtdmac in rut, or from
going into heat with every bitch on the farm! It was very upsetting to my
governess - I was still in the schoolroom then. Of course, she was a
frozen-faced old viper - I won't insult my favorite dog by calling the lady a
bitch! I am sure she often wished she could have had me gelded like the pack
chervines, so she could go with my lessons!"
Romilly
giggled uneasily. He sensed her unease and said kindly, "I am sorry - I
had forgotten you were a cristoforo and brought up to their ways. I had
thought girls were different, but I had four sisters, and if I had ever
entertained any feelings that girls were different and more delicate, I got
over them soon enough - and I won't apologize, you are a woman from the
mountains and I know from your work with the birds that you have been around
animals enough to know what I mean."
Romilly
blushed, but the feeling was not unpleasant, and she remembered the high summer
in her own hills near Falconsward, the world flowing with life, cattle and
horses mating, so that she too had unashamedly shared the flow of nature all
round her, even though, with her child's body, it had been an undifferentiated
awareness, sensual but never personal. She knew he was teasing her, but she did
not really care.
Listen,"
said Ranald, "There are the singers." They were all in the uniform of
common soldiers; four men, on tall and burly, another with shaggy,
reddish-brown hair and an untrimmed patch of beard, one short and fat with a
round, rosy face and a lopsided smile, and the fourth tall and gaunt, with a
scrawny face and big red hands; but from his throat came the most exquisite
tenor she had ever heard. They hummed a little together to find their pitch,
then began to sing a popular drinking song which, Romilly knew was very old.
Aldones
bless the human elbow.
May
he bless it where it bends;
If
it bent too short, we'd go dry, I fear,
If
it bent too long, we'd be drinking in our ear..."
They
finished the catch by up-ending their tankards with a flourish to show them
empty, and the soldiers roared approval and poured them all brimming mugfulls,
which they drank and then began another song.
Their
songs were rowdy but not indelicate, mostly concerned with the pleasures of
drink and women, and their voices were splendid; with the rest, Romilly cheered
and sang along on the choruses till she was hoarse. It made her forget her own
strange feelings, and she was grateful to Lord Ranald for suggesting this. At
one point someone thrust a mug into her hand - it was the strong, fragrant
lowlands beer, and she felt a little tipsy from it; her voice sounded good to
herself - usually she had no singing voice to speak of - and she felt
pleasantly dizzied and yet - not drunk enough to be off her guard. At last, it
grew later and the men sought their beds, and the Windsong Brothers, full of
wine and yet walking steadily, sang their last song to wild cheers and
applause. Romilly had to lean on Ranald as she sought her tent.
He
drew her close to him in the bright moonlight. He whispered, "Romy - what
is done under the four moons need not be remembered or regretted."
Half-heartedly
she shoved him away. "I am a Swordswoman. I do not want to disgrace my
earring. You think me wanton, then, because I am a mountain girl? And Lady
Maura shares my tent."
"Maura
will not leave Carolin this night," Ranald said seriously, "They
cannot marry, till the Council had agreed, and will not while she is needed as
his leronis, but they will have what they can; do you think she would
blame you? Or do you think me selfish enough to make you pregnant, while we are
in the middle of this war and your skills are as valuable as mine?" He
tried to pull her into his arms again, but she shook her head, wordless, and he
let her go.
"I
wish - but it would be no pleasure to me if it was none to you," he said,
but he pressed a kiss into her palm. "Perhaps - never mind. Sleep well,
then, Romilly." He bowed again, and left her; she felt empty and chill,
and almost wished she had not sent him away....
I
do not know what I want. I do not think it is that.
Even
in her tent - and Ranald had been right, Lady Maura was not within, her
blanketroll was tossed empty on the floor of the tent - she felt that the
moonlight was flooding through her whole body. She crawled into her blankets,
pulling off her clothes; usually she left on her undertunic at night, but
tonight she felt so heated in the moonlight that she could hardly bear the
touch of cloth on her feverish limbs. The music and the beer were still
pounding in her head, but in the dark and silence, it seemed that she was
outside in the moonlight, that she was somewhere pawing at the grass, a sweet,
heady smell arising from the earth and somewhere a frantic restlessness
everywhere within her.
Sunstar,
too, seemed flooded with the restlessness of the four moons and their light . .
. now she was linked deep in rapport with the stallion . . . this was not new to
her, she had sensed this before, in bygone summers, but never with the full
strength of her awakened laran, her suddenly wakeful body . . . the
scent of the grass, the flooding of life through her veins till she was all one
great aching tension . . . sweet scents with a tang of what seemed to her
shared and doubled senses a tang of musk and summer flowers and something she
did not even recognize, so deeply was it part of herself, profoundly sexual,
sweeping away barriers of thought and understanding . . . at one and the same
time she was one with the great stallion in rut, and she was Romilly, frightened,
fighting to break out of the rapport which she had, before this, shared so
unthinking, it was too much for her now, she could not contain it, she was
bursting with the pressure of the raw, animal sexuality under the stimulating
light of the moons. . . . She felt her own body twisting and turning as she
fought to escape, hardly knowing what it was she dreaded, but if it should
happen she was terrified, she would not bear it she would be drawn in forever
and never get back never to her own body what body she had no idea it was too
much unendurable ... PASSION, TERROR, RUT ...NO, NO...
Blue
moonlight flooded the tent as the flap was drawn back . . . but she did not see
it, she was beyond seeing, only the moonlight somehow reached her fighting
body, tossing head. ...
She
was held gently in gentle arms; a voice was calling her name softly. Gentle
hands were touching her.
"Romilly,
Romy . . . Romy, come back, come back . . . here, let me hold you like this,
poor little one . . .come back to me, come back here . . ." and she
saw Ranald's face, heard his voice softly calling her; she felt as if she was
drowning in the flood of what she was not, came back gratefully to awareness of
her own body, held close in Ranald's arms. His lips covered hers and she put up
her arms and drew him down wildly to her, anything now, anything to keep her
here safely within her own body, shut out the unendurable overload of emotion
and physical sensation; Ranald's arms held her, Ranald caressed her, she was
herself, she was Romilly again, and she hardly knew whether it was fear, or
gratitude, or real desire, that locked her lips to his, flung her into his
arms, thrusting away all the unwanted contact with the stallion, reminding her
that she was human, human, she was real, and this, this was what she wanted. .
. . She could read in his mind that he was startled and delighted, even if a
little overcome, by her violent acceptance, and more startled yet to find her
virgin, but it did not, in that shared violence of that moment, matter to
either of them at all.
"I
knew," he whispered afterward, "I knew it would be too much for you.
I do not think it was to me you were calling, but I was here, and I
knew...."
She
kissed him thankfully, astonished and delighted. It had happened so naturally,
it now seemed so sweet and right to her. A random thought, as she floated off
into sleep, touched her mind at the edge of laughter.
It
would never have been like this with Dom Garris! I was perfectly right
not to marry him.
Carolin's
army remained encamped in the watercourse for three days. On the third day,
Romilly went out to fly the sentry-birds again, Ranald at her side. She was
quite aware that she must somehow shield her thoughts from Ruyven; he would not
understand at all what had happened. He would see only that his young and
innocent sister had shared her bed with a Ridenow lord, and to do her justice,
Romilly was more worried that this might spoil the ability of the three of them
to work together, than she was troubled by any sense of shame or regret for
what she had done. Ruyven would be certain to think that Ranald had played the
seducer, and it was not like that at all; he had simply pulled her free from
something she had found herself quite unable to tolerate. Even now, Romilly did
not know why she had found it unendurable.
"Remind
me not to look at you and smile like that," Ranald said, picking up her
concern lest Ruyven should know, and she smiled back. She felt soothed and
happy, able to look into the pasture by the watercourse where Sunstar and the
horses were grazing and pick up her old, close communion with the stallion,
with no sense of distaste or unease, no break in her warm sense of unity with
Sunstar.
Ranald
made it so easy for me.
Maura
told me, about something else; horses have neither memory nor imagination. That
is why I can pick up where I left off.
Twice
during these days she went and joined the Swordswomen's mess, sharing her meal
with the women of the Sisterhood. Clea jeered a little at her.
"So
you are still one of us, in spite of hob-nobbing with the nobility and
all?"
"Be
fair," said Jandria, "she has her work to do just as we do, and Lady
Maura is as good a chaperon as a whole hostel full of our sisters. One of the
handlers is her own brother, too. And if rumor tells true-" but she looked
inquisitively at Romilly, "that same Lady Maura will one day be our queen
- what do you know of that, Romy?"
Romilly
said, "I know no more than you. And King Carolin cannot marry until the
Council gives him leave - a noblewoman of Lady Maura's station cannot marry
without parental consent, and how much more if the king comes wooing? But
certainly, if they have their will, there will be a marriage made."
"And
if there is not, the king will get him a bastard to make as much trouble in the
kingdom as that gre'zuin Rakhal," said Tina scornfully. "Nice
behavior for a leronis - I know from her waiting-woman that she spent
two nights in the king's tent; what sort of chaperon is she for Romy,
then?"
Ranald
had taught her to shield herself a little; so Romilly managed neither to blush
nor turn away her eyes. "Between three ugly birds and my brother, do you
truly think I need a chaperone, Tina? As for Maura, I have heard she is kept
virgin for the Sight, and I cannot believe she would endanger that, even in a
king's bed, while the war still rages; but I am not the keeper of her
conscience; she is a grown woman and a leronis, and need account to no
man."
Clea
made a contemptuous sound. "So she might sell her maidenhood for a crown,
but not for love? Bravely done, leronis!" she made an applauding
gesture. "See that you profit by her example, Romy!"
She
had thought that among these women, who were free to follow their own wills,
she might have been able to speak of this thing that bad happened to her; even
now, she felt, if she could speak with Jandria alone, she would like to tell
her ... but Jandria was already rising to attend on Carolin's advisers, and
there was no other, not even Clea, whom she had thought her friend, to whom she
felt she could talk freely. Not after their scornful words. No, she would not
speak of Ranald. They would not understand at all.
She
knew that she had not disgraced her earring, nor brought the Sisterhood into
contempt. Her oath bound her to nothing more; and at least she had not sold
herself to that elderly lecher Dom Garris in return for riches and the
prospering of her father's horse-trade with Scathfell!
So
on the third day, when she went out to fly the birds, with Ruyven and Ranald,
her spirits were high. The day was grey and drizzly, with little spats and
slashes of gusty rain coming across the plains, and even when a rare break came
in the clouds, the wind was high. The sentry-birds huddled on their perches,
squalling with protest when they were put on their blocks; they did not like
this weather, but they needed exercise after two days of full fed rest, and
Carolin needed to know where Rakhal's armies moved in the countryside.
"Somehow
we must keep them low enough to spy through the mists," Ranald said, and
Romilly protested, "They will not like that."
"I
am not concerned with their liking or the lack of it," Ranald said curtly,
"We are not flying the birds for our own pleasure nor yet theirs - have
you forgotten that, Romy?"
She
had, for a moment, so close she felt to the great birds. As she tossed
Diligence free of her gloved hand, she went into rapport with the winged
creature, flying on strong pinions, high over the ranges, then remembered,
forced it into flying lower, hovering, guiding the bird eastward to where they
had last seen Rakhal's armies.
Even
so, and with the bird's extra keen sight, she could not see very far; the
drizzle clouded vision, so that she had to fly the bird low enough to see the
ground, and the rain, slanting in from the northeast, dimmed sight further.
This kind of flight bore no relationship to what she had known last time they
flew, soaring in headlong flight, hovering high and letting the picture of the
ground be relayed through Ranald to Carolin. Now it was slow, sullen effort,
forcing the bird's will against the stubborn wish to turn tail and fly home to
huddle on the perch till fine weather, then forcing it down against the
instinct to fly high above the clouds.
Sentry-birds;
spy-birds. Like all of us I am a tool for Carolin's army to strike. How angry her father would
be! Not only the runaway son he had disowned, but the daughter he had thought
compensation for one runaway son and one worthless bookish one . . . how was
Darren managing, she wondered, had he resigned himself to handling hawks and
horses now?
She
had lost track of the bird, and a sharp sense of question from Ruyven recalled
her to the flying in the rain, chilled and battered by the icy gusts of sleet
which buffeted her ... or Diligence? She must risk flying lower, for they could
see nothing through the thick curtain of wet They were linked three ways, and
now she set herself to follow Temperance, flying ahead strongly toward a break
in the clouds. Below them the land lay deserted, but low on the horizon she
could see smoke which she knew to be Rakhal's army where it waited out the
rain. Behind her she could actually feel the displacement in the air where
Prudence flew at her tail. At the same time a part of her was Romilly, balanced
carefully in her saddle, and a part of her still Carolin, waiting for
intelligence through the minds of bird-handlers and birds.
A
speck against her sight, swiftly growing larger and larger ... of course, she
should have known that they too would have had spy-birds out in this weather! She
- or was it Diligence? - shifted course ever so slightly, hoping to miss
unseen the oncoming bird. Was it Rakhal himself, or one of his advisers, behind
the hovering wings of that bird, poised to intercept. ...
Would
it come to a fight? She could not hope to control the bird if raw instinct took
over; there was not much difficulty in controlling the mind of the bird if all
was well, but in danger instinct would override the shared consciousness.
Temperance was still flying well ahead, and through the link with Ruyven's mind
she too could see the outskirts of the enemy camp, and a wagon about which
something black and sinister was hovering . . . she was not sure she saw it
with her eyes; was she perceiving something through Ruyven's mind or the
bird's? Birds - Maura's phrase, echoing in her mind, neither memory nor
imagination - could only see with their physical sight, and could not
interpret what they saw unless it concerned them directly, as food or threat.
It
was taking all of her strength to hold Diligence on course. The wagon was
there, and a curious, acrid smell which seemed to sting her, whether her own
nose or the bird's she was not sure; but the blackness was something she must
be perceiving through one of the minds linked in rapport with the sentry-birds
spying. She was vaguely curious, but so sunk in the bird's consciousness that
she was content to leave it to Carolin to interpret.
Something
was in the air now . , . danger, danger ... as if a red-hot wire had seared
her brain, she swerved, shrieking and then there was a slicing pain in her
heart and Romilly came with a cry out of the rapport, fighting to hold to it...
pain . . . fear . . somewhere, she knew, Diligence was falling like a
stone, dizzy, consciousness fading out, dying. . . . Romilly, seated on
her horse, physically clutched at her breast as if the arrow which had slain
the sentry-bird had penetrated her body as well. The pain was nightmarish,
terrifying, and she stared wildly around her in anguished disorientation. Then
she knew what must have happened.
Diligence!
She had flown her bird deliberately into the danger of those arrows,
over-riding the bird's own sense of caution, its instinct to fly high and away
from danger. Guilt
and grief fought within her for dominance.
Someone
very far away seemed to be calling her name . . . she came up out of grey fog
to see Ranald looking at her, with deep trouble in his face. She said,
strangled, "Prudence .. Temperance ... get them back ..."
He
drew a long breath. "They are away from the soldiers; I sent them high up,
out of range ... I am sorry, Romy; you loved her."
"And
she loved life!" she flung at him wildly, "And died because of you
and Carolin - ah, I hate you all, all you men and kings and your damned wars,
none of them are worth a feather in her wing-tip-" and she dropped her
head in her hands and broke into passionate crying.
Ruyven's
head was still flung back, his face glazed with intent effort; he sat unmoving
until a dark form dropped from the clouds, sank down to his gloved hand.
'Temperance,"
Romilly whispered, with relief, "but where is Prudence-"
As
if in answer from the clouds came a shrilling cry, answered by another; two
dark forms burst through the layers of mist and rain, locked together, falling
joined in battle; feathers fell, and the screaming and shrilling died. A small
dark limp body dropped at their horses' feet; another sped away, screaming in
triumph.
"Don't
look! Ranald, hold her-" Ruyven began, but Romilly was off her horse,
crying wildly, catching up the small blood-spattered form of Prudence, still
limp and warm with recently-departed life. She clutched it against her breast,
her face wet and furious. "Prudence! Ah, Prudence, love, not you
too-" she cried, and the bird's blood smeared her hands and her tunic.
Ranald dismounted, came and gently took it from her.
"No
use, Romilly; she is dead," he said quietly, and his arms caught her to
bun. "Poor little love, don't cry. It can't be helped; that is war."
And
that is supposed to be the excuse for all! Romilly felt fury surging within her.
They play with the lives of the wild things and hold themselves harmless,
saying it is war ... I question not their right to kill themselves and
one another, but what does an innocent bird know or care of one king over
another?
Ruyven
was gentling Temperance on his fist, sliding the hood over her restless head.
He said, "Romilly, try to be calm, there is work to do. Ranald - you
saw-"
"Aye,
I saw," Ranald said shortly, "Somewhere in Rakhal's train there is clingfire
and I know not where he means to use it, but Carolin must know at once!
Time may be short, unless we want to burn beneath the stuff, and I for one want
none used against me, or any of the lands hereabout."
"Nor
I. I saw what clingfire can do, in Tramontana," said Ruyven, "Though not
in war. Carolin has pledged he will not use it against folk who must live in
his lands. But if it is used against us, I know not how he can fight it."
Romilly,
still standing silent, demanded, "What is clingfire?"
"The
very breath of Zandru's forges," said Ranald, "Fire flung which burns
and keeps on burning as long as there is anything to feed it, through skin and
bone and into the very stone... fire made by wizardry and laran."
I
doubt it not. Folk who would kill an innocent bird for some king's claim, why
should they stop at killing people too?
"You
must come with us." Ranald gently urged her into her saddle. "Carolin
must know of this and he will need all of his leronyn - Maura has sworn
not to fight against Rakhal, but I do not think she will hesitate to stop the
use of clingfire against her own people, no matter what she may still feel for
Rakhal!"
But
Romilly rode blind, tears still streaming from her eyes. She knew nor wished to
know nothing of the weapons these men and their kings and their leroni used.
Dimly she knew that Ranald rode away from her, but she reached out blindly for
contact with Sunstar, feeling, in the reassuring strength of the great
stallion, an endless warmth and closeness. He was in her and she was in him,
and drawn into the present, with neither memory nor anticipation, without
imagination or emotion save for the immediate stimuli; green grass, the road
under foot, the weight of Carolin, already beloved, in the saddle. She rode
unseeing because the best part of her was with Sunstar, loss and grief wiped
out in the unending present-moment of timelessness.
At
last, comforted somewhat, she came out of the submersion in the horse's world,
half aware that somewhere they spoke of her.
She
was very fond of the sentry-birds, she is very close to them. It was so from
the moment we first saw her, we spoke of how ugly they were, and it was she who
pointed out to us that they had their own kind of beauty....
.
. . her first experience with this kind of loss, she must learn how to keep
herself a little separate....
.
. . what
can you expect, then, of a wild telepath, one who has tried to learn without
the discipline of the Towers. ...
She
thought, resentfully, that if what they taught in the Towers would teach her to
be complacent about the deaths of innocent beasts who had no part in men and
their wars, she was glad she had not had it!
"Please
understand," Carolin said, looking at the three bird-handlers, "No
blame attaches to any one of you, but we have lost two of our three
sentry-birds, and the remaining one must be sent out at once, danger or no.
Which of you will fly her?"
"I
am willing," said Ruyven, "My sister is new to this work and she is
deeply grieved - she has handled these birds since they were young and was very
close to them. I do not think she is strong enough to work further now,
Sir."
Carolin
glanced at Ranald and said, "I shall need all my leronyn if we are
to destroy the clingfire in Rakhal's hands before he can manage to use it. As
for Romilly-" he looked at her, compassionately, but she bristled under
his sympathy and said, "None but I shall fly Temperance. I know enough now
not to take her into danger."
"Romilly-"
King Carolin dismounted and came toward the girl. He said seriously, "I am
sorry, too, about the birds. But can you look at this from my point of view,
too? We risk birds, and beasts too, to save the lives of men. I know the birds
mean more to you than they can to me, or to any of us, but I must ask you this;
would you see me die sooner than the sentry-birds? Would you risk the lives of
the birds to save your Swordswomen?"
Romilly's
first emotional reaction was, the birds at least have done Rakhal no harm,
why cannot men fight their battles without endangering the innocent? But
she knew that was irrational. She« was human; she would sacrifice bird or even
horse to save Ranald, or Orain, or Carolin himself, or her brother.... She said
at last, "Their lives are yours, your Majesty, to save or spend as you
will. But I will not run them heedless into danger for no good reason,
either."
She
saw, and wondered, that Carolin looked so sad. He said, "Romilly, child .
. ." and broke off; finally, after a long pause, he said, "This is
what every commander of men and beasts must face, weighing the lives of some
against the lives of all. I would like it better if I need never see any of
those who have followed me die-" and sighed. "But I owe my life to
those I am sworn to rule ... in truth, sometimes I think I do not rule but
serve. Go, send your bird," he added, and after a time Romilly realized,
in shock, that only the last four words had been spoken aloud.
I
read his thoughts, and he knew I would read them . . . he would not have spoken
such things aloud before his armies, but he could not hide his thoughts from
anyone with laran.....
It
was bad enough that such a king must lead his people to war. She should have
known that Carolin would waste no life, needless. And if by sending
sentry-birds into danger he thus could spare the lives of some of his
followers, he would do so, there must be responsible choice; as when she had
chosen to let the banshee go hungry, because for it to feed would have meant
death for all of them. She was human; her first loyalty must always be to her
fellow men and women. She bowed, rode a little away from Carolin with
Temperance on her saddle, and raised a gloved fist to send the bird into the
rainy sky again.
She
was flying, hovering over the field . . . and not far away, she heard the
thunder of charging horses, as Rakhal's army swept down over the brow of the
hill and the troops charged toward one another. There was a tremendous shock,
and Romilly saw through the bird's eyes....
Horses,
down and screaming, sliced open by swords and spears . . . men lying on the
ground, dying . . . she could not tell whether Carolin's men or
Rakhal's, and it did not matter.... A picked group of men swept down toward
where the blue fir-tree banner flew over Carolin's guard ... Sunstar! Carry
my king to safety . .. and a part of her rode with the great black
stallion, thundering away with the king, to form a compact group, awaiting the
charge again.
Flames
seemed to seat the air; it was filled with the acrid smell of burning flesh,
men and horses shrieking, and death, death everywhere....
Yet
through it all Romilly kept still, hovering over the field, bringing the
bird's-eye pictures of the battle to Carolin's eyes so that he could direct his
men where they were most needed. Hours, it seemed, dragged by while she swept
over the field, sated with horrors, sickened with the smell of burning
flesh....
And
then Rakhal's men were gone, leaving only the dead and dying on the field, and
Romilly, who had been in rapport with the remaining sentry-bird (she knew now
that it was Ruyven who had siezed her bridle and led her horse to safety atop a
little hill overlooking the field, while she was entranced in rapport with the
bird) returned to her own awareness, sick and shocked.
Dying
horses. Seven of them she had trained with her own hands in the hostel . . .
dead or dying, and Clea, merry Clea who had talked so lightly of death, lying
all but dead on the field, her blood invisible on the crimson tunic of the
Swordswoman. . . . Clea, dying in Jandria's arms, and an empty place, a vast
silence where once had been a living, breathing, human being, beloved and real....
There
was no rejoicing on this battlefield; Carolin had felt too many deaths that
day. Soberly, men went to bury the dead, to give the last few dying horses the
mercy-stroke, Ruyven went with the healers to bind up the wounds of those who
had been struck down. Romilly, shocked beyond speech, set up the tent aided
only by Ruyven's young apprentice, who had a great burn on his arm from the clingfire
that had rained down on the army. Three perches were with the baggage, but
only one bird perched alone, and Romilly felt sick as she fed her ... the
carrion smell was now all around them. She could not bring herself to sleep in
the little tent she had shared with Lady Maura; she searched through the camp
at the edge of the battlefield till she found the rest of the Sisterhood, and
silently crept in among them. So many dead. Horses, and birds, who had been
part of her life, into whom she had put so much time and strength and love in
their training . . . the Sisterhood had set her to training these horses, not
that they might live and serve, but that they might die in this senseless
slaughter. And Clea, whom Jandria had carried dead off the field. Two of the
Sisterhood called to Romilly.
"Sister,
are you wounded?"
"No,"
Romilly said numbly. She hardly knew; her body was so battered with the many
deaths which had swept over her wide-open mind, which she had felt in her very
flesh; but now she realized that she was not hurt at all, that there was not a
mark anywhere on her flesh.
"Have
you healing skills?" And when Romilly said no, they told her to come and
help in the digging of a grave for Clea.
"A
Swordswoman cannot lie among the soldiers. As she was in life, so in death she
must be buried apart."
Romilly
wondered, with a dull pain in her head, what it would matter now to Clea where
she lay? She had defended herself well, she had taught so many of her sisters
to defend themselves, but the final ravishment of death had caught her unaware,
and she lay cold and stiff, looking very surprised, without a mark on her face.
Romilly could hardly believe that she would not laugh and jump up, catching
them off guard as she had done so many times before. She took the shovel one of
the Swordswomen thrust into her hand. The hard physical labor of digging the grave
was welcome; otherwise she caught too much pain, too many wounded men,
screaming, suffering, in silence or great moans, their pain racking her. She
tried to shut it all out, as Ranald had taught her, but there was too much, too
much....
Out
on the field, dark flapping forms hovered, waiting. Then one swept down to
where a dead horse lay, already bloating, and thrust in his beak with a great
raucous cry of joy. Another flapped down and another, and then dozens, hundreds
. . . feasting, calling out joyously to one another. Romilly picked up a
thought from somewhere, she could not tell whether from one of the Swordswomen
beside her at the grave, or someone out of sight on the dark campground, the
defeat of men is the joy of the carrion-bird, where men mourn the kyorebni make
holiday . . . and dropped her shovel, sickened. She tried to pick it up,
but suddenly doubled over, retching. She had not eaten since morning; nothing
came up but a little green bile, but she stayed there, doubled over, sick and
exhausted, too sickened even to weep.
Jandria
came and led her silently inside the tent. Two Swordswomen were tending the
wounds of three others, one woman with a clingfire burn on her hand which was
still burning inward, another unconscious from a sword-cut across her head, and
still another with a leg broken when her horse fell and rolled on her. One
looked up, frowning, as Jandria led Romilly inside and pushed her down on a
blanket.
"She
is unwounded - she should be helping to bury our dead!"
Jandria
said gruffly, "There is more than one kind of wound!" She held
Romilly close, rocking her, stroking her hair, soothing her, but the girl was
unaware of the touch, lost in a desperate solitude where she sought and sought
for the dead. .. .
Romilly
wandered in a dark dream, as if on a great grey plain, where she saw Clea
before her, laughing, riding on one of the dead horses, and Prudence perched on
her fist.. . but they were so far ahead, no matter how she raced, her feet were
stuck as if she waded through thick syrup and she could not catch up with them,
never, never....
Somewhere
Romilly heard a voice, she felt she ought to know the voice but she did not,
saying, She has never learned to shut it out. This time, perhaps, I can give
her barriers, but there is really no remedy. She is a wild telepath and she has
no protection.
Romilly
only knew that someone . . . Carolin? Lady Maura? . . . touched her
forehead lightly, and she was back in the tent of the Swordswomen again, and
the great desolate grey plain of death was gone. She clung to Jandria,
shuddering and weeping.
"Clea's
dead. And my horses, all my horses . . . and the birds ..." she wept.
Jandria
held and rocked her. "I know, dear. I know," she whispered,
"It's all right, cry for them if you must, cry, we are all here with
you." and Romilly thought, in dull amazement, She is crying too.
And
she did not know why that should seem strange to her.
Romilly
woke, on the morning after the battle, to a grey and dismal day of heavy rain.
On the field nothing stirred except the omnipresent carrion-birds, undaunted by
the downpour, feeding on the bodies of men and horses.
It
makes no difference to her now, Romilly thought, but even so she was grateful that Clea
lay in the earth, her body guarded from the fierce beaks of the quarreling kyorebni.
Yet one way or another, her body would return to its native elements, food
for the small crawling things in the earth, to feed grasses and trees. She had
become part of the great and endless cycle of life, where those who fed on the
earth became in turn food for the earth. Why, then, should I grieve? Romilly
asked herself, but the answer came without thought.
Her
death did not come in the full course of time, when she had lived out her days.
She died in a quarrel between kings which was none of her making. And yet, troubled, she
remembered how she had met with Lyondri Hastur. Lyondri's cruelties were many,
while Carolin at least seemed to feel that it was his duty to serve and protect
those who lived in the lands he had been born to reign over.
Carolin
is like a horse . . . with
her love of Sunstar and of the other horses, it never occurred to Romilly that
she was being offensive to the king. . . . While Rakhal and Lyondri are like
banshees who prey on living. Suddenly, for the first time in the year she
had been among the Swordswomen, Romilly was glad that Preciosa had abandoned
her.
She
too preys on the living. It is her nature and I love her but I could not, now,
endure to see it, to be a part of it!
She
dressed herself, drew the hood of her thickest cloak over her head, and went to
tend Temperance. Her first impulse was to leave her to Ruyven: she felt that
the sight of the empty perches of Prudence and Diligence would rewaken all the
horror and dread of their deaths. But she was sworn to care for them, she was
the king's hawkmistress, and Ruyven, though he cared dutifully for the birds,
did not love them, as she did.
Temperance
sat solitary on her perch, huddled against the chilly dampness; the perches
were sheltered but there was no protection against the wind, and Romilly
decided to move the bird inside the tent in which neither she nor Maura had
slept now for several nights; Temperance was the only remaining sentry-bird
with Carolin's armies, and if she took cold in this damp and drizzly weather,
she could not fly. Romilly shrank from the memory of her last flight, but she
knew that she would, as her duty commanded, fly the bird again, even into
danger. Not gladly; that gladness had been a part of innocence and it was gone
forever. But she would do it, as duty demanded, because she had seen warfare
and known a hint of what would befall the folk of these hills under Lyondri
Hastur's harsh rule.
Lyondri
did not wish - she knew this from her brief contact with him - to be only
Rakhal's executioner. Tell Jandria, he had said, that I am not the
monster she thinks me. Yet he believed that this was his only road to
power, and therefore he was as guilty as Rakhal.
He
is Carolin's kinsman. How can they be so unlike?
As
she was caring for Temperance, there was a step outside the tent, and she
turned to see a familiar face.
"Dom
Alderic,"
she cried, but before he had more than a moment to stare at her in surprise,
Ruyven hurried to greet Alderic with an enthusiastic kinsman's embrace.
"Bredu!
I should
have known you would hurry to find us here - does your father know?"
Alderic
Castamir shook his head and smiled at his friend. He said, "I am recently
come from Falconsward; your father gave me leave to go, though not willingly;
you should know that Darren has returned to the monastery."
Ruyven
sighed and shook his head. "I would so willingly have yielded my place as
Father's heir to Darren, and hoped, when he was not in my light, that Father
would come to see his true worth... ."
"His
own worth," Alderic said quietly. "Darren has small love for
horses or hawks, and no trace of the MacAran Gift. He cannot be blamed for what
he is not, any more than you for what you are, bredu. And I think The
MacAran has had to grant that you cannot forge a hammer from featherpod fluff,
nor spin spider-silk even from precious copper. Darren's skills are otherwise,
and The MacAran has sent him to Nevarsin, to complete his schooling; one day he
shall be Rael's steward, while Rael - I have already begun to teach him to work
with horses and hawks."
"Little
Rael!" marvelled Ruyven, "When I left Falconsward he was still at
Luciella's knee, it seemed! Yet I knew he would have the MacAran Gift; I think
I was blinded about Darren because I love him and I wanted so much for him to
have the Gift, that I might be free. Well, Darren has found his place, as I
mine."
Alderic
came and bent over Romilly's hand. "Mistress Romilly," he said
gently, and Romilly corrected him:
"Swordswoman
Romilly - and I know what my father would say to that; he shall have no
chance."
"Under
favor, Romy," said Alderic, looking directly into her eyes, "Your
father loves you and mourns you as dead; and so does your stepmother. May I beg
you as your friend - and theirs, for your father has been more than kind to me
- to send them word that you live."
She
smiled wryly. "Better not. I am sure my father would rather think of me
dead than earning my bread by the sword, or wearing the earring of the
Sisterhood."
"I
would not be quick to be too sure of that. I think, when you left Falconsward,
he changed; it was not long after that, that he bowed his head to the truth and
gave Darren leave to return where he was happy. You must have been blind, deaf
and dumb, Romilly, if you did not know that you were the favorite of all his
children, though he loves you all."
"I
know that," Ruyven said, lowering his eyes, and his voice was strangled
and harsh, "I never thought he would bend so far. I too have been harsh
and stiff-necked. If we come alive from this war - Bearer of Burdens, grant
that! -" he interjected in that stifled voice, "I shall go to
Falconsward and be reconciled to him, and beg him to make his peace with the
Towers, so that Rael may have proper training for his laran before it is
too late. And if I must abase myself to him, so be it. I have been too
proud."
"And
you, Romilly?" asked Alderic. "He has grieved for you so terribly
that he has grown old in this single year."
She
blinked tears from her eyes. It tore at her heart to think of her father grown
old. But she insisted, "Better he should think me dead, than that a
daughter of his should disgrace him by wearing the earring-"
Alderic
shook his head. "I cannot persuade you, but would it ease your heart to
know that Mallina was married to Dom Garris at Midwinter?"
"Mallina?
My little sister? To that - that disgusting lecher?' Romilly cried, "and
you say my father has changed?"
"Be
not too quick to judge," Alderic cautioned, "Garris dotes on her, and
she, to all appearances, on him - even before they were wedded, she confided to
me that Garris was not so bad at all, when she came to understand him; she
said, the poor fellow has been so lonely and unhappy that his wretchedness
drove him to all kinds of things, and now he has someone to love him and care
about him, he is completely changed! You should see them together!"
"God
forbid," Romilly said, shaking her head, "but if he makes Mallina
happy, better her than me!" She could not imagine how anyone could
tolerate that man, but Mallina had always been something of a fool, perhaps
they deserved one another! "Anyhow, Mallina would be the kind of docile
and obedient wife that Garris wanted."
Ruyven
said, "You are so fond, you say, of my father; but have you yet gone to
greet your own?"
"My
father can willingly dispense with my company," Alderic frowned
stubbornly. "He has never sought it; he sees only my mother in my
face."
Romilly
remembered what she had guessed before she left Falconsward; Alderic was
Carolin's son! And therefore, rightfully heir to all these lands....
She
bowed and said, "Let me take you to your father, my prince."
Alderic
stared and laughed. "Romilly, Romilly, my young friend, if you have
believed me the king's son, better that you know now how you have misjudged me!
Carolin's sons are safely in the care of the Hastur of Carcosa, and I have
heard rumors that Carolin is courting a certain leronis of
Tramontana-" he smiled at Ruyven and said, "That was in the air even
before you left the Tower, my friend."
"And
Domna Maura has promised to wed him, if the Council gives leave,"
said Ruyven, adding grimly, "Providing any of us escape this war. Rakhal
fell upon us with clingfire-arrows; we managed to fight him away, but he
will rally and be upon us again, and the Bearer of Burdens knows alone what
devilry of laran-work he will fling against us when next he comes! So make
haste to greet your father, 'Deric, for this is but the lull before the storm,
and by this time tomorrow we may be fighting for our lives! Would you greet
your Gods after death with the stain of kin-strife still upon you? For it is
most likely you have come only to die at your father's side."
"As
bad as that?" Alderic asked, searching Ruyven's face. Ruyven nodded,
grimly.
"We
are, as I said, at the center of the storm; at peace for a moment, no more.
Carolin has need of all the leronyn he can summon to his side,
'Deric."
Romilly
interrupted, "What is this? If you are not Carolin's son-"
Alderic
said quietly, "My father is called Orain, and he is foster-brother and
friend of Carolin. I was reared at Carolin's court."
She
reached for his hand with sudden confidence. She should have guessed, when he
had spoken of the way in which his father could not endure to look on him.
Carolin, even in an unwanted dynastic marriage, could have shown courtesy and
kindness to a woman; but, as reward for her moment of foolishness, she had seen
straight into Orain's heart. She was sorry for Alderic that he had not known a
father's love; for now she knew how blessed she had been in that love.
"I
am the king's hawkmistress," she said, "and he will have need of my
bird soon, if we are to meet Rakhal again on the field of war. And, no doubt,
your father is with him."
"I
doubt it not at all," Alderic said, "He is never far from the side of
his king. When I was younger, I hated him for that, and resented it because he
cared more for Carolin's sons, and even Lyondri Hastur's little son, than for
me." He shrugged and signed. "The world will go as it will; love
cannot be compelled, even within kin, and to such a man as my father, my very
existence must have been a painful reminder of an unhappy time in his life. I
owe Orain a son's duty - may I never fail in it - but no more. Kinship, I
sometimes think, is a joke the gods play, to bind us to those we do not love,
in the hope we can somehow be reconciled to them; but friends are a gift, and
your father has been a friend, almost a foster-father to me. When we are free
of this war-" he touched her hand lightly. "We need not speak of that
now. But I think you know what I would say."
She
did not look at him. There had been a time, indeed, when she had thought she
would willingly have married this man. But much had happened to her in the year
since then. She had desired Orain himself, even though he had not wanted her.
And Ranald . . . what had happened with Ranald was not the sort of thing which
led to marriage, nor would a Drylands lord be likely to marry a mountain
Swordswoman; indeed, she did not think she would marry him if he asked, and
there was no reason he should. Their bodies had accepted one another joyfully,
but that was under unusual conditions; she would have accepted any man she
supposed, who had come to her and offered surcease from what was so tumultuous
within her. But apart from that, they knew little of one another. And if
Alderic knew she was not the virtuous maiden she had been a Falconsward, would
he even want her?
She
said, "When this war is done, Lord Alderic-"
"Call
me Deric, as your brother does," he interrupted her. "Ruyven and I
are bredin, and as friend to both your brothers, I owe you always a
brother's protection, even if no more."
"I
am a Swordswoman Deric," she said. "I need no man's protection, but I
will gladly have your friendship. That, I think, I had, even at Falconsward. As
for anything more than friendship, I think-" uncontrollably, her voice was
shaking. "We should not even speak of that, until we are free of this
accursed war!"
"I
am grateful for your honesty, Romilly," he said. "I would not want a
woman who would marry me just because I am the son of Carolin's chief counselor
and friend. My father married because the old king wished to honor his son's
foster-brother by giving him in marriage to a high-born lady; they despised one
another, and I have suffered for that; I would not wish my own children torn by
hatred between their parents, and I have always sworn that I would marry no
woman unless we were, at least, friends." His eyes, levelled and gentle,
met hers, and for some reason the kindness in them made her want to cry.
"For
anything more we can wait - Swordswoman."
She
nodded. But all she said was, "Let us go, then, and greet your
father."
But
they did not reach Carolin's tent before they met Orain, hurrying toward the
place where the birds were kept. He said, "Mistress Romilly, your sentry-bird
is wanted-" and stopped, blinking, at the sight of her companion.
"Father,"
Alderic said, and bowed.
Orain
took him, for a moment, in a brief, formal embrace. The sight hurt Romilly; she
was so accustomed to Orain's rough affection. She thought, he would have
greeted me with more kindness than that! He said, "I did not know
you had come, my boy. Carolin has need now of any who are skilled at laran; perhaps
you have heard that he came down on us with clingfire."
"I
heard it when I came to camp, Father," Alderic said, "and I was
making haste to offer such small skill as I have to Carolin's service; but I
came first to greet you, sir."
Orain
said, with constraint, "For that I thank you in his name. The king's leronyn
are gathered there-" and he gestured. "Mistress Romilly, bring
your bird; we must know how long we have before Rakhal falls on us again."
"Are
we to march out on Rakhal, then?" Alderic asked, and Orain said, with his
mouth set in a grim line,
"Only
to get free of the bodies here, so that we can maneuver if we must. If Rakhal
has clingfire at command, we dare not meet him in the woods, or all this land
will be burned over between here and Neskaya!" And as Romilly looked
toward Carolin's headquarters she saw the tent struck, and the Hastur banner
taken out by his guardsmen. Alderic glanced once at Romilly, but all he said
was, "I must join the others, then. Guard yourself well, Romilly,"
and hurried away.
She
went back swiftly to prepare herself for riding, and set Temperance on her
saddle, leaving it to Ruyven's young assistant to strike the tent and pack it
for moving with the army. Could Rakhal indeed be so thoughtless of the land as
to send fire-arrows in forested country, at this season, and risk fire? Well,
it was like what she had heard of the man. For that reason, if for no other,
somehow they must defeat that unprincipled man who called himself king!
Now
that she knew what she was seeking, it proved easier to send up the
sentry-bird. Because of the rain, Temperance was reluctant to fly, but this
time Romilly did not hesitate to send the bird up, almost to the bottom of the
low-lying clouds. She flew her slowly in circles, gradually widening, so that
she could see Rakhal's army on the move. As she rode, half of her mind on the
bird, she joined Carolin and his array of skilled leronyn, men and
women; it crossed her mind, briefly, that she was one of them, that perhaps at
last, she had found her true place.
I
am Swordswoman still. But I am grateful that I need not bear a sword in this
combat. If I must, I think I could do so, but I am glad that my skills lead me
elsewhere. I do not want to kill... and then, grimly, she forced herself to be
realistic. She was a part of this killing, as much as if she bore sword or bow
into the battlefield; more, perhaps, for her sentry-bird's eyes directed the
killing. She took her place, resolutely, between Lady Maura and Ranald. One or
both of them would remain in rapport with her, to relay the information to the
ears of Carolin and his general.
It
cannot be easy for Jandria, to go against Lyondri this way, and know that she
will be instrumental in his death- and now there is no help for him but death. She
was not sure at that moment whether the thought was hers, or Lady Maura's, or
even, perhaps, Lord Orain's. They were all in a tight little group, clustered
around Carolin, and Alderic was among them. At the edge of her awareness she
saw Alderic greet Jandria kindly, and call her "My lady Aunt." As if
it were something she had dreamed a long time ago, it crossed her mind that if
she married Alderic, she would be kinswoman to Jandria.
But
we are sworn to one another in the Sisterhood, anyway, I need not that to be
her kin. Alderic said it so; kinsmen are born, but friendship is a gift of the
Gods....
Maura
looked at her meaningfully, and Romilly remembered her work; she went swiftly
into rapport with Temperance, who was still flying in widening circles over the
great plain. At last she spotted, through the keen eyes of the bird, a
darkening cloud of dust on the horizon....
Rakhal's
army, on the move, and riding swiftly toward the forested cover of the hills.
As she saw, and as this information was relayed swiftly to Carolin, she caught
the thought of the king, So he would hide within the cover of the trees, for
he knows I am unwilling to use clingfire, or even ordinary fire-arrows,
where there is danger that the resin-trees may bring on wildfire. Somehow we
must overtake him before he reaches the forest, and do battle on ground of my
choosing, not his. And Romilly sensed the touch of his mind on Sunstar's; Lead
my men, then, great horse....
She
saw with a strange widening consciousness, linked to Carolin, to Sunstar, to
all the men around her. She knew that Ranald had seized her horse's rein and
was guiding him, so that she could ride safely even while she was in rapport
with the sentry-bird, and spared him a quick thought of gratitude. The ram was
slowing, and after a time a strange, low, watery sunlight came through the
clouds. She flew Temperance lower, over the armies, trying to fly high enough
that she could not be seen, yet dipping in and spying...
Rakhal's
armies seemed shrunken in size, and off to the north she saw another body of
men and horses. Were they coming to Rakhal's aid, now that the first battle had
thinned his ranks? No; for they were riding away from Rakhal's main army as
swiftly as they could. And Carolin's thoughts were jubilant.
Rakhal's
men are deserting him, now they know what he is . . . they have no more stomach
than I for this kind of warfare. ...
But
the main body of men was still formidable; they had come to a halt at the brow
of a little hill, and Romilly knew, being in communication with the minds of
Carolin's men, that Rakhal had seized the most advantageous terrain, and would
make a stand there and defend it.
This,
then, would be the decisive battle. Under urging from Carolin, she flew the
bird down closer, so that through her eyes, Carolin's advisers might take stock
of the size of the forces arrayed against them. Rakhal had the advantage, it
seemed, in numbers, and in terrain.
Somehow
we must lure Rakhal from that hill....
Alderic
rode toward his father and spoke to Orain urgently for a few moments, and
Romilly, what small part of her mind was not with the bird, heard Orain say to
Carolin, "By your leave, my lord. My son has put me in mind of an old
trick in the mountains, and we have leronyn enough to make it effective.
Let me lead a dozen or two of your men, with the leronyn, to cast an
illusion as if there were four times as many of us, to force Rakhal to charge
down upon us; then you can come and take him on the flank."
Carolin
considered for a moment "It might work," he said at last, "But
I'll not send your leronyn into danger; most of them do not even wear
swords."
Ranald
Ridenow said, "My laran as well as my sword are at your service, my
King. Let me lead these men."
"Pick
your men, then - and Aldones ride with you, all of you!" Carolin said,
"but pick your moment carefully."
"Mistress
MacAran shall do that for us," said Ranald, with his hand on Romilly's
bridle.
Orain
said, "Would you take a woman into battle?" and Romilly, pulling
herself free for a moment of the rapport with the bird-mind, said, "My
lord Orain, I am a Swordswoman! Where my brother will go, I shall go with
him!"
Ruyven
did not speak, but she felt the warmth that said, not in words, Bravely
spoken, sister, and with it a touch from Alderic. Somehow it reminded her
of the day when they had flown hawks at Falconsward, at Midsummer-festival.
When
I am free of this war, I shall never again hunt for pleasure, for I know now
what it is to be hunted . . . and with amazement, she knew that the mind which held
this thought was Orain's.
How
near to my own thought! Romilly
felt again the bitter regret for the distance that had fallen between Orain and
herself. We were so close in so many ways, so much alike! But the world
would go as it would, and Orain was as he was and not as she would have him.
She threw herself back into rapport with the sentry-bird, letting Ranald see
through her mind, and relay to Orain and Alderic, what she saw in Rakhal's
army.
Horsemen
were drawn up at the perimeter of his army, surrounding foot-soldiers and
bowmen, and at the center, a number of great wagons, with the acrid smell she
knew now to be the chemical smell of clingfire. They ringed the brow of
the little hill completely while they took their stand there, it would be
impossible to breach their defenses.
But
that is precisely what we must do, it was Alderic's thought, and he rode
the company of two dozen men, headed by the small band of leronyn, breakneck
toward the hill; suddenly stopped them.
Now!
And
suddenly it seemed to Romilly that a great cloud of dust and fire moved on the
hill, with a racing and a pounding of hooves, and cries . . . what soldiers
are these? And then she knew that she had seen these men, the men who had
deserted Rakhal and were riding away ... it was like a great mirror, as if the
image of this separate army were thrown straight at Rakhal's men ... for a
little they held firm, while a cloud of arrows came flying down toward the
close-clustered band of soldiers and leronyn at the foot of the hill. ..
but they were shooting short, at the image of the racing soldiers ...
Join
with us! In the name of the Gods, everyone who has laran, join us to hold this image ...
on and on the racing cloud of dust, in which Romilly could now see indistinct
shapes, horses' heads like great grey skulls, the burning visages of skeletons,
glowing with devil-fire inside the hidden cloud of dust and sorcery....
She
heard a voice she had never heard before, reverberating within her mind,
bellowing; "Stand firm! Stand firm!" But that could not stand against
the assault of the ghostly army; Rakhal's men broke and charged down the hill,
riding straight into the cloud of magical images, screaming in terror, and
their line faltered, broke in a dozen places. Fire struck up through the
ground, licking, curling, green and blue flames rising . . . then it was as if
a river of blood flowed up the hill, through the horses' feet, and they stopped
short, snorting, screaming in terror, stamping. Some of their riders fell, a
few men held their ground, crying out, "No smell of blood, no smell of
burning, it's a trick, a trick-" but the line was broken; horses stampeded,
colliding with one another, trampling their riders, and the officers struggled
wildly to rally the broken line, to gather the men into some semblance of
order.
"Now!
Carolin!"
"A
Hastur! A Hastur!" Carolin's
men charged, the main body of the army, flowing like water up the hill and into
the broken ranks of the horsemen. Right over Rakhal's outer defenses they
flowed, and then they were fighting at close quarters, but Ranald and Alderic
broke and dashed right through to the center of the armies, where the guarded
wagon stood with the clingfire. Men were gathered, hastily dipping their
arrows in the stuff, but Alderic and Orain and their little band
rode right over them and toward the wagon. Swiftly, like a running tide of
energy, they linked minds, and a band of blue fire rolled out toward the wagon
with the clingfire. It struck, blazed upward, and then a roaring column of fire
burst skyward, blazing so fiercely that Rakhal's men scattered and ran for
their lives. Burning droplets fell on some of them and they blazed up like
living torches and died screaming; the fire ran through Rakhal's own armies,
and, panicked, they ran, scattered, and ran right on Carolin's spears and
swords.
Although
a part of Romilly was still linked with the bird, she knew there was no more
need of it. She found herself closely linked in mind with Sunstar, as Carolin
urged him forward; she knew the terror of fire, shuddering with the smell of
burning grass and burning flesh; even in the rain which had begun to drizzle
down again in the fitful sunlight, the clingfire burned on. But the
great stallion, bravely overcoming that inborn fear, carried his rider forward
... or was it Romilly herself, bearing the king into the heart of the fleeing
enemy.
"See
where Rakhal flies with his sorcerers!" cried out Orain, "After them,
men! Take them now!"
Romilly
let Temperance fly upward out of range of the fire; it was burning inward now,
with a ring round it where there was nothing left to bum - so much had the leronyn
of Carolin's armies accomplished; but she, with Carolin, was away with the
stallion Sunstar, forging to the heights, where the last remnant of Rakhal's
men, cut off between Carolin and the raging remnant of clingfire, fought with
their backs to the fire. Sunstar seemed to fly forward with Carolin's own will
to take the height, and Romilly felt that it was she herself who bore him on to
the last moment of success....
Then
she stumbled - for a moment Romilly was not sure it was not she herself who had
stumbled - recovered, and reared high in the air, Carolin's hand guiding him
up, then down, to trample the man who had risen, sword in hand, before him. His
great hooves were like hammers pounding the man into the ground. Romilly felt
the man go down, his head splitting like a ripe fruit beneath her hooves –
Sunstar’s hooves - felt Carolin fighting for balance in the saddle. And then
another man reared up with a lightning-flash of steel, she felt Carolin slip
back in the saddle and fall, and in that moment Romilly felt sharp shearing
pain as the sword sliced through neck and throat and heart, and blood and life
spurted away....
She
never felt herself strike the ground.
.
. . rain was falling, hard cold rain, pounding down; the ground was awash with
it, and even the smell of the clingfire had been washed away. The sky
was dark; it was near nightfall. Romilly sat up, dazed and stunned, not even
now fully aware that it was not she who had been felled by the sword.
Sunstar!
She
reached out automatically for his mind, found-
Found
nothingness! Only a great sense of vacancy, emptiness where he had been. Wildly
she looked around and saw, lying not far away, the stallion's body, his head
nearly severed, and the man he had killed lying beneath his great bulk. The
rain had washed the blood clear so that there was only a great gaping wound in
his neck from which the blood had soaked into the ground all around him. Sunstar,
Sunstar-dead, dead, dead! She reached out, again, dazed, to
nothingness. Sunstar, whose life she had shared so long....
And
whom she had betrayed by leading him to death in a war between two kings . . . neither
of them is worth a lock of his black mane . . . ah, Sunstar . . . and I died
with you ... Romilly felt so empty and cold she was not sure that she was
still alive. She had heard tales of men who did not know they were dead and
kept trying to communicate with the living. Dazed, drained of all emotion
except fury and grief, she managed to sit up.
Around
her lay the bodies of the dead, Rakhal's men and Carolin's; but of Carolin
himself there was no sign. Only the body of Sunstar showed where Carolin had
once been. Vaguely, not caring, she wondered if all Carolin's men were dead and
Rakhal victor. Or had Orain's party captured or killed Rakhal? What did it
matter?
What
matters it which great rogue sits on the throne....
She
began to get her bearings a little. As before the previous battle, the field
was covered with the dark shapes of kyorebni, hovering. One lighted,
with a harsh scream, on Sunstar's head, and Romilly rushed at it, flapping her arms
and crying out The bird was gone, but it would come back.
Sunstar
is dead. And I trained him with my own hands for this war, betrayed him into
the hands of the one who would ride him into this slaughter, and the noble
horse never faltered, but bore Carolin to this place and to his death. I would
have done better to kill him myself when he ran joyously around our green
paddock behind the hostel of the Sisterhood. Then he would never have know fire
and fear and a sword through his heart.
Dark
was falling, but far away at the edge of the battlefield, a lantern bobbed, a
little light wandering over the field. Grave-robbers? Mourners seeking the
slain? No; intuitively Romilly knew who they were; the women of the Sisterhood,
seeking their fallen comrades, who must not lie in the common grave of
Carolin's soldiers.
As
if it mattered to the dead where they lay....
They
would come here soon, thinking her dead - when she had fallen from her horse,
stricken down by Sunstar's death, no doubt they had left her for dead. Now they
would come to bury her, and find her living, and they would rejoice....
And
then Romilly was overcome with rage and grief. They would take her back to
themselves, reclaim her as a warrior-woman. She had fled from the company of
men, come among the Sisterhood, and what had they done? Set her to training
horses, not for their own sake or for the service of men, but to be
slaughtered, slaughtered senselessly in this strife of men who could not keep
their quarrels to themselves alone but involved the innocent birds and horses
in their wars and killings. ...
And
I am to go back to that? No, no, never!
With
shaking hands, she tore the earring of the Sisterhood from her ear; the wire
caught and tore her ear but she was unconscious of the pain. She flung it on
the ground. An offering for Sunstar, a sacrifice offered to the dead! She
could hardly stand. She looked around, and saw that riderless horses were
wandering here and there on the battlefield. It took only the slightest touch
of her laran to bring one to her, his head bent in submission. It was
too dark now to see whether it was mare or gelding, grey or black or roan. She
climbed into the saddle, and crouched over the pommel, letting the horse take
his own way . . . -where? It matters not. Away from this place of death,
away, friend. I will serve no more, not as soldier nor Swordswoman nor leronis.
From henceforth I shall serve no man nor woman. Blindly, her eyes closed
against streaming hot tears, Romilly rode alone from the battlefield and into
the rain of the night.
All
that night, she rode, letting the horse find his own pathway, and never knew
where she went or what direction she took. The sun rose and she was still
unaware, sitting as if lifeless on the animal's back, swaying now and again but
always recovering herself before she quite fell. It did not seem to matter.
Sunstar was dead. Carolin and Orain had gone she knew not where, nor did it
matter, Orain wanted nothing of her . . . she was a woman. Carolin, like the
Sisterhood, sought only to have her use her laran to betray other
innocent beasts to the slaughter! Ruyven . . . Ruyven cared little for her, he
was like a monk from the accursed Tower where they learned devilry like clingfire.
. . .
There
is no human who shall mean anything to me now.
She
rode on, all day, across a countryside ravaged and deserted, over which the war
had raged. At the edge of the forest, she slid from her horse, and set him
free.
"Go,
my brother," she whispered, "and serve no man or woman, for they will
only lead you to death. Live free in the wild, and go your own way."
The
horse stared down at her for a moment; she gave it a final pat and pushed it
away, and, after a moment of motionless surprise, it turned and cantered
awkwardly away. Romilly went quietly into the darkness of the forest. She was
soaked to the skin, but it seemed not to matter, any more than the horse minded
his wet cloak of hair. She found a little hollow between the roots of a tree,
crawled into it, drew her cloak tightly around her, covering her face; curled
herself into a ball and slept like the dead.
At
dawn she woke to hear birds calling, and it seemed, mixed with their note, she
could hear the harsh screams of the kyorebni, still feeding on the waste
of the battlefield. She did not know where she was going; somewhere away from
the sound of those screams. She got numbly to her feet and walked, not caring
in which direction, further into the wood.
She
walked most of that day. She was not conscious of hunger; she moved like a wild
thing, silently, avoiding what was in her path and whenever she heard a noise,
freezing silently in her tracks. Late in the day she nearly stumbled into a
small stream, and cupping her hands, drank deeply of the clear sweet water,
then laid herself down in a patch of sunlight that came between the leaves and
let the sun dry the remaining damp from her clothes. She was still numb. As
darkness fell, she curled up under a bush and slept. Some small thing in the
grasses brushed against her and she never thought to turn aside.
The
next morning she slept late and woke with the sun's heat across her back.
Before her, a spider had spun its web, clear and jewelled with the dew; she
looked on its marvelous intricacy and felt the first pleasure she had felt in
many days. The sun was bright on the leaves; a bushjumper suddenly bolted on
long legs, followed by four miniature babies, their bushy tails standing up
like small bluish flags riding high. Romilly heard herself laugh aloud, and
they stopped, tails quivering, dead silent; then, as the silence fell around
them, with a burst of speed all four of the tiny flags popped down a hole in
the grass.
How
quiet it was within the woods! There could certainly be no human dwelling
nearby, or nothing could have been so peaceful, the wild things so untroubled
and unafraid.
She
uncurled herself from sleep, lazily stretching her limbs. She was thirsty, but
there was no stream nearby; she licked the dew from the low leaves of the tree
over her head. On a fallen log she found a few old woody mushrooms, and ate
them, then found some dried berries hanging to a stem and ate them too. After a
little while, as she wandered lazily through the wood, she saw the green flags
of a root she knew to be edible, grubbed it up with a stick, rubbed off the
dirt on the edge of her tunic, and chewed it slowly. It was stringy and hard,
the flavor acrid enough to make her eyes water, but it satisfied her hunger.
She
had lost the impetus that had kept her moving restlessly from place to place;
she sat in the clearing of the fallen log most of the day, and when night fell
again she slept there.
During
her sleep she heard someone calling her name; but she did not seem to know the
voice. Orain? No, he would not call her; he had wanted her when he thought her
a boy, but had no use for the woman she really was. Her father? He was far
away, across the Kadarin, safe at home. She thought with pain of the peaceful
hills of Falconsward. Yet it was there she had learned that evil art of
horse-training by which she had betrayed the beloved to his death. In her dream
she seemed to sit on Sunstar's back, to ride like the wind across the grey
plain she once had seen, and she woke with her face wet with tears.
A
day or two later she realized that she had lost shoes and stockings, she did
not remember where, that her feet were already hardening to the dirt and
pebbles of the forest floor. She wandered on aimlessly, ever deeper into the
forest, eating fruits, grubbing in the earth for roots; now and again she
cooled her feet in a mountain stream but she never thought of washing. She ate
when she found food; when once for three days together she found nothing
edible, she was dimly aware of hunger, but it did not seem important to her.
She no longer troubled to rub the dirt from the roots she ate; they seemed just
as good to her in their coats of earth. Once she found some pears on an
abandoned tree and their taste was so sweet that she felt a rush of ecstasy.
She ate as many as she could but it did not occur to her to fill her pockets or
to tie them into her skirt.
One
night she woke when the purple face of Liriel stood over her in the sky,
seeming to look down and chide her, and thought, I am surely mad, where am I
going, what am I going to do? I cannot go on like this forever. But when
she woke she had forgotten it again. Now and again, too, she heard, not with
her ears but within her mind, voices that seemed to call, Romilly, where are
you? She wondered faintly who Romilly was, and why they were calling her.
She
came to the end of the woods, the next day, and out into open plains and
rolling hills. Waving grasses were covered with seeds ... all this country must
once have been settled and planted to grain, but all around the horizon which
stretched wide from west to east, from the wall of the forest behind her to the
mountains which rose greyish-pink in the distance, there was no human dwelling.
She picked a handful of the seeds, rubbed their coats from them, and chewed
them as she walked.
High
in the sky, a hawk soared, a single hawk, and as she watched, it dropped down,
down, down, falling toward her with folded wings, it alighted on her shoulder.
It seemed to speak in her mind, but she did not know what it was saying, yet it
seemed that once she had known this hawk, that it had a name, that once she had
flown beside it in the sky ... no, that was not possible, yet the hawk seemed
so sure that they knew one another. She reached out to touch it, then stopped,
there was some reason she should not touch it with her finger . . . she wished
she could remember why. But she looked into the hawk's eyes, and wished she
knew where she had seen the hawk before this.
She
woke again that night, and again she was aware that she was certainly quite
mad, that she could not wander forever like this. But she had no idea where she
was, and there was no one to ask. She knew who she was, now, she was Romilly,
and the hawk, the hawk which had perched on the low limb of a nearby tree, the
hawk was Preciosa, but why had she sought her out here? Did she not know that
she, Romilly, set the touch of her mind on bird or horse only to train it to
follow humankind meekly to its own death?
It
took her five days to cross the plain; she counted them, without thinking, as
the face of Liriel grew toward full. When last the moon was full, she had
followed Sunstar - she slammed the memory shut; it was too painful. There were
plenty of the grainlike seeds to eat, and water to drink. Once the hawk brought
a bird down from the sky and lighted on her shoulder, screaming in frustration;
she looked at the dead bird, torn by the hawk's beak, and shuddered. It was the
hawk's nature, but the sight of the Wood made her feel sick, and at last she
flung it to the ground and walked on.
That
night she came beneath the edges of another patch of forest. She found a tree
heavy with last year's nuts, and by now she had sense enough to fill her
pockets with them. She was still not certain where she was going, but she had
begun to turn northward when there was a choice. She moved noiselessly now
through the woods, driven restlessly onward ... she did not know why.
Overhead,
toward evening, she heard the cry of waterfowl, flying toward the south. She
looked up, soaring with them in their dizzy flight, seeing from afar where a
tall white tower rose, and the glimmer of a lake. Where was she?
The
moons were so bright that night, four of them shining down on her, Uriel and
Kyrrdis round and full, and the . other two shining pale and gibbous, that she
could not sleep. It seemed to her that when last she had seen four moons in the
sky, something had happened ... no, she could not remember, but her body ached
with desire and hunger unslaked, and she did not know why. After a time, lying
in the soft moss, she began to range outward, feeling hungers like her own all
round her....
A
cat crawled along a branch, and she felt the tug of the light within her, too,
the flow of the life of the world, and herself with it. She could see the gleam
of the great eyes, followed it with her mind while she prowled around the foot
of the tree. There was a sweet, sharp, musky scent in the air now and, in the
mind of the cat, she followed it, not knowing whether or not she moved or
whether only the cat moved . . . closer and closer she came, and heard herself
make a small snarling, purring cry of hunger and need . . . turned with a
lashing of the great tail as the cat's mate pounced down the tree trunk, with
cries and frisking sounds. Her body ached and hungered and as the cat seized
her mate, Romilly twisted on the moss of the ground and dug her hands into the
ground, gasping, crying out...
Ranald
. . . she
whispered, hi the moment before she was lost in the wild surge of heat. The
night seemed filled with the snarling, purring sound of the great cats in their
mating, and she lay silent, battered down beneath it, and at last, her senses
and laran overloaded, she lost consciousness.
The
next morning she woke, hardly aware what had happened, feeling sick and
exhausted. She did not know why, but her aimless moving through the forest had
quickened pace. She must get away, get away ... a nameless apprehension was on
her, and when she heard, above her, the same snarling cry of the great cat, she
was too numbed to be afraid. And then there was a dark flash as it slithered to
the ground and stood facing her, mouth drawn back in a snarl over sharp fanged
teeth. Behind it she sensed the presence of the little balls of brownish fur,
hidden in the hollow tree....
The
cat was protecting her young! And, she, Romilly, had blundered into the
proximity of the cat's protected territory . . . she blundered backward, fighting the
temptation to turn and run, run away ... if she did, she knew the cat would be
on her in a moment! Slowly, stealthily, she drew backward, backward, trying to
catch the animal's eyes, to press on it with her laran...
Peace,
peace, I mean no harm, not to you, not to your little ones. ... At some time, she had
done this before, something which menaced her, cold, fierce, in the snows. . ..
Silently,
silently, step after step, withdraw, withdraw . . . peace, peace, I mean you
no harm, your cubs no harm....
Then,
when she was almost at the edge of the clearing, the cat moved like a streak,
with a single long leap, and landed almost at Romilly's feet.
Peace,
peace . . . The
cat bent her head, almost laid it at Romilly's feet. Then shock struck through
her.
No,
no! I betrayed Sunstar to death, I swore 1 would use that laran no more, never,
never ... no more of the innocent to die ...
One
paw lashed out like a whip; claws raked Romilly's face, and the weight of the
arm stretched her sprawling and gasping with pain; she felt blood break from
her cheek and her lip. Now she has spilled my blood, will she kill me now as
sacrifice to her cubs, in expiation for the death of Sunstar. . . .
The
hoarse, soft snarling never stopped. Romilly rolled over, to protect her face.
Then, as the cat sprung again, a fury of wings lashed down, and the hawk's
claws raked at the eyes of the great cat, beating wings flapping around the
cat's muzzle.
Preciosa!
She has come to fight for me!
Romilly
rolled free, springing up and climbing into a nearby tree. Preciosa hovered,
just out of reach of the deadly claws, flapping and striking with beak and
talons, until the cat, snarling softly, turned her back and vanished into the
long grasses where her cubs were hidden. Her breath catching in her throat,
Romilly slid down the tree and ran as far as she could in the opposite
direction, Preciosa close behind her; she heard the sound of the wings and the
little shrilling sound of the hawk. When she was out of range, she stopped,
turned, thrust out her fist, in a gesture so familiar that she did not even
make it consciously.
Preciosa!"
she
cried, and as the hawk's talons closed, gently, on her arm, she remembered
everything, and began to cry.
"Oh,
Preciosa, you came for me!"
She
washed in a stream, that night, and shook the leaf-mold and dirt from her
cloak. She took off her tunic and trousers, and shook them out to air, and put
them on again. She had lost, somewhere, her Swordswoman's earring - she never
knew where. With the hawk riding on her shoulder, she tried to orient herself.
She
supposed the white Tower nearby must be Neskaya, but she was not certain. A
day's walk should bring her there, and perhaps she could send a message
somewhere, and know what had befallen Carolin, and what the armies did. She
still flinched from the thought of joining them again, but she knew someday she
must return to her own kind.
Late
that night, as she was looking for a dry place to sleep, and wondering how she
had managed all these days alone - she thought she must have been in the woods
all of three days, perhaps - it seemed that she heard someone calling her name.
Romilly!
Romilly!
Search
for her with laran,
only so we can find her, she is hiding...
She
cannot be dead. I would know if she was dead....
She
recognized, vaguely, some of the voices, though it was still not clear.
If
you can find her, bid her come back to us. This was a voice she knew, a voice
she loved; Jandria, mourning. And although she had never done it before,
somehow Romilly knew how to reach out with her mind.
Where
are you? What has happened? I thought the war Was over.
It
is ended, and Carolin is encamped before the walls of Hali, came the answer. But it
is stalemate, for Lyondri has Orain as hostage somewhere within the city.
And
Romilly did not even stop to remember her grudge, or what it had been.
I
will come as swiftly as I can.
She
slept only a little that night, and was awake and walking by daylight, sending
out her laran to spy out a dwelling of men. Once in the village she
sought out a man who had horses for hire.
"I
must have a fast horse at once. I am of the Sisterhood of the Sword, and I am
on an urgent mission for King Carolin; I am needed at once at Hali."
"And
I am His Majesty's chief cook and bottle-washer," jeered the stableman.
"Not so fast, mestra; what will you pay?" And Romilly saw
herself reflected in his eyes, a gaunt scarecrow of a woman in a tattered tunic
and breeches, barefoot, her face savagely clawed and bleeding where the
mountain-cat had swiped at her, the unkempt hawk riding on her shoulders.
"I
have been through the war and worse," she said. She had dwelt among
animals so long she had forgotten the need of money. She searched the deep
pockets of tunic and breeches and found a few coins forgotten; she spilled them
out before him.
"Take
these as earnest," she said, not counting them, "I swear I will send
the rest when I reach a hostel of the Sisterhood, and twice as many if you will
find me a pair of boots and some food."
He
hesitated. "I will need thirty silver bits or a copper royal," he
said, "and another as token that you win return the horse here-"
Her
eyes glittered with rage. She did not even know why she was in such need of
haste, but she was sought for at Hali. "In Carolin's name," she said,
"I can take your horse if I must-"
She
signalled to the nearest horse; he looked fast, a great rangy roan. A touch of
her laran and he came swiftly to her, bowed his neck in submission. His
owner shouted with anger and came to lay his hand on the horse's lead-rope, but
the horse edged nervously away, and lashed out, kicking; circled, and came back
to rub Romilly's head with his shoulder.
"Leronis..."
he
whispered, his eyes widened, staring.
"That
and more," said Romilly tartly.
A
young woman stood watching, twisting her long apron. At last she whispered,
"My mother's sister is of the Sisterhood, mestra. She has told me
that the Sisterhood will always pay debts incurred by one of them, for the
honor of them all. Let her have the horse, my husband, and-" she ran into
the house, brought back a pair of rough boots.
"They
were my son's," she said in a whisper, "Rakhal's men came through the
village and one of them killed him, cut him down like a dog, when they seized
our plow-beast and slaughtered it for their supper, and he asked them for some
payment. Carolin's men have done nothing like this."
Romilly
slipped the boots on her feet. They were hillmen's boots, fur-lined, soft to
her toes. The woman gave her half of a cut loaf of bread. "If you can
wait, mestra, you shall have hot food, but I have nothing
cooked...."
Romilly
shook her head. "This is enough," she said. "I cannot
wait." In a flash she was on the horse's back, even while the man cried,
"No lady can ride that horse - he is my fiercest-"
"I
am no lady but a Swordswoman," she said, and suddenly a new facet of her laran
made itself clear to her; she reached out, as she had done to the mountain
cat, and he backed away before her, staring, submissive.
The
woman cried, "Do you not want saddle-bridle - let me bind up your wounds,
Swordswoman."
"I
have no time for that," Romilly said, "Set me on the road to
Hali."
The
woman stammered out directions, while the man stood silent, goggling at her.
She dug her heels into the horse's back. She had ridden like this, with neither
saddle nor bridle, when she was a child at Falconsward, just learning her
laran, guiding the horse with her will alone. She felt a brief, poignant
regret; Sunstar! Sunstar, and the nameless unknown horse she had ridden
away from the battle and turned loose to wander in the wild. She had surely
been mad.
The
horse moved swiftly and steady, his long legs eating up the road. She gnawed at
the hard bread; it seemed that no fine meal had ever been quite so delicious.
She needed fresh clothes, and a bath, and a comb for her hair, but nightmare
urgency drove her on. Orain, in the hands of Lyondri! Once she stopped
to let the horse graze a little and rest, and wondered, What do I think I
can do about it?
The
Lake at Hali was long and dim, with a Tower rising on the shore, and pale waves
lapping like stormclouds at the verge; at the far end Carolin's army encamped
before a city whose walls were grey and grim. And now she was sure enough of
her laran to reach out and feel for the presence of the man she had
known as Dom Carlo, and to know that he was her friend, king or no. He
was still the man who had welcomed her, protected her among his men even when
he knew she was a woman, kept her secret even from his dearest friend and
foster-brother.
She
made her way through the staring army, hearing one of the Swordswomen call her
name in amazement. She knew how she must look to them, worn and gaunt, her
tunic and breeches filthy, her hair a ragged and uncombed mop, the cat-claw
marks still bloody across her face, riding a countryman's horse with neither
saddle nor bridle. Was this any way to present herself to a king?
But
even as she slid from her horse, Jandria had her in a tight embrace.
"Romilly,
Romy, we thought you were dead! Where did you go?"
She
shook her head, suddenly too exhausted to speak.
"Anywhere.
Everywhere. Nowhere. Does it matter? I came as swiftly as I could. How long
since the battle? What is this about Orain being held hostage for
Lyondri?"
Alderic
and Ruyven came to stare, to clasp her in their arms. "I tried to reach
you, with Lady Maura," Alderic said, "but we could not-" and
Jandria cried out, "What happened to your face - your earring-?"
"Later,"
she said, with an exhausted shake of her head, and then Carolin himself was
before her; he held out both his hands.
"Child-"
he said, and hugged her as her own father might have done. "Orain loved
you, too - I thought I had lost both of you, who followed me not as a king, but
as an outlaw and fugitive! Come in," he said, and led the way into his
tent. He gestured, and Jandria poured her a cup of wine, but Romilly shook her
head.
"No,
no, I have eaten almost nothing, I would be drunk if I drank half a cup now - I
would rather have some food," she said. The remnants of a meal were laid
around the rough table inside, and Carolin said, "Help yourself."
Jandria cut her a slice of meat and bread, but Romilly laid the meat aside -
she knew she would never taste it again - and ate the bread, slowly. Jandria
took the rejected wine and washed the deep claw-marks on her face.
"Why,
how came you to have these? The healer must tend them, a cat's claw-wounds
always fester; you could lose the sight of an eye if they spread," she
said, but Romilly only shook her head.
"I
hardly know. Some day I will tell you all I can remember," she promised,
"But Orain-"
"They
have him somewhere in the city," Carolin said. He had been pacing the tent
but now he dropped wearily into one of the folding camp-chairs. "I dare
not even enter to search for him, for they have warned me . . . yet it might
give him an easier death than what Lyondri plans for him. Rakhal's army is cut
to pieces; most of them have made submission to me, but Rakhal himself, with a
few of his men, and Lyondri, took refuge here . .. and they have Orain captive;
he has been in their hands since the battle. Now they are using him to
parley-" she could see his jaw move as he swallowed and said, "I
offered them safe-conduct across the Kadarin, or wherever they wished to go,
and both their lives, and to leave Lyondri's son safe in Nevarsin, and have him
reared as kinsman at my court, with my own sons. But they - they -" He
broke off, and Romilly saw that his hands were trembling.
"Let
me tell her, Uncle," Alderic said gently. "I sent word I would
surrender myself in exchange for my father, and go with them where they wished
across the Kadarin to safety, to whatever place they should appoint for refuge;
I also made offer of copper and silver-"
"The
long and short of it is," Jandria said, "that precious pair have
demanded that Carolin surrender himself to them for Orain's life. I,
too, offered to exchange myself - I thought Lyondri might agree to that. And
Maura said she would give herself up to Rakhal, even go with him into exile if
that was what he wished, so that Carolin might have his paxman. But-" her
face was grim, "Let her see what answer they sent us."
Ruyven
fumbled with a little package wrapped in yellow silk. His hands shook
dreadfully. Carolin took the silk from him and tried to unwrap it. Maura laid
her hands over his, stroked them for a moment, then opened the bloodstained
cloth.
Inside
- Romilly thought that she would retch-was a calloused finger. Clotted blood
caked the end where it had been cut from the hand; and the horror was, that one
finger bore a copper ring, set with a blue stone, which she had seen on Orain's
hand.
Carolin
said, "They sent word - they would return Orain to me - a little piece at
a time - unless I surrendered myself to them, and made complete submission of
my armies." His hands were shaking, too, as he carefully wrapped up the
finger again. "They sent this two days ago. Yesterday it was - it was an
ear. Today -" he could not go on; he shut his eyes, and she saw the tears
squeezing from his eyes.
"For
Orain I would give my life and more, and he has always know it," Carolin
said, "but I - I have seen what Rakhal has done to my people - how can I
give all of them over to him and his butcher Lyondri?"
"Orain
would let himself be cut into little pieces for you, and you know that-"
Maura said, and Carolin lowered his head and sobbed. "Lyondri knows that,
too. Damn him! Damn him waking and sleeping-" His voice rose, almost in
hysteria.
"Enough."
Maura laid a gentle hand on his, took the horrid silk package from him and set
it aside.
Jandria
said grimly "I swear, I shall not sleep nor drink wine till Lyondri has
been flayed alive."
"Nor
I; but that will not save Orain from his fate," said Carolin. "You
come when we have lost hope, and are almost ready to storm the city, so that
Orain may have a death that is swift and clean. Yet somehow we must find out
where they are keeping him, and he has managed to shield the city against laran.
But we still have one sentry-bird, and we thought, perhaps - we could fly
her; she has not been manageable since the battle, Ruyven could not handle
her."
Maura
said, "And Ranald was killed in the final charge, where we thought you too
had died. But Ruyven said you were not dead, that he would have felt you die -
and the Swordswomen could not find your body. But we knew not where you had
gone. Yet perhaps, if we can find out in what part of the city they have
kenneled for their filthy work - if we enter the city, they have threatened,
they will start to cut him to pieces at that moment, and we may have what is
left by the time we have searched long enough to find him." Her face
twisted with dread and horror. "So we cannot search at random, and - and
somehow his leronyn have guarded the city - but perhaps they would not
notice a bird."
"They
would see a sentry-bird at once," said Romilly. "Their leronyn would
be aware of just such a plan."
"That
is what I told them," Ruyven said, "but it seemed a chance - if you
can handle Temperance-"
"Better
that I should send Preciosa," said Romilly. "She would not come into
the army with me, but flew away - but I can call her." Had she ever
believed that she would not use her laran again? It was, like her body
and her life, at Carolin's service. No land could survive with a mountain-cat
like Lyondri at its head. No; the cat killed because it was its nature from
hunger or fear, but Rakhal and Lyondri for power alone.
"That
might do," said Carolin, "They might think her only a wild hawk - the
Gods know there are enough of them in the country round Hali, and you might spy
out where Orain is being held, so that we can make directly for that place, and
they will have to surrender Orain or kill him quick and clean."
Somewhere
a horn blew; Carolin started and cringed. "That is their accursed
summons," he said weakly, "It was at this hour - just before
sunset-that they came on the other two days, and while I sit here trying to
summon courage to storm the city, Orain -" his voice failed again. Again
the horn sounded, and Carolin went out of his tent. A common soldier came
toward him, with insolent bearing. In his hand he bore a little packet of
yellow silk. He bowed, and said, "Carolin, pretender to the throne of the
Hasturs, I have the honor to return another portion of your faithfully sworn
man. You may take pride in his bravery."
He
laughed, a jeering, raucous laugh, and Alderic leaped forward.
"Wretch
whom I will honor by calling dog, I win at least rid you of that
laugh-" he shouted, but Jandria flung her arms round him.
"No,
Deric, they will only revenge themselves on Orain."
The
soldier said, "Do you not want to see what token they have sent you of
your paxman's bravery and devotion?"
Carolin's
hands were shaking. Jandria said, "Let me," released Alderic and
unwrapped the horrid packet. Inside there was another finger. The soldier said,
"This is the message of Lyondri. We weary of this play. Tomorrow it will
be an eye; the next day, the other eye; and the day after that, his testicles.
Should you hold out beyond that, it will be a yard of skin flayed from his back."
"Bastards!
Sons of bastards!" cursed Carolin, but the soldier turned his back and, to
the sound of the trumpet again, walked within the gates of the city.
"Follow
him with laran!" commanded Carolin, but although Ruyven, Maura and
Alderic all sought to do so - Romilly could sense it, tried to follow the man
with her special senses - it was as if her body rammed against an impregnable
wall of stone; as soon as the man was inside the gates, she could not reach
him. Carolin was shaking with horror, unable to even shed tears; Maura held him
tightly in her arms.
"My
dearest, my dearest, Orain would not have you surrender."
"Avarra
protect me, I know that - but ah, if I could only kill him quickly-"
Inside
the tent again he said with implacable fury, "I cannot let them
blind him, geld him, flay him. If we can think of nothing this night, tomorrow
at dawn I storm the city with everything I have to throw at them. I will send
word that no citizen will be harmed who does not raise hand against me, but we
will search every house till we find him; and at least there will be a swift
end to his torment And then the tormenters will come into my hands."
Yet
Romilly knew, watching him, that Carolin was a decent man; he would do nothing
worse, even to Lyondri Hastur, than to kill him. He might hang him, ignobly,
and expose his corpse for a warning, rather than giving him a nobleman's swift
death by the sword; yet Lyondri would still be in better case than Orain,
should it go on so far. Carolin sent word quietly through the army to make
ready to storm the gates at dawn.
"Can
your hawk see well enough in the dark to lead us to where Rakhal hides with his
torturers? I do not think he did this by himself, alone-" he gestured
weakly at the little packet.
"I
do not know," said Romilly quietly, but while they spoke, a plan had been
maturing in her.
"How
many men watch the city walls?"
"I
do not know; but they have sentry-birds all along the wall, and fierce dogs, so
that if anyone tries to sneak into the city by breaking the side gates - we
tried that once - the birds and the dogs set up such a racket that every one of
Rakhal's men is wakened and rallies to that spot," he said despondently.
"Good,"
said Romilly quietly. "That could hardly be better."
"What
do you say-"
"Think,
my lord. My laran is of small use against men. And you say Rakhal's leronyn
have guarded the city against our laran - laran such as your
men use. But I fear no bird, no dog ever whelped, nothing that goes on four
legs or flies on a wing. Let me go into the city alone, before dawn, and search
that way, my lord."
"Alone?
You, a girl-" Carolin began, then shook his head.
"You
have proved again and again that you are more than a girl, Swordswoman,"
he said quietly. "It is worth a risk. If it fails, at least we will have
some notion before dawn where to strike first, so they will have to give him a
quick death. But let the night fall first; and you have had a long ride. Find
her some proper food, Jandria, and let her go and sleep a little."
"I
could not sleep-" Romilly protested.
"At
least, then, rest a little," Carolin commanded, and Romilly bent her bead.
"As
you will."
Jandria
took her to the tent of the Swordswomen, then, and found her food and fresh
clothing.
"And
washing-water and a comb," Romilly begged, so Jandria brought her hot
water from the army's mess fires, and Romilly washed, combed out her tangled
hair - Jandria, who helped her, finally had to cut it very short - and climbed
gratefully into the clean soft underlinen and fresh tunic and breeches. She had
no boots except the countrywoman's, but she put clean stockings on her feet
under them. What a relief it was, to be clean, dressed, to eat cooked food, to
be human. . . .
"And
now you must rest," Jandria said, "Carolin commanded it. I promise
you, I will have you called at the midnight hour."
Romilly
lay down beside Jandria on the blanket roll. The light of the waning moon came
into the tent, and Romilly thought, with a great sadness, of Ranald lying
beside her when last the moons were full. Now he was dead, and it seemed so
bitter, so useless. She had not loved him, but he had been kind to her, and she
had first accepted him as a man, and she knew she would remember him and mourn
for him a little, forever. Jandria lay silent at her side, but she knew that Jandria,
too, mourned; not only because of Orain's peril, but for Lyondri Hastur who had
once been to her what Ranald was to Romilly herself, the first to rouse
womanhood and desire. And she could not even think of him with the sweet
sadness of the dead; he had gone further from her, become a monster - she put
her arms around Jandria, and felt the woman shaking with grief.
There
has been so much sorrow, all useless. In my pride, I too have brought grief on
those who have done me no harm. I will do my uttermost to save Orain from the
fate they have measured for him; it looks hopeless, but not all porridge cooked
is eaten. But whichever way it goes, if I am alive at dawn I shall send word to
Father and Luciella that I live and they must not grieve for me.
Jandria's
sorrow is worse than mine. Orain, if he dies, I will mourn, because he was my
friend and because he died nobly for Carolin, whom he loves. But who could
mourn, or have any feeling except relief, if Lyondri can do no more evil?
She
held Jandria's sobbing body in her arms, and at last felt her drop away into
sleep.
She
had slept for an hour or two, when Jandria shook her shoulder softly.
"Get
up, Romilly. It is time."
Romilly
splashed her face with cold water, and ate a little more bread, but she refused
wine. For this she must be perfectly alert. Carolin was waiting for her in his
tent, his face composed and grim. He said, "I hardly need tell you that if
you free Orain - or save him any more suffering, even if you must put your own
dagger through his heart - you may name your own reward, even if you wish to
marry one of my own sons."
She
smiled at the thought; why should she wish to do that? She said, speaking as if
he were the Dom Carlo she had first known, "Uncle, I will do what I
can for Orain because he was kind to me beyond all duty when he thought me only
a runaway hawkmaster's apprentice. Do you not think a Swordswoman and a MacAran
will risk herself as well for honor as from greed?"
"I
know it," Carolin said gently, "but I will reward you for my own
pleasure, too, Romilly."
She
turned to Jandria. "The boots will make too much noise. Find me a pair of
soft sandals, if you will." When Jandria had brought a pair of her own -
they were too big, but Romilly bound them tightly on her feet - she tied her hair
into a dark cloth, so that no stray gleam would give her away, and smeared her
face with dirt so that it would not shine in a watchman's lantern. Now she
could go noiselessly into the city, and she feared no sentry-bird nor dog. At
this hour, certainly, all but a few men would be sleeping.
Alderic
said in a tone that brooked no denial, "I will go with you to the side
gate."
She
nodded. He too had a touch of this laran. She held his hand, silently,
as they stole on their soft shoes away from Carolin's tent, making a wide
circle away from the gates. Somewhere a dog barked; probably, she thought,
sending out a questing tendril of awareness, at a mouse in the streets; but she
silenced him anyway, sending out thoughts of peace and drowsiness...
"The
gate will creak if you try to open it, even if you can quiet the
sentry-birds," whispered Alderic, and without a word, made a stirrup of
his hand as if he helped her to mount a tall horse; she caught at the top of
the small side-gate and climbed to the top, looking down on the sleeping city
by moonlight.
She
sent out her thoughts to the sentry-birds, sending out peace, quiet, silence .
. . she could see them on the walls now, great ugly shapes with their handlers,
like statues against the sky. A disturbance and they would scream, awakening
all of Rakhal's armies....
Peace,
Peace, silence . . . through
their eyes she looked down at the moon-flooded streets, which lay dark, with
only, now and again, a single lighted window . . . one after another she
reached out to investigate them. Ordinary laran was clouded, but
reaching into the minds of animals, she could feel silence . . . behind one
lighted window, a woman struggled to give birth to a child and a midwife knelt,
holding her hands and whispering encouragement. A mother sat beside a sick
child, singing in a voice hoarse with worry and weariness. A man wounded
somewhere in the war tossed with the fever in the stump on his leg....
A
dog snarled from a side street, and Romilly knew it would burst into a frenzy
of barking . . . she reached out, silenced it, felt its bewilderment, where had
the disturbing one gone... ? She crept silently past.
Now
she was far from the walls, the sentry-birds silent. Would they have thought to
guard the rest of the city against laran? Or had it stretched the few leronyn
at Rakhal's command, to guard the gates, so that they were open inside the
city?
Carefully,
ready to retreat at a moment's touch, she reached out . . . Orain had little laran,
she knew, but he was not head-blind and she could feel him
somewhere; he lay wakeful with the pain of his injuries . . . she must not let
him feel her presence; he might be monitored by Rakhal's or Lyondri's
sorcerers. Yet she moved, softly, nearer to him, block by block of the ancient
city, and as she stole quietly through, no dog barked, no mouse in the walls
squeaked aloud. Silence, silence, peace on the city. Horses drowsed in
their stables, cats left off chasing mice and dozed before hearths, restless
babies quieted under the powerful spell; from one end to the other of the
ancient city of Hali, no living soul felt anything but peace and silence. Even
the woman in labor fell into a peaceful sleep, and the midwife dozed at her
side.
Peace,
calm, silence.. ..
Outside
a silent house near the opposite wall - she had traversed the whole city in her
entranced spell - Romilly became aware of the two minds she had touched before.
Orain; Orain lay within, somnolent under the sleep-spell that she had put on
all things, but through it she could feel pain, fear, despair, a hope that
perhaps he could somehow manage to die. Carefully, carefully, she thrust out a
tendril of thought.. ..
Keep
silence, do not move or stir lest someone be alerted when you wake. . . .
The
door creaked, but so still was all within that the sleeping man outside Orain's
door did not stir. Beyond him, in an inner room, she sensed the stony wall of
Lyondri Hastings thoughts - he too was deeply troubled. The dreadful thing
is that Lyondri is not a cruel man by nature. He will not even watch the torturer
who does his beastly work. He does this only for power!
His
thoughts seemed to quest out, seeking an intruder . .. Romilly quickly
submerged her own mind in that of a cat, sleeping across the hearth, and after
a moment Lyondri Hastur slept... the watchman drowsed...
Even
if 1 kill him too swiftly for him to cry out - Romilly's hands tightened on the
dagger in her belt, his death-cry even in thought - will waken Lyondri! But
perhaps he would stop at killing Orain with his own hands. . ..
She
must. There was no help for it. Then she realized that the watchmen was more
deeply asleep than she, with her soothing consciousness extended throughout the
whole city, could have managed; and felt another mind touch hers. Then there
was a soft movement behind her, and she whirled, alert, dagger in hand-
"Don't
kill me, Romilly," Caryl whispered. He was wearing a white child's
night-gown, and his fair hair was tousled as if he had come from his bed. He
reached out and gripped her in a great hug ... but not for one moment did
the spell relax. . ..
"Oh,
Romilly, Romilly - I pleaded with my father, but he would not hear me - I
cannot bear it, what they are doing to Orain - it - it hurts me too - have you
come to take him away?" His whisper was all but inaudible. If Lyondri
Hastur stirred in his sleep, and touched his son's mind, he would think him
gripped in nightmare.
And
Lyondri Hastur did this where his son could know of it, feel it.
"He
said it would harden me to the necessity of being cruel sometimes, when the
good of the realm demands it," Caryl whispered, almost inaudibly, "I
am - I am sickened - I did not think my father could do this-" and
he struggled to hold back tears, knowing that would waken his father too ...
Romilly
nodded. She said, "Help me quiet the dogs as I go..."
But
she could not take Orain sleeping. Silently, she stole past the sleeping
watchman.
The
torturer. He is worse than any brute; his mind is an animal's mind, otherwise I
could not so easily enspell him....
"Orain-"
she whispered, and her hand went out to grip his mouth silent against an
involuntary cry. Remember you are dreaming this. ...
Orain
knew instantly what she meant; if Lyondri wakened or his slumber lightened, he
would think he wandered in dreams. . . . Softly, moving as noiselessly as
Romilly herself, he drew himself to his feet. One of them was bleeding through
a rough bandage. She had not seen the cut-off finger. But she fought to
suppress her horror, to keep the sleep-spell strong, as he moved softly across
the room, forced his feet, wincing, into his boots.
"I
would not leave that man alive-" he whispered, glancing with implacable
hate at his jailer, but he sensed, so close they were in rapport, Romilly's
reason for not killing him, and contributed a single wry thought:
When
Lyondri wakes and finds me escaped while he slept, what he will do to the man
will be worse than your dagger through his heart; for mercy I should kill the
man! But 1 am not kind enough for that.
The
smell of the air told Romilly that dawn was nearing; she would soon have to
contend with dogs waking all over the city, with the sentry-birds on the wall
rousing, and if they did not waken at the proper time, that too would
alert their handlers; they must be free of the city before then. She took
Orain's shoulder. His hand, too, was wrapped in rough bandages, and there was a
patch over the cut-off ear which had bled through. But he was not seriously
harmed, and came silently after her. Now they were outside the house, and she
came aware that Caryl was following them on noiseless feet, in his nightgown.
"Go
back!" She whispered, and shook the boy's shoulder. "I cannot be
responsible!"
"I
will not return!" His voice was stubborn and set "He is no longer my
father; I would be worse than he is, to stay with him." She saw that great
silent tears were rolling down his face, but he insisted, "I can help you
quiet the guards."
She
nodded and signalled him to steady Orain, who was limping. Now she must quiet
pain, keep the tumult of his thoughts and emotions under her own, and . . .
yes, she must let the birds wake normally, with ordinary cries, elsewhere in
the city, while keeping those near here safely entranced until they had somehow
made their escape.
They
had reached the side gate. Caryl set a hand on the latch and the lock gave way
and swung open. There was a horrendous creaking from the broken lock, a sound
of tortured metal and wood that rent the sky; everywhere, it seemed, there was
an uproar from the walls, but they dropped all caution and ran, ran hurriedly
through the camp and the forming army, ran toward Carolin's tents . . . and
then Carolin caught Orain in his arms, weeping aloud in relief and joy, and
Romilly turned and hugged Caryl tight.
"We're
safe, we're safe - oh, Caryl, we could never have done it without you."
Carolin
turned a little and opened his arms to clasp Romilly and Caryl in the same hug
that encircled his friend.
"Listen,"
Orain said, "The racket - they know I am gone."
"Yet
our army is here to guard you," said Carolin quietly. "They shall not
touch you again, my brother, if our lives answer for it. But now, I think, they
will have to surrender; I will not burn my people's city over their heads, but
I will spare any man who makes his submission and swears loyalty to me. I think
Rakhal and Lyondri will find few partisans this morning." He felt Orain
flinch as the embrace touched the bandage over his ear.
"My
brother, let me have your wounds tended."
He
brought him into the tent, and Maura and Jandria hastened to attend Orain.
While the hacked fingers and ear were bandaged, Carolin sat blinking back tears
in the lamplight
"How
can we reward you, Romilly?"
"There
is no need of reward," she said. Now it was over, she was shaking, and
glad to feel Alderic's arm supporting her, holding a wine-cup to her lips.
"It is enough that now my lord Orain knows-" she did not know what
she was going to say until she heard herself saying it, "that even though
I am only a girl, I have no less courage or worth than any boy!"
Orain's
arms swept out and he hugged her close, knocking the bandage loose and bleeding
all over her. "Sweetheart, sweetheart," he whispered, holding her
tight and crooning to her like a child, "I did not mean - I could not want
you that way, but always I wanted to be your friend . . . only I felt such a
fool-"
She
knew she was crying too as she hugged him and kissed his cheek. She found
herself in his lap like a child, while he stroked her hair. Orain held out his
free hand to Alderic and said, "They brought me news that you had offered
to exchange yourself for me, my son - what have I done to deserve that? I have
never been a father to you-"
"You
gave me life, sir," said Alderic quietly. "I owe you that, at least,
since you have had nothing else from me of love or respect."
"Perhaps
because I have not deserved it," Orain said, and Caryl came to his knees
and hugged Orain too, and Romilly who was still in his lap. Carolin said,
finding his voice through thickness in his throat, "You are all here and
safe. That is enough. Caryl, I swear I shall be a father to you, and you shall
be brought up with my own sons. And I will not kill Lyondri if I can help it.
He may leave me no choice, and I cannot now trust his oath or his honor; but if
I can, I shall let him live out his life in exile."
Caryl
said shakily, "I know you will do what is honorable, Uncle."
"And
now if you are all done with your love-feast," said Jandria, waspishly,
"I would like to bandage this man up again so he will not be bleeding into
our breakfast!"
Orain
grinned at her and said, "I'm not hurt as badly as that. The man knew his
business as well as any army surgeon. He made it quick, at least. They told me,
though-" and suddenly he shuddered, and said, shaking, "You came just
in time, Romilly."
He
took her hand in his undamaged one. He said gently, "I cannot marry you,
child. It is not in my nature. But if Carolin gives leave, I will betrothe you
to my son-" and he looked up at Alderic. "I can already see that he
is willing."
"And
nothing would please me better," said Ruyven, coming to smile at Alderic.
"Then
that's settled," Orain said, smiling, but Romilly pulled loose in outrage.
"And
am I to have nothing to say about this?" she demanded, and her hand went
to her ear where the earring had been torn loose. "I am not free of my
vows to the Swordswomen until the year has ended. And then-" she grinned a
little nervously at Alderic and Ruyven, "I know now that however good my laran,
it is still not properly trained, or I could have done better with it. It
betrayed me on the battlefield, when Sunstar was killed... I came near to dying
with him because I did not know how to keep myself clear. If they will have
me-" she looked from Ruyven to Alderic, "I will go to a Tower, and
learn what I must do to master my laran so that it will not master me.
And then I must make my peace with my father and stepmother. And then-"
she smiled now, waveringly, at Alderic, "Then, perhaps, I will know myself
well enough to know if I want to marry you - or anyone else, my lord."
"Spoken
like a Swordswoman," Jandria said approvingly, but Romilly hardly heard,
Alderic sighed, then took her hand.
"And
when that is done," he said quietly, "I shall await your decision,
Romilly."
She
clasped his fingers, but only for a moment. She was not sure; but she was no
longer afraid.
"My
lord," she said to Carolin, "Have I leave to take your kinsman to the
tent of the Swordswomen and find him some breeches?" She looked at Caryl,
who flushed with embarrassment and said, "Please, Uncle. I - I cannot show
myself to the army in a night-gown."
Carolin
laughed and said, "Do as you wish, hawkmistress. You have been faithful to
me, and to those I love. And when you have done your duty to your laran and
to your parents and to the one who would marry you, I shall expect you to come
back to us in Hali." He turned and took Maura's hand, saying, "I
pledged to you that we would celebrate our Mid-summer-festival in Hali, did I
not? And the next moon will see us at Midsummer. If it will please you, Lady -
I had thought to make the hawkmistress's marriage at the same time as her
Queen's. But we can wait for that." He laughed aloud and said, "I am
not so much of a tyrant as that. But one day, Romilly, you will be hawkmistress
to the reigning king as you were in exile."
She
bowed and said, "I thank you, sir." But her mind, ranging ahead, was
already seeking the walls of Tramontana Tower.
She
rejected her noble life and embraced the freedom only a man could claim. She
was Romilly, who spurned humanity for its evils and jealousies and
lived among the beasts of hill and forest. There was war in the lands of
Darkover, but Romilly wanted none of it. Yet, male-garbed or beast-minded, she
was also human. And duty to her own kind pointed her to the ultimate
decision...