"THE PRIESTING OF ARILAN"
Young Denis Arilan intended to be a priest—the first Deryni priest
in two hundred years!
If he were known to be one of the dread Deryni, whose magical
talents made them proscribed, he could never be ordained, of course. As part of
the strictures imposed as a result of the Council of Ramos, Deryni were
forbidden to enter the priesthood on pain of death.
The Church obviously had some way of enforcing its ban. Arilan had
watched his friend Jorian fall in agony at the altar during his first
celebration of the Mass as a priest. But there was no evidence of how he had
been detected or destroyed.
What was there to prevent the same happening to Denis Arilan?
Nevertheless, he was going to be a priest—or die!
By Katherine Kurtz
Published by Ballanttne Books:
THE LEGENDS OF CAMBER OF CULDI
Volume I: CAMBER OF CULDI
Volume II: SAINT CAMBER
Volume III: CAMBER THE HERETIC
THE CHRONICLES OF THE DERYNI
Volume I: DERYNI RISING
Volume II: DERYNI CHECKMATE
Volume III: HIGH DERYNI
THE HISTORIES OF KING KELSON
Volume I: THE BISHOP'S HEIR
Volume II: THE KING'S JUSTICE
Volume III: THE QUEST FOR SAINT CAMBER
THE DERYNI ARCHIVES
LAMMAS NIGHT
Katherine Kurtz
1986
DEL REY
A Del Rey Book
BALLANTINE BOOKS - NEW YORK
A Del Rey Book
Published by Ballantine Books
Copyright © 1986 by Katherine Kurtz
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States of America by Ballantine Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 86-90861
ISBN 0-345-32678-4
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Edition: August 1986 Sixth Printing: October 1988
Cover Art
by Darrell K. Sweet
Map by
Shelley Shapiro
"Catalyst,"
copyright © 1985 by Katherine Kurtz. First published in Moonsinger's Friends
(Bluejay Books, 1985).
"Healer's Song,"
copyright © 1982 by Katherine Kurtz.First published in Fantasy Book, August
1982.
"Vocation,"
copyright © 1983 by Katherine Kurtz. First published in Nine Visions (Seabury
Press, 1983).
"Bethane,"
copyright © 1982 by Katherine Kurtz. First published in Hecate's Cauldron (DAW
Books, 1982).
"Legacy," copyright
© 1983 by Katherine Kurtz. First published in Fantasy Book, February
1983.
II Healer's Song (August 1, 914) 28
III Vocation (December 24, 977) 45
V The Priesting of Arilan 99 (August 1, 1104-February 2, 1105)
VII The Knighting of Derry (May, 1115) 173
appendix I:
Index of Characters 232
appendix II: Index of Place Names 241
appendix
III: A Partial Chronology for the Eleven Kingdoms 244
appendix
IV: Literary Origins Of The Deryni 254
Welcome
to Gwynedd and the universe of the Deryni. Whether or not you've been here
before, you'll likely find it at least somewhat familiar, for Gwynedd and its
neighboring kingdoms are roughly parallel to our own tenth, eleventh, and
twelfth century England, Wales, and Scotland in terms of culture, level of
technology, similarity of social structure, and influence of a powerful
medieval Church that extends its machinations into the lives of nearly
everyone, highborn or low. The major difference, aside from historical
personalities and places, is that magic works; for the Deryni are a race of
sorcerers.
In
a sense, the term "magic" is almost a misnomer to describe Deryni
capabilities, because much of what the Deryni can do falls under the general
category of what we would call extrasensory perception or ESP. Telepathy,
telekinesis, teleportation, and other "paranormal" phenomena are
functions we are now beginning to suspect may be far more normal than we had
dreamed, as we approach the threshold of the twenty-first century and science
continues to expand our understanding of human potential. In fact, much of what
we consider science today would have been magic to the feudal, superstitious,
non-technological folk of the Middle Ages. (They would have scoffed at the
notion that invisible animalcules called "germs" could cause disease,
for everyone knew that evil humors made people sick—or, sometimes, the
wrath of God.)
Of
course, not all "magical" phenomena can be explained, even by modern
science. Complicating matters in Gwynedd is the fact that the Deryni themselves
cannot always distinguish between the various forms of these phenomena. First
there are the natural Deryni abilities, ESP-type functions. Then there
is the grey area of ritual procedures which, when performed with suitable
mental focus, concentrate the operator's own power to produce certain
predictable results. And finally, there are supernatural connections
that even the Deryni would regard as magical, which tap into unknown power
sources in unknown ways, at unknown cost to the well-being of one's immortal
soul—the certain existence of which is also unknown. The latter is a realm that
has always been of profound interest to those engaged in philosophical
pursuits, whether those of science, organized religion, or more esoteric
disciplines. (And if we define magic as the art of causing change in conformity
with will, then perhaps all Deryni powers are magical. Denis Arilan will
have some thoughts on supernatural agents in the story bearing his name.)
The
Deryni, then, have abilities and power connections that are not accessible to
most people—though Deryni are not omnipotent. At their best, the Deryni might
represent the ideal of perfected humankind— what all of us might be, if
we could learn to rise above our earthbound limitations and fulfill our highest
destinies. One would like to think that there is at least a little Deryni in
all of us.
With
few exceptions, the use of one's Deryni abilities must be learned, like any
other skill; and some Deryni are more skilled and stronger than others. Primary
proficiencies have to do with balances—physical, psychic, and spiritual—and
mastering one's own body and perceptions. Even without formal instruction, most
Deryni can learn to banish fatigue, at least for a while, to block physical
pain, and to induce sleep— skills that can be applied to oneself or to others,
Deryni or not, with or (often) without the conscious cooperation of the
subject, especially a human one.
Healing
is another highly useful Deryni talent, though rare and requiring very
specialized training for optimum use. A properly qualified Healer, provided he
has time to engage healing rapport before his patient expires, can deal
successfully with almost any physical injury. Treatment of illnesses is
necessarily more limited, confined mainly to dealing with symptoms, since
medieval medicine has yet to understand disease mechanisms. (Physicians, both
human and Deryni, have made the connection between cleanliness and
decreased likelihood of infection, but lack the technology to discover why this
is so.)
Few
would take exception to the abilities we have just outlined—other than
sleep-induction, perhaps, if it were used to the detriment of a subject unable
to resist. What is far more threatening to non-Deryni is the potential use of
Deryni powers outside a healing context. For Deryni can read minds, often
without the knowledge or consent of a human subject; and they can impose their
will on others. Some exceptionally competent Deryni have even been known to
take on the shape of another person.
In
actual practice, there are definite limitations to the extent of all these
abilities, though most non-Deryni have wildly exaggerated notions of what those
limitations are, if they even acknowledge their existence. And human fears are
not reassured by the fact that some Deryni can tap into energies outside even
their own understanding, consorting with powers that may defy God's will. Fear
of what is not understood becomes a major theme, then, as the human and Deryni
characters interact in the stories.
But
humans did not always fear the Deryni as a race, though individual humans may
have come to fear certain individual Deryni. For centuries before the Deryni
Interregnum, especially under the consolidating rule of a succession of
benevolent Haldane kings (some of whom made discreet interaction with a few
highly ethical Deryni), Deryni were few enough and circumspect enough in their
dealings with humans that the two races lived in relative harmony. The Deryni
founded schools and religious institutions and orders, sharing their knowledge
and healing talents with anyone in need, their own internal disciplines
discouraging any gross abuse of the vast powers at their command. Certainly,
there must have been occasional incidents, for the greater powers of the Deryni
surely subjected them to greater temptations; but exclusively Deryni outrages
must have been rare, for we find no evidence of general hostility toward Deryni
before 822. In that year the Deryni Prince Festil, youngest son of the King of
Torenth, invaded from the east and accomplished a sudden coup, massacring all
the Haldane royal family except for the two-year-old Prince Aidan, who escaped.
We
can blame the ensuing Festillic regime for much of the deterioration of
human-Deryni relations after the invasion, for the Deryni followers of Festil I
were largely landless younger sons, like himself, and quickly recognized the
material gains to be had in the conquered kingdom by exploiting their Deryni
advantages. Much was shrugged off or overlooked in the early years of the new
dynasty, for any conqueror takes a while to consolidate his power and set up
the apparatus for ruling his new kingdom. But Deryni excesses and abuse of
power in high places became increasingly blatant, eventually leading, in 904,
to the ouster of the last Festillic king by fellow Deryni and the restoration
of the old human line in the person of Cinhil Haldane, grandson of the Prince
Aidan who had escaped the butchery of the Festillic invaders.
Unfortunately,
Deryni magic itself, and not the ill judgment and avarice of a few individuals,
came to be blamed for the evils of the Interregnum. Nor, once the Restoration
was accomplished, did the new regime waste overmuch time adopting the aims, if
not the methods, of their former masters. After the death of the restored King
Cinhil, regency councils dominated successive Haldane kings for more than
twenty years, for Cinhil's sons were young and died young—within a decade—and
the next heir was Cinhil's four-year-old grandson Owain.
Such
an enticing opportunity to redistribute the spoils of the Restoration to their
own benefit could hardly be overlooked by regents nursing memories of past
injustices. With lands, titles, and offices in the offing, the Deryni role in
the Restoration soon became eclipsed by more emotion-charged recollections of
the Deryni abuses that had triggered the overthrow of Deryni overlords. In the
space of only a few years, Deryni remaining in Gwynedd found themselves
politically, socially, and religiously disenfranchised, the new masters using
any conceivable pretext to seize the wealth and influence of the former rulers.
The
religious hierarchy played its part as well. In the hands of a now
human-dominated Church, political expedience shifted to philosophical
justification in less than a generation, so that the Deryni soon came to be
regarded as evil in and of themselves, the Devil's brood, possibly beyond the
salvation even of the Church— for surely, no righteous and God-fearing person
could do the things the Deryni did; therefore, the Deryni must be the
agents of Satan. Only total renunciation of one's powers might permit a Deryni
to survive, and then only under the most rigid of supervision.
None
of this happened overnight, of course. But the Deryni had never been many; and
with the great Deryni families gradually fallen from favor or destroyed, most
individuals outside the immediate circles of political power, both temporal and
spiritual, failed to realize how the balance was shifting until it was too
late. The great anti-Deryni persecutions that followed the death of Cinhil
Haldane reduced the already small Deryni population of Gwynedd by a full
two-thirds. Some fled to the safety of other lands, where being openly Deryni
did not carry an automatic death sentence, but many more perished. Only a few
managed to go underground, keeping their true identities secret; and many who
did go underground simply suppressed what they were, never telling their
descendants of their once proud heritage.
This,
then, is a very general background of the Deryni, much of which is woven into
the stories in this volume; it is told in far greater detail in the novels of
the three trilogies set in the Deryni universe. THE LEGENDS OF CAMBER OF CULDI—Camber
of Culdi, Saint Camber, and Camber the Heretic—recount the overthrow
of the last Festillic king by Camber and his children, and goes on to show what
happened immediately after the death of King Cinhil Haldane, thirteen years
later. THE CHRONICLES OF THE DERYNI—Deryni Rising, Deryni Checkmate, and
High Deryni—take place nearly two hundred years later, when anti-Deryni
feeling has begun to abate somewhat among the common folk, but not yet within
the hierarchies of the Church. The HISTORIES OF KING KELSON—The Bishop's
Heir, The King's Justice, and The Quest for Saint Camber—pick up the
story after the CHRONICLES; and future novels will explore the centuries
between the reigns of Cinhil's successors and the accession of Kelson Haldane.
The
stories in this volume, except for the first one, all fall between the Camber
and Deryni Trilogies, and constitute all but one of the shorter works written
in the Deryni universe to date. It was felt that the omitted story really
needed greater length for proper development—which it will receive in a future
novel. Three stories were written specifically for this collection, and have
never appeared in print before. At least one of the others has been out of
print for some time, and several never got wide distribution. They are all
canonical with respect to the novels—that is, what is told here is consistent
with what appears in the novels.
Most
of them elaborate on incidents or characters that are mentioned in the novels.
And some, whatever else they may do, are designed to tantalize with hints of
things to come in future novels.
Incidentally,
before we move on to the stories, I probably should mention a few points about
my approach to Deryni history. I've said that it's a rough parallel to real
world history in terms of culture, level of technology, type of government,
ecclesiastical involvement, and the like. However, readers have often commented
that the stories read like history rather than fantasy. In fact, I've been
accused, not entirely tongue-in-cheek, of simply recounting the real history of
a world in some other dimension.
Well,
I can't answer that. Part of that impression undoubtedly comes from the fact
that I was trained as a historian and thus have a historian's eye for detail
and a historian's background of real world history from which to draw.
But
there are times when I have no idea where the material comes from—I simply know
that things happened a particular way. When I'm asked what character A did
after event B and I say that I don't know— the characters haven't told me yet—I
really am not being facetious. Also, solidly conceived characters tend to do
what they are going to do, whether or not that was how the author thought they
would behave. And sometimes, the only thing I can say is, "I can't tell
you why right now; I just know that it happened that way." Sometimes, it
even seems to me that I'm just tapping into a stream of events that have
already taken place, and all I have to do is sit back, observe, and report what
I see. Every author does this to some extent, I suspect. But when readers
comment on the illusion as much as readers have commented regarding the Deryni,
one has to wonder, if only wistfully, whether there isn't at least a mythic
truth to the speculation. (I suppose I could tell you about some of the
times I've sensed Camber peering over my shoulder, agreeing or disagreeing with
what I was typing, but that's whimsy— isn't it?)
So,
these are tales of the Deryni and those who come into contact with them, as the
characters have revealed them to me. I hope you enjoy your sojourn among them.
—Sun
Valley, California June, 1985
Chronologically,
"Catalyst" is the earliest of the Deryni stories written thus far,
set some fifteen years before the opening of Camber of Culdi. It was
written for a Festschrift in honor of Andre Norton's fiftieth year of
publication. (A Festschrift is an anthology in celebration of an author,
its stories written by fellow authors who have been influenced by the honoree
and who wish to pay him or her tribute.) The major requirement was that the
story be of the sort that Andre would enjoy reading.
And
so, since I grew up on Andre's books about young people and animals and coming
of age (Starman's Son was an early favorite), I decided that I ought to
respond in kind. Camber's children seemed likely candidates, for at that time,
I had not set any Deryni stories earlier than Camber of Culdi. A story
about Joram, Rhys, and Evaine would also give me an opportunity to play a bit
with the character of Cathan, Camber's eldest son, who had been killed off
fairly early in the Camber series. In addition, since I had just lost my two
elderly cats, Cimber and Gillie, from complications of age, the story could be
my memorial to them—for as youngsters, Camber's children surely would have had
cats around the castle at Caerrorie. (They would have had dogs, too, but I'm
not really a dog person, so I've never gotten into doggy lore. With apologies
to dog-lovers, I'm afraid the dogs in this story get rather short shrift.)
From
there, it was a simple progression to have Rhys, in the course of discovering
that he's going to be a Healer, do for his cat what I hadn't been able to do
for my own in the real world. I changed Cimber's name to the soundalike Symber
in the story, because Cimber looks too much like Camber on the printed page.
The lines ascribed to Lady Jocelyn, describing Symber as "that damned
stringbean" while in his gangly adolescence, were words my own mother used
to describe my Cimber; but he, like Symber, grew into a magnificent cat.
Gillie, who is the unnamed white cat sleeping at Cathan's feet, never did go
through that awkward stage. Even as a kitten, she was a perfectly proportioned
miniature cat who simply got bigger—and would have twitched her plume-tail in
indignation at the mere thought that she was ever anything less than
graceful and beautiful.
So
this is for Cimber and Gillie, as well as for Andre. In addition, it is the
favorite story of my son Cameron, who was the same age as Rhys and Joram when
the story was written and who adores cats at least as much as I do. I think he
also liked "Catalyst" because it shows that even Deryni children,
with all their advantages, have the same kinds of problems growing up that any
other children have.
Catalyst
Biting
at his lip in concentration, eleven-year-old Rhys Thuryn stared at the red
archer on the board between him and Joram MacRorie and wrapped his mind around
it. Smoothly the little painted figure lifted across two squares to menace
Joram's blue abbot.
The
younger boy had turned to watch rain beginning to spatter against the lights of
a tall, grey-glazed window beside them, but at the movement on the board, his
blond head jerked back with a start.
"Oh
no! Not my Michaeline you don't!" he cried, nearly overturning the
board as he sprang to his feet to see better. "Rhys, that was a sneaky move!
Cathan, what'll I do?"
Cathan,
a bored and blasé fifteen-year-old, looked up from his reading with a
forebearing sigh, red-nosed and miserable with the cold that had kept him from
going hunting with the rest of the household. The white cat napping against his
feet did not stir, even when Rhys chortled with delight and knuckled
exuberantly at already unruly red hair.
"Hoo!
I've got him on the run! Look, Cathan! My archer's going to take his
abbot!"
Cathan
only blew his nose and huddled a little closer to the fire before burying
himself in his scroll again, and Rhys' glee turned to consternation as Joram's
war-duke floated unerringly across the entire board to take the red archer.
"On
the run, eh?" Joram crowed, plopping back onto his stool with triumph in his
grey eyes. "What are you going to do about that?"
Deflated,
Rhys huddled down in his fur-lined tunic to re-evaluate the board. Where had
that war-duke come from? What a stupid game!
He
had half-expected the outcome, of course. Joram almost always beat him at
Cardounet. Even though Rhys was a year older than Joram, and both of them were
receiving identical instruction from the Michaelines at Saint Liam's, one of
the finest abbey schools in all of Gwynedd, it was a fact that Rhys simply did
not have the gift for military strategy that his foster brother did. Joram, at
ten, had already announced that he was joining the Michaeline Order when he
came of age, to become a Knight of Saint Michael and eventually a priest as
well—to the dismay of his father, Earl Camber of Culdi.
Nor
was it the priesthood Camber objected to—and Jocelyn, Joram's mother, was
clearly pleased that one of her sons intended to become a priest. Indeed,
Camber had often told the boys of the happy years he himself had spent in Holy
Orders in his youth, until the death of his elder brother made him heir to
their father's earldom and he was forced to come home and assume his family
obligations. Barring further unforseen tragedy—for a fever had carried off a
brother and sister only slightly older than Joram earlier in the year— Joram's
brother Cathan would carry on the MacRorie name in this generation, leaving
Joram free to pursue the religious vocation that had been denied Camber.
No,
it was the Michaeline Order itself that gave Camber cause for concern—the
Michaelines, whose militant warrior-priests were sometimes dangerously
outspoken about the responsibilities they believed went along with the
prerogatives that magic-wielding Deryni enjoyed. Camber, himself a powerful and
highly trained Deryni, had no quarrel with the Michaelines' ethical stance in
principle; he had always taught his children the duty that went along with
privilege.
In
practice, however, the Order's sometimes over-zealous attempts to enforce that
philosophy had led more than once to disaster—for the Royal House of Gwynedd
was Deryni, and some of its scions among the worst abusers of Deryni power.
Thus far, royal ire had always been directed against the offending individuals;
but if Joram became a Michaeline, and the King should one day turn his anger
against the entire Order...
Still,
Michaeline schools did provide the finest primary training for Deryni
children that could be had, outside the highly specialized instruction given
the rare Healer candidate; and even among the Deryni, a race blessed—or cursed,
according to some—with a wide assortment of psychic and magical abilities, the
Healing gift did not often appear. It was the abuse of power, sometimes in mere
ignorance, that so often led to problems between Deryni and humans—or even
Deryni and Deryni.
That
was why Camber had sent Joram and the orphaned Rhys to attend Saint Liam's—and
allowed them to continue attending, even when Joram began making starry-eyed
plans to join the Michaelines. After all, the boy could not take even temporary
vows until he turned fourteen. Much might change in four years. Perhaps Joram
would outgrow his infatuation with the bold and dashing Knights of Saint
Michael, with their distinctive deep blue habits and gleaming white knight's
sashes, and come around to a more moderate choice of orders, if indeed he felt
himself called to be a priest.
Rhys,
on the other hand, felt no call to the religious life, though he was perfectly
content taking his training in the religious atmosphere Saint Liam's provided.
Nor had he any idea yet what he did want to do with his life.
He
had no great prospects. His father, though gentle-born, had been only a second
son, so he had inherited no title or fortune in his own right. Only his
mother's close friendship with Camber's countess, the Lady Jocelyn, had ensured
a place for the infant Rhys when both parents died in the great plague the year
after he was born. He was clever with his hands, worked well with animals, like
most Deryni, and had a head for figures—but none of those skills suggested an
occupation for a young gentleman.
One
thing was certain, Rhys thought, as he continued to survey the game board,
considering and discarding a succession of possible but unprofitable moves: he
was not cut out to be a soldier. The military strategy and tactics that were
Joram's passion were like a foreign language to Rhys. With diligence, and
because the subject intrigued Joram, who was his very closest friend, Rhys had
mastered enough at least to get by in school and to appreciate that Joram had a
natural flair for such things; but he would never be Joram's match, at least in
this.
Rarely
had he been so dismally aware of that fact as he continued staring at the game
board, discarding yet another futile move. The rain hammering now on the window
and the roof slates above only added to his depression. Even with the fire and
the larger windows here in the solar, it had gotten colder and gloomier as the
storm set in, though it was only just past noon.
Perversely,
he hoped that Camber and Lady Jocelyn and the rest of the household were
getting good and soaked, for having gone off hunting with the king and left
them cooped up in the castle with only this dumb game to play! Cathan, who'd
been grouchy and irritable all morning with his stupid cold, should be glad
they'd made him stay at home, warm and dry and curled up with a fur-lined robe,
a cat, and a good book.
As
a matter of fact, maybe a book was a good idea. Rhys was bored with trying to
beat Joram. He thought he might go find something to read, but before he could
decide what, Evaine, the baby of the MacRorie family, came pattering
purposefully into the room, flaxen braids coming undone and her black cat,
Symber, in her arms. She had the cat just behind the front legs, its body and
tail dangling almost to her knees. Oddly, the cat did not seem to mind.
"Cathan,
Cathan, there's somebody sneaking around downstairs!" she whispered with
six-year-old urgency, scuttling past Rhys and Joram to pause at her older
brother's elbow.
Cathan
gave a sigh and lowered his manuscript long enough to wipe his nose with a
soggy handkerchief.
"I'm
sure there is," he croaked hoarsely.
"Cathan,
I'm not joking!" she persisted. "I heard them clunking things in the
great hall."
"It's
probably the dogs."
"The
dogs don't make noises like that."
"Then
it's the servants."
"It
isn't the servants!" she replied, stamping a little foot.
"Symber came running up the stairs. He was afraid. He doesn't run from the
servants."
"He
probably got in Cook's way and she booted him with a broom."
"He
did not!" Evaine insisted, hugging the cat closer. "There's
someone down there. Come and see. Cathan, please!"
"Evaine,
I'm not going downstairs," Cathan snapped. "I don't feel like
playing. In case you hadn't noticed, this stupid cold is making me mean and
grumpy. Why don't you go pester Joram and Rhys?"
"They're
too busy playing their dumb game! Just because I'm little, nobody ever listens
to me!"
Rhys,
who had been following the exchange with growing amusement, exchanged a
conspiratorial wink with Joram, who had also sat back to grin.
"We'll listen
to you, won't we, Joram?" he said, delighted at the excuse to leave the
hopeless game and do something else.
Apparently
Joram had also grown bored with the game, for he joined in without missing a
beat.
"Of
course we will, little sister," he said, rising and adjusting a dagger
thrust through the belt of his blue school tunic. "Why don't you show us
where you think you heard them? Can't have prowlers carrying off the silver. Do
you think they've tied up the servants?"
"Jor-am!"
"All
right, all right!" Joram held up both palms and did his best to assume the
more serious mien he thought a future Michaeline Knight should wear. "I
said we'd go investigate. Why don't you leave Symber here, where he'll be safe?"
"No!"
"Then,
why don't you let me carry him?" Rhys reasoned. "That way, you
can lead the way and show Joram and me where to look."
"All
right, you can carry him," she agreed, handing over the cat. "But I
think Joram better go first. He's got a knife."
"Good
idea," Joram said, though he had to turn away to keep from grinning. As he
stealthily pushed the door to the turnpike stair a little wider, holding a
finger to his lips for silence, Rhys hefted the cat's front end onto his left
shoulder and supported its weight in the crook of his arm. The cat began
purring loudly in his ear as it settled, kneading contentedly with its front
paws.
Rhys
ignored Cathan's bemused and slightly patronizing smile as he followed Joram
and Evaine into the winding stairwell. What did he care what Cathan
thought? If Evaine had judged Joram best suited to lead a military exercise,
she was only acknowledging the obvious—and without any of the hint of ridicule
Cathan so often heaped upon Rhys for his lesser military acumen. And it was
Rhys to whom she had entrusted her precious Symber—which was a far more
important responsibility, in her eyes.
On
the other hand, Rhys' military training had not been wholly wasted. Trying to
place his slippered feet as quietly as Joram or the cat purring in his arms, he
sent a tendril of thought questing into the cat's mind— just in case there was
something going on below stairs that shouldn't be.
And
Symber had been frightened by something. The big black cat was
too wrapped up in the pleasure and security of perching on Rhys' shoulder,
reveling in that special ecstacy that only the feline purr declared, for Rhys
to read any details; but he did manage to catch an impression of something Symber
did not like, that had scared him enough to send him scooting to Evaine for
safety. And somehow Rhys did not think it had been Cook with her broom.
He
sent that mental impression off to Joram just before they reached the landing,
but only the two MacRories had gotten close enough to even touch the curtains
across the entry to the great hall before a pair of hairy arms burst through
the split in the middle and grabbed each by an arm, jerking them through.
"I
told you I'd seen a kid!" a rough voice bellowed.
"Rhys,
Rhys!" Evaine shrieked. And a heavy "Whoof!" exploded
from someone far larger and heavier than Joram as Rhys instinctively ducked and
hurled himself through the curtained doorway at the side rather than in the
middle, burdened by an armful of suddenly startled cat—and found himself right
in the middle of a tangle of struggling bodies, both adult and child.
"Cathan!"
Joram screamed, sending up a psychic cry as well, as he squirmed almost out of
the grasp of the man who held him and Evaine and somehow managed to get his
dagger free of his belt. "Rhys, look out!"
But
Rhys was having his own problems as he tried to duck the clutches of another
rough-clad man who suddenly loomed right in front of him. He yelped and lost
his footing as Evaine's cat launched itself from his shoulder with all its back
claws dug in, but the squawk of horrified surprise from his attacker was worth
the pain, for Symber landed on the man's bare forearm with all claws out and
clung like a limpet, sinking his teeth into the fleshy part of the man's thumb
with a ferocious growl.
Cursing
and flailing, the man tried to shake the cat off his arm; Symber only dug in
with all four sets of claws and held on more tenaciously. Rhys almost managed
to tackle one of the man's legs and trip him, but a vicious kick that only
narrowly missed his head changed his mind about that. As he rolled clear,
trying frantically to see whether there might be more than just the two men and
wondering where the dogs were, Evaine wormed out of the grasp of her captor—who
was now far more worried about Joram's knife than a child of six—and went for
the man molesting her cat, kicking him hard in the shin.
The
man howled and whirled around. The reaction cost the cat its grip. As the man
grabbed for Evaine and missed, cursing with rage, he made an even more
desperate attempt to dislodge the clawing, biting black demon attached to his
arm. With a mighty heave, he shook Symber loose and flung him hard against the
wall. Evaine wailed as the cat slid to the floor and did not move.
But
even worse danger kept Rhys from noticing what happened to cat or girl after
that. He was scrambling toward Joram, for Joram was losing the tug of war with
his attacker for the knife in his hand, when suddenly a third man towered
between them, throwing down a bag of booty with a loud clank and seizing Rhys
by a bicep with one hand while the other began to draw a sword.
Rhys
tried to remember every trick he'd ever practiced or heard about hand-to-hand
fighting in the next few seconds, for he was weaponless, and his opponent was
probably three times his age and weight. As he ducked under a blow that would
have taken off his head if it had connected, he saw Cathan finally careen out
of the newel stair doorway with a sword in his hand, shouting urgently for the
servants.
He
was too busy staying alive to see what happened as the older boy took after the
man who was grabbing for Evaine again. As Evaine dove between Cathan's legs for
safety, Rhys' concentration was distracted by even more frantic scuffling
between Joram and his opponent. Suddenly fire was searing across the back of
Rhys' right leg, and it was buckling under him.
The
pain was excruciating, the terror worse, as Rhys collapsed and tried to worm
out of his assailant's range, clamping a frantic hand to the slash across his
calf. His hand came away bloody in the instant he had to look, the thick wool
of his grey legging rapidly turning scarlet. He was gasping too hard to utter
much physical sound as the man raised a bloody sword to finish him, but his
desperate psychic cry reverberated in the hall and beyond as he made a last,
determined attempt to fling himself clear of the descending blade—though he was
sure he was going to die.
He
never knew how Cathan managed to intervene; only that suddenly another sword
was flashing upward to block the blow, shattering the attacker's lesser blade,
driving on to split the man's skull from jaw to crown. As blood and brains
spattered, and before the man even hit the floor, Cathan was whirling to take
on Joram's opponent. The man who had menaced Evaine was already moaning on the
floor, clutching a belly wound and trying to crawl out of Cathan's reach.
A
handful of male servants finally managed to burst into the hall at that point,
quickly helping Cathan subdue and bind the remaining attacker. Only then did
Rhys dare to sit up and take another look at his wound.
Oh,
God, it was bad!
His
breath hissed between his teeth, and tears welled in his eyes as he clapped his
hand back over the gash and subsided on the floor again.
The
great tendon down the back of his calf was cut clean through. Despite the depth
of the wound, he did not seem to have bled much after the initial trauma, but
the leg was begining to throb and burn as the first shock wore off. A Healer
might be able to repair the injury, but if he could not, Rhys would be a
cripple for life.
"I'll
send for a Healer!" one of the servants promised, tight-lipped and pale,
when he had gotten just a glimpse of Rhys' leg. "Try to stay calm."
Biting
back tears, for he was old enough to know that crying was not going to help matters
any, Rhys curled into a ball on his left side and closed his eyes, pillowing
his head on his left arm and trying to relax while he made himself run through
one of the spells he'd been taught to control pain. He was scared, but it was
the only thing he knew to do.
It
worked, though. When he opened his eyes, the leg was numb, and he was no longer
quite so afraid. Joram and a still-sniffing Evaine were kneeling at his side,
Evaine cradling a motionless but still-breathing Symber in her arms.
"Is
it bad?" Joram asked, craning his neck to see. "Jesu, he's
hamstrung you! You aren't bleeding very much, though. Father will be back soon.
Cathan and I have already Called him."
"I
think I Called him, too," Rhys whispered, managing a strained little grin
for Evaine's sake as he drew a deep breath to keep the pain and despair from
rising again. "Him and any Deryni for two counties. I thought they were
going to kill us."
"I
think they may have killed Symber," Evaine murmured around a little
sob of grief, ducking her head over the cat's labored breathing. "That
horrid man threw him against the wall! He's still breathing, but he's all
limp."
As
she lifted plaintive eyes to his, begging him to tell her everything would be
all right, he caught Joram's faint head-shake. He had to agree the cat did not
look good. Wincing as he shifted his good leg to support the injured one, still
holding his wound with his right hand, he tried to think how to make it easier
for her.
"I'm
sorry, little one," he whispered. "Maybe it isn't as bad as you
think. Would you—like to put Symber next to me? Maybe a Healer can fix us both,
when one gets here. And if I worry about Symber, maybe I won't worry so much
about my leg."
With
a brave gulp, Evaine laid the injured cat in the curve of Rhys' left arm, close
against his chest and cheek. He could sense how badly the cat was hurt, even
though it was unconscious, and he let his fingertips caress one quiet velvet
paw as he looked up at Evaine, wishing there were something he could do.
"You—you're
not going to die, are you, Rhys?" she asked in a very small voice.
He
forced himself to give her a reassuring smile. "Don't worry," he said
softly. "It's bad, but I'll be all right."
Cathan
came and crouched at Rhys' feet to look at the wound, snuffling and wiping
futily at his nose with a blood-stained sleeve, then sat heavily on the floor
and let out a forlorn sigh.
"Well,
at least Father will be here soon with a Healer. The king's loaning him Dom
Sereld. He's one of the best. Damn!" He slammed a bloody fist against the
flagstones. "I should have gotten to you sooner! I should have come down
when Evaine asked me to! They poisoned the dogs with doctored meat while the
servants were busy in the cellar. They must've known most of the household were
away."
The
steward came with questions about the prisoners after that, and Cathan took
Joram with him to see to their handling until Camber should arrive. Evaine
stayed with Rhys, though, laying her small hands on his forehead and helping
him ease into a floating, twilight state that was even more isolated from his
pain. It was something Rhys could have done for himself, as most Deryni with
any training could have done, but the luxury of not having to do it
released him to drift off to merciful sleep while he waited for the Healer.
He
dreamed about the cat curled in the hollow of his arm—dreamed that the animal
snuggled closer and buried a cool, damp nose in his side, purring so hard that
the vibration resonated all along his body.
He
dreamed of the summer Camber had brought the kitten home, an endearing scrap of
plush black fur with eyes like peridots and needle-sharp hooks at the tips of
velvet paws. By Christmas, the adorable kitten had turned, as kittens will,
into an awkward, gangling catling, all huge bat-ears, over-long legs, and a
stringy tail. For months, Lady Jocelyn referred to him as "the damned
stringbean."
By
the following summer, however, Symber had grown into the promise of his
kittenhood and become the sleek, graceful feline Rhys remembered best: friend,
comforter, and counsel-keeping confidant of all the MacRorie household—though
it was Evaine and Rhys he seemed to prefer. It was that Symber who stayed in
Rhys' dream, his purr rumbling in Rhys' ear and taking him deeper, deeper...
He
started to come up once, but a new presence pushed him gently down. He thought
that perhaps he should resist, at least until he found out who it was, but
almost immediately he realized that it was a Healer's presence, and that it was
all right to let go. He sensed the anxious brush of Camber's mind against his
own for an instant, and Lady Jocelyn's; but then it seemed far too much effort
to even keep wondering what would happen. Drowsily, he returned to the dream of
the purring cat.
The
next thing he knew, there was a cat purring in his ear. As he opened his
eyes, still slightly curled on his left side, a svelte black cat body stretched
languidly against his chest and kneaded velvet paws against his arm, butting a
moist black nose against his cheek before settling back to sleep with a
contented purr. A stranger in a rich tunic of Healer's green was kneeling on
his right, wiping just-washed hands on a clean towel.
"Well,"
the Healer said, giving him a pleased smile, "I'm surprised you didn't
finish the job yourself. You did fine work on the cat."
"I
what?" Rhys said stupidly, for the man's words made no sense whatever.
The
man only chuckled and shook his head, tossing the towel aside. Freckles across
his nose and cheeks made him look youthful despite his receding hairline, for
there was very little grey frosting his reddish-brown hair, but Rhys guessed
him to be approaching fifty. There were little crinkles at the corners of his
dark brown eyes, and his neat little beard and mustache were greyer than his
hair. He let Rhys roll onto his back, but he restrained him with a hand on his
chest when Rhys would have tried to sit up.
"Not
yet, son. I want to make sure I've gotten any clots before you move that leg
much. Of course, something like a hamstring's a little tricky to manage on
oneself," he went on, bending Rhys' restored leg at the knee and stroking
his Healer's hands lightly over the area where the wound had been. "I had
to have Lord Camber help me with the physical manipulation. Healing's much
easier if you can get injured bits back in the general area where they belong,
before you start. Hard to heal across a handspan of empty space when you're
trying to reattach two cut ends.
"But
you'll learn all about that when you get some proper training. Did you really
not know? By the way, I'm Sereld, the king's Healer."
"I'm—Rhys
Thuryn," Rhys managed to whisper, his head reeling with the implications
of what Sereld was saying.
"Yes,
I know. And a lot of other people are going to know soon, too. It's cause for
celebration when we find a Healer we didn't know about." He finished with
Rhys' leg and gently straightened it out again, then cocked his head at Rhys
more thoughtfully.
"Were
either of your parents Healers, son?"
"No.
But they died when I was only a baby."
"Hmmm.
Any Healers in the rest of the family?"
"Not
that I know of," Rhys whispered. "Did I—did I really Heal
Symber?"
"The
cat? Sure looks that way. Controlled most of your own bleeding, too."
Sereld chucked Symber under the chin and grinned as the big cat rubbed its
whiskers against his hand and purred even louder. "Well, you needn't thank
me, little friend. You've got your own Healer to take care of you from now
on."
Still
not quite able to believe what he was hearing, Rhys raised up on his elbows.
"But,
if I'm—a Healer" he spoke the word with awe, "why didn't I
know?" he whispered. "Why didn't anyone tell me?"
"I
suppose no one thought to check," Sereld said, beginning to take
instruments out of a basin of water and drying them with a soft cloth.
"Those Michaelines of yours don't know everything, you know. And you're
not from a Healer family, after all."
Rhys
started as the Healer clinked his clean instruments into a green Healer's
satchel.
"On
the other hand, you're just about the right age for the gift to show up, if
it's going to," Sereld continued. "Naturally, Healing potential can
be spotted earlier, if one has cause to look for it; but unless its
manifestation is being deliberately guided by Healer training, the first
appearance of the actual gift is often triggered by some great need for it to
work." He grinned hugely. "I suppose you could say that your furry
friend here was a—catalyst!"
Rhys
groaned at the play on words, but he could not help joining in with Sereld's
hearty laughter. He was grinning ear to ear as he let the Healer help him sit
up; and Symber's rumbling purr was an echo of Rhys' own joy as he scooped up
the cat and gathered it into his lap.
As
Camber and the awed Joram and Evaine and all the others came gathering around
to offer their congratulations, Rhys knew that there was no longer any question
about what he was going to do with his life.
"Healer's
Song" is less a story than a recounting of an incident in the lives of
some of the Camber characters. The Healer of the title is Rhys, of course; and
the song is the Adsum Domine, the hymn of the Gabrilite Healers, which
embodies much of the ethical code of Healers trained in that tradition. Camber
heard parts of it when, as Alister Cullen, he visited Saint Neot's Abbey with
Rhys in Camber the Heretic, but that was several years after he had
heard it in full in "Healer's Song." In the present context, the Adsum
Domine becomes a framework for the magical dedication of Rhys and Evaine's
newborn son, Tieg Joram Thuryn, as a future Healer.
Healer
training must have been a fascinating and diverse option for those fortunate
Deryni who carried the very rare and specialized Healing gift. The Deryni
regarded the vocation of the Healer with the same respect accorded the priestly
vocation and counted it just as much a God-spoken call. Hence, it is not
surprising that most Healers were trained within the context of a religious
order like the Gabrilites.
But
besides the school maintained by the Order of Saint Gabriel at Saint Neot's,
where Rhys received much of his training, we know of several other options: the
rather more secular and pragmatic Varnarite School at Grecotha, attended by
Tavis O'Neill (who became Healer to Prince Javan); and at least one Healer
school even more elite than Saint Neot's, presumably of religious orientation
similar to the Gabrilites, where Dom Emrys received his training. (My
personal suspicion is that the latter had connections with that mysterious
black and white cube-altar that Camber and Joram found beneath Grecotha.) As
Morgan and Duncan continue to explore their rediscovered healing potentials in
future books, we undoubtedly will be learning more about Healers and their
training. (Jebediah's use of a slightly different format for invoking the
Quarters suggests that Healers are not the only Deryni whose training and
traditions vary.)
As
important as the insights into Healer ethics and training, however, is the
glimpse that "Healer's Song" gives us of another kind of Deryni
ritual than we've usually seen— more a religious observance than a traditional
magic-working, far different from the rituals of power assumption we have seen
worked on assorted Haldane princes, or the constructions of various magical
defenses and the like. It is not even exclusively Christian, though Christian
clerics like Joram and Camber/Alister are certainly at home with its form, and
Camber administers the Christian sacrament of baptism in the course of the
ritual. First and foremost, it is a Deryni observance of ancient
traditions, perhaps even older than Christianity itself. All of this bespeaks a
certain universality in the Deryni way of looking at the universe—catholicity
in the broad sense, if you will—that has something to say to every person
who has ever contemplated his or her relationship with the Creative Force, that
entity we usually call God.
Finally,
"Healer's Song" is a most intimate portrait of the relationship
between Rhys and Evaine, as husband and wife as well as magical
partners—revealing glimpses of a rich melding of physical, mental, and spiritual
functioning. May we all taste such joy in our own relationships with those we
love.
healer's song
Evaine's
birthing had been much easier this third time, Rhys Thuryn thought, as he
stirred an herb posset and turned to glance contentedly across the room where
his wife lay with their infant son. Healer though Rhys was, even he had not
known for certain what to expect, for they had sensed, almost from the moment
of conception, that this child, unlike his brother and sister, would be a
Healer, too. Often during Evaine's pregnancy, she had felt the quiver of the
child's developing potential ripple at the edge of consciousness. Sometimes she
had even had to draw away from Rhys when he was Healing. His patients' pain had
disturbed her and the child.
All
that had gone dormant in these final weeks before the birth, however, and was
slated to remain so for several years. Now, as Rhys crossed to bend
protectively over his wife and son, extending the herb-laced wine in gentle
offering, Evaine looked up at him and smiled. The babe at her breast suckled
lustily, tiny sounds of contentment coming from the little russet-downed head.
"He
is definitely your son," Evaine whispered. Her blue eyes danced
mischievously as she took the cup from Rhys and sipped. "If the Healer's
gift were not sufficient proof, he has your hair, your mouth, your
hands..."
Rhys
returned her grin roguishly, reading several levels of meaning in her words,
then leaned down to kiss the top of the breast not attached to babe, turning
his attention next to her lips, still moist with the herbed wine. Enfolding her
with mind as well as arms, he kissed her mouth gently but thoroughly, his
satisfaction blending with hers in a surge of quiet joy and casual rapport. His
Healer's sense caught the answering flutter in her womb, contracting as it
should in one so recently delivered of a child, and he let one hand stray
lingeringly across the suckling child to rest on her abdomen as he eased onto
the bed beside her and lay back against the pillows.
You should rest now, my love, he whispered in her mind.
She
settled into the circle of his arms with a contented sigh and slept.
They
were still in that position, Evaine and the baby dozing in the shelter of Rhys'
arms, when a quiet rap at the door nudged Rhys from his dreamy contemplation.
He knew who it should be, and when his lazy mental query confirmed it, he sent
a cordial Welcome! with his mind.
All
three of the smiling men who peered in and then entered were of the militant
Order of Saint Michael, with swords at their sides and the white, fringed
sashes of Michaeline knighthood tied close about their waists. Two of the men
wore cloaks of Michaeline blue, but the third and oldest was garbed in rich
episcopal purple. Rhys grinned as the men approached, a detached part of the
Healer side of him effortlessly erecting a shield of thought around the
sleeping Evaine so she would not be disturbed. He reached out his free hand in
welcome as the three surrounded the bed, catching the oldest man's hand and
kissing the amethyst on it while his mind greeted, Camber! and his lips
shaped another name from long habit, for the benefit of the servant who was
closing the door.
"How
are you, Bishop Alister?" he asked, touching hands with the other two men
as the bishop turned his attention to the sleeping woman and child.
Camber
MacRorie, whom the world now knew as Bishop Alister Cullen, peered approvingly
at his daughter and grandson for a moment, then brushed a feather-touch across
the baby's head before accepting the stool which the younger of his Michaeline
companions brought up behind him.
"I'm
doing very well, for an old man," Camber said with a chuckle, for he
neither looked nor felt the nearly sixty years of the man whose identity he
wore, much less the sixty-eight years of his own age, and knew that Rhys was
aware of that. "I assume that mother and child are doing well?"
"Aye,
just resting now. Joram, Jebediah, how are you?"
Joram,
but a few years older than the sleeping woman and obviously related, sleeked
back a wind-blown strand of pale hair and smiled.
"I
don't know about Jeb, but I'm feeling older. This is my fifth time to be an
uncle, you know."
Rhys
laughed. "Well, you would be a Father instead of a father," he
quipped. "You priests have no cause to complain. And Jebediah, you didn't have
to choose the celibate life of an ecclesiastical knight."
"No,
but I don't regret it," Jebediah chuckled, folding his arms across his
chest. "Each calling has its compensations."
They
all chuckled at that, for among the four of them, they likely wielded more
power in the running of the Kingdom of Gwynedd than any other six men,
including the King. Camber, as Alister Cullen, was Chancellor of Gwynedd, as
well as Bishop of the important see of Grecotha, to the north. He once had been
Vicar General of the Michaelines. Joram MacRorie, Michaeline priest and knight
and Camber's son, functioned as confidential secretary and aide to the
chancellor-bishop—a post conveying far more influence than the mere title might
have suggested. Jebediah of Alcara, as the Earl Marshal, had the keeping of all
Gwynedd's military organization under his command, in addition to remaining
Grand Master of the powerful Knights of Saint Michael. Rhys himself was Healer
to the Crown of Gwynedd, with responsibility for the health of the three young
heirs, as well as that of the King.
But
it was the Healer's function which concerned Rhys most at that moment, not any
other ramification of temporal or spiritual power. For Rhys' wife, daughter to
Camber and sister of Joram, had just given birth to a future Healer—an event of
sufficient rarity among the magical race known as the Deryni, to which all of
them belonged, that its occurrence had been heralded by special observances
since the gift had first been recognized and sought.
That
was the reason these three very busy and important men had come to Rhys and
Evaine's manor of Sheele, outside the capital—besides their obvious desires to
see and greet the newest member of Camber's family and congratulate the
parents. This night, Rhys intended to formally dedicate his newborn son to the
service of his Healing patrimony, in accordance with Deryni custom. It was
fitting that such a rite be witnessed by those closest to the parents and their
child.
A
few hours later, after dark, when Evaine had awakened and visited with father
and brother and friend-like-brother, and all of them had supped, the four men
made the necessary preparations while Evaine nursed the babe. It was Lammas
night, the first of August, so Jebediah had gotten fresh-baked bread from Saint
Neot's that morning for them to share in commemoration. The loaf, in its simple
dish of salt-glazed clay, was set on a white-covered table just off center in
the chamber—a particularly fitting offering for this dedication, since the
finest Healers known were trained at Saint Neot's Abbey. A cup of wine was also
produced, though not of so auspicious an origin, and vessels containing water,
salt, and chrism—for the child would be baptized by his grandfather during the
course of the rite. The bishop draped a white stole around his neck as he
joined the others in the center of the room.
"This
room has permanent wards built into its walls, so we really need no formal
circle, but I'll walk the perimeter once for form's sake anyway," Rhys
said, swinging his cloak of Healer's green around his shoulders and clasping it
at his throat. "Jebediah, I'll ask you to stand for me in the east. Joram,
Father, if you'll take your usual places, south and north..."
They
moved where they were bidden and stood facing inward a few yards from the
walls, three solidly reassuring forms in royal blue or purple, back-lit by
candles set on the floor against the walls. In the west, Evaine sat on a chair
with the candlelight behind her and looked like a golden madonna, the baby
asleep in her lap.
Stilling
his mind in preparation, Rhys walked slowly to Jebediah's side of the circular
chamber and moved between him and the candle, then raised both hands to
chest-level and turned his palms outward. A moment he paused, letting the energies
build in the established Wards and intertwine among his splayed fingers,
hard-soft glitter crackling, seen and not quite seen; then he half closed his
eyes and began moving to the right along the curve of the wall, though he did
not touch it. The others bowed their heads as he passed behind them, all of
them aware of the energy extending along the line of his passage like a sheet
of verdant fire, the glow all but invisible except in the flicker of peripheral
vision.
When
he had completed his circuit of the chamber, he stopped behind Jebediah once
more and extended his arms slowly to either side, throwing back his head to
breathe deeply of the energies he had just raised. The not-light domed above
their heads. He dropped his arms and turned back into the circle, touching
Jebediah's shoulder in preoccupied comradeship as he passed. Evaine had risen
and moved into the center of the circle during his circuit, and now she gave
their son into his arms.
She
had loosed her hair, and it cascaded around her shoulders like a firefall of
molten gold, though the front was caught in slender braids and pulled back from
her face. The touch of her hands against his, as they settled the child against
his cloak of green, set his nerves to tingling. Atremble, Rhys caught her hand
with his free one and clasped it close against his breast, eyes and mind
locking with hers in an exchange of such intensity that it started to spill
over to the others before he remembered to damp it to more tolerable levels for
all their sakes. He caught Camber's flicker of amused indulgence, not quite
embarrassed, as he pressed her palm to his lips with the more tender control of
his Healer's touch.
God, how I love you! he let the thought extend to her, not caring if the others
overheard. And thank you for our son.
She
did not answer him with words, or even thought of words. Instead, she smiled
and leaned a little closer, her hand still clasped in his, to stretch across
the babe and touch his lips with hers. He held the balance of their rapport steady,
like a flame, as she slowly drew away enough to move around behind him. She did
not release his hand until all of them had turned to face the east. Rhys could
feel her arms extending behind him to either side, close and cherishing like
sheltering wings, though she no longer touched him physically. Her voice was a
little lower than usual as she wove the familiar words of the opening
invocation.
"We
stand outside time, in a place not of earth. As our ancestors before us bade,
we join together and are One."
Rhys
bowed his head reverently and let himself center into the stillness, his lips
brushing against the soft, reddish down of his son's head.
"By
Thy Blessed Apostles, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John; by all Thy Holy Angels; by
all Powers of Light and Shadow, we call Thee to guard and defend us from all
perils, O Most High," she continued. "Thus it is and has ever been,
thus it will be for all times yet to come. Per omnia saecula
saeculorum."
"Amen,"
all of them breathed as one, each signing himself with a cross.
Rhys
raised his head as she came around to his right, letting his slight smile
mirror her own and those of the others watching as the two of them moved toward
Jebediah. The knight bowed slightly as they approached, ushering them to his
right as he turned to face the almost-shimmer of the warded walls. He paused,
then cocked his head slightly toward Rhys in question.
"Do
you mind which invocation I use? I'd like to offer one my father taught me,
from a slightly different tradition."
"We
would be honored," Rhys murmured with a slight bow, not needing to look at
Evaine to know that she agreed.
Jebediah
smiled and hitched his thumbs into his white sash, then straightened to address
the guardian of the east.
"All
honor to Saint Raphael, Physician-Healer, Lord of Wind and Tempest, Prince of
Air, thou Eastern Warder! Here stand thy servants Rhys and Evaine, to dedicate
their son, a Healer-born!"
Rhys
held his infant son aloft for just a moment, balancing the tiny bundle across
the palms of his hands, and then the three of them bowed. As they straightened
and Rhys and Evaine began moving toward the southern ward, Evaine brushed the
knight's shoulder with her fingertips.
"Thank
you, Jeb. That was beautiful."
They
passed behind Joram, who was sporting a pleased, lopsided grin.
"I'll
follow Jebediah's lead, if you don't mind," he murmured. He drew his sword
as the two of them moved into place at his right, kissing the cross-hilt in
salute before raising the blade to point southward.
"All
honor to Saint Michael, the Defender, he who subdues the Serpent, Keeper of the
Gates of Eden, Prince of Fire, thou Southern Warder! Here stand thy servants
Rhys and Evaine, to dedicate their son, a Healer-born!"
Again
Rhys held up the baby and the three of them bowed, Joram sweeping his blade
down in completion of his salute and then sheathing it. He kissed his tiny
nephew on the forehead and signed him in blessing before standing back to let
them move on. Evaine caught his waist in a fond hug and brushed his lips with
hers before moving on with husband and son, and Rhys felt both embrace and kiss
as if it had been himself. They stood now in the west, in Evaine's usual place.
She bowed her head, stilling all else, then raised her arms in welcome.
"All
honor to Saint Gabriel, the Heavenly Herald, Prince of Water and Warder of the
West, who didst bring glad tidings to Our Blessed Lady! Here stand thy servants
Rhys and Evaine, to dedicate our son, a Healer-born!"
Rhys
bowed his head, but he did not yet hold aloft the child.
"In
the name of the mother of this child, I would commend him also to the
protection of Our Lady," he said softly, turning his head to look Evaine
full in the eyes. "For the Healing gift is the gift of mercy and
compassion, as well as physical mending, and both are beloved of the Queen of
Heaven."
With
that, he held the child out for the third time, feeling Evaine's hand extend to
touch one tiny arm, the caress of her mind intertwining with his as both of
them bowed. Then they were moving on to stand beside Camber.
His
face was not the face of Evaine's father, for that had been put aside nearly a
decade before, for the sake of a king and a kingdom to be saved; and the risk
of detection, even here in sacred circle, was too great to dare unless there
were a need. Over the years, they had come to accept that as a necessary
caution. It was a small sacrifice when weighed against some others that had
been made.
But
the love which enfolded the three of them as they stepped into the shelter of
Camber's arms was no less tangible for being contained behind a stranger's
eyes. Nor, after so long, could Alister Cullen even be counted as stranger any
longer. He was a part of Camber now, even though his body lay in a secret vault
deep beneath the ground.
"All
honor to Saint Uriel, Lord of Death in its season," Camber said softly,
his voice carrying a quality which came, perhaps, of being more in years than
any other in the room, of having faced the Dark Angel more than once, and
having lost all fear.
"Thou
who rulest forest tracks and all dry land, the Prince of the Earth, the Warder
of the North!" Rhys felt Camber's hand rest on his shoulder, a vital
current reverberating through Evaine, as well. "Here stand thy servants
Rhys and Evaine, and my dear children—" The beacon of Camber's attention
shifted down to the child's face, "—to dedicate their son, a
Healer-born!"
Again
all bowed, the glow of Camber's uncompromising love following them even when
they returned to Jebediah's quarter to complete their circuit of the chamber.
Then they were moving back into the center, the other three were coming in, and
Camber was taking up the elements of baptism, his white stole gleaming in the
glow of their magic.
Rhys
laid his son in Joram's arms, then stepped aside, content to let the priests
perform this part of the rite. While the greater part of him withdrew in
preparation—for the heart of this night's work was yet to come—another part
looked on with detached interest. Evaine had settled in her chair to watch, and
he laid both hands lightly on her shoulders, all physical passion submerged now
as he turned his thoughts inward. Evaine laid her head against his waist, one
hand covering one of his, but he knew she felt his gradual retreat into that
Healing place where only he could go. He watched her father sign the baby's
head with chrism, touch his tongue with salt, pour water as he named him Tieg
Joram, "... in nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti, Amen."
The
rite went on, and when it was done, they put the child into his arms again and
fell back a few paces, all around. Evaine sat forward expectantly, her face
serene and trusting.
The
silence settled, ever more profound in the stillness of the warded chamber, and
Rhys bowed his head beside his son's. Nudging his conscious mind toward Healing
trance, he reached out with his mind to softly intertwine his son's. The
rapport came, gently and without much form as the infant stirred in sleep,
resounding on an incredible note of harmony as their Healing potentials met and
fused for just an instant.
In
thought, his mind soared back across the years, to the spellbound days of his
Gabrilite apprenticeship and the Credo of the Healer-priests who had
taught him. His voice could never match those massed choirs at Saint Neot’s,
but the words at least gave form to his intent. Later, young Tieg must hear the
words sung as they should be sung and know the full range of the holy burden
which destiny had given him; but for tonight, a solo must suffice.
Rhys
held his son against his heart and began to sing, his rich baritone
gaining-strength as the flow of the chant began to soar. "Adsum,
Domine: Me gratiam corpora hominum sanare concessisti..."
Here am I, Lord:
Thou hast granted me the grace to heal
men's
bodies.
Here am I, Lord: Thou hast blessed me with
the Sight to See men's
souls.
Here am I, Lord: Thou hast given me the
might to bend the will of
others. O Lord, grant strength and wisdom
to wield all
these gifts only as Thy will wouldst have
me serve...
The
hymn Rhys raised was the ancient and haunting Adsum Domine, heart of the
ethical precepts which had governed the conduct of Healers, lay and
ecclesiastical alike, for nearly as long as there had been Healers recognized
among the Deryni. He could feel the others watching him with wonder as he sang,
but he knew that they were experiencing only a pale reflection of the full
meaning which permeated the words for a Healer—that even he was losing some of
its effect by delivering it alone. When the Healer-monks sang the hymn, their
voices wove intricate harmonics that struck at hidden chords within a Healer's
mind. Still, the chords were touched in Rhys from memory, and he felt the
familiar euphoria fill him as he finished the first section and moved into the
versicle. "Dominus lucis me dixit, Ecce..."
The Lord of Light said unto me, Behold:
Thou art My chosen child, My gift to man. Before the daystar, long before thou
wast in mother-womb, thy soul was sealed to Me for all time out of mind. Thou
art My Healing hand upon this world, Mine instrument of life and Healing might.
To thee I give the breath of Healing
power, the awesome, darkling secrets of the wood and vale and earth. I give
thee all these gifts that thou mayst know my love:
Use all in service of the ease of man and beast. Be cleansing fire to purify corruption, a pool of sleep to bring surcease from pain. Keep close within thy heart all secrets given, as safe as said in shriving, and as sacred. Nor shall thy Sight be used for revelation, unless the other's mind be freely offered. With consecrated hands, make whole the broken. With consecrated soul, reach out and give My peace...
They
were all bound in with Rhys now; and as he knelt to begin the final antiphon,
he felt their longing, their awe at the power his song conveyed, their
near-bereavement that they would never really know the length and breadth and
height and depth of the universe that was his to command—or the awful
responsibility that such a universe demanded.
On
both his knees, he held his son in outstretched arms and made his song a
prayer. He knew Evaine's presence close at hand, although she never moved from
where she sat. Her sweet voice blended with his own even as hearts and minds
were intertwined, tentative at first, then strengthening with every echoed
heartbeat. "Adsum, Domine..."
Here am I, Lord:
All my talents at Thy feet I lay.
Here am I, Lord:
Thou art the One Creator of all things.
Thou art the Omnipartite One Who ruleth
Light and Shade,
Giver of Life and Gift of Life Thyself.
Here am I, Lord: All my being bound unto
Thy will.
Here am I, Lord: Sealed unto Thy service,
girt with strength to save or slay.
Guide and guard Thy servant, Lord, from
all temptation, that honor may
be spotless and
my Gift unstained...
The
silence was profound when he had finished. For a moment he remained on his
knees, humble tears streaming down his cheeks as he bowed before the Presence
of the All Holy, Which had surely passed Its countenance over this sacred
circle and smiled upon his son. Then he slowly raised his head and looked
around him, saw them all kneeling, too, each lost in his own mind and
contemplation.
Only
Evaine could meet his eyes as he rose and slowly crossed to lay their son in
her arms once more, her own eyes bright with tears. Only Evaine, he thought,
had understood more than a fraction of what had just transpired.
He
eased himself to one knee to slip his arm around her waist, laid his head
against her shoulders, and gazed with her in wonder at their son, Tieg Joram,
who would one day be a Healer.
"Vocation"
takes place on the sixtieth anniversary of the destruction of Saint Neot's, in
the ruins of the abbey. The anti-Deryni backlash heralded by that dreadful deed
has had sixty years to ferment. No longer are Deryni the masters of Gwynedd. We
are near the end of the reign of King Uthyr Haldane, grandson of that Cinhil
Haldane restored to the throne by Camber and his kin; Uthyr, whose father, Rhys
Michael Haldane, early fell under the influence of an avaricious and rigidly
anti-Deryni Council of Regents.
More
than half a century of this official stance has gradually eliminated all overt
participation by Deryni in the governing of the kingdom, and the stigma of
being Deryni has been intensified by religious sanctions imposed by the Council
of Ramos—restrictions begun as a reaction against Deryni power in general and
magic in particular, but quickly transformed into a moral issue, in which the
Deryni are now seen by the Church as evil in and of themselves. Indeed, even
the continuation of the Deryni as a race has become questionable, as the harsh
anti-Deryni legislations of Ramos extend unto the third and fourth generation.
In Gwynedd, bishops' tribunals often burn Deryni; and secular lords holding the
right of high justice are free to use or abuse Deryni as they will.
Gilrae
d'Eirial is not Deryni, but he has heard stories about them. The days of Deryni
power are not so long past that everyone is dead who remembers what it was
really like, but men and women of that era are growing fewer and fewer, and
stories of the old days become more and more embellished with the exaggerations
of legend with each passing year. Gilrae's life thus far has been fairly
typical of men of his knightly caste, for he is destined to succeed his dying
father as Baron d'Eirial. (The very title suggests that Sir Radulf d'Eirial,
Gilrae's father, may have been heir to the breakup of some of the estates
formerly held by Deryni or Deryni sympathizers, for Haut Eirial was a holding
of the Order of Saint Michael before the Michaelines were ousted from Gwynedd.)
But
Gilrae does not want to be Baron d'Eirial—though he has let duty bind him to
this course until a more overweening destiny seems to have taken even this
option out of his hands. And having failed to choose what he really wanted
while he still had the chance, his life now seems reduced to destiny rather
than desire. The last thing he expects, as he rides out on this bright December
afternoon, is to have his options startlingly renewed.
Incidently,
if the name Simonn seems to strike a familiar chord, think back to Camber's
visit to Saint Neot's, and a young novice Healer of that name learning how to
read his own body processes.
vocation
The
air was cold and very still as Gilrae, the doomed young heir d'Eirial, reined
in his mare at the top of the rise and glanced back the way he had come. He and
his mount cast only an odd, truncated shadow on the virgin snow, for the sun
was as high overhead as it was like to get on this bright winter day, but
crisp, dainty hoofprints stretched back clearly to the point where he had left
the main track. Few would dare to follow, for the ruins ahead were believed by
most folk to be haunted, but Caprus would have no trouble finding him, if he
really wanted to. Caprus had always made it his business to know the whereabouts
of his elder half brother, for he had been groomed by his mother from birth to
be alert to faults which might turn their father's favor from the son of his
first marriage to that of his second. If only Caprus could believe how little
his supposed rival sought their father's title—or how little time there was
before the title passed again: brother to brother, the next time, instead of
father to son.
But
Gilrae's last ordeal still lay months in the future. Their father's was in
progress, and Gilrae could no longer bear to watch it happening. For the next
few hours, Caprus and his mother could keep the death watch without him; they
would not miss him anyway, until the old man was dead. And in whatever time
remained before Caprus came to fetch him, Gilrae must weight his own soul's
yearnings and reach some firm decision. At least the air was clean here at the
crest of the Lendours. He did not think he could have borne the closeness of
his father's sickroom for another minute.
Gilrae's
sigh hung on the frosty air as he touched heels to the mare and urged her up
onto the plateau, letting her choose her own footing as he turned his attention
to the ruined walls coming into sight. In addition to the initial destruction
wreaked on the abbey and its inhabitants, the decay of more than half a century
of hard winters and neglect had taken a heavy toll. The scavenging of local crofters
had compounded the process, for the smooth blue ashlars from the outer walls
made sturdy hearths, cottage walls, and even sheep pens for those bold enough
to risk the ghosts and strong enough to cart them away. In some spots, little
remained of the outer walls besides foundations.
Gilrae
thought about the ghosts as the mare minced her way across a broken, ice-slick
courtyard, her ears lacing back at a rabbit that broke from cover. He supposed
it was inevitable that the place should have fostered such fears. Even before
its fall, Saint Neot's had been rife with forbidden magic. Deryni sorcery had
been its mainstay—sorcery which the Church condemned as evil, its practitioners
anathema. To be Deryni was to live under sentence of death, if one did not
renounce one's hell-born powers and adopt a life of penance and submission.
That these particular Deryni were said to have been healers and teachers of
healers was immaterial, for the healing had come of their misbegotten powers,
and hence from the Devil—or so the priests taught. The abbey's destroyers,
crack troops of the young king's regents, had slaughtered the monks to a man,
and their students as well, profaning the holy chapel with a sea of blood and
desecrating the altar itself with vicious murder.
Nor
had that been the extent of the raiders' savagery. When they had finished their
brutal, butcher's work and sacked the abbey of its portable wealth, they set
upon a systematic destruction of what they could not carry off, smashing the
leaded glass and the fine carvings which adorned altar screens, choir stalls,
and chapel doorways, scarring the tougher stone with sword and mace blows, and
then torching the lot. Rare manuscripts of human Grafting, as well as heretical
Deryni works, went to feed the flames which licked at the oak-beamed ceilings,
the roof thatching. When, two days later, the fires at last burned out, men
with ropes and horses pulled down what the flames had spared. More than half a
century later, few walls stood higher than the withers of Gilrae's mount. In
the face of such mayhem, small wonder that the local folk feared the vengeance
of Deryni ghosts.
Gilrae
had never met any of those ghosts, of course. Nor, to his knowledge, had he
even met a Deryni, ghost or otherwise, though the priests warned that the
sorcerers were devious, and one could never be too sure. Even the places
formerly inhabited by such men were to be shunned, the priests said—though
Gilrae had not known that as a young boy; and, as an adult, he had years of
personal experience to tell him that they must be wrong about this particular
place. There was surely no evil here. And as for ghosts—
Ghosts,
indeed! As Gilrae guided his mare through what remained of gatehouse and
porter's lodge, nearing what once had been the cellar level of a dormitory
block, he remembered the one conversation he and old Simonn had had about the
alleged ghosts—and the chuckle and look of bemused indulgence he had gotten for
his trouble.
Well,
the old man certainly ought to know. He had been living in these ruins, in
defiance of ghosts and skittish priests, since Gilrae's father was a boy. If
there were ghosts, they had never bothered Simonn—or Gilrae.
But
mental debates on the existence of ghosts were not conducive to watching where
one was going. The mare knew, but Gilrae had not been to the ruins since before
his accident, and he had forgotten the depth of the drop as the mare jumped
down to the level of the former cellar. The leap was not much farther than the
height of the mare's belly, but Gilrae was unprepared, and his right hand gave
when he tried to brace himself in old reflex. The jolt threw him against the
front of the saddle so hard that he all but lost his seat. The pain that shot
up his arm from wrist to shoulder nearly made him faint.
He
rode the remaining distance in tight-lipped silence, head bowed in the shadow
of his fur-lined cap, useless right hand wedged into the front opening of his
leather riding jerkin to keep it from flapping around. When he reached the
alcove he often used as a makeshift stable, he dismounted easily enough; but
when he tried to loosen the girth, he found he could not do it left-handed.
Biting back tears of anger and frustration, he gave the mare an apologetic pat
on the neck and turned away, scrambling over the snow-covered rubble toward the
open cloister garth. His sword, awkward and unwieldy hanging from his right
side rather than his left, kept banging against his boots and tangling between
his legs as he climbed up to the cloister level, nearly tripping him several
times and bringing the hot tears to his eyes despite his determination to the
contrary. The footing was better in the open, though, and he tried to put aside
his bitterness as he emerged into sunlight.
The
place brought back happier memories. As a boy, he could remember stealing away
here for hours at a time, pretending that the ruined church was whole, and he
free to choose, never even dreaming that the choices would be taken from him
before he could make them.
He
had longed to be a priest even then. As a very young boy, he had dared to
pretend he was a priest, and had often played at celebrating Mass with
an acorn-cap chalice and an oak-leaf paten. When he had shyly confided it to
the old priest who was his tutor and chaplain, and asked whether he might one
day become a priest in fact, the old man had sputtered and ranted and given him
a stiff penance—not only for the sacrilege of pretending the sacrifice of the
Mass, but for even thinking of the priesthood when he was the lord's eldest
son. The Church might be for younger sons of noble families, but not for the
heir. Old Father Erdic had even told his father, in blatant defiance of the
seal of the confessional.
His
father's response had been predictable and harsh: a birch rod applied liberally
to Gilrae's bare buttocks and a week of seclusion in his room, with only bread
and water. Months had passed before Gilrae could slip away alone again, and he
had never again trusted the forsworn priest. Nor had he given up his acorn and
leaf Masses, at least for a while, though in time the futility of it all
relegated the practice to only a childhood memory.
He
caught himself smiling as he remembered those days of youthful innocence,
wondering that he ever could have been so naive. He was twenty now. He was
still the heir d'Eirial, and could become baron at any moment. The previous
Easter, he had been knighted by King Uthyr himself, who had addressed him as Right
Trusty and Well-Beloved, in anticipation of his imminent inheritance. Any
ordinary man should have been well content; but all Gilrae d'Eirial had ever
really wanted was to be a priest.
No
longer smiling, he turned slow, reluctant steps across the open space of the
cloister garth and headed toward what remained of the chapel, avoiding the
rougher going of the peripheral walks, with their litter of charred beams and
fallen stones. Fresh sheep droppings confirmed the identity of the last living
things to pass this way, but of other humans there was no trace. Balancing
precariously with only one good hand to steady him, Gilrae made his way up
broken, snow-slick steps to pause in the shelter of a once-grand processional
doorway, blowing on his gloved fist to warm it as he surveyed the south
transept and crossing and eastern nave. Only the expected sheep were browsing
in the ruins, nibbling at lichens and tufts of frost-seared grass.
Removing
his cap, for he liked to think of the place as holy still, he moved on through
the transept in the direction of the choir, musing again on the place's past.
Saint Neot's had fallen, they said, in the same year good King Cinhil died—the
year the bishops had condemned the Deryni as a race and declared them anathema,
to be shunned, persecuted, and often even slaughtered by righteous men because
of what they were. It had been on a Christmas Eve a full three-score years
ago—sixty years ago today, Gilrae realized, as he did the necessary
arithmetic in his head.
The
sun chose that moment to go behind a cloud, plunging Gilrae and the ruined
choir aisle into shadow, and he shivered. In the heavy atmosphere of his
father's sickroom, he had nearly forgotten that it was Christmas Eve. Many
people believed that the anniversaries of terrible events held powerful
potential for supernatural visitations—and what place was more likely than an
altar profaned by murder?
Still
chilled by more than cold, he cast a nervous glance in the direction of the
desecrated altar. The previous night's snowfall had given it new altar
coverings, disguising the vast cracks across the once-hallowed slab, but as the
sun re-emerged, the illusion became apparent. The battered edges spoke all too
clearly of the violence and the hate of the altar's destroyers, and suddenly
Gilrae felt an almost irresistable urge to sign himself in protection—an
inclination immediately thwarted by his useless right hand.
Angry
both at his helplessness and the superstition which had brought it to mind
again, he dashed recklessly up the choir, sword flailing at his side as he
plunged and stumbled through the snow. His bravado deserted him as he reached
the foot of the altar steps, however. Sobbing for breath, he dropped to both
knees on the lowest step and buried his face in his good hand.
Everything
was denied him now. Once there had been choices, had he but had the nerve to
make them; now, either path he once might have traveled was barred to him. Even
were it not for the malignant growth paralyzing his arm, even if there had only
been the accident—if he could not wield a sword with a useless right hand,
neither could he function as a priest. The Church kept strict standards for the
fitness of priestly candidates, and a man who could not properly handle the
Mass vessels at the time he sought ordination certainly would not be accepted.
With
vision blurred by tears which would no longer be denied, Gilrae yanked at the
ties of his fur-lined cloak until he could pull it off and spread it
leather-side down on a relatively dry patch of unbroken flags just at the foot
of the altar steps. He hardly noticed the warmth of the sun on his back as he
prostrated himself on the thick, wolfskin pelt, too numb with grief and loss to
do more than lie there weeping bitterly for several minutes, forehead cradled in
his good arm. Despair shifted to resentment after a while—an angry, defiant
argument with God, protesting the gross unfairness of it all, pleading for
reprieve—and then contrition for his presumption.
Very
well. If he was meant to die with neither life fulfilled, then at least let that
be to the glory of the One he would far rather have served in other ways.
Setting himself to formal prayer, he admitted his terror of what lay ahead and
offered it up, pleading for the strength to accept what was ordained. When even
that brought no comfort, he let himself drift in numb dejection and tried not
to think at all, the sun on his back gradually lulling the last of his terror
to resignation.
For
a while, only the swirling colors played behind his closed eyelids; but then,
with a bright clarity that he had only occasionally experienced before, images
began to form behind his eyes.
In
his altered vision, it seemed that the abbey walls rose around him once more,
the high, mosaic-lined vaulting of the choir dome arching protectively over his
vantage point. The sanctuary shone with candlelight, the pale, carved wood of
the choir stalls restored, the ruby glow of a Presence lamp above the high
altar lending the snow-white walls a pinkish tint.
The
abbey was peopled once more as well, by silent, white-robed men with single
braids emerging from under the cowls that fell back upon their shoulders. He
sensed them approaching from the processional door, their double file splitting
around him to enter the choir stalls to either side. Turning toward the altar
as one man, they made their obeisance in perfect unison, raising their voices
in the most beautiful harmony Gilrae had ever heard. Only the first few words
were distinct, but they brought back all the poignance of the life to which
Gilrae now would never dare aspire.
"Adsum Domine..." Here am I, Lord...
It
was also the response of the candidate for priesthood as he presented himself
before his ordaining bishop—words that Gilrae now would never speak.
The
anguish that welled up anew in his chest blotted out the vision, and, muffling
a sob, he rolled onto his side and then to a sitting position to cradle his
throbbing arm. Only then did he become aware that he was not alone; he whirled
around on the seat of his leather britches, good hand going for the dagger at
his belt.
But
even as he turned, he realized that if the intruder had wished him harm, he
could have been dead several times over. In any case, the old man sitting on a
stone block a few feet away posed no threat. With an uneasy grin, Gilrae let
the dagger slip back into its sheath and sat up straighter, surreptitiously
dragging his left sleeve across his face, though he pretended only to brush a
lock of hair out of his eyes. He should have expected the visit, after seeing the
sheep. He hoped the old man had not noticed he had been crying.
"Simonn.
You startled me. I thought I was alone."
"I
shall leave, if you wish," the man replied.
"No.
Don't go."
"Very
well."
No
one knew who old Simonn was, or where he had come from. He had been old when
Gilrae's father had played here as a boy. He tended his sheep, sometimes
trading their wool for necessities in the spring; occasionally, he came down to
the village church to hear Mass. Simonn the shepherd, Simonn the hermit, Simonn
the holy man, some said. Gilrae had discovered quite by accident that the old
man could read and write—a skill not easily or often gained by peasants,
especially here in the Lendour highlands. Gilrae himself had had to fight for
the privilege, and he the lord's son. He had never presumed on their friendship
by inquiring too insistently, but he sometimes wondered how much more Simonn
was than he appeared. Whoever he was, he had always been a friend to Gilrae.
The
old man smiled and nodded, almost as if he had been aware of Gilrae's inner
dialogue, but the blue eyes were kindly and unthreatening as they gazed across
the short distance between them. When Gilrae did not speak, Simonn raised a
white eyebrow and made gentle clucking noises with his tongue.
"So,
young Master Gilrae, I've not seen you in many months. What brings you to the
hills on this bright Christmas Eve? I should have thought you would be feasting
in your father's hall, preparing to welcome the Christ Child."
Gilrae
hung his head. It was obvious the old man had not heard, either of his father's
illness or his own misfortune. He could feel the wild pulse throbbing through
the growth on his inner forearm as he cradled it closer to his midriff. The
thought of the two coming deaths, his father's and his own, made his stomach
queasy.
"There
will be no feasting in Haut Eirial this night, Simonn," he whispered.
"My father is dying. I—had to get away for a few hours."
"Ah,
I see," the old man said, after a slight pause. "And you are feeling
the weight of your coming responsibility."
Gilrae
said nothing. If only it were that simple. With two good hands, he supposed he
could have resigned himself to the life of a secular lord, governing the
d'Eirial lands and keeping the king's peace, as his father wanted. With two
good hands, he might even have had the courage to give it all up in favor of
his brother and make the choice he had longed to make for years. But the
accident, and the resultant—thing growing in his arm, had put an end to
choices.
He
shivered as he inadvertantly clutched it closer, instinctively protective of
what he feared the most, but despite old Simonn's watchful eyes, he was unable
to suppress a grimace as pain shot up his arm. As he looked up defensively,
daring the old man to mention it, Simonn casually turned his face toward the
ruined altar, going very quiet.
"It
is not an easy thing to lose what one loves," Simonn murmured after a
moment, apparently testing. "Nor is it ever an easy thing to shoulder
responsibilities, even if one welcomes them. And if one finds oneself forced
into responsibilities by circumstances, rather than by a choice based on love,
the task becomes even more difficult."
"Are
you saying that I don't love my father?" Gilrae asked, after a stunned
pause.
Simonn
shook his head. "Of course not. I think you love him very much, as a son
should love his father. If you did not, you would not now be agonizing over the
choices you must make. We rarely ask for the choices that are placed
before us, but they must always be made, nonetheless."
Swallowing
with difficulty, Gilrae turned his gaze to the wolfskin lining of the cloak he
sat on, unconsciously rubbing his numb right arm to warm it.
"What—makes
you think I'm faced with any particular choices, old man?" he said a
little belligerently. "My father is dying, and I'm to be Baron d'Eirial.
That involves no choices. It is a role I was born to."
"By
blood—yes," Simonn replied. "But by spirit— well, I think you did not
come to this ruined abbey while your father lay dying and prostrate yourself
before its altar because you are overjoyed to be coming into your temporal
inheritance. And I do not mean to imply that your grief at your father's
passing is not genuine," he added, as Gilrae looked up in astonishment.
"I wonder if you even know what drove you to present yourself this way—in
this ruined church, before an altar drenched by the blood of scores of holy
men."
Gilrae
gave a sigh and lowered his eyes again, subdued. Simonn knew part of it, at
least. It could not have been hard to guess. They had talked before, if only
hypothetically, about the practical considerations of a religious life. Simonn
had never quite said, but it was clear that, at least as a boy, he himself had
received some kind of instruction in a religious community. Perhaps that was
where he had learned to read and write.
"It
doesn't matter anyway," Gilrae finally murmured. "The question is
academic. There are no choices for me anymore—only duties and responsibilities
that I'll be increasingly ill-equipped to handle. God, I almost wish I were
dead already!"
Even
as the bitter words left his lips, the shocked Simonn was on his feet and
darting across the few feet which separated them, grabbing his wrist to shake
him. It was the bad wrist, and Gilrae gasped aloud with the pain. Instantly,
Simonn was kneeling beside him and shoving back his sleeve, pulling off the
glove, running gentle fingers over the swollen flesh.
"How
did this happen?" Simonn murmured, turning the forearm and drawing in
breath as he spied the blackness spread along the inner side. "Why didn't
you tell me you were ill?"
Gilrae
swallowed and tried to pull away, feeling like an animal caught in a trap.
"Leave
me alone. Please. What difference can it make?"
"It
can mean your life!" the old man snapped, holding him with his eyes.
"How did this start?"
"A—a
fall from a horse, several months ago," Gilrae found himself saying.
"I—thought it was only a bad sprain at first, but then the—swelling
started."
"Have
you much pain?"
Gilrae
wrenched his gaze free with a gasp and nodded, staring unseeing at the ground.
"I—can't
close my hand anymore, either," he managed to whisper. "I can't hold
a sword, and I can't—"
Though
he struggled to prevent it, the old dream flashed into memory again: himself,
garbed in the vestments of a priest and raising the chalice at the celebration
of Mass. Choking back a sob, he shook his head to clear the image from his
mind.
There
were no choices now. That dream would never be; nor would he even be
able to be a proper lord to his people. All the doors were closing. Until now,
he had never even thought about ending his life before the blackness could, but
perhaps he would be better off.
"What
else can't you do?" old Simonn urged softly, the voice boring into his
brain. "What is it you really want most?"
"I
want another chance, I suppose," Gilrae whispered after a moment, dropping
his head to rest his forehead on his knees, no longer minding that his arm
still lay in Simonn's hands. "I want it to be last spring, when I was
still a whole man, and the decisions were still mine to make. All the choices
have been made for me, now. I'll die from this. No one else knows about that
part of it except my father's battle surgeon, but it's going to happen."
He lifted his head to glance at the useless arm with tear-blurred eyes. "I
lacked the courage to follow my own heart when I still had the chance—and now I
can't even follow my father's heart and be a worthy leader for his people, once
he's gone."
He
found himself staring stupidly into space for a while, but then Simonn's soft
sigh was bringing him back.
"I
can't help you with your decisions, Gilrae, but I might be able to help you
with your arm," the old man said. "It would be rather painful, but
the growth could be removed."
Gilrae
swallowed noisily, afraid to let himself dare to hope.
"I'd
like to believe you, but I don't think so," he managed to murmur.
"Gilbert said it would only come back, worse than before, and that it
would spread. The arm could be cut off—that might stop it, if I survived
the amputation—but what good would that do? It wouldn't allow either of the
lives I'd choose, if the choices still were mine."
"We
always have choices, son," Simonn replied, in a voice so soft and yet so
compelling that Gilrae turned to look at him again. "If you choose to let
me try to help you, I may be able to make it possible for you to reopen those
other choices. What do you have to lose?"
And
what, indeed, did he have to lose? Gilrae reasoned, as he stared into
the old man's eyes and found himself swaying dizzily. As if some force outside
himself compelled his movement, he felt his left hand going to the knife at his
belt and unsheathing it, handing the blade across to Simonn hilt-first, rising
at the old man's beckoning gesture to pull his cloak around himself and mount the
altar steps behind him.
"Sit
here," the old man whispered, pulling him toward the left-hand corner and
setting his back against the cold marble.
Gilrae
felt his knees buckle under him, and his back slid slowly down the stone facade
until he was sitting, surrounded by the folds of the fur-lined cloak, his sword
lying close along his right thigh. Snow still lay in drifts in the north shadow
of the altar, and he could not seem to resist as Simonn pushed back the sleeve
of his leather tunic and buried the right forearm in the snow to numb it
further. The sun was more than halfway down the western sky—how had it
gotten so late already?—but its light still dazzled Gilrae's eyes as he laid
his head against the marble behind him, golden fire also flashing from the
blade Simonn polished on a surprisingly clean hem of pale grey undertunic.
When
the cold of the snow against his bare arm began to ache more than the original
pain, Simonn turned the forearm upward in its bed of melting snow and ran a
hand over the area to be excised.
"You
needn't watch this," he said, touching ice-cold fingers to the side of
Gilrae's face to turn his head away. "Look out at the sunset and think
about other things. Watch the clouds, if you like. Perhaps the shapes will
suggest answers to your questions."
The
old man's fingers seemed somehow to numb Gilrae's brain as well as the flesh
they touched, and he found himself becoming very detached from his still body.
As Simonn bent over the upturned forearm and positioned his blade, Gilrae summoned
just enough will to glance down and see the steel trace a crimson path along
one side of the blackness he had come to hate and fear. The blood welled up
scarlet against the snow, steaming in the frigid air, and Gilrae rolled his
eyes upward again to gaze at the sky. After a few seconds more, his eyes
closed, and he dreamed.
He
was in a church again, but it was smaller than the one he had seen before—no
more than a chapel, really—and this time, he was a participant rather than an
observer, one of four solemn yet joyful young men in white, processing down the
narrow nave. Like the others, he carried a lighted candle in his right hand;
his left was pressed reverently to the deacon's stole crossing his chest and
secured at his right hip. The men in the single row of stalls to either side
wore grey habits rather than the white of the previous dream, but a few of them
sported the single braid Gilrae had noticed before. Ahead, at the foot of a far
more humble altar, waited two men in copes and mitres.
He
knelt with his brethren at their feet—a bishop and a mitered abbot, he somehow
knew—and though he could not quite make out the words the senior of them spoke,
he knew the response. He and his brethren sang it together as they held their
candles aloft, the notes floating pure and clear in that holy place.
"Adsum, Domine..." Here am I, Lord...
The
scene wavered and dissolved at that, much to his regret, and for an
indeterminable while he simply floated a little sadly in a state of
disconnection, only dimly aware of the sunlight on his face, beating on his
closed eyelids, and the cold penetrating his cloak and riding leathers from the
stone step, the altar at his back, the snow still numbing his right arm past
all feeling.
He
had no inclination to open his eyes, to move, or even to think. He drifted some
more—and then he was back in the dream, humbly kneeling with joined hands
before the bishop, swaying a little on his knees as the consecrated hands came
to rest on his head.
"Accipe Spiritum Sanctum..."
He
imagined he could feel the holy Power surging through every nerve and sinew,
the divine Energy filling him to overflowing and then opening him to fill even
more. The ecstasy grew so intense that he began to tremble.
Then,
suddenly, he was aware of cold hands on either side of his face, and old
Simonn's voice gently bidding him open his eyes. He managed to make his dry
throat contract and swallow, but he was still disoriented for a moment and
could not quite seem to bring Simonn into focus.
"I—you—"
"You're
all right. I think you must have fallen asleep on me," the old man
murmured, smiling. "Did you dream?"
"I
did. How did you know? Simonn, it was wonderful! I—"
Confused,
Gilrae raised both hands to rub his temples before he realized that the right
hand had obeyed just like the left one, and that there was no longer any pain.
A strip of grey cloth bound his right arm from wrist halfway to elbow, but no
unnatural bulge disturbed the clean line. Blood stained the snow where his arm
had lain, but far less than he might have expected. Simonn was retrieving his
dagger even as Gilrae started to speak, burnishing the melted snow from blade
and grip and extending it to him hilt-first.
"I
believe your father's battle surgeon may have frightened you unduly," the
old man said. "It shouldn't come back. You may still have some weakness
for a few days, but I think you'll find that you can grip a sword—or anything
else you may wish."
"But—"
Simonn
shook his head and held up a hand to stop his question, then stood and shaded
his eyes against the sun, gazing west beyond the ruins. As Gilrae, too,
scrambled to his feet, steadying himself on the corner of the altar, Simonn
began kicking fresh snow over the bloodstains at their feet, erasing the
visible evidence of what had just occurred.
"Your
brother is coming, and an escort with him," Simonn said, glancing up at
him as he finished the job. "I fear he brings news which will sadden
you—but at least you may now make your decisions based on what you really want,
not what your physical condition seemed to dictate. If you value what I have
done, say nothing of my part in this, I beg you."
"You
have my word," Gilrae, promised.
But
the old man was already gliding into the ruins, melting into the shadows, and
so carefully had he chosen his escape route that even Gilrae, who had watched
him go, could detect no sign of his passage.
His
brother's voice called out his name then, and Gilrae knew it was only a matter
of a few minutes before he was found. Scuttling around the ruined altar in a
panic, hardly daring to believe, he crouched in its eastern shadow and tore at
the bandage on his arm with trembling fingers, safe for a few more minutes from
even Caprus's prying eyes. Beneath the bandage, only a yellowed shadow of
former bruising showed where once the fatal blackness had spread—that and a
faint pink line where he thought his blade had gone. Of the growth there was no
trace.
Amazed,
he flexed his fingers and made a fist, watching the tendons ripple under the
skin, feeling the muscles obey. A growing suspicion nagged at the edges of his
mind about old Simonn, but the healing spoke for itself. He would worry later
about its source—and the promise of the dream. For now, it was sufficient that
a miracle had occurred, and that he had been given back his choices.
"Lord
Gilrae?"
The
voice of Sir Lorcan, his father's seneschal, brought him back to earth with a
jolt, and almost guiltily he tugged his sleeve back into place and dropped the
bandage onto the snow. No time for contemplating miracles just now. As he struggled
to pull fur-lined gloves onto damp hands, he could hear the hollow clip-clop of
iron-shod hooves treading on the flagstones far back in the ruined nave, and
the sound infuriated him.
Fools!
Could they not sense that the ground was holy still? How dared they bring
horses into this place?
Indignant
at the manner of their intrusion, he hooked his right hand around the hilt of
his sword and stood. He did not intend to tell them what had happened just yet.
They spotted him as he moved around to the front of the altar to wait for them,
Caprus pointing in his direction and urging the rest of, them to follow faster.
The
horses plunged through the snow and slipped and scrambled on the uneven flags,
scattering the sheep, their riders watching the footing now, instead of Gilrae.
They
were ten in all, Caprus and Lorcan in the lead. Caprus wore a stormy look, for
all the pale handsomeness of his bright yellow curls, and Lorcan's lined face
was as grave as Gilrae had ever seen it. Father Arnulf and Master Gilbert, the
surgeon, rode at their backs, and behind them half a dozen men-at-arms in his
father's livery—his livery now, he suddenly realized. The men's short
lances were reversed in the stirrup-rests, the silver circlet of his father's
coronet clutched in the priest's gloved fist. Despite the fact that he had been
expecting it, Gilrae suddenly felt very cold.
"Take
the horses out of the church," he said quietly, when they reined in at the
transept and started to dismount. "Don't argue, Lorcan, just do it."
He
could sense Caprus's beginning indignation, but Lorcan murmured something
sharply under his breath and turned his chestnut hard into the chest of Caprus'
grey, shouldering it into a turn even as the surprised Caprus bit back whatever
he had been about to say. Wordlessly the lot of them withdrew halfway along the
length of the nave, where Lorcan, Caprus, and the priest and surgeon dismounted
and gave their reins to the remaining men. As the horses were led out of the
church, the four made their way back toward the altar on foot, muttering among
themselves. Lorcan drew slightly ahead and bowed as he reached the foot of the
altar steps. He was wearing mail and leathers beneath his fur-lined cloak, as
were Caprus and the surgeon.
"I'm
sorry, Lord Gilrae. Your father is dead," he said, his breath hanging on
the chill air. "He bade us bring you this."
As
he gestured slightly behind him, the middle-aged Father Arnulf stepped forward
and extended the coronet in unsteady hands.
"You
are confirmed as the heir, my lord," Arnulf said, a shadow of pity
flickering behind his eyes as Gilrae reached out to touch the gleaming metal
with his left hand only. "Since the king has already acknowledged it, in
anticipation of this moment, there can be no question. May God bless you in your
endeavors, my lord."
Gilrae
could sense the effort it took them not to look at his motionless right hand,
but he still was not ready to reveal himself. With a nod to acknowledge all of
them, he came slowly down the altar steps. Caprus was watching him with an
expression of sorrow mixed with envy, Lorcan looking very uncomfortable. Only
the staid Master Gilbert seemed unmoved by it all, though the brown eyes held
compassion.
"I
thank you, Father," Gilrae murmured, dropping to one knee before the
priest. "Would you do me the favor of blessing my father's coronet before
you place it on my head? I shall have many difficult decisions ahead of me from
this time forward and I shall surely need God's help to persevere."
Not
even Caprus could dispute that. As the others knelt around him, warriors'
harness clinking softly beneath riding leathers and furs, Gilrae bowed his head
and let the priest's blessing roll over him like a wavelet on the lake at
Dhassa, trying to think. The coronet across his forehead was cold and heavy,
its weight far more than mere metal, pressing into his very soul as he stood
and turned away from them, averting his eyes.
The
time was come to make his decision. He was baron, but he now had the means to
change that, if he dared. Retreating slowly to the altar, he spread his gloved
left hand flat on the snow-covered mensa as if in oath, lifting the fingers of
his right to brush the edge, shielded behind his body where the others could
not see. As the fingers moved and he stared at them, he knew he had not been
spared to wear a coronet.
"Sir
Lorcan," he said softly, over his shoulder, "were you my father's
liegeman?"
"My
lord, you know I was."
"And
are you now my liegeman?"
"I
am your man, my lord," came the crisp reply.
"Thank
you. Call the rest of the men here, if you please."
He
continued to face the altar, but he could hear uneasy stirrings from Caprus'
direction and the low whisper of an exchange between Gilbert and the priest as
Lorcan moved off a few paces to signal the men-at-arms to join them. When he
sensed the arrival of the others, he drew deep breath and turned, very much
aware of the weight of the circlet on his head. The men knelt in a semicircle
at the foot of the steps, faces fiercely proud beneath their helmets. Caprus
remained with the surgeon and the priest, looking vaguely uneasy as Lorcan
moved halfway up the steps to bow.
"As
you requested, my lord."
"Yes.
Thank you." Gilrae turned his eyes on the men gazing up at him.
"Gentlemen, Sir Lorcan has confirmed his continued fealty to me as Baron
d'Eirial. Have I your loyalty, as well?"
To
murmurs of affirmation, the men drew their swords and held them toward him with
the hilts uppermost, gauntleted hands grasping the naked blades just below the
quillons. Gilrae nodded.
"Thank
you. I take your actions as oaths sworn. You may stand, but remain where you
are, please. Lorcan?"
"My
lord."
"Lorcan,
I have need of your counsel. Caprus, please come forward."
As
the men-at-arms rose and sheathed their weapons, and Lorcan moved silently to
Gilrae's left elbow, Caprus came hesitantly to face his brother. He had
blanched at the sound of his name, and his glove was tight across his knuckles
where his left hand gripped the hilt of his sword as he walked. Wordlessly
Gilrae came down the three steps from the altar, pausing where a snowbank stood
knee high between them and motioning Caprus to join him. After a slight
hesitation, Caprus obeyed, dropping uncertainly to one knee when Gilrae did not
speak. Gilrae could sense Lorcan standing slightly behind him, but he did not
take his eyes from his brother's. He did not know whether he would like the
answer to the question he must now ask Caprus, but if he ever was to dare what
his heart desired, an answer was demanded. He prayed God it would be the one he
wanted to hear.
"How
may I counsel you, my lord?" Lorcan asked quietly.
"A
point of jurisdiction. Have I the right, as Baron d'Eirial and a knight of this
realm, to mete High and Low Justice in my lands, to all my vassals, great and
small?"
"You
do, my lord."
High Justice: the
power of life and death. He had known it was so, but he had wanted to be sure.
Before Caprus could do more than open his mouth to start to protest, Gilrae
reached to his sword with his left hand and drew it hilt-first, thrusting it
into the snow between them like a javelin.
"Hold
your peace, Caprus!" he snapped. "Keep silence and consider well what
I am about to ask you. I have my reasons, and I swear I bear you no ill
will."
Caprus
was trembling with outrage, fists clenched rigidly at his sides, but he said
nothing as his brother hooked his other hand in his sword belt and looked down
at him. Despite Caprus' repeated mutterings of resentment all their lives about
the succession, especially when his mother was around, Gilrae seriously doubted
that Caprus had ever been actively disloyal, but he had to be certain—and, more
important, his men must be certain. Though he once more had choices open to
him, those choices also carried responsibilities.
"Caprus
d'Eirial," he said clearly, "I require your solemn oath, before God
and these assembled knights, that you have never, in word or in deed, acted
against either me or our father to the detriment of our people."
Caprus's
lower lip was trembling, but he met Gilrae's gaze squarely. Pride and anger
played behind the pale blue eyes.
"How
dare you ask such an oath?" he demanded. "And why, after speaking of
the High Justice? When have I ever given you cause to doubt my loyalty?"
"Place
your hands on the sword and swear it, before God," Gilrae answered.
"I am not required to tell you why. Only do it."
For
one heart-stopping moment, Gilrae feared Caprus would refuse. The gravity of
the question was apparent. But stiff-necked and arrogant as his younger brother
sometimes was, Gilrae had never known him to be dishonest or forsworn. Could he
not swallow his pride and give his oath?
"Swear
it, Caprus," he repeated. "Please."
His
faith was rewarded for the second time that afternoon, for all at once Caprus
broke their defiant eye contact and yanked off both his gloves, laying bare
hands firmly on the quillons, his thumbs resting on the center boss which
concealed the sword's holy relics. The face he raised to Gilrae over the
sword's cross hflt was tight-jawed, but otherwise expressionless.
"I
swear before Almighty God and these assembled knights that I have always been
loyal to our father and to you," Caprus said, the words clipped and
precise. His gaze hardened, the jaw setting even more stubbornly, but then he
seized the sword by its blade and jerked it from the snow, holding it aloft
like a talisman between them as he went on.
"I
do further swear, of my own free will and desire, that I am today become your
liegeman of life and limb and of earthly worship. Faith and truth will I bear
unto you, to live and to die, against all manner of folk, so help me God!"
He paused to wet his lips uncertainly. "And if you think I ever would have
played you false, you're wrong, Gilrae—regardless of what my mother might have
had you believe. I was born your lawful brother, and you are now my lawful
lord!"
He
brought the blade to his lips and kissed the reliquary boss boldly enough, but
when he held it out to Gilrae for the oath to be acknowledged, his gaze
faltered a little—not with duplicity, but an honest fear that Gilrae might not
believe he was sincere. Hardly able to contain his relief, Gilrae took back the
sword in his left hand, just under the quillons, and glanced aside at the
puzzled Lorcan.
"Sir
Lorcan, one further question. Among my other prerogatives as baron, have I the
right to create a knight?"
"A
knight? Aye, my lord, you do, but—"
As
Lorcan moved a startled step closer, no less confused than the others murmuring
among themselves, Gilrae shook his head and seized the hilt of his sword with
his restored right hand, raising it blade-upward in salute to kiss the relics
in the hilt. A gasp rippled among them all, for Gilrae had not been able to do
that since his fall. The stunned Caprus could only gape at him in astonishment,
springing to his feet to grab at Gilrae's sword arm and push back the sleeve to
stare.
"Gilrae,
your arm—!" he began, genuine joy lighting the blue eyes.
Echoing
Caprus's grin, Gilrae pressed his younger brother back to his knees with his
free hand and glanced out at all of them, still holding the sword before him.
"Gentlemen,
while I prayed this afternoon, something happened that I can't explain,"
he said quietly. "I was near despair because I thought all my choices had
been taken from me. God saw fit to give me all my choices back." He smiled
down at his brother. "I hope you will not think ill of me as I give over
part of the burden to you, Caprus. I believe it is something you have long
wanted, despite your love, and I know now that you will prove worthy of the
test."
Before
Caprus or any of the rest of them could even begin to question, Gilrae drew
himself up formally and raised the sword, bringing the flat of the blade down
smartly on Caprus's right shoulder.
"In
the name of God and Saint Michael, I dub thee knight, Caprus d'Eirial," he
said. The blade lifted to touch the left shoulder. "I give thee the right
to bear arms and the duty to protect the weak and helpless."
He
brought the blade to rest on Caprus's yellow curls, sighting down the gleaming
blade to his brother's tear-bright eyes.
"I
give thee also the charge of our father's lands and the meting of justice, high
and low," he added, for an instant shifting his glance out over the awed
men watching. "Be thou a good knight and gentle lord to these, thy
people."
He
drew the scabbard from his belt and sheathed the sword, then laid both across
the astonished Caprus's hastily raised palms before taking the coronet from his
head. He held it high in both his hands, so that there could be no mistaking
his fitness for the honor he passed—and no mistaking his intent—then set it
firmly on Caprus's head.
"Before
God and these assembled witnesses, I renounce all claim to the lands and titles
of Eirial, vesting them forever in this Caprus d'Eirial, my brother, true-born
son of the late Radulf d'Eirial, and his lawful descendants. This is my
irrevocable intent, which I hope will be confirmed without question by our lord
the King."
Helping
Caprus to his feet, right hand to right, he turned him to face the others. He
wondered if his own contentment was as evident as Caprus's incredulous
pleasure, and marveled that the choice could have seemed so difficult before.
"My
lords, I here present your new Baron d'Eirial.
I command you to give him the same loyalty you gave our father, and
which you earlier pledged to me. Do it. I haven't got all night."
Lorcan
swore. The men swore. Master Gilbert swore, and even the priest swore. But as
Caprus and the others moved off toward the horses, whispering excitedly among
themselves and glancing back in awe, Lorcan lingered.
"But,
what will you do now?" the old knight whispered, staring as Gilrae watched
Caprus and the others disappear against the sunset glare. "You've given up
everything, my lord."
"I'm
not your lord any longer, Lorcan—and I haven't given up anything that really
mattered." Gilrae cocked his head at the other man. "Don't you
understand? Before today, I had nothing. And then I was given everything, so
that I might choose what I really wanted." He pulled off his right glove
and laid his restored hand on the ruined altar.
"Don't
you see? This is where I belong. Oh, not here, at this poor, ruined altar. I'm
as stunned as you are, that a miracle could have taken place where magic once
held sway. But maybe that means that the magic wasn't evil to begin with—I
don't know. I do know that I'm not the same man I was when I came here earlier
today."
Closing
his hand as if to cup something precious, he gazed beyond the altar to where a
Presence lamp had burned in his dream.
"I
think I've been given a sign, Lorcan—one that I can finally comprehend. It's
what I was always looking for—you know that. I don't intend to throw away my
second chance."
The
old knight shook his head. "You're right. I don't understand." He
snorted, then stuck out his hand, which Gilrae took. "If you've found your
vocation, though, I pray God will prosper you, my lord."
"Not
'my lord' anymore, Lorcan. Just Gilrae—and maybe Father Gilrae someday,
if what I pray is true."
"And
if it isn't?"
"I
think it is," he said with a smile. A slight movement had caught his eye
off in the north transept, and he gave Lorcan's hand a final squeeze.
"You'd
better go now, old friend. Your new lord is waiting, as is mine. Serve Caprus
faithfully, as you would have served me. I have no doubt you'll find him
worthy."
The
old knight did not speak, but as he bowed over his former master's hand in
farewell, he pressed his lips against its back in final homage, battle-scarred
fingers briefly caressing the smooth flesh of the once swollen wrist. Then he
was turning on his heel and striding down the steps, head ducked down in the
collar of his cloak, stumbling a little as he receded down the nave.
Gilrae
stared after him, sun-dazzled, then drew on his glove again and turned to lay
his hands on the ruined altar once more, bowing his head in blind and wordless
thanksgiving. He felt the sun die behind him, and the deepening shadows of the
evening, and after a while longer, the touch of a hand on his right shoulder.
"Gilrae?"
"Adsum," Gilrae whispered.
Old
Simonn's gentle chuckle floated on the air like music as the night's first
snowflakes began to drift to earth. Out on the eastern horizon, Gilrae realized
that the evening's first star was heralding a personal advent, as well as the
coming of the Christmas King.
"Come,
young friend," came Simonn's invitation. "But you must save that word
for another than myself. Come and I'll take you to an unstained altar."
With
"Bethane," we shift more than a hundred years to the timeframe of
Morgan, Kelson, and the rest of the familiar characters of the CHRONICLES OF
THE DERYNI. This particular story sprang from two sources: a brief reference in
Deryni Checkmate to the summer when Alaric Morgan fell out of a tree and
broke his arm; and a request to do a story about witches for an antholoy called
Hecate's Cauldron. I'd never actually referred to old Bethane as a
witch, but she certainly fulfills the usual stereotypes about crones and
cauldrons and the like. Besides, I'd always been curious about her. Her brief
appearance in Deryni Checkmate sketched just enough information to be
enticing, and asked far more questions than it answered.
Who
was Bethane? Who was Darrell, her husband? What happened to him? What happened
to her, to make her the way she was? She wasn't always an old nag, living in the
hills and eking out a miserable existence from sheep and the offerings of the
locals for concocting the odd love potion or practicing folk medicine. She'd
obviously had some contact with Deryni, but was she Deryni herself, though
ill-trained, or was she something else, like Warin de Grey?
So
I melded the two ideas—Alaric's tumble from the tree and the mysterious old
woman in the hills, twenty years younger than when we saw her in Deryni
Checkmate, though already an eccentric old hag—and turned the characters
loose. I found out more than I'd bargained for about Bethane, her husband and
his associations, and another Deryni I hadn't expected to see in this context;
and got yet another glimpse of those dark times of anti-Deryni persecution that
had only just begun to ebb to a livable level by the time Alaric Morgan reached
young manhood.
bethane
Old
Bethane shaded her eyes with a gnarled hand and peered out across the meadow
with a frown. She had seen the approaching children before. Two of them were
sons of the Duke of Cassan; she didn't know about the other two. This time, the
four were racing their shaggy mountain ponies across her meadow at a mad
gallop, beginning to scatter the scraggly sheep she had spent all morning
collecting.
A
low growl rose in her throat as she saw one of the boys lean down and whoop at
a grazing ewe and her lamb. The ewe bolted in terror and lumbered out of the
pony's way, the lamb scampering after, and Bethane lurched to her feet,
brandishing her shepherd's crook at the girl child, who was almost upon her.
"Here,
now! You stop that!"
The
girl's pony stopped stock still, but the girl continued on over the animal's
head, legs all akimbo and skirts flying, to land in the grass with a thump as
the pony whirled and retreated, bucking and squealing. Bethane grabbed the
child's upper arm and hauled her to her feet, giving her a none-too-gentle
shake.
"Got
you now!" Bethane crowed. "What's the matter with you, riding through
here like you owned the free air and frightening an honest woman's sheep? Well,
speak up, girl! What do you have to say for yourself?"
As
the girl raised wide blue eyes in astonishment, more stunned than hurt, the
three boys came galloping toward her. The oldest looked to be twelve or so,
though he carried himself like a soldier already. The other two were several
years younger, one of them pale blond like the little girl.
"You
let my sister alone!" the blond boy shouted, yanking his pony to a halt
and glaring at Bethane quite fiercely.
"You'd
better not hurt her!" the older boy chimed in. "She didn't mean any
harm."
Bethane
laughed, almost a cackle, and shook her head. "Not so fast, young masters.
I'm owed an apology first." She glared at her captive. "What's your
name, girl? What's the idea of chasing my sheep?"
The
girl, perhaps five or six, swallowed visibly, not even glancing at her brother
and the other two boys, though the hand of the eldest rested on the hilt of his
dagger.
"I'm
sorry, grand-dame," the girl said in a small voice. "We didn't know
the sheep belonged to anyone. I mean, we knew they weren't Duke Jared's, but we
didn't think they'd been herded. We thought they were just grazing free."
Bethane
did not allow her expression to soften, but she did relax just a little inside.
Perhaps the children had not come to torment her, after all.
"Oh,
you did, did you?" she muttered. "Who are you, anyway?"
The
eldest boy drew himself up a little haughtily in the saddle and gazed down at
her from his advantage of height. "I am Kevin, Earl of Kieraey." He
nodded toward the other brown-haired boy. "This is my brother, Lord
Duncan, and that's Lord Alaric Morgan, Bronwyn's brother. You'd better let her
go," he added, a trifle less belligerently.
"Oh,
I'd better, eh? Well, I'll tell you one thing, young Earl of Kierney. You'd
better learn some manners, if you expect anyone to respect you for more than
that high-sounding title you bear. What's your excuse for chasing my poor
little ewes?"
As
the young earl's mouth gaped—she could tell he was not often spoken to in that
manner—his brother moved his pony a little closer and swept off his leather
hunt cap in a polite bow.
"Please
pardon us, grand-dame. We are all to blame. It was thoughtless on our part. How
can we make amends?"
Slowly
Bethane released the little girl's arm, studying her and the three boys a
little suspiciously. What was there about these children that raised her
hackles so? Something fey, something she had not sensed in a long time...
But,
no matter. Hitching up her greyed and tattered skirts, she leaned against her
shepherd's crook and continued to eye them sternly, determined not to speak
until all four had backed down from her gaze. She did not have long to wait.
"Very
well. Apology accepted. And to balance accounts, you can help gather
up my sheep now, since you helped scatter them."
The
blond boy nodded, no trace of resentment in his look. "A fair recompense,
grand-dame. We'll see to it at once."
For
the next little while, the children applied themselves diligently to the task
at hand, eventually rounding up all the sheep they had scattered and even a few
Bethane had missed. When they had finished, they spread their noon meal under a
large tree across the meadow and settled down to eat. The little girl invited
Bethane to join them, but the old woman shook her head wordlessly and retreated
to her cave, overlooking the meadow. She wanted no such exalted company.
Besides, the oldest boy, Kevin, obviously did not like her much. Only the
little girl seemed genuinely concerned about an old widow woman's feelings,
even bringing up a napkin full of fresh-baked bread and savory cheese when she
and her companions were finished eating. She laid it on a smooth rock and made
a graceful little curtsey before heading back down the hill without a word.
Bethane
could hardly ignore such a gesture. Besides, she could smell the food. She
found the bread soft and pale, so kind to old, jagged teeth and aching
gums—bread such as she had not tasted since her youth, when she and Darrell
first were wed. And the cheese—how he would have loved that!
With
sweet memory for companion, she settled on a sunny ledge just outside the cave
to enjoy the last morsels, basking in the summer warmth. The faint murmur of
the children still playing in the meadow, the coolish breeze, and the glow of a
full stomach soon lulled her to drowsiness, and the old eyes closed. With her
wedding ring cradled close beside her cheek, she drifted. She could almost
imagine she was young again, her Darrell lying at her side.
He
had been a handsome man, perhaps the more so for being of the magical Deryni
race, though she had been afraid of him at first. He had risked his life to
save her from a life she still chose to forget. The love which had grown
between them became a beacon for her soul, a positive focus for the knowledge
which before had threatened to destroy her.
He
had taught her things, too—a magic beyond the ancient lore of midwifery and
conjuring and divination handed down to her by her mother and mother's mother.
Though many of their methods had been similar, his powers had come from an
elsewhere that she had never tapped; and she, in turn, had taught him how to
bid the elemental forces—more homespun magic than the exalted theory and
ceremony of the mysterious and much-feared Deryni, but it had worked as well,
if in different ways. Together, they had dreamed of shaping a better world,
where differences would not give others leave to kill. Perhaps their children
would not need to live in fear, as they had done.
But
there were to be no children; none that lived, at any rate. Too soon had come a
renewed wave of madness in their village, condoned and even encouraged by the
local lord. Darrell, unknown to be Deryni by most of their acquaintances, had
been a teacher of mathematics in nearby Grecotha. With several of his Deryni colleagues,
he also had been tutoring young children of his race in secret, though it was a
capital offense against the law of Ramos if they were caught.
They
had been betrayed. Agents of the local lord, all armored and ahorse, had raided
the small farmhouse where the Deryni schola met and slain the teacher
schooling them that day. More than twenty children were captured and driven
like sheep into a brush-filled pen in the village square, for the lord's man
and the village priest meant to burn them as the heretics they surely were.
She
remembered the smell of the oil-soaked wood in the pen, as she and Darrell
huddled in the crowd which gathered to see sentence carried out. She saw again
the looks of dull terror on the faces of the children, most of them no older
than the girl Bronwyn and her brother now playing across the meadow. Her
stomach churned in revulsion as it had so many years ago, as a line of guards
bearing torches marched out of a courtyard behind the square and took up
stations around the captive children. The guard captain and the village priest
followed, the captain bearing a scroll with pendant seals and cords. The crowd
murmured like a wild animal aroused, but the cry was not of horror but
anticipation. In all their number, there was no one to plead the cause of these
terrified little ones.
"Darrell,
we have to do something!" she whispered in her husband's ear. "We
can't just let them burn. What if our child were among them?"
She
was just seventeen, carrying their first child. Her husband's voice was tinged
with despair as he shook his head.
"We
are two. We can do nothing. They say the priest betrayed us. Even the
confessional is not sacred where Deryni are concerned, it seems."
She
bowed her head against his shoulder and covered one ear with a hand, trying to
blot out the pious mouthings of priest and captain as holy words were spoken
and writs of condemnation read. All pretense of legality and justice was but
excuse for murder. The child she carried beneath her heart kicked, hard, and
she cradled her arms across her adbomen as she began to sob, clinging to
Darrell’s arm.
Hoofbeats
intruded then, and a disturbance behind them. She looked up to see a band of
armed men forcing their horses through the crowd, more of them blocking the
exits from the square—stern-looking horse-archers with little recurve bows,
each with an arrow knocked to bowstring and more in quivers on their backs. At
their head rode a fair-haired young man in emerald green, surely no older than
herself. His eyes were like a forest in sunlight as he swept the crowd and
urged his white stallion closer to the captain.
"It's
Barrett! The young fool!" Darrell whispered, almost to himself. "Oh,
my God, Barrett, don't do it!"
Barrett? she
thought to herself. Is the man Deryni?
"Let
the children go, Tarleton," the man named Barrett said. "Your master
will not take kindly to children being slain in his name. Let them go."
Tarleton
gazed back at him agog, his writ all but forgotten in one slack hand. "You
have no authority here, Lord Barrett. These are my lord's vassals—Deryni
brats! The land will be well rid of them."
"I
said, let them go," Barrett repeated. "They can harm no one. How can
these infants be heretics?"
"All
Deryni are heretics!" the priest shouted. "How dare you interfere
with the work of the Holy Mother Church?"
"Enough,
priest," Tarleton muttered. At his hand signal, the men holding the
torches moved closer to the pen where the children huddled in terror, fire
poised nearer the oil-soaked brush.
"I
warn you, Barrett, do not interfere," Tarleton continued. "The law
says that those who defy the law of Ramos must die. Whether it happens to these
now or later makes no difference to me, but if they die now, you doom
them to die without blessing, their Deryni souls unshriven. You cannot stop
their deaths. You can only make it worse for them."
No
one moved for several seconds, the two men measuring one another across the
short distance which separated them. Bethane could feel her husband's tension
knotting and unknotting the muscles of his arm, and knew with a dull certainty
which ached and grew that Barrett was not going to back down. The young lord
glanced behind him at his men stationed all around, then dropped the reins on
his horse's neck.
"I
never have liked the law of Ramos," he said in a clear voice,
casually raising both hands to head-level as though in supplication.
Instantly
he was surrounded by a vivid emerald fire which was visible even in the sunlit
square. The gasp of reaction swept through the crowd like a winter wind, chill
and fearsome. Tarleton reddened, and the village priest shrank back behind him,
crossing himself furtively.
"By
my own powers, which are everything those children have not realized, you shall
not have those lives," Barrett stated. "This I swear. I can stop you
with my powers, if I must, and save at least a few, but many others are likely
to die who do not deserve such fate."
The
crowd was beginning to look around uneasily for an escape, but Barrett's men
had closed the perimeter even more tightly, guarding all exits from the square.
There was no place to go.
"I
give you this choice, however," Barrett continued, raising his voice above
the rising murmur of dismay. "Release the children, allow my men to take
them away to safety, and I will give myself into your hands as their ransom.
Which will please your lord more? A handful of untrained children, who can do
no harm to anyone? Or someone like myself, fully trained and able to wreak
havoc any time I choose?—though I would not do so willingly, despite what I know
you are thinking."
In
the rising panic around them, no one heard Darrell's choked, "No!"
except Bethane. Tarleton let the crowd seethe and mutter for several seconds,
then held up a hand for silence. He was obviously unnerved by Barrett's
implication that he was reading minds, but he put up a brave front,
nonetheless. Gradually the crowd noises died down.
"So,
the aristocratic Lord Barrett de Laney is a Deryni heretic himself," the
captain said. "My lord was right not to trust you."
"Your
lord must wrestle with his own conscience in the dark, early morning hours and
answer for his own actions at the day of reckoning," Barrett replied.
"A
prize, indeed," Tarleton continued, as though he had not heard. "But,
how do I know that you would keep your part of the bargain? What good is the
word of a Deryni?"
"What
good is any man's word?" Barrett returned. "Mine has been my bond for
a long as anyone has known me. I give you my word that if you allow my men to
take these children out of here, I will surrender myself into your hands and I
will not use my powers to resist you. My word on that. My life for the lives of
those children. I am able to face my God on those terms."
"You
must be mad!" Tarleton replied, a menacing grin beginning to crease his
face. "But I accept your terms. Guards, allow His Lordship's men to take
the children. Archers, train your arrows on my Lord Barrett and see that he
keeps his Deryni word. I have never heard that magic could stop a flight of
arrows."
A
half-dozen archers stepped from their vantage points on the roof to either side
of Tarleton and covered the new hostage. The other guards murmured among
themselves, but they obeyed, moving away from the pen to surround Barrett,
though they would not approach too closely with the green fire of his magic
still flaring close about him. Methodically, Barren's men rode in one at a time
and took the children up in front of them, one to each man, until the pen was
empty and the last double-mounted horse had disappeared at a gallop down the
main street. Four men remained, arrows still knocked to their little recurve
bows. One of them saluted Barrett smartly.
"Sir,
your orders will be carried out."
Barrett
gave a quiet nod. "I thank you for your service and release you from all
other orders. Go now."
The
four bowed over their saddlebows, then wheeled as one and galloped off the way
the others had gone. When the clatter of steel-shod hooves had died away,
Barrett swung down from his horse and began walking slowly toward Tarleton. The
crowd parted before him, even Tarleton and the priest backing off a few steps.
When he had approached to within a few feet of them, he stopped and bowed his
head. The fire died around him, and with his left hand he drew his sword
hilt-first and extended it to Tarleton.
"I
keep my word, Captain," he said, eyes blazing at the other man.
Tarleton
gingerly took the weapon and moved back a pace, and instantly half a dozen of
his men were moving in to grasp Bennett's arms and bind him.
"His
eyes!" the priest hissed. "Evil! Evil! Beware his eyes, my
lord!"
As
the crowd took up the cry, Tarleton gestured curtly to his men and turned to
lead them back into the yard. Barrett held his head high, but he stumbled as
the guards manhandled him away from the crowd.
Old
Bethane shook her head in her quasi-dream, resisting the continued memory; but
it continued to play itself out before her closed eyes, and she could not seem
to open them and stop it.
In
the yard beyond the square lay a blacksmith's shop, and just outside the shop,
clearly visible from where she and Darrell watched in horror, a brazier held
various implements of red-hot iron. To this place the guards of Tarleton led
their captive, one of them pausing to pluck a glowing bar of iron carefully
from the fire. Then the captive was hidden behind the ring of soldiers which
closed in for his torture.
She
did not see them blind him, though she knew that it was done. His scream echoed
through the square, making her stomach cramp and the child move in her womb.
Even as she was squeezing her eyes shut and trying to stop her ears against
ever more agonized screams, Darrell was leaning close and pulling a hand away,
speaking in a stern, urgent voice.
"I
gave no word! I'm going after him. If I can get him out, I'll take him to Saint
Luke's. Meet me there. God keep you, dearest."
And then, before she could hold him, he was gone, slipping through the crowd and vaulting onto Barrett's horse, the golden fire of his glorious shields blazing up around him as he and the snow-white stallion surged through the crowd and into the yard beyond.
Magic
flared, shouts and screams choked off in mid-breath, and the crowd began to
panic, pushing away through every exit from the square in mindless stampede.
Bethane felt herself carried on their tide whether she willed or no, away from
the yard, away from Darrell, and she wept, she raged.
She
caught just a glimpse of his horse in the entry to the yard, rearing and
screaming and lashing out with battle-trained hooves—and a limp, bloodied form
slung across the saddle in front of her husband.
Then
the rest of Tarleton's men were pressing close around him, he was breaking
away, and the archers were firing at him as he spurred the stallion toward a
street on the other side of the square, people falling beneath the hooves and the
archers' arrows.
The
screams of those around her sent bolts of terror shafting through her mind like
the arrows of the soldiers, and she was running with them and screaming and—
Other
screams broke through her consciousness, and she sat up groggily to see the
child Bronwyn running toward her across the meadow, shrieking at the top of her
voice.
"Grand-dame!
Grand-dame! Come quickly. My brother's hurt! Oh, come quickly!"
As
Bethane struggled to her feet with the aid of her staff, she could see two of
the boys bent over the third, far across the meadow. The child was coming far
too fast to stop, and nearly knocked her down as she flung her arms around the
old woman's waist.
"Oh,
come quickly, please, grand-dame. He's hurt! I think his arm is broken!"
She
did not want to go. These children were nothing to her but nuisance. But
something in the little girl's frantic entreaty reminded her of those other
little faces in that long-ago village square, so she fetched her satchel of
bandages and healing herbs and hobbled down the rocky hillside, the child
tugging at her free hand all the while and urging her to hurry faster, faster.
The
others looked up as she approached, the young McLain boy standing almost
protectively. It was the blond one who lay on the ground struggling to breathe.
The split branch dangling from a high limb overhead told most of the story. A
glance at the odd angle of the boy's right arm told the rest. Kevin, the young
earl, had had the foresight to slit the boy's sleeve from wrist to shoulder, but
the arm thus exposed was already purpling along the bulge of the broken angle.
The boy himself was conscious, but breathing raggedly. The fall must have
knocked the wind out of him, as well as breaking his arm. At least she could
see no blood. That was usually a good sign.
"Well,
let's have a look," she said gruffly, heaving herself to her knees at the
boy's right and laying aside her satchel. "Can you feel this?"
As
she touched the arm above and below the angle of the break, he winced and
nodded, but he did not cry out. She tried not to hurt him more, but his face
went dead-white several times as she went about the business of assessing the
damage.
"Both
bones are snapped clean through," she said, when she had finished her
appraisal. "It won't be easy to set, or pleasant." She looked across
at Kevin. "I can tend it, but you'd best get back to your father's and
bring men with a litter. Once it's been set, it mustn't be allowed to shift
before it's had time to knit a little."
The
young earl's face was pale, but a touch of the old arrogance still lingered in
the clear blue eyes. "It's his sword arm, grand-dame," he said
pointedly. "Are you sure you can set it properly? Shouldn't I fetch my
father's battle-surgeon?"
"Not
if you want it to heal straight," she replied with a contemptuous toss of
her head. "Most battle-surgeons would just as soon as cut it off. It's a
bad break. The wrong manipulation, and the bone could pierce the skin—and then
he would have to lose the arm. I know what I'm doing. Now go!"
The
arrogance was gone. With a sincere and now thoroughly chastened nod of
agreement, Kevin scrambled onto his pony and headed off at a gallop. Bethane
sent the other two children to find wood for splints, then settled down
cross-legged to resume her examination of the broken arm. The boy's breathing
had eased, but he still sucked in breath between clenched teeth when her
fingers came anywhere near the area of the break. He would need a painkiller
before she could do much more.
She
pulled her satchel closer and began rummaging inside for the appropriate drugs
and herbs, glancing at the boy from time to time through slitted eyes. She left
her selection to intuition and was astonished to see that one of the pouches
she had withdrawn contained a deadly poison.
Now why? she
thought, staring at the pouch and trying to ken a reason. 'Tis but a boy, no
enemy, no—
Sweet
gods and elemental lords! The boy was Deryni!
All
in a rush, the old bitterness came flooding back: Darrell dying in her arms
with the archers' arrows in his back; dying because he had felt compelled to
try to save his Deryni comrade; dying because of those Deryni children.
And
their own child, stillborn in the awful after-anguish following Darrell's
death; and then, a long, long time that she lay sick and despondent at Saint
Luke's, not caring if she lived or died, and something had snapped
inside, never to be mended...
Darrell...
A choked sob
welled in her throat, the tears spilling down her weathered cheeks as she
pressed the pouch to her withered breasts.
Deryni
children had cost Darrell his life. For Deryni children, he had taken the
archers' arrows and died. Now another Deryni child lay in her power, helpless
to defend himself from her just vengeance. Could she not have just this one
life in exchange for her love's?
She
reached behind her for one of the cups the children had left after their meal.
The first was empty, but the second still contained two fingers' worth—enough
to serve her purpose. The boy's eyes were closed, so he did not see her pour
the measured dose from pouch to cup, or stir the greyish powder with a handy
twig. She might have administered the killing draught without a qualm, had not
the boy opened his eyes as she raised his head.
"What's
that?" he asked, the grey eyes wide and trusting, though he winced as his
arm shifted from having his head raised.
"Something
for the pain," she lied, unnerved by his eyes. "Drink. You will feel
nothing, after this."
Obediently,
he laid his good hand on hers which held the cup, pale lashes veiling the fog-grey
eyes. The cup was almost to his lips when he froze, the eyes darting to hers in
sudden, shocked comprehension.
"It's
poison!" he gasped, pushing the cup aside and staring in disbelief.
"You want to kill me!"
She
could feel the tentacles of his thought brushing at the edges of her mind and
she drew back in fear, letting his head fall to the grass. He moaned, his face
going white as he clasped his injured arm to his body and rolled on his side
away from her, trying to sit up. She touched his shoulder and murmured one of
the old charms to drain him of his strength, knowing he could not concentrate
to resist it, with the pain—could only just stay conscious now, even if his
training were sufficient to resist her spelling, though she doubted
that. As she twined her fingers in his hair and yanked his head up-turned, the
pain-bright eyes tried to focus on her other hand, as if his gaze might stave
off the cup she brought toward him again.
"But,
why?" he whispered, tears runnelling narrow tracks from the corners of his
eyes. "I never harmed you. I never wished you ill. It can't be for the sheep!"
She
steeled herself against his pleas, shifting her hand to pinch at the hinges of
his jaws and force the mouth to open.
Darrell, my only love, I do it to avenge you! she thought, as the boy groaned and tried
to turn his head aside.
But
as she set her teeth and moved the cup closer, ignoring his groans and
weakening struggles, the sunlight caught the wedding band on her hand, flashing
bright gold in her eyes. She blinked and froze.
Darrell—oh, my gods, what am I doing?
All
at once she realized how very young the boy was: no more than eight or nine,
for all his earlier posturings of manhood. He was Deryni, but was that his
fault, any more than it had been the fault of those other children, or Darrell,
or even the self-sacrificing Barrett? Was this what Darrell had tried to
teach her? Was she mad, even to consider killing a Deryni, like him?
With
a muted little cry, she flung the cup aside and let him go, burying her face in
her hands.
"I'm
sorry, Darrell," she sobbed, crushing her lover's ring against her lips.
"I'm sorry. Oh, forgive me, my love. Please forgive me, my love, my
life..."
When
she finally looked up, drying her tears on a tattered edge of her skirt, the
boy was on his back again, the grey eyes studying her quite analytically. The
fair face was still pinched with pain, the injured arm still cradled in his
good one, but he made no move to escape.
"You
know what I am, don't you?" he asked, his voice hardly more than a
whisper.
At
her nod, the grey eyes shuttered for an instant, then turned back on her again.
"This
Darrell—was he killed by a Deryni?"
She
shook her head, stifling a sob. "No," she whispered. "He was
Deryni, and died to save another of his kind."
"I
think I understand," the boy replied, with a preternaturally wise nod. He
drew a deep, steadying breath, then continued. "Listen, you don't have to
help me if you don't want to. Kevin will bring the battle-surgeon, even though
you said not to. I'll be all right."
"Without
a sword arm, young Deryni?" She drew herself up with returning dignity.
"Nay, I can't let you chance that. Darrell would never approve. How can
you carry on his work without a proper sword arm?"
As
his brows knit in question, she replaced the lethal pouch in her satchel and
began withdrawing rolls of yellowish bandages.
"I
won't offer you another painkiller," she said with a wry smile. "I
wouldn't trust either of our judgements in light of what has already passed
between us. I will set the arm, though. And I give you my word that it
will heal as straight as ever, if you follow my instructions."
"Your
word? Yes," the boy repeated, glancing aside as Duncan and Bronwyn
returned with an assortment of straight pieces of wood.
As
she sorted through them, picking four which suited her, she remembered that
other Deryni's reply to such a question—My word is my bond!—and she knew
that she, too, had meant what she said. When she had put the other boy to work
whittling knots and twigs from the splints she had chosen, showing him how to
carve them flat along one side, she glanced at the injured one with rough
affection.
Something
in her face must have reassured him— or perhaps he read it in the way Darrell
once had known her innermost feelings. Whatever the cause, he relaxed visibly
after that, letting his sister cradle his head in her lap and even appearing to
doze a little as Bethane made a final inspection of the splints and bandages
and prepared to do what must be done.
All
three of the children were Deryni, she realized now; and as she bade the other
boy kneel down to hold young Alaric's good arm, she sensed that he knew
she was aware—though how she knew, he would understand no better than Darrell
had. She had tried to tell Darrell that it was the ancient wisdom...
"Girl,
you try to ease him now," she said gruffly, probing above the break and
sliding one hand down to his wrist. "A pretty girl can take a man's mind
from the pain. My Darrell taught me that."
He
had stiffened at her first words, perhaps fearing that she would betray her
knowledge to the others; but now he closed his eyes and drew a deep breath,
tension draining away as he let it out. Bethane waited several heartbeats,
sensing a rudimentary form of one of Darrell's old spells being brought into
play, then gave his wrist a squeeze of warning and began pulling the arm
straight, at the same time rotating it slightly and guiding with her other hand
as the ends of bone eased into place. The boy's breath hissed in between
clenched teeth, and his back arched off the ground with the pain; but he did
not cry out, and the injured arm did not tense or move except as she
manipulated it. When she had adjusted all to her satisfaction, she bound the
arm to the splints Duncan held, immobilizing it straight from bicep to
fingertips. As the final bandages were tied in place and the bound arm eased to
his side, Alaric finally passed out.
Across
the meadow, horsemen were approaching at a gallop. Bethane stood as they drew
rein, her work completed. A man with a satchel much like her own dismounted
immediately and knelt at the boy's side. Two more got down and began unrolling
a litter. The fourth man, Lord Kevin mounted pillion behind him, gave the young
earl a hand down and then himself dismounted. He was young and fair, in
appearance much like her Darrell when first they met.
"I'm
Deveril, Duke Jared's seneschal," the man said, watching as the first man
inspected her handiwork. "His Grace and the boy's father are away. What
happened here?"
She
inclined her head slightly, supporting herself on her shepherd's staff.
"Boys will be boys, sir," she answered cautiously. "The young
lord fell out of the tree." She gestured with her staff and watched all
eyes lift to the broken branch. "I but lent my poor skills to right the
lad's hurt. He will mend well enough."
"Macon?"
the seneschal asked.
The
battle-surgeon nodded approvingly as his patient moaned and regained
consciousness. "An expert job, m'lord. If nothing shifts, he should heal
as good as new." He glanced at Bethane. "You didn't give him any of
your hill remedies, did you, Mother?"
Containing
a wry smile, Bethane shook her head. "No, sir. He is a brave lad and would
have nothing for his pain. A fine soldier, that one. He will fight many a
battle in his manhood."
"Aye,
he likely will, at that," Deveril replied, looking at her so strangely
that she wondered for a moment whether he had caught her double meaning.
The
boy had, though. For when they had laid him on the litter and were preparing to
move out, he raised his good hand and beckoned her closer. The battle-surgeon
had given him one of his remedies for pain, and the grey eyes were
almost all pupil, the pale lashes drooping as he fought the compulsion to
sleep. Still his grip was strong as he pulled her closer to whisper in her ear.
"Thank
you, grand-dame—for several things. I will—try to carry on his work."
Bethane
allowed herself an indulgent nod, for by the look of his eyes, he would
remember nothing when he woke from the battle-surgeon's potion. But just as the
litter started to move, he drew her hand closer and touched his lips to her
ring—Darrell's ring!—in the same way he had always done, so many years
ago.
Then
the fingers went slack as sleep claimed him, and all the noble party were
mounting to leave, the litter bearers gently carrying him out into the golden
sunlight. The girl Bronwyn dropped her a grave curtsey—could she know
what had happened?—and then all of them were heading off across the meadow,
toward the castle.
Wondering,
she brought her hand to her face and rubbed the smooth gold of the ring against
her cheek, her eyes not leaving the departing riders and especially the bobbing
litter. But by the time they had disappeared into the afternoon haze, the day's
events were hardly more than dimly harkened memories, as her mind flew back
across the years.
"Well,
Darrell, at least we saved one of them, didn't we?" she whispered, kissing
the ring and smiling at it.
Then
she picked up her satchel and started up the hill, humming a little tune under
her breath.
The
Deryni Bishop Arilan has been a subject of fascination for me ever since he
showed up on Kelson's Regency Council in Deryni Rising. I knew, from the
beginning, that Arilan was secretly Deryni (though, at that time, I had no idea
the Camberian Council even existed), but he wasn't revealed as such until High
Deryni, and I doubt Brion ever knew. Still, Brion's appointment of a very
junior auxiliary bishop to his privy council must have reflected a close personal
trust and friendship. (In fact, Denis Arilan was Brion's Confessor at the time
of his death—and how he came to be so will be told in a future novel.)
Arilan's
fellow bishops obviously didn't know he was Deryni either, or he could not have
been elected to the episcopate. Indeed, had the Synod of Bishops known what
Arilan was, he could not even have been ordained a priest— for, as part of the
strictures placed on Deryni as a result of the Council of Ramos, Deryni were
forbidden to enter the priesthood, on pain of death.
The
Church obviously had some way of enforcing its ban over the years—though Arilan
apparently found a way to get around it. The Deryni bishop states in High
Deryni that, so far as he knows, he and Duncan are the only Deryni to have
been ordained in several centuries. (One suspects that Arilan might have had a
hand in getting Duncan through safely, though Duncan obviously never knew, or
he would have known Arilan was Deryni.)
So,
how did the Church keep Deryni out of the priesthood? What was there to stop
Dernyi from being secretly ordained anyway? How did Arilan circumvent the
ecclesiastical barriers to ordination—and what was the price? What
justifications did he have to make, in his own mind? Did he have any regrets?
“Tell
me," Duncan demands, in High Deryni, "did it never bother you
to stand by idly while our people suffered and died for lack of your
assistance? You were in a position to help them, Arilan, yet you did
nothing."
Arilan
counters, "I did what I dared, Duncan. I would it had been more. But... I
dared not jeopardize what greater good I might achieve by acting
prematurely." We can surmise by those words that the price was high.
Incidentally,
two acquaintances from the Camberian Council of Kelson's day show up in this
story, though they're introduced to the twenty-year-old Denis Arilan by first
name only, and he knows nothing of that connection or even of the Council's
existence at this time. Unknown to Denis, his brother Jamyl is also a member of
the Council—but Denis knows only that Jamyl has powerful friends in high places
of some sort, including but not limited to King Brion. We'll be seeing more of
the Arilan brothers and their association with the Haldane Royal House in the
CHILDE MORGAN TRILOGY.
the priesting of arilan
The
twenty-year-old Denis Arilan, vested for choir in black cassock and white
surplice, did not know whether God really would strike down any Deryni
presuming to seek ordination to the priesthood, but he was about to find out—or
rather, his friend Jorian de Courcy was about to find out.
"Embue
me with the garment of innocence and the vesture of light, O Lord," Jorian
recited softly, from inside the new white alb Denis was pulling over his head.
"May I worthily receive Thy gifts and worthily dispense them."
The
linen smelled of sunshine and summer breezes, and fell in soft folds over
Jorian's cassock as Denis helped him with the ties at the throat.
You don't have to go through with this, you know, Denis whispered mind-to-mind, as only
Deryni could, the link enhanced by the contact of their hands.
Three
other candidates were also vesting in the library of Arx Fidei Seminary
on this balmy August morning, each of them also assisted by a senior
seminarian, for the usual vesting area in the church sacristy had been taken
over by the visiting archbishop and his entourage, as was always the case for
ordinations.
What if it's true? Denis went on. Jorian, listen to me! If they find you out,
they'll kill you!
Jorian
only smiled as he took a white silk cincture from Denis and looped it around
his waist, murmuring the accompanying prayer as he tied it.
"Bind
me to Thee, O Christ, with the cords of love and the girdle of purity, that Thy
power may dwell in me."
Jorian, what if it's true? Denis insisted.
Maybe it ISN'T true, Jorian responded mentally, in far more intimate exchange than mere
speech would have allowed, especially with others nearby, who must never find
out that the two were Deryni. But we'll never know if someone doesn't take
the chance. I'm the logical someone. I'm not highly trained like you are—nor
ever wanted to be—so I'll be far less of a loss to our people if I AM caught.
Being a priest is what I was born to do, Denis—and if I can't do that, I might
just as well be dead.
That's crazy talk!
Maybe. I'm not turning back now, though, when I'm so close. If I'm
supposed to be ordained, God will look after me.
Jorian
paused to recite another prayer aloud as he laid the white deacon's stole over
his left shoulder and let Denis bend to secure it at the right hip.
"Oh
Thou who hast said, 'My yoke is easy and my burden is light,' grant that I may
bear Thy blessing to all the world."
And if I DON'T make it, Jorian went on mentally, maybe you'll make it for me.
Denis
was too well schooled to let himself change expression, as Jorian slipped the
maniple over his left forearm and secured it, whispering another prayer, but he
knew Jorian was right. Though they had been careful to play down their
friendship all through seminary, so that Jorian's fall, if it came, would not
drag down Denis as well, neither of them had ever harbored illusions that
things could end in other than this ultimate testing. Someone must be
the forerunner, and Jorian was it. The Church had taught for nearly two
centuries that Deryni must not seek priestly ordination, on pain of death, and
that God would strike down any Deryni presumptuous enough to try. Tradition had
it that He had done so, many times, in the years immediately after the onset of
the great anti-Deryni persecutions, early in the tenth century. And every
seminary had its horror stories, impressed on every entering seminarian, of
what had happened to those who had tried since.
As
a result, there had been no Deryni priests or bishops in Gwynedd for nearly two
hundred years. None that Denis' teachers knew of, in any event—and they were in
a position to know, if anyone was. But if Deryni were ever to reverse the
persecution of their people and regain a place of dignity and shared authority
in the kingdom, part of the impetus must come from within the Church, by
gradually reversing the teaching that Deryni were evil because of the powers
they could wield. That meant not only reinfiltrating the Church, but eventually
assuming positions of high authority again. Denis Arilan's teachers hoped for
nothing less than a bishopric for their prize student and had been relieved, if
saddened, when the older and less talented Jorian de Courcy elected to clear
the way for Denis by going first.
"Your
attention please, reverend sirs," came a low voiced warning from Father
Loyall, the abbot's chaplain, as he stuck his tonsured head through the library
doorway and then stood aside.
As
Father Calbert, the energetic young Abbot of Arx Fidei, came into the
library with several members of his faculty and a few visiting priests, all
eyes turned toward him, the four candidates making hurried last-minute
adjustments to their vestments. Denis retreated with the other seniors who had
been assisting, and all of them bowed dutifully as Calbert raised both hands in
blessing and gave them ritual greeting.
"Pax vobiscum, filii mei."
"Deo gratias, Reverendissimus Pater," they replied in unison.
"Ah,
such fine priests you will all make," Calbert murmured, beaming with
approval as he inspected his charges. "Choir, you may go and take your places
while I have a few final words with your brethren."
Denis
fell into line obediently with the other three, eyes averted, as was seemly,
but as he passed closest to Jorian, he sent his mental farewell winging to the
other's mind in a final act of defiance—not of Calbert, for he was a most
learned and holy man, but of the outrage of a law that made this a day of dread
for Jorian when it should have been a day of joy. Without physical contact to
facilitate the mental link, and with Jorian not actively seeking it himself,
the brief rapport took a great deal of energy, but Jorian's weaker but no less
fervent thank-you made it all worthwhile in that instant just before the door
closed between them.
Then
Denis was out in the cloister garth and falling into line behind the thurifers
and processional cross with his classmates, his voice joining with theirs in
the entrance hymn as his heart lifted in a final prayer that Jorian might be
granted his priesthood—and that God would not smite either of them for their presumption.
"Jubilate Deo, omnis terra," he sang with his brethren. "Servile
Domino in laetitia. Introite in conspectu euis in exsultatione..." Make
a joyful noise unto the Lord, all ye lands. Serve the Lord with gladness. Come
before His presence with singing...
The
Abbey Church of the Paraclete was packed, both because of the archbishop's
presence for the ordination and because several of today's priestly candidates
were of highborn families in the area—as was Jorian, though most of his blood
relatives were dead. That had been yet another factor in allowing Jorian to
risk exposure as he did today, for no ecclesiastical or civil reprisals
realistically could be visited on the dead—even Deryni dead. Numb foreboding
accompanied Denis Arilan as he moved with the choir procession into the crowded
church.
The
altar blazed with candles. The candlesticks and altar plate gleamed. The
familiar scents of beeswax and incense made Denis' senses soar with an old joy
as he followed into his place in the right-hand section of choir stalls ranged
to either side of the High Altar, hands joined piously before him.
"Bendicte, anima mea, Domino," the choir sang on, shifting to another
psalm. "Et omnia quae intra me sunt nomini sancto eius..."
Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless His holy name...
The
archbishop's procession seemed to go on forever; nor did its composition bode
well for any Deryni discovered today in deception. The archbishop was bad
enough—the fire-breathing Oliver de Nore, Archbishop of Valoret and Primate of
All Gwynedd, who was known to have burned Deryni in the south during his days
as an itinerant bishop—and two of the priests accompanying him were also
gaining a reputation for anti-Deryni zeal. The worst was a Father Gorony, the
archbishop's chaplain, already responsible for the ferreting-out and eventual
execution of several Deryni. Another was a priest of rising prominence named
Darby, newly appointed pastor of nearby Saint Mark's parish, traditionally a
stepping stone to a bishopric for favored sons of the Church. Every cleric in
Gwynedd had heard of Alexander Darby, whose treatise on Deryni, written during
his own seminary days at Grecotha, had become required reading for all aspiring
clergy.
But
this was no time for Denis to dwell on the foibles of the visitors of
ArxFidei. Today was Jorian's, walking third in the line of candle-bearing
deacons following at the trail end of the procession led by Abbot Calbert.
Despite whatever fears the young Dernyi might have had about his impending fate,
his plain, earnest face was suffused with guarded joy as he approached the
sacrament for which he had spent his life preparing. Denis prayed again, as he
had never prayed before, that Jorian might be spared; and for a time, it
appeared his prayer would be answered.
No
lightning smote Jorian de Courcy when he answered, "Adsum" at
the calling of his name and came forward to kneel and hand over his candle to
the archbishop with a reverent bow. His tongue did not cleave to his palate as
he answered the ritual questions demanded of each candidate. Nor was he struck
dead as hands were laid on his head in consecration and blessing, first by the
archbishop and then by every other priest present, or when the sacred chrism
was spread on his upraised palms.
When,
vested in the white chasuble and stole of a priest at last, Jorian and the
three other new priests gathered at the altar to concelebrate their first Mass
with the archbishop, Denis began to believe they just might make it through
without incident. But as Jorian, after receiving Communion from Archbishop de
Nore, came forward with a ciborium to assist in administering to the school and
congregation, the look of rapture on his face suddenly turned to one of
surprise and then fear, and he stumbled.
"O
sweet Jesu, help me!" Denis heard Jorian murmur, as the new-made
priest blanched and staggered to his knees, catching his weight against the
altar rail with one hand and nearly spilling the contents of the ciborium in
his other.
Father
Oriolt, one of the others ordained with Jorian, had the presence of mind to
rescue the ciborium, but Archbishop de Nore was already moving purposefully
toward the now-swaying Jorian, handing off his own ciborium to Father Gorony as
Abbot Calbert also converged on the stricken priest.
"Jorian,
are you ill?" Calbert asked, laying arms around Jorian's shoulders in
support as de Nore and several others crowded nearer.
From
where he knelt in choir, Denis could not hear Jorian's reply, or indeed any of
the further exchange that passed between them, but there was no mistaking
Jorian's distress, as he sank lower and lower to the floor, now almost hidden
by anxious clerics. At de Nore's imperious signal, Gorony brought down the
archbishop's own chalice from the altar, and Jorian was given to drink from it,
but the draught did not seem to help. If anything, Jorian seemed worse.
And
when de Nore himself retired to the sacristy with the abbot and a half-fainting
Jorian, who had to be supported by Oriolt and Father Riordan, the Master of
Novices, Denis knew something was dreadfully wrong. Could it be that God had
struck down Jorian?
Denis
did not want to believe that, but what other explanation could there be? Jorian
was not a fainter. Nor had he been at all out of sorts earlier in the morning,
while Denis helped him vest. And in Jorian's year as a deacon, essentially a
junior priest-in-training, he certainly had assisted with Communion often
enough for that not to have shaken his composure, solemn an office
though it was.
The
only other conclusion possible was that Jorian's collapse did have
something to do with him being Deryni. God had struck him down, just as
the legends said; and as Denis' turn came to go forward and receive Communion,
he wondered whether God would strike him, too, for even being a party to
Jorian's transgression.
But
though the consecrated wafer Denis received from Father Gorony seemed drier
than usual and stuck in his throat as he made his way back to his place, no
divine wrath struck him. Nor, however, had he just been ordained a
priest in defiance of Holy Church.
He
worried about Jorian all through the rest of the Mass, aching to know what was
going on. The archbishop soon came out of the sacristy with Oriolt and resumed
administering Communion as if nothing had happened, but Father Darby went back
to take his place; and it was Father Gorony who performed the Ablutions after
Communion was over, while de Nore disappeared into the sacristy again for a
little while.
Jorian
did not come out to give his first blessings with the other new priests,
either, and only members of the archbishop's staff were allowed in the sacristy
after Mass was over. Nor did Jorian appear afterward at the celebratory feast
in the refectory hall—though the archbishop came in about halfway though, still
minus his chaplain and Father Darby.
Neither
archbishop nor abbot had any announcement about Jorian at the feast, though
they could not have been unaware how speculation was spreading among the guests
and seminarians in the relaxed atmosphere permitted by suspension of the Rule
of Silence on a feast day. Nor did anyone dare to ask. But when the school
gathered for Vespers that evening, outside visitors no longer among their
number, a tight-lipped and shaken-looking Abbot Calbert came into the pulpit
after the service and called for their attention.
"My
dear sons in Christ, it is my most painful duty to inform you concerning Jorian
de Courcy," he said, his tone and the omission of Jorian's new title
conveying chill dread to the listening Denis. "I have not been unaware of
your concern. I wish I could tell you that Jorian is well—or even that he is
dead. Unfortunately, I can do neither. For Jorian de Courcy, unknown to us
before today, has been found to be a Deryni spy in our midst."
The
disclosure was made dispassionately, with little inflection, but every man and
boy in the church gasped. Denis, fighting down a panic that, unchecked, could
have triggered a mindless and fatal bolt for escape, used his Deryni talents to
force outward calm upon his body so that his reaction seemed no more than any
of the others around him, but the clasped hands he raised to his lips in
hurried prayer for Jorian were white-knuckled. As whispered reaction among the
students shifted to louder speculation, Calbert held up a hand for silence,
which was given immediately.
"No,
none of us suspected before today. The Deryni are skilled in the arts of
deception—but even Deryni magic could not deceive the Lord of Hosts! God has
struck down Jorian de Courcy for his pride and disobedience, and God's servants
will see that justice is done. Tomorrow, de Courcy will be taken to Valoret for
trial before the archbishop's tribunal. Some of you may be asked to make
deposition concerning his record here at Arx Fidei, for it is
unthinkable that a Deryni should have penetrated this close to the Sacred
Mysteries."
They
were all but forbidden to speak of it further among themselves, but after
Compline later that night, when everyone was supposed to be abed, Denis joined
several other seniors just outside the dorter to question the newly ordained
Father Oriolt, who alone, besides the archbishop V staff and the abbot himself,
had seen what transpired in the sacristy after Jorian was spirited away.
"I
don't know what happened," Oriolt was saying, as Denis eased closer
to hear his whispered account more clearly. "I thought he'd just gotten
lightheaded from the excitement, and from fasting since yesterday. I know I
felt a little giddy. That wine the archbishop uses is potent on an empty
stomach."
"But, why did he call out for help?" asked Benjamin, one of the seniors who had been serving at the altar and who, like Denis and most of the rest of those gathered, was due to be ordained in the spring, with the next crop of new priests.
Denis
cautiously extended his Truth-Reading ability as young Oriolt shook his head
and answered.
"I
don't know. He was feeling dizzy. He could hardly walk. He almost vomited after
we got him into the sacristy. I got his vestments off as fast as I could,
figuring the heat might have gotten to him; but he was trembling like a leaf,
and his pupils were huge.
"De
Nore said we should try to give him some more wine, but that didn't seem to
help. I was afraid he was going into convulsions, except that he passed out
then. That's when de Nore told me to come back into the sanctuary with him, and
that Father Darby would stay with Jorian while we finished the Mass. Apparently
Darby's had training as a physician."
Some
of the others asked Oriolt a few more brief questions, but the priest had
already told everything he saw, and Denis knew it was the truth as Oriolt had
perceived it. All of them soon dispersed to go back to their beds, for it
technically was forbidden to speak during the Great Silence of the night
Offices, but Denis lay staring at the ceiling for well over an hour, a growing
suspicion gnawing at the edge of his mind as he considered what he had learned.
The symptoms Oriolt had described sounded almost like poisoning, or—
Merasha! It
was a Deryni substance, and not generally known to non-Deryni, but merasha could
have produced Jorian's distress. Merasha was a powerful mind-muddling
drug that the Deryni themselves had developed to control their own, centuries
before. It acted only as a mild sedative in humans, but for Deryni, in even
minute doses, it produced dizziness, nausea, and loss of physical coordination
and it totally disrupted the ability to concentrate or to use the psychic
powers ordinarily accessible to one of their race. Denis had been given the
drug several times in the course of his advanced training, so he might
recognize its effects and learn how to minimize them if ever it were used
against him by an enemy; but even a trained response could not totally cancel
out the resultant symptoms— and Jorian had not been well trained. Denis doubted
his friend had ever even experienced merasha disruption before.
But
if Jorian had been dosed with merasha, how had it been done?
Could the Church hierarchy somehow have learned of Deryni susceptability to the
drug and used it as their screening device for the priesthood, knowing it would
be harmless to human candidates— and fatally revealing of Deryni who so
presumed? Was "God's will" actually the Church's will that Deryni not
serve as priests, thereby continuing to extend the restrictions laid upon the
race in fearful backlash after the Haldane Restoration?
Suddenly
he suspected how it had been done, too: the sacramental wine! Oriolt had
commented that the wine the archbishop used was very potent. The implication
was that the archbishop had brought his own— which, on the surface, was not at
all illogical, since a bishop, traveling from parish to parish in the course of
his duties, was apt to encounter any number of inferior vintages.
But
if, by supplying his own, slightly adulterated vintage, a bishop might indulge
a discriminating palate and also ensure that no Deryni slipped past God's will
and got ordained—or, if a Deryni were ordained, he would not leave the
altar without being revealed...
It
had to be the wine. And de Nore had given it to Jorian twice—no, three
times: twice from his own chalice and once in the sacristy, though at least the
latter had not been consecrated. It was a scandalous, if not sacrilegious,
misuse of the Sacrament the wine conferred, but it certainly would serve the
aims of a human eccelesiastical hierarchy irrational with fear of Deryni and
smug with the power that their exclusive access to the priesthood and
episcopate ensured.
Denis
shivered over the implications of his theory for several minutes, huddling
miserably under the thin blanket on his bed, not wanting to believe it. If it
was true, though, he had to know—and then figure out a way to circumvent it—for
his own ordination was only six months away. He tried not to think about what
would happen to Jorian, who had not been so fortunate.
Racking
his brain to remember who had been responsible for setup in the sacristy that
morning, Denis conjured the faces of two of the younger subdeacons. One of them
slept in another dormitory, but the other was a friend of his, one Elgin de
Torres, snoring softly only a few beds down from Denis.
Scanning
the long room carefully to make sure no one else was awake besides himself,
Denis rose stealthily, slipped a church cape over his night robe, and glided
silently to Elgin's bed. He knelt slowly at its head, grimacing as one of his
knees popped, and cautiously touched one forefinger lightly to the sleeping
Elgin's forehead just between the eyes, extending subtle control across the
link thus formed.
Elgin, did Archbishop de Nore bring his own wine for Mass today? he asked, demanding the answer only as a
thought—not words.
Immediately
the memory of Elgin's time in the sacristy surfaced—images of de Nore's
chaplain unpacking sumptuous vestments, a jewelled chalice and paten, and a
common enough looking flask from which he filled the wine cruet that would go
on the altar.
So!
De Nore had brought his own wine! That didn't necessarily mean that it
had been drugged with merasha, but it could have been. And all four of
the newly ordained priests had drunk from the archbishop's chalice at
communion.
But
had the merasha actually been in the wine already, when Gorony decanted
it into the cruet, or was it added later? Or it could have been added to
the water cruet—in emotional terms, not as serious a profaning of the sacrament
as tainting the wine, but the effect would be the same. Denis wondered whether,
when Jorian had been given to drink wine a third time in the sacristy, they had
used school wine or wine from de Nore's personal supply—for that would answer
the question regarding the water—but only Oriolt could tell him that, of those
he might safely ask, and Oriolt had already gone to bed and was inaccessible,
and would be leaving early in the morning to take up his new assignment as a
priest.
Still,
wine or water made little difference. Merasha in the sacrificial cup was
diabolical: ultimate betrayal in the very sacrament the newly ordained priest
had just been empowered to celebrate. It was akin to the horror story of
poisoned baptismal salt used by a rogue priest to murder an infant Haldane
prince, around the time of Restoration. Denis would never forget his shock, the
first time he'd heard of that.
Only,
this was even more monstrous, to Denis' way of thinking, for it put the
principal sacrament of the Church into question, if only for would-be Deryni
clergy. Only priests and bishops received both the bread and the wine at
communion—thank God for that, else no Deryni would ever dare to approach the
altar rail for the solace and grace the sacrament conferred.
But
with merasha in the cup, no Deryni priest could slip through that first,
concelebrated Mass with his ordaining bishop without being betrayed. No wonder
there were no Deryni priests, and had been none for all these years. How could
a priestly candidate avoid— or know to avoid—the very sacrament for which he
had sought to be ordained?
Denis
shuddered as he withdrew from Elgin's mind, erasing all trace of his tampering
as he deepened the younger man's sleep. He needed confirmation of his
suspicion. If he could sneak into the sacristy without interference, perhaps he
could find some clue to what had happened there—in the cruets, perhaps, if they
had not gotten washed properly or at all, in the confusion and disruption of
usual procedures following Jorian's apprehension.
It
had to be tonight, though, or tomorrow's students assigned to sacristy duty
would obliterate whatever faint hints their fellows might have left today.
Denis was safe enough as far as the sanctuary, for seminarians of deacon and
subdeacon rank had the privilege of going into the church to pray at any time,
even during the Great Silence of the early morning hours. But if he were caught
in the sacristy, he would have some quick explaining to do—especially with
Jorian having just been found out that day.
But
he had to take that chance. For if drugged wine was the key to the
hierarchy's screening process to keep Deryni out of the priesthood, rather than
direct divine intervention, then Denis or his mentors might be able to figure
out a way around it. And if they couldn't, then Denis' only choices were either
to risk the same fate as Jorian, or else to drop out of Arx Fidei and
disappear altogether, his public usefulness as a secret Deryni forever
compromised.
His
mission to the sacristy appeared to be doomed from the start, however—at least
for tonight. For when he slipped quietly down the night stairs and into the
south transept, pausing in shadow to scan the front of the church, two of his
classmates were already kneeling in the dim-lit choir stalls. And Father
Riordan, the Master of Novices, was just coming down from the altar steps to
approach them.
Damn!
All Denis needed was for Riordan to tell him to go back to bed, as he
apparently was telling the other two in the choir, through silent signal. Denis
would not be obliged to go, even if Riordan told him to, but refusal
would only create suspicion where none yet existed. He wondered whether the
novice master at least might be persuaded to break Silence and tell him
something about Jorian—through purely conventional means of encouragement, of
course—but he knew he would not dare to press the question if Riordan was not
feeling talkative. Even now, Riordan was shooing his two truant students back
toward the night stair in the transept—and toward Denis.
Fortunately,
however, Riordan's mood seemed at least a little indulgent tonight, judging by
the faces of Denis' two classmates who bowed as they passed, on the way back to
their dormitory as instructed. And Riordan himself nodded sympathetically to
Denis as he saw him and came closer, though he was already raising a hand to
signal him to leave.
Denis
put on what he hoped was one of his most sorrowful and troubled expressions as
he bowed to the novice master, hands tucked modestly in the sleeves of his
robe, hoping to make the most of his reputation as one of the school's brighter
and more devout students.
"Forgive
me for breaking silence, Father, but I couldn't sleep," he whispered.
"I've been praying for Jorian de Courcy's soul. Can—can you tell me what
will happen to him?"
Riordan
stopped and crossed his arms on his chest, breathing out perplexedly.
"You
know that breaking silence is forbidden, Denis."
"I'll
accept whatever penance you require, Father," Denis murmured dutifully,
averting his eyes briefly as he clasped his hands at chest level. "But
I—helped him vest this morning, before..." He swallowed. "I've been
thinking about his soul. I thought perhaps my humble prayers might help bring
him to contrition for what he has done."
Sighing
wearily, Riordan turned to glance back toward the altar, at the great,
life-sized crucifix suspended above it, the pale figure of the Crowned King on
the Tree lit red by the Presence lamp that burned before the tabernacle.
"I
know, son. I've been praying for him, too," Riordan murmured. "I
don't see how I could have been so wrong about him. He seemed to have such a
strong vocation, to be so—"
Riordan
shook his head bewilderedly and sighed again. "In any case, they're
already taken him to Valoret. If it—goes as it usually does, they'll—bring him
back here for execution in a month or two."
Execution ...the stake...
Denis
shivered and bowed his head over his clasped hands, closing his eyes against
the thought, but the image sprang up stronger still in his imagination. He had
seen a man burn once, when he was only a young boy.
"I
know," he heard Riordan murmur—and flinched as the priest's hand came to
rest heavily on his shoulder. "It's a terrible way to die. You mustn't
dwell on it. There can be only one consolation: that the flames will cleanse
him of his sins. And perhaps the prayers of those who knew only his nobler side
will help to engage Our Lord's mercy when Jorian comes before the Throne of
Judgement."
Denis
knew Riordan meant well, but it was all he could do not to despise the man for
his pious repetition of the same platitudes humans had been mouthing about
Deryni for two centuries. He stumbled back to his bed almost blind with tears
of rage that he prayed Riordan would attribute to his sensitive nature. He sobbed
into his pillow for a long time before he finally drifted into uneasy sleep for
the few hours remaining before Lauds.
More
than a week passed before Denis finally found legitimate cause to be in the
sacristy alone, washing cruets and sorting linens after a weekday Mass. By
then, of course, no trace remained of the mischief of the ordination Mass. Nor
had he expected any.
A
week after that, however, Denis was able to convey his suspicions to his older
brother Jamyl, come to visit him one balmy Sunday afternoon. Sir Jamyl Arilan
was a rising luminary at court: friend and confidant of young King Brion
Haldane, a newly appointed member of Brion's council of state, and, unbeknownst
even to Brion, a Deryni of extremely thorough training. Jamyl had other powerful
friends besides those at court, too— very highly placed Deryni connections who
commanded even the men who had taught the two Arilan brothers in secret. Denis
hoped Jamyl might enlist their aid in his behalf.
"Sweet
Jesu. Den, if this were coming from anyone but you, I wouldn't believe
it," Jamyl muttered under his breath, when Denis had imparted all he knew
about Jorian's betrayal through words and psychic recall. "What you've
described is incredible—and, if true, nearly impossible to counter without
subverting the staff of every bishop in Gwynedd. Maybe you should just give it
up."
The
heavy weight that had grown in Denis' stomach as he started his recounting rose
to his throat. He had been afraid his brother would say that.
"Jamyl,
I can't do that. What reason could I give? I'm to be ordained in February. I've
done too well here. If I left so soon after Jorian, they might suspect
why— and that could endanger all of us. Besides, I have to do it for
Jorian."
Jamyl
bowed his head, flicking the end of a riding crop against his boot as he stared
at the ground between his feet.
"It
isn't going well for Jorian, you know," he said quietly. "I've been
keeping tabs on the progress of his trial, but I can't do anything more direct.
De Nore's had his inquisitors at him ever since the night he was brought in.
The boy doesn't know enough to really incriminate anyone besides
himself—yourself excepted, of course, and maybe me—"
"Jorian
won't betray us—" Denis began hotly.
"Easy!
I never said he would! They're running out of patience with him, though. And
when they finally do—"
Denis
swallowed hard. "I know," he whispered. "Father Riordan says
they'll burn him."
"Father
Riordan is a perceptive man," Jamyl said neutrally.
Denis
fought down the lump in his throat and looked away, blinking back tears.
"What
about the king?" he ventured, after a moment. "Couldn't he do
something? He doesn't hate Deryni."
Sadly,
Jamyl shook his head. "Sheltering the odd Deryni at his court is one
thing, Den; trying to pardon one who's broken canon law is quite another. Brion
doesn't know about me—and young Alaric Morgan is only half Deryni and son of a
man who was close to Brion's father. Besides, he's only thirteen.
"But
Jorian de Courcy not only defied canon law, he tried to undermine the Church's hierarchy.
The bishops can't let that go by—and Brion can't meddle in the affairs of the
Church without endangering his own status. The bishops traditionally have
turned a blind eye to the Haldane powers in the past—but they mightn't, if a
Haldane king tried to push too hard."
"What
about your Deryni friends, then?" Denis demanded. "They had us
trained; they set up Jorian and me to infiltrate the priesthood. They may not
be able to help him—and I'm sure he understands that; we both knew all
along that a risk was involved—but now that I've found out what we're up
against, why can't they help figure out a way to counter it?"
"I'll
see if they can," Jamyl said.
"You
will?" Denis stared up at his brother in amazement. "Do you think
they really could?"
"I
can't promise anything, but I'll certainly look into it. Can you get away for a
few days?"
"Probably
not until Christmas. Something important is supposed to happen around
Martinmas—at least that's what student gossip says. In any event, all home
visits are canceled."
"You
don't know?" Jamyl said, an odd, strained look on his face.
"Know
what?"
"Martinmas
is when they'll burn him, Den."
In
the nearly three months until Martinmas, Denis Arilan received but one brief
letter from his brother.
To
all outward appearance, the letter contained only family news. The seal on the
letter gave Denis additional information, however—keyed by Deryni magic to be
accessible only to a Deryni, and then only the specific Deryni for whom the
message was intended.
The
news was not good, though—not concerning Jorian de Courcy, in any case.
According to Jamyl, the archbishop's tribunal had, indeed, condemned Jorian and
set his execution for Martinmas at Arx Fidei, to make an example of him.
But Jamyl's Deryni contacts, though unable to do anything for Jorian, had at
least come up with a possible plan to help Denis.
They'll need to discuss details with you in person, however, Jamyl had informed him in the seal. What
we have in mind will be risky, both for you and for those who are minded to
help you, but they are willing to take the risk if you are. Shortly after
Martinmas, do not be surprised to hear that I am deathly ill and may be dying.
That will be your ruse to come home for a few days.
But
before the journey home must come another, more terrible journey—this one
Jorian's, not Denis'. True to Jamyl's prediction, the ecclesiastical
authorities brought Jorian de Courcy back to Arx Fidei, that his fellow
seminarians might see firsthand what happened to Deryni who attempted to
circumvent the Law of God. No one, from the lowliest junior cleric of fourteen
to the abbot himself, would be excused from attending.
Martinmas
dawned clear and glorious, bright with the promise of a day rare in November,
hardly a hint of coming winter in the early morning breeze. Father Riordan
stood in for the abbot at morning prayer, for Calbert was already closeted with
the archbishop and his staff, who had arrived with the condemned Jorian the
night before. Afterward, Riordan led the school to the square outside the abbey
church, where scores of students from neighboring schools and a handful of
curious outsiders already had gathered to see a Deryni burn.
Denis
hardly recognized his friend as the gaunt and stumbling Jorian was led in
chains to the stake erected in the center of the yard. No bruises or stripes of
the lash or other sign of physical torture marked his body, but Denis could
almost count every rib, even from across the yard. By his slack expression and
general air of disorientation, Denis guessed he also was under the influence of
merasha again, and wondered whether they had kept him drugged all the
months of his imprisonment.
One
thing Denis knew they had done almost immediately was to suspend
Jorian's priestly function, cruelly separating him from exercise of the only
privileges that might have brought him some measure of comfort as his doom drew
nearer. They were equally ruthless in ensuring that he did not even look like
a priest. A breechclout of rough homespun was Jorian's only garment this
morning—nothing that might be construed as robe or gown or any other item of
clerical attire. As additional insult, he had not been allowed to shave or
maintain his tonsure during his imprisonment, either. In a yard full of
clean-shaven men and downy-cheeked boys, Jorian's was the only beard; and
someone had raggedly hacked off the hair around his grown-out tonsure so that
no hint now remained of where the tonsure had been—even that symbol of his
former clergy status denied him.
Jorian
de Courcy would die excommunicate and without benefit of the Sacraments as
well. Riordan had read the instrument of anathema to the school before morning
prayers, in a voice so shaky with emotion that it was almost unintelligible—for
the novice master had been fond of Jorian. Then Riordan had preached a brief
homily on conscience and compassion, never mentioning Jorian specifically, but
making clear that compassionate men of conscience were free to pray for whom
they wished during the silent prayer that would follow.
That
small act of kindness and courage could have cost Riordan a severe reprimand or
even his position, had anyone from the archbishop's staff overheard, for
official policy permitted no softness where Deryni were concerned. But only
students were present; and all of them were far too shaken by what was about to
happen to think Riordan's comments at all amiss as they bowed in silent prayer.
During the next few minutes, Denis had used his powers to spot-check the
feelings of those around him—ordinarily an unthinkable invasion of others'
privacy—and was comforted to confirm that nearly everyone there truly grieved
for Jorian's plight. That give him hope that the long-held hatred of Deryni
might be abating where it mattered most, for these young men and boys around
him were the future leadership of the Church; and where the Church led, the
people eventually would follow. Meanwhile, if Denis could succeed where Jorian
had failed, perhaps he himself could help turn the Church back to a course of
moderation and tolerance of Deryni.
That
hope was little personal consolation to Denis just now, however—watching the
archbishop's executioners chain Jorian to the stake. As they drew the chains
snug across Jorian's bare chest, leaving his arms free, Archbishop de Nore came
out on the steps of the abbey church with his chaplain and Abbot Calbert, the
latter looking nigh to fainting already, for the world of academia did not
prepare even abbots for what must be witnessed today. De Nore's appearance
elicited a murmur of anticipation from the watching crowd, and Jorian shuddered
visibly, though he did not look in the archbishop's direction. Denis tried to
reach out to him in psychic comfort, stretching his powers almost to the limit,
but the hazy contact with Jorian's merasha-fogged mind was unbearable,
and he had to withdraw.
Almost
weeping at the injustice of it all, Denis pulled back into his own mind in
despair and hugged his arms across his chest, wishing there were something,
anything, he could do to ease what lay ahead for his friend— but there was
nothing. Jorian must face this final trial with only God for comfort; Denis was
powerless to help him.
Fighting
down the anger that could destroy him if he let it get out of hand, Denis
forced his mind to the discipline of set prayers as de Nore stepped forward,
crozier in hand, to preach a lengthy sermon on the evils of the Deryni, and how
justice was about to be done to this particular specimen of the race. Jorian
merely stood there numbly, hands unbound but dangling listlessly at his sides,
as if he simply did not care any more—until de Nore finished, and calmly set a
torch to the kindling piled around the condemned priest's feet.
A
gasp, half of approbation and half of horror, whispered through the spectators
as the flames caught, steadied, and leaped higher, fanned by an errant autumn
breeze. Jorian stirred at that, the expressive hands lifting in a pathetic
little warding-off gesture that elicited derisive shouts and catcalls from some
of the spectators, seeing it as but one more presumption from this heretic
Deryni who would be priest.
But
then Jorian raised his eyes above the heads of his tormentors and seemed to be
searching for something along the roofline of the abbey buildings beyond. Most
of those watching undoubtedly thought he looked for some hope of rescue or
salvation, but Denis fathomed his intent almost immediately. Jorian de Courcy,
true to his faith even to the end, was searching for a cross, and de Nore had
had him bound so he could not even see one.
If
Denis had known how to turn his powers to destruction at that moment, he
cheerfully could have blasted the archbishop into Hell for that—but he had not
yet been taught how, and would be grateful afterwards that the temptation had
not been a real one. The noble Jorian meanwhile managed quite bravely despite
de Nore, tipping his head back against the stake, eyes closed, and calmly
crossing his hands on his breasts as the flames licked closer to singe his legs
and breech-clout, apparently oblivious to the pain the flames must have caused him
as the heat intensified.
Denis
could hardly bear to watch, but he made himself do it for Jorian's sake,
determined to engrave this event upon his memory for all time to come, that
Jorian's example and the cause for which he died might never be far from
conscious awareness. Jorian de Courcy was not the first or the last Deryni
martyr to human hatred and fear, but Denis thought he surely must have been
among the bravest. Even at the end, Jorian never even cried out. Denis was sure
he sensed the precise moment Jorian's soul left his tortured body, and he sent
his silent farewell winging to his friend even as the soul soared free and into
the hands of God. And as the fire blackened and contorted Jordan's earthly
remains, and the spectators murmured uncomfortably among themselves, a boyish
voice from across the square shouted, "Sacerdos in aeternum!"
Sacerdos in aeternum... a priest forever. Even the Church dared not dispute the truth
of that statement. Ecclesiastical writ might have suspended Jorian from his priestly
function, but the holy imprint set upon the soul of a priest at ordination was
no more capable of being erased than the anointing of a king. In fact, the very
act of sacring a king dated from the time when kings were priests as well as
rulers for their people, the rites of coronation gradually evolving from the
priestly ordination. What God had conferred through the sacraments of His
Church, no mere mortal could reverse, be the recipient Deryni or not.
The
shouted phrase, Sacerdos in aeternum, then, was pointed reminder of that
truth and produced a shocked silence in the watching crowd. Denis had no idea
who had said it—though a reckless part of him almost wished he had—and
no one afterward would admit to having said it, or come forward to betray who had.
It was as if, in hearing that phrase, everyone present had been poignantly
reminded that Jorian de Courcy was a priest forever, no matter what else
he might have been; and only God could judge him now.
But
though the jeering had stopped with the shout, and an almost reverent stillness
descended on the square as a column of greasy smoke rose higher and flames
enveloped the stake, nothing could cancel out the stark physical horror of what
was occurring: the fiery immolation of a living being. All reason, both Deryni
and merely human intellect, told Denis that Jorian de Courcy no longer
inhabited the shiveled husk now writhing in the fire, blackened limbs
contorting in the heat—that the movement came of the effect of fire on physical
matter and not any desperate last stirrings of a living entity in agony.
But
the sight and the stench of burning flesh stirred emotional responses not
necessarily governed by reason or intellect, especially in the young. Nor could
reason postpone more physical reactions indefinitely. Denis was not the first
or the last to crouch with his head between his knees to keep from fainting, or
to stagger retching from the square when they were finally allowed to leave,
the pyre at last but a mound of smoldering ashes.
And
the reek hung about Arx Fidei for days, even after Jorian's ashes were
cast unceremoniously into the river nearby. When, a week later, in response to
the expected news of his brother's ill health, Denis drew rein in the courtyard
of his family's manor house of Tre-Arilan, outside Rhemuth, he imagined he
could still smell the smoke clinging to his riding cassock.
"Well,
I don't suppose there's anything I can say," Jamyl said quietly, when
brief greetings had been exchanged with family and retainers and the two were
alone at last in Jamyl's private study. "I won't ask you for an account of
what happened, because you'd only have to tell it again in a little while. I'm
taking you to meet some very important men tonight, Den. I hope you realize
what a risk we'll all be taking—and what we've already risked for you."
Denis
lowered his eyes, blinking back the tears he had fought to suppress all the way
from Arx Fidei.
"How
much did he risk, Jamyl?" he managed to whisper huskily. "It
seems to me that he paid the ultimate price. I won't let it be for
nothing, even if I have to die trying to handle things alone!"
"I'd
hoped you'd say that," Jamyl said, rising to come lay a comforting hand on
Denis' shoulder. "And hopefully, there's been enough of dying. Come with
me. The others will be waiting."
Denis
knew about the secret passageway Jamyl opened beside the fireplace and followed
his brother without question as the elder Arilan led boldly into the darkness,
each of them conjuring silvery handfire to light their way. He had not known about
the Transfer Portal in the little ritual chamber at the other end, however; and
he was not expecting Jamyl's next request.
"I've
been instructed to bring you through blind," his brother said. "I
really have no business whatever taking you where we're going, but it's too
difficult to transport one of the items we'll need. You must give me your
solemn oath never to speak of what you see and hear. Nor will I be able to
answer any of your inevitable questions, once we've come back—not about the
place and not about the people. Is that understood?"
Denis
swallowed uneasily, wondering what he was getting into.
"1
understand," he said.
"I
need your formal oath, then," Jamyl insisted, his deep blue-violet eyes
never leaving Denis' as he held out his hands, palm up. "I need it very
specific, fully open to my Reading, and I need it sworn by whatever you hold
most sacred."
Awe
sent a shiver down Denis' spine as the seriousness of Jamyl's demand hit home.
He could feel the tingle of the Portal under his feet, the magic of his race
all around him, and he opened wide his shields as he laid his hands on his
brother's, inviting Jamyl's witness through the powers they both held.
"I
swear by my vocation as a priest," Denis said softly, "and by the
memory of Jorian de Courcy, whose priesthood I also vow to uphold, that I will
never reveal any detail of what I shall witness tonight. This knowledge shall
be as inviolate as that of the confessional. And if I break this oath, may I
fail in all I endeavor and perish in the gaining of the priesthood that I seek.
All this I swear, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen."
Only
when the oath was completed did he lift his hands from Jamyl's to cross himself
in blessing and kiss his thumbnail to seal it. He did not think he had ever
sworn a more important or more solemn oath.
"Thank
you," Jamyl whispered, lifting his hands to rest on Denis' shoulders.
"I had no doubts, but there are others who must be absolutely sure. I'll
take you to them now. You'll need to give me complete control for a few
minutes."
With
a blink, a slowly drawn breath, and a nod of agreement, Denis let familiar
rapport form with his brother, relaxing all his shields as he exhaled. As his
vision tunneled down to only Jamyl's eyes, nearly all pupil in the dim light of
waning handfire, he could feel Jamyl's controls slipping into place, almost
welcome after having to keep himself in tight check for so many months. His
eyes fluttered closed even before Jamyl's right hand lifted to brush his brow;
and the next thing he knew, he was aware that they had gone through the Portal,
he had no idea where.
"Keep
your eyes closed until I tell you it's all right to open them," Jamyl
murmured, taking his right elbow and guiding him forward.
The
psychic controls kept him from sensing anything about the space they crossed
with their few dozen steps, and a part of him knew that even if he had been
physically able to disobey and open his eyes, he would see nothing. He was
blind and helpless until Jamyl should choose to release him—though that
awareness caused him no concern in his deeply centered state. When, after what
seemed like a very long time, Jamyl silently guided him to sit in a high-backed
chair, a heavy table surface close in front of it, he had no idea what to
expect. Thus he was not surprised when Jamyl had him place both his hands on
what felt like a head-sized chunk of polished rock in front of him, and shifted
one of his own hands to lightly clasp the back of Denis' neck.
"I'm
going to bring two more minds into our link, Den. As soon as we're stable, I
want you to let your memory of Jorian's ordination run—everything you yourself
witnessed, and everything you learned or heard about afterward. We'll do it
now."
Denis'
assent had not been asked for and was superfluous in any case, given the depth
of Jamyl's controls; but he gave it anyway, trying to actively bridge as the
new contacts eased deftly into place, sensing the raw strength of the newcomers
beyond even his brother's, though Jamyl was a powerful and highly trained
Deryni. The surge of memories began almost at once, shaking him nearly as much
as the actual events had done, bittersweet even in the recollection of the
earlier parts, before disaster struck—but he would not have blunted them even if
that had been within his control, which it was not.
He
thought he had weathered it well when the run ebbed to a close, his controllers
also having demanded his recall of Jorian's execution; but then they took him
deeper still, until he lost all consciousness of any function whatsoever. When
he came to his senses again, it was no gradual easing back to awareness; he
simply was there, sitting in a chair opposite two men he had never seen before.
The table he had sensed before was at his right now, ancient ivory banded with
gold, and Jamyl sat perched on the chair arm at his left, gently kneading the
tight muscles across the back of his neck, smiling.
Any discomfort besides the one I'm working on? his brother whispered in his mind.
Intrigued
by the two strangers and what they had done to him—far beyond Jamyl's ability,
he knew—Denis only answered, No. The younger of the other two men looked
hardly older than Jamyl; he, too, was smiling, pale eyes lit with wry
amusement, absently raking the fingers of one hand through a forelock of
shortish, white-blond hair that kept slipping over one eye. His tunic was the
same vibrant blue as the background of the shield above his head on the back of
his chair—something with chevrons and arrowheads, vaguely familiar, though Denis
could not quite place it.
The
other man appeared to be in his forties, reddish-brown hair winged with grey at
the temples, dark eyes very serious in his lean, angular face. He wore
scholar's robes over an expensive-looking undertunic and had ink smudges on the
first and second fingers of his right hand. He was leaning close to the table
to drape a veil of purple silk over the biggest shiral crystal Denis had
ever seen.
"It's
a lovely one, isn't it?" the younger man said, his pleasant baritone
catching Denis' attention instantly. "Shiral, of course. Don't even
think about what it cost. Incidentally, I'm Stefan." He grinned at Denis'
blink of confusion. "That's Laran, our physician; and the fellow sitting
beside you is Jamyl. I think you know him already. And there's certainly no
doubt that you're an Arilan, is there?" He shifted his gaze to Jamyl with
a roguish chuckle. "Jamyl, your brother may go even farther than you,
someday—if we can get him through his ordination, that is."
Denis
swallowed a little uneasily at the light banter. He was not accustomed to
hearing anyone besides family address his brother in quite so casual a tone.
These men must be close, indeed. As he glanced at Jamyl for reassurance, the
man identified as Laran sat in the empty chair beside Stefan's and pulled a
stoppered flask from inside his robes, reaching across to set it in Denis'
hand.
"That's
all that's stopping you right now, young Denis Arilan," Laran said.
"Incidentally, you were absolutely right about merasha in the
wine."
Denis
nearly dropped the flask as he realized he must be actually holding some of the
merasha-laced wine.
"We've
been wondering for nearly two hundred years how the bishops kept blocking us
from getting some priests ordained," Laran went on. "We don't have to
wonder anymore. Unfortunately, merasha is the almost ideal substance for
screening out Deryni. There's no known antidote, before or after the
fact—though we can minimize some of the nastier physical effects. In
humans, right up to fatal dosages, it only acts as a sedative, the depth
varying with the dose and the individual—in that sample, a little drowsiness,
perhaps." He waved a hand toward the flask Denis held. "Nothing that
can't be explained by simple reaction to strong wine on an empty stomach, in a
system already keyed up by the emotional tension of the priestly initiation—
and nothing to attract attention to a one-time use of a bishop's private stock
of wine for a priest's first communion.
"For
Deryni, however—and unfortunately for your young friend Jorian..." He
sighed. "But I don't have to tell you what happened to him."
Shaking
his head, Denis set the flask carefully on the table, then wiped his palms
against his thighs distastefully.
"Is
that from de Nore's private stock?" he asked.
"No,
it isn't," Stefan said. "We haven't even tried to penetrate his staff
yet. It will be risky enough when we do have to infiltrate, to do
whatever we decide to do to help you. That's from another bishop's sacristy,
though. And we've spot-checked two others." He grimaced. "They all
have a special supply of wine that comes from the archbishop-primate's office
on a regular basis and that's used only for ordinations. Needless to say,
they're all adulterated with merasha. So we can't even consider trying
to get you ordained in another diocese."
"I
couldn't anyway, having trained at Arx Fidei" Denis murmured.
"Not without having to answer a lot of very dangerous questions,
especially after Jorian. What about switching the wine?"
Laran
nodded. "We're working on that. We've even located some untainted wine of
the proper vintage Unfortunately, that isn't the entire solution."
"Why
not?"
Laran
shrugged. "Well, aside from the obvious logistical problem of actually
making the switch without getting caught, there's the question of whether
anyone who shouldn't will be able to notice a difference in taste. Merasha doesn't
have any taste per se, but it does have a distinctive aftertaste, as we
all know— not as noticeable to humans, I'm told, but nonetheless it's
there."
"And
you're afraid de Nore will notice, if it isn't there," Jamyl
guessed.
"Well,
he is known for his discriminating palate," Laran pointed out.
"Not only is that a convenient excuse for bringing along his own wine when
he travels and for sending special shipments to the other bishops as a sign of
episcopal favor, but he celebrates enough Masses at enough ordinations to know
quite precisely what his private stock should taste like. To keep a switch from
being detected, I must find something that will give an aftertaste similar to merasha,
that acts like a light sedative, but that also has no other side effects,
for humans or Deryni—probably some combination of substances."
He
sighed heavily, then went on. "Or maybe we'll have to go with pure wine
and take our chances that de Nore won't notice something's missing. It's better
than the alternative. We know what merasha will do."
"Maybe
the pure wine isn't as risky as you think," Denis ventured. "I'll bet
that's what he uses for daily Masses. He wouldn't dare use the special vintage
every day, if only because of the sedative effect."
"Hmmm,
he might have built up a tolerance to that," Laran argued, "but your
point is well taken. Knowing how de Nore feels about Deryni, and assuming that
even he knows just what makes the ordination wine
different—"
Startled,
Stefan turned to look at Laran, his intensity cutting off the physician's
speculation in mid-phrase.
"Are
you implying that he doesn't know there's merasha in the wine, or
that someone else may be responsible for adding it?" he asked softly.
Laran
fluttered ink-stained fingers in a gesture of impatience.
"Either
could be true, Stefan, or neither. That doesn't really matter. It's been going
on for many years, after all, and individual archbishops come and go. Think
back to how it must have started, though!"
In
the blink of an eye, Laran the physician gave way to Laran the professor,
academic intensity displacing medical dispassion, his sharp features lighting
with zeal as he slipped into the role of lecturer.
"The
religious question of good and evil aside, barring Deryni from the clergy
served the inheritors of the Council of Ramos very well," he said.
"It concentrated all spiritual authority in human hands, and a great deal
of temporal authority as well—an action totally justified in human minds, since
everyone knew that Deryni abuses of power had triggered the Haldane Restoration
and its aftermath. However we may deplore it, using merasha thereafter
to screen candidates for the priesthood was only a logical extension of what
had already begun. It was the perfect vehicle for ensuring that our people
would never regain power, for the effects of merasha on Deryni, to those
who did not know better, would appear to be the wrath of God striking down evil
Deryni who would dare aspire to the holy office of priest. All that was wanted
was to ensure that it was used consistently."
"A
charge that was given to the bishops," Jamyl supplied.
"Probably—at
least in part. But since, in the greater picture, no individual bishop lives
forever, I think it's worth considering that the Ramos Fathers might have set
up some separate, secret, on-going body to be their deputies, to see that only
humans rose through the ranks of clergy. Perhaps a small, elite religious
order. Perhaps one that makes wine. Sheerest speculation, I suppose, but it
bears further thought."
Stefan
snorted and folded his arms across his chest.
"I
refuse to believe that de Nore doesn't know what he's doing."
"Oh,
he may know exactly what he's doing," Laran agreed. "That
doesn't necessarily rule out a group to back him, however. Perhaps the secret
is imparted to each new archbishop by some designated representative, whose job
it is to ensure that his bishops use 'specially blessed' wine at ordinations
and that they know what to look for. However it's done, it works. We certainly
have no Deryni priests or bishops."
Even
Denis could find no quarrel with that conclusion, though it almost seemed to
anger Stefan. After what seemed like an eternity, Stefan slammed the heel of
one hand against the arm of his chair and let out an explosive sigh. Laran only
sat back in his chair, once again the cool and analytical physician, and
glanced back at the flask of wine on the table beside them.
"Well,
then," Laran said amiably. "Whatever we may or may not have resolved
while I played the professor at you—for which I apologize to all—young Arilan
is probably right about de Nore declining to use his special wine on a regular
basis. Even if it had no Deryni associations, the sedative effect could cause
problems over a period of time. So perhaps his experience with merasha is
limited enough that he would not notice a substitution of pure wine for
tainted."
"Perhaps isn't
good enough," Jamyl muttered, getting up from his perch on Denis' chair
arm to begin pacing restlessly. "We're talking about my brother's
life." He paced a few more steps, thumbs hooked in the back of his belt,
then paused to glance back at them.
"I
don't suppose we dare just interfere directly with de Nore?" he asked.
"It should be possible to induce him to switch the wine himself and then
bury the memory."
"Not
wise at all," Stefan said. "Any tampering with de Nore could
conceivably invalidate Denis' ordination, if it were ever found out what we'd
done."
"What
about someone on de Nore's staff, then?" Denis asked. "You already
said you'd infiltrated other bishops' staffs to get samples of their wine.
Doesn't that constitute tampering?"
"Of
course," Laran conceded. "But they're not ordaining you."
"Well,
here's another thought, then," Denis went on, seizing on sudden
inspiration. "De Nore only has a sip of the wine before bringing it down
for the new priests to communicate. It's his chaplain who finishes it off and
performs the ablutions. Maybe you could tamper with him. He doesn't have
anything to do with ordaining me."
Laran
looked dubious, but Stefan slowly began nodding.
"The
lad may have a point. What's the name of de Nore's chaplain? Gorony? It's
Gorony's taste we have to fool, Laran—not de Nore's. And it's Gorony who's in
the ideal position to make a switch. What would it take to keep him from
noticing a slight difference in the wine?"
"For
me, or for you?" Laran replied, giving Stefan an odd look.
Stefan
snorted, a sly smile flashing across his face so quickly that Denis was never
sure he really saw it.
"We'll
work on it," Stefan said enigmatically. "Meanwhile, it's getting
late, and we should be finishing up. I do think Denis should know what he's
getting into if we don't succeed, however." He picked up the flask of
drugged wine. "Have you got a cup and some water, Laran?"
As
Denis stared in horror, Stefan began working the stopper loose from the neck of
the flask, Laran rising to leave the room briefly. Denis hardly saw him go.
Surely
they didn't really expect him to take merasha without a fight, after
what had happened to Jorian? He'd had the drug before, of course, in training,
but this was different. This was the wine that had betrayed Jorian to his
death!
"You
may have to take it this way, if something goes wrong," Stefan
said, answering Denis' unasked questions as he took the empty goblet Laran
brought and slowly poured wine into it. "At least if you know what to
expect, you may have some chance of hiding your reaction. We'll give you
something to counteract what we can, before you leave tonight. Is that about
right?"
He
held out the goblet, a quarter-filled with dark, potent-looking wine, and Denis
tried to imagine it as de Nore's chalice, his heart hammering in his chest.
"You
need to add water now," he managed to whisper.
Coolly
Stefan took a second goblet from Laran, filled with water, and held it over the
drugged wine, preparing to pour—then thought better of it and offered the water
to Denis.
"You'd
better do this. You know how much it should be."
Hands
shaking, Denis took the goblet and poured— too much.
"You're
going to have to add some more wine," he heard himself saying, as Laran
took the water from him and began rummaging in his physician's satchel for a
drug packet. "I added a little more than I meant to."
"How
much would de Nore add?" Stefan asked, slowly pouring more wine until
Denis signalled him to stop.
"I
don't know," Denis admitted. "I've never served Mass for him—or for
any bishop. I—think he'd deliberately go light on the water at an ordination,
though, since—so much depends on the wine..."
His
voice had trailed off as Stefan set the flask aside, and he had to clasp his
hands tightly in his lap to keep them from shaking.
"I'm
afraid I have to agree with your logic," Stefan said quietly, moving a
little closer with the drugged cup. "Think before you drink this, now. How
big a swallow would you normally take, and how small a swallow can you get away
with, without arousing suspicion?"
Denis
closed his eyes briefly, remembering de Nore's huge, jewelled chalice. It would
have to be a noticeable swallow.
"Here
it comes now," he heard Stefan say softly, far closer now, as the rim of
the goblet touched his lips. "Remember what I asked you."
Almost
without volition, Denis lifted his hands to steady the cup as Stefan tipped it
for him to drink. He had never received communion by Cup as well as by Host,
for that was reserved for priests and bishops. The wine was rich and fruity,
and he was not sure whether he could detect any of the expected merasha aftertaste
at all as Stefan took the cup away and he carefully swallowed. Laran had come
around behind him while he drank and monitored his reaction with a cool hand
laid along the side of his throat.
"Well,"
Stefan murmured, handing off the goblet to an anxious Jamyl, "I'll confess
I've never made a study of the size swallow priests take when they drink
communion wine, but that seemed plausible to me." His manner was casual as
he sat back in his chair, but his eyes never left Denis' face. "Try to
keep from showing any distress for as long as you can," he said. "I
would estimate you'll have an hour or more before you can safely slip away, if
you have to do this for real. With any luck at all, though, that won't be
necessary. Tell me, could you taste the merashaT"
He
was tasting it by then, faintly bitter at the back of his tongue. He did his
best to describe it, aware that Laran was delving deeper to catch every nuance
of memory about it, but he could feel the drug gradually extending its tendrils
of disruption into every corner of his mind, insidious and terrifying, even
though he knew he was safe here. He lasted a little longer than Jorian had, but
not nearly long enough to have gotten through the rest of the Mass and
subsequent celebrations safely. The dose was a little lighter than those he'd
had in training exercises, but that only made it ease him into thrall instead
of hitting him like a mountain falling on his head. He tried not to imagine
what it had been like for Jorian, who had been given to drink from the chalice
a second time—and then given more wine in the sacristy, almost certainly from
de Nore's private stock.
His
head was throbbing and he could hardly see by the time Laran took pity on him
and gave him the second cup, to counteract some of the effect of the first. He
never knew how Jamyl got him back through the Portal and into bed. He woke
briefly at noon the next day, his head still pounding, but rose only long
enough to relieve himself and take another dose of the sedative Laran had sent
with Jamyl. He was mostly recovered by the second morning and had time for only
a brief visit with Stefan and Laran before he must head back for Arx Fidei, his
leave now exhausted. This time, the two came to Tre-Arilan, gathering
conspiratorially in Jamyl's little ritual chamber.
"I
wish I could offer you more encouragement," Stefan said, as Laran rummaged
in his medical satchel and Denis watched apprehensively. "We have a plan
that we think will work, but it's safer for everyone concerned if you
don't know what it is."
He
took an empty cup and a flagon of water from Jamyl and held the cup toward
Laran, who half filled it with wine.
"What's
that?" Denis whispered. "I have to go back to school in an hour or
so."
"This
is Laran's answer to Archbishop de Nore's nasty wine," Stefan said,
passing the cup to Denis. "We need you to check it for taste, because with
any luck, you'll be drinking this at your ordination instead of de Nore's. Do
you want to add the water, or shall I?"
"I'll
do it," Denis murmured, nervously adding the necessary amount.
"What's in it?"
"Oh,
this and that," Laran said with a grin—the first time Denis could ever
remember seeing him smile. "I think the effect is a fair approximation of
what a human experiences after taking merasha, though. You shouldn't
feel much."
Denis
hoped he wouldn't feel much, as Laran slipped into rapport to monitor
again and he raised the cup to drink. It tasted about the same to him, even to
a faint, bitter after-tang a few seconds after it went down— but then, his
palate was not yet as well trained as he would like. At twenty, he was not yet
a connoisseur of wines.
"Suppose
Gorony can taste a difference, though?" he asked, as he waited for
whatever effect was going to manifest. "Or suppose you simply can't make
the switch?"
"Do
you want to bow out?" Stefan countered. "There's still time for that,
you know—though it may mean that Jamyl and his family will have to leave
Gwynedd, if anyone ever suspects that the reason you left is because you're
Deryni."
Denis
swallowed hard, knowing what Jamyl's loss in the king's council could cost the
slim gains their people had made in the last decade.
"If
I'm caught," he whispered, "that will happen anyway. Jamyl, are you
going to be there?"
Jamyl
laughed uproariously. "Oh, yes, little brother. I'd hardly dare miss it,
would I?"
"You're
part of the plan, then."
"Part
of the problem, part of the solution, I'm afraid."
"We'll
do the best we can for you, Denis," Stefan went on softly. "God
knows, no one wants a repeat of Jorian's fate. But if you're determined to
become a priest—and we do need you so badly in that function— I'm afraid
this is your only option."
"Why
can't I know what you're planning?" Denis asked. "It's my life. Don't
I have a right to know?"
"It
isn't a matter of 'right to know.' It's a matter of the danger to the rest of
us, if it doesn't work and you're taken. So far as we know, Jorian didn't
break— and no one is saying that you would—but do you want to have to worry
about that, in addition to everything else? If everything goes as it should,
there'll be no reason for you to expect anything odd or different is going on.
And if it doesn't—well, you'll know that, too."
That
was precisely what worried Denis, but he had to admit that their logic was
sound. What he did not know, he could not betray—and Deryni senses fine-tuned
to the possibilities of the situation should keep him somewhat apprised of how
things were progressing. Jamyl would be there, after all. He hoped his brother
had a plan to get away if it didn't work, though.
"All
right," he murmured around a yawn. "I'm game if you are. Will I hear
from you before Candlemas?"
Laran
chuckled and finally dismantled rapport, shaking his head as Denis yawned
again. "You may— but don't expect it. Incidentally, how do you like
reacting like a human?"
"What
do you mean?"
"I
told you that what you drank simulated the effect of merasha on humans.
Feeling a little sleepy?"
Denis
laughed and shook his head as he yawned again.
"I'm
not going to nod off on my horse, am I?"
"No.
It shouldn't get any worse than this. You'll be fine by the time you ride into
the abbey yard."
But
riding into the abbey yard was the last thing Denis Arilan was worried
about as he made hasty farewells and set out on the journey back to Arx
Fidei. He wondered how he was going to survive the nearly three months
until Candlemas—and whether three months would be enough time for the others to
do what they needed to do.
On
the morning slated for his ordination, Denis Arilan found himself outwardly
calm as Elgin de Torres helped him vest in a corner of the library. The calm
had a numb edge to it, however, for he had heard nothing from his hoped-for
saviors or even from his brother since leaving Tre-Arilan in late November.
That visit home had cost him his Christmas leave, ostensibly because of his
impending ordination and the gap the absence had left in his studies. Denis
hoped those were the only reasons and had tried hard not to think about what
his allies' silence might mean.
Suppose
something had happened to prevent them from executing their plan—whatever the
plan was. What if his fate was to be the same as Jorian's, betrayed unto death
even in the midst of the joy he had yearned for all his life, in this
culmination of his reach toward the priesthood?
He
tried to pray as he settled the deacon's stole over his shoulder and let Elgin
secure it at his waist, repeating the appropriate words by rote, but he could
not get Jorian out of his mind. Nor, he suspected, could any of the other four
priestly candidates vesting with him, each one more silent than the next.
Jorian's fate haunted every seminarian at Arx Fidei, though no one but
Denis knew that it had been men, not God, who had betrayed the unfortunate
Deryni priest. In ethics class, Charles FitzMichael, Denis' chief competition
for top academic honors, had even been bold enough to ask what would happen to
someone who did not know he was Deryni, and sought ordination. Would a just but
loving God strike down such an unwitting innocent?
Abbot
Calbert could supply no ready answer to that one; and his inability had half
the school walking on eggshells for the next week—for it was perfectly possible
not to know, given the persecutions of the last two hundred years and
the fact that many Deryni had simply gone underground, hiding and denying their
talents, never telling children or grandchildren who and what they really were.
Why, anyone could be Deryni and not be aware of it!
That
was the theory, in any case. Denis tended to think that anyone of Deryni blood
would at least suspect, especially if trained in the meditation
techniques and mental disciplines that clergy candidates were expected to
master—but that did not alter the importance of the original question. Would
a loving but just God strike down an unwitting transgressor, if man did
not?
In
whispered consultations snatched between classes, or enroute to chapel, or
after everyone was supposed to be abed, most of Denis' classmates eventually
agreed, albeit uncomfortably, that God's justice and His love might, indeed, be
at odds in such a situation—and who could say which way He would tip the
balance? After all, God's Church had forbidden Deryni to seek the
priesthood; therefore, it would be just for Him to punish anyone
arrogant enough to defy that ban.
But
the opposite argument held equal weight. For if God was infinitely loving as
well as infinitely just, would He—could He—punish a loving son who
disobeyed out of ignorance rather than arrogance?
The
logic did not help Denis, who knew full well what he was doing, but it gave
some comfort to Charles, Benjamin, and the other two being ordained—Melwas and
a heavy-set Llanneddi boy named Argostino. Denis could only pray that his own
concept of justice matched God's, and that he and the other Deryni who tried to
serve that justice would be able to circumvent the impediments put in their way
by human fear and hatred.
A
partial answer to that last prayer, at least, came most unexpectedly when Abbot
Calbert came into the library for his customary final words with the priestly
candidates, accompanied by school faculty and several unfamiliar priests. For
one of the priests looked suspiciously like the Deryni Stefan—though he walked
with a slight limp, and his hair was peppery brown instead of fair.
Denis
tried to steal a closer look at the man as the juniors filed out and Calbert
bade them all draw nearer, but he dared not be too obvious. Nor was he sure he
dared attempt a psychic contact to test, for some humans could sense such a
touch.
Calbert
seemed to talk for hours, most of his words running into a senseless blur. Only
when he had finished and was motioning the five of them to fall into line, did
the stranger-priest finally meet Denis' eyes and confirm that he was Stefan.
There are lots of strange priests here today, came Stefan's clear thought as he brushed
Denis' shoulder in passing, as if helping shepherd the line of candidates out
of the library to join the entrance procession. The archbishop thinks I'm
one of Calbert's, and Calbert thinks I came with de Nore. Stay calm. The switch
WILL be made.
Stefan
was moving off with the other priests almost before Denis could register what
had been said.
The
switch will be made! Then, it had not yet been made\ What if they
could not make it?
He
could feel a trembling start in the pit of his stomach as he inched along in
the entrance procession, second in line, and he thought his heart must be
pounding loud enough to drown out the choir's "Confitebor tibi, Domine,
in toto corde meo"—I will praise Thee, O Lord, with my whole heart.
One of the juniors handed him a lighted candle as he passed through the doors
into the church, and he made himself use the warmth and flicker of the flame
and the faint, honey-sweet scent of beeswax to help him steady his nerves. He
must not let his own fear betray him.
He
tried not to notice that the church was even more packed than last time. A
bishop's visit to a local parish always brought a large turnout, but he
suspected that some of the crowd, at least, had been drawn not by de Nore's
presence, but by the stories of what had happened at the last Arx Fidei ordination.
People were standing in the side aisles. Denis wondered desperately where Jamyl
was.
He
soon guessed Jamyl's part in the operation, however. For as the procession
moved slowly down the aisle, heralded by processional crosses, candles, censers,
and the voices of the choir continuing their hymn of praise, Denis noticed
Malachi de Bruyn and another junior waiting to move a small, white-draped table
into the center aisle after he and the other candidates had passed. On the
table, with extra ciboria containing bread to be consecrated during the Mass,
were the cruets of wine and water that would be used.
Of
course! After the ordination itself, members of the new priests' families
traditionally brought forward the gifts of bread and wine for communion. Jamyl
undoubtedly would be among them. Denis had no idea how his brother was going to
do it, but it must be Jamyl who was going to make the switch.
He
felt a little relieved at that—and even more relieved when he actually saw Jamyl
standing near the altar rail, left of the aisle. Jamyl's wife and son were not
with him, but Denis had not expected that they would be, given the danger to
everyone of Arilan name if Denis were found out. Jamyl was to have sent them to
safety at Christmastime, there to remain until all of this was resolved.
But,
could that possibly be King Brion standing at Jamyl's left? Dear God,
surely the king was not in on this, too?
It
was Brion, he quickly realized, as he took his place with the others in
a line across the foot of the chancel steps, just outside the altar rail, and
knelt with his candle held reverently before him. Jamyl's friendship with the
king must be even closer than Denis had dreamed, for it was a singular honor
for the king to attend an ordination. Everyone seemed aware of the royal
presence. Perhaps that was the reason for the heavy attendance this
morning, and not the ghoulish hope of seeing another Deryni brought to light.
Even the archbishop paused to bow in the king's direction before taking his
seat to examine the candidates.
Denis
went through the next half hour in a daze. He responded to the ritual questions
with ritual answers when called upon. He prostrated himself with the others for
what seemed like an interminable litany to more saints than he had ever heard
of. And then, after the archbishop had set his hands on the head of each
kneeling candidate for the first time, he remained bowed with his fellow
ordinands while all the other priests present came forward to touch each new
priest in additional blessing. He let himself read psychic impressions as each
pair of hands rested briefly on his head and then moved on to the next man,
both bewildered and heartened by what he sensed.
Nervousness
in some... uncertainty... rote performance of an expected physical action in
many... preoccupation bordering on outright boredom in a very few... but in
most, regardless of any other emotions, a genuine intention and desire to
transmit the unbroken succession of apostolic authority as it had been passed
to each participating priest at his own ordination, through a variety of
bishops of varying degrees of integrity and sanctity, over a period spanning
more than fifty years. At least that magic—of passing on the Divine
mandate—was permitted, even by the most conservative of the ecclesiastical
hierarchy, just as no one would dispute the magic of the eucharistic
celebration that would follow.
Stefan,
too, came forward—not really a priest, of course, but his lack of true priestly
authority in no way detracted from what the others did, and his message
strengthened Denis' hope as the Deryni adept briefly laid his hands on Denis'
bowed head.
Everything is going fine, Stefan told him. Be of good cheer. And may God bless and defend
you, young Deryni priest!
Denis
basked in that appellation all through the rest of the ordination ceremony,
even daring to let himself get caught up in the very un-Deryni magic as his
hands were anointed with the sacred chrism, the more worthily to handle the
eucharistic elements, and he was invested with the chasuble and other physical
accoutrements of a priest. God did not strike him dead on the spot for his
presumption—but then, neither had He struck Jorian until the new priest tried
to exercise his priesthood.
As
the moment approached for Denis to do so, he knew with a cold and humble
sobriety that his own moment of testing was still to come. The archbishop's
treachery aside, who was to dictate when an angry God might exercise His
judgment? For that matter, who was to say that merasha itself was not
the instrument of God's wrath? God usually chose to work through mortal agents.
What need had He to work outright miracles, when more usual vehicles were at
hand?
The
Mass resumed where it had left off before the ordination began. As the choir
sang the Offertory, Denis stood beside the archbishop with his newly ordained
brethren, facing the congregation, and watched Jamyl and other representatives
of the new priests' families come forward with the gifts of bread and wine.
Jamyl had contrived to carry the wine cruet—the other presenters' deference
undoubtedly nudged in the proper direction by subtle Deryni persuasion—but
Denis could read no hint on his brother's face as to whether he had been able
to make the switch. Nor, when Jamyl gave him the cruet, could he coax any kind
of mental confirmation as their hands brushed. Jamyl's shields were rigid.
Denis
feared the worst. Why else would Jamyl shut him out? Praying that he did not
bear his own death in his hands, he set the cruet on the tray the archbishop
had received from Benjamin's elderly mother and tried not to stare as de Nore
turned briefly to hand tray and cruets to the waiting Father Gorony, who took
them back to the altar. His heart was in his throat as he moved mechanically
into the place assigned him for the concelebration and watched de Nore offer up
the bread, numbly repeating the accompanying prayer with the others.
"Suscipe, sancte Pater, omnipotens aeterne Deus, hanc
immaculatam hostiam..." Holy Father, almighty and everlasting God, accept this unblemished
sacrificial offering, which I, Thy unworthy servant, make to Thee, my living
and true God...
The
cup was next. With ponderous care, de Nore let Gorony pour wine from the cruet
into his great, jewelled chalice, then blessed the water and added but a few drops.
"Offerimus tibi, Domine, calicem salutaris..." We offer Thee, Lord, the chalice of
salvation...
Denis
feared it might not be his chalice of salvation—not in this world,
at any rate—but there was no turning back now. If the switch had not been made,
his only remaining hope was a miracle. Denis believed in miracles, but he did
not think he had ever been singled out personally as the subject of one. And a
miracle had not saved Jorian, who Denis felt had been far more deserving.
He
followed numbly through the censing, the lavabo, and the prayers that followed,
reciting all the proper words and making all the proper physical responses, but
setting his heart on but one plea.
O Lord my God, in You do I put my trust, he prayed. Save me from all them that
persecute me, and deliver me... If I can truly serve You best with my death,
then I freely offer it, even as I offer this bread and wine upon Your altar—but
can I not serve You even better with my life... ?
The
choir sang the Sanctus, more sweetly than Denis had ever heard it sung—Holy,
Holy, Holy—and he tried to let the joy it evoked buoy him as he lifted his
hands toward the pale, fragile Host the archbishop raised in mystical
adoration, whispering the words of consecration with every iota of his faith.
"Hoc est einem corpus meum." This is my body...
The
chime of the sacring bell plunged him into profound reverence as he and his
fellow priests followed the archbishop's bows and elevation, and he hardly
dared to look at the chalice the archbishop raised next, faith and fear
tumbling wildly in his heart as he echoed de Nore's words.
"Simili modo postquam coenatum est, accipiens et hunc
praeclarum Calicem in sanctas ac venerabiles manus suas." In like manner, when He had supped, He
took this goodly cup into His holy and venerable hands...
Help, Lord, for the godly man ceaseth; for the faithful fall from
among the children of men! Denis
prayed.
"Hic est einem calix sanguinis mei..." This is the chalice of my blood, of the
new and everlasting covenant, a mystery of faith. It shall be shed for you and
many others so that sins may be forgiven. Whenever you shall do these things,
you shall do them in memory of me...
In
a magic that had nothing to do with being either Deryni or human, Denis became
the sacrifice in that instant, offering up his own life's blood in
unreserved dedication, as the Christ had offered His and Jorian had offered
his. A profound peace filled him as he followed the rest of the prayers leading
to communion and then knelt with the others to receive first the bread and then
the wine. The Host was light as dew on his tongue; and he allowed himself but
one thought as de Nore brought the great chalice to his lips and he reached up
to lightly steady it.
Into Thy hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit. May it be done
according to Thy will...
"Sanguis Domini nostri Jesu Christi custodial animam tuam in
vitam aeternam," de
Nore murmured. May the blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ preserve thy soul unto
everlasting life...
Barely
mouthing his "Amen," Denis drank from the cup. The wine was sweet and
heady, lighter than he remembered, igniting a gentle but growing tingle that
spread from his stomach, up his spinal column, and out to the tips of his
fingers and toes, to explode at the back of his head in a starburst of warmth
and light and love—and it was not merasha.
Light
seemed to fountain from the vessels still on the altar, from the tabernacle on
the credence shelf behind it, from the chalice de Nore carried back to the
altar, and Denis sensed a similar energy pulsing through the bodies of all
those assembled to assist. Benjamin and Melwas, kneeling reverently to either
side of him, had the same glow; and the ciborium de Nore set solemnly in his
hands a few minutes later throbbed gently with a rhythm that was the heartbeat
of the universe, silvery radiance spilling from the cup to bathe his hands in
light that apparently only he could see.
He
felt as if he was floating a handspan off the ground as he rose to go down to
the communion rail where his brother waited with the other members of the new
priests' families to receive the Sacrament. Indeed, he made certain he was not
floating, for the way he felt—his Deryni powers not only intact but
apparently enhanced—he thought he could have, given even a whit more
provocation. The intimacy of the moment in which, a priest at last, he gave his
brother Holy Communion for the first time, was almost too much joy to contain,
the awe and wonder on Jamyl's face a sight he would cherish until the day he
died.
And
when the king slipped in to kneel beside Jamyl, pointedly turning his face
toward Denis when de Nore would have come to claim the privilege, Denis could
only marvel silently at the sign of royal favor. To give the Sacrament to his
king set yet another seal on this most glorious and blessed day of his life.
His
perceptions gradually diminished to more normal levels as he settled into
ministering to the other communicants come forward to receive, and he sensed a
slight lethargy stealing along his limbs as he neared the end, but that was
surely from sheer physical fatigue and Laran's medicines, not merasha's insidious
corruption. The sedative effect was stronger than he had expected from the one
sample he'd had from Laran, but not uncomfortably so—though he did see Charles
stifle a yawn, a little farther along the rail, and sensed Melwas and Argostino
fighting drowsiness, too.
Physical
after-reaction threatened more insistently as he returned to the altar to
surrender his ciborium, but he was able to counteract much of it by running through
a brief fatigue-banishing spell as he knelt with his brethren to watch de Nore
and Gorony consolidate the contents of all the ciboria into one and place it in
the tabernacle. Then de Nore returned to his faldstool to kneel in meditation
while Gorony performed the final ablutions—the last opportunity for something
to go wrong. For if Gorony detected any difference in the taste of the wine...
Fortunately,
the nervous seminarian who came forward to pour the wine and water for Gorony
was clumsy, and the wine cruet slipped from his shaking fingers and shattered
on the marble floor before he or anyone else could prevent it. Gorony's obvious
impatience was distracted by the king choosing that moment to rise and slip
quietly back up the aisle with his attendants, to escape before the crowds
began to leave, and the archbishop's chaplain simply signalled for more wine to
be brought from the sacristy—by Stefan, who sternly escorted the disgraced
seminarian back into the sacristy, where Deryni persuasion undoubtedly dealt
with whatever memory he might have had of his "accident" having been
commanded.
"How
did you do it?" Denis was finally able to ask his brother later that
night, when an oddly tense Jamyl drew him aside for a few moments during the
celebration feast, both of them confirming with Deryni senses that they could
not be overheard. "It must have been when you brought the cruet forward at
the Offertory."
Solemnly,
Jamyl shook his head. "I didn't do it, Denis," he whispered. "I
couldn't. They were watching too closely. I don't know what happened, but you
drank merasha and you weren't affected."
"What?"
The
king chose that moment to come up to Denis for a blessing, curtailing all
further discussion with Jamyl, but Denis pondered the implications of Jamyl's
revelation for the rest of the evening and, later that night, knelt in
trembling question and thanksgiving in the now deserted church.
Or,
no, not deserted. The red lamp burning before the tabernacle reminded him of
that—if ever he could have forgotten it after what had happened. And as he
lifted his eyes timidly to the Crowned King on the cross above the altar, he
knew that he had experienced as much of a miracle as any man could ever hope
for— and that he would spend the rest of his life trying to serve the purpose
of the One Who had spared him today.
O Lord, I am Deryni, but I am also Your child, he prayed. And though I never really
doubted, now I truly believe You have ordained the time to bring Your other
Deryni children back into an equal partnership with the sons of humankind—for
You have saved me from the wrath of men who would misuse Your Sacrament to
destroy me. For this salvation, I give You thanks.
He
swallowed with difficulty and eased back on his heels, trying to still the
trembling of his clasped hands.
I think
perhaps we Deryni are not really so different from other men after all, Lord, he
went on more boldly, searching the serene Face. You give us gifts the humans do not understand and
therefore fear—and some among our number have, indeed, abused their gifts in
the past, and doubtless will do so in the future—but so doth mankind in his
frailty abuse many other gifts not unique to the Deryni. We ask no special
favor, Lord—only, let us be judged by our fellows and by You on our individual
merits and failings, and not on the merits and failings of our race.
He
bowed his head and closed his eyes.
Adsum,
Domine—here am I, Lord. You called me in the hour of my begetting, and today
I have publicly answered that call and bound me to Your service. Nor did You
forsake me in my hour of need. Give me wisdom and strength, Lord, to know Your
will and to do it as best / can, that I may always be Your true priest
and servant, ministering to all Your children, both human and Deryni, with
tolerance, compassion, and love... That IS why You saved me—isn't it?
In
days to come, whenever he returned to the memory of that jumbled monologue with
God, he would never be really certain whether his imagination had gotten the
better of him, or whether, as he raised his head, his eyes swimming with tears,
the image of the Sacred King actually had given a slight nod.
One
of the pivotal events mentioned in Deryni Rising and the succeeding
books of THE CHRONICLES OF THE DERYNI—though it takes place some fifteen years
before the trilogy begins—is King Brion Haldane's slaying of the Marluk,
Charissa's father, in a magical confrontation. From the Haldane point of view,
of course, the Marluk only got what he deserved, after daring to challenge the
rightful King of Gwynedd for his throne and crown.
Quite
naturally, the Marluk's supporters disagreed, even as his heiress prepared to
take up his fight when she came of age, for both father and daughter came of
the senior branch of the House of Festil, whose rival claim to Gwynedd's crown
dated from the days immediately post-Interregnum—never mind that the Festils
had usurped the throne from a Haldane king in the first place. For more than
two hundred years, the descendants of Mark of Festil, the son gotten by Imre,
the last Festillic king, on his sister Ariella, stubbornly chose to argue that
Cinhil Haldane and his successors were the usurpers, overlooking—especially
after a few generations had passed—the stigma normally attached to the
offspring of an incestuous brother-sister union.
"Legacy"
tells a part of that early story, but from the Festillic side rather than the
Haldane: the eye witness account of the Marluk's death as the eleven-year-old
Charissa told it, filtered through the perspectives and ambitions of Wencit of Torenth,
her distant cousin—who also happened to be next after her in the Festillic
succession. It provides an interesting counter to the Haldane version, I
think—because official histories are almost always written by the winners,
after all. I would venture to guess that most of history's blackest
villains—unless they were actually deranged—generally had what were, for them,
quite rational reasons for doing what they did. Few sane individuals are nasty
just for the sake of being nasty.
By
Festillic lights, then, Charissa was no villainess at all, but her father's
loyal daughter, born and bred to the expectation that one day she would have to
carry on her father's crusade to reclaim the throne he felt was rightfully
Festillic. Though some of her seeming callousness in Deryni Rising must
certainly come of that early horror of seeing her father killed before her
eyes, yet is one left with the impression that, for the most part, she simply
did what she felt she had to do to satisfy her family honor. One is tempted to
wonder how different things might have been for everyone if she had married her
cousin Wencit.
Of
even more interest to me than Charissa, however, was the insight I gained into
the character of Wencit, by watching him react to Charissa's observations. At
thirty-two, it is obvious that Wencit of Torenth already had his own best
interests firmly in mind—for though of both Torenthi and Festillic royal blood,
he was not bom heir to the crown of Torenth. He was the king's second
son, and his elder brother had a son. Someday, I'll write the story of how he
came to be king...
legacy
The
tower chamber was airy and filled with light— rare enough in any castle, but
especially at High Cardosa, where the winds swept down the Rheljan range even
in summer and forced the shuttering of most windows year-round. This chamber
was not shuttered, however, for the russet-clad man reading in a pool of
sunlight had more than a passing competence in the working of weather magic. No
breath of breeze disturbed the age-yellowed parchment rolls spread on his work
table, though the black hart banners and orange pennons declaring the presence
of the court of Torenth fluttered and snapped on the gusts outside, and the
wind whined among the crenellated battlements.
Nor
was the presence of the royal court a commonplace event this far from the
Torenthi capital, as advancing age gradually curtailed the movements of the
king. Traveling by slow stages, the aging Nimur II, his two sons, and his
grandson had arrived with a small entourage nearly a week before, accompanying
the vanguard of the Duke of Tolan's forces. Hogan Gwernach, called the Marluk,
was bent on reclaiming his Festillic birthright—and that concerned Nimur
acutely, since, after Hogan's daughter Charissa, the Festillic succession passed
back to the House of Furstan and gave Nimur and his heirs legal claim to the
Crown of Gwynedd.
The
Furstan claim was very old, dating from the marriage of Mark, son of the last
Festillic king, to a daughter of the first Nimur, and strengthened a generation
ago when Hogan's grandmother had married a lesser Furstan prince. It would be
further confirmed when young Charissa was officially betrothed to the king's
grandson at Michaelmas—an expectation not entirely to the liking of the man in
the tower, but it could be endured. With a brother and a nephew ahead of him in
the succession, it was not likely that Prince Wencit of Torenth would ever rule
the combined lands of Torenth and Gwynedd in his own right, even if Hogan was
successful; but on the other hand, the larger the Furstan lands became, the
larger would be his own portion as only brother of the future king. The
genealogy governing all of this was very complicated and a subject far more
fitting for the scrutiny of heralds than of princes, but Wencit had made it his
business to learn all the nuances, nonetheless. One could never predict with
overmuch accuracy just what role the Fates might call upon one to play.
He
thought about Hogan and the Festillic claim as he unrolled another parchment.
The dispute over Gwynedd was not a new one. Augarin Haldane had first called
himself High King of Gwynedd nearly five centuries ago, after uniting several
warring factions and petty princedoms in and around the central Gwynedd plain.
He and his line had held the gradually growing kingdom for nearly two hundred
years, until the first Festil, youngest brother of the then-king of Torenth,
had swept into Gwynedd at the head of a Deryni army and accomplished a sudden
coup.
The
dynasty founded by Festil I lasted slightly more than eighty years—a time
called the Interregnum by Haldane loyalists. Then Imre, the last Festillic
king, had been ousted by the treachery of a man claiming to be a lost Haldane,
assisted by the traitor Earl of Culdi, later briefly called a saint, and the restored
Haldane line had reigned ever since.
With
an impatient sigh, Wencit turned his attention to the scroll in his hands.
Hogan was asserting his claim even now, and Wencit was hard-pressed to divert
himself while he waited for his cousin to return. The sunlight dimmed the faded
brown ink on the parchment almost past reading, but he knew the words almost by
heart anyway. It was one of the few remaining letters of his ancestress Ariella
to her brother-lover Imre. The language was archaic, and couched in the manners
and innuendoes of two centuries past, but it held the essence of the Festil and
Furstan claims which Hogan at this very moment pursued. The child of incest
spoken of in Ariella's letter was to become the same Prince Mark who had
married the first King Nimur's daughter.
"And so we must stand resolute, my dearest Liege and Lord and
Brother, for there are those who will condemn the fruit of our love—if they do
not dismiss it as a wantonness on my part—and refuse to accept that the child
is yours and, therefore, your heir. But even if the world holds our son
bastard, issue of my own indiscretion, still he is a Festil; and if neither of
us contracts other marriage, then he must be our heir and follow us upon the
throne. Let others think what they will. We are Deryni; we need no other
justification!"
Wencit
smiled a little at the arrogance, but he did not wholly disagree as his pale,
almost colorless eyes skimmed the rest of the letter. Like Imre and Ariella, he
and his family were also Deryni, masters of magical abilities not usually
granted to ordinary men—except, in annoying cases, an occasional Haldane,
though this current one, Brion, had evidenced no particular signs of power. As
Wencit read, the power of Ariella's love came through, even across two
centuries of time. He felt almost like an eavesdropper as his eyes drank in her
last, private words to her brother, and something akin to Imre's passion
stirred in his loins as he imagined the fiery Ariella suiting action to her
promises. Surely theirs had been one of the great loves of all time. Of such a
love had he himself dreamed, in the days when he had considered marrying
Charissa himself. Not for the first time, he wondered what his father would do
if something were to happen to Nephew Aldred. He did not particularly wish the
boy ill, but the dream was tempting.
He
sat staring out the window for a long time, indulging in a quiet fantasy which
vacillated between the live Charissa and the dead Ariella, then blinked and
came back to normal awareness as a disturbance at the main gate caught his
attention. The banner at the head of the troop which galloped through was that
of his cousin Hogan, but of Hogan himself there was no sign. In the midst of
the mud-spattered company rode a slump-shouldered young girl cloaked in blue,
mounted on a mouse-grey palfrey.
She
was sobbing in Aldred's arms by the time he could make his way down to the
great hall, her fair hair touseled around her face, sticking in damp tendrils
and falling well past her waist. He felt a sharp twinge of envy for the callow,
sweaty-palmed Aldred, who dared to hold her and give comfort at a time like
this, but he suppressed it quickly. Charissa of Tolan was all but betrothed to
his father's choice. Any resentment he harbored must be kept carefully shielded
when among other Deryni, especially those of his family, with whom few barriers
could be maintained without suspicion.
His
brother Carolus was there, and also his father, the king, though the old man
had had a bad day and leaned heavily on the arm of a liveried attendant.
Hassan, Hogan's tactician and the self-appointed bodyguard both to Hogan and
his young daughter, was kneeling at the king's feet, black robes dust- and
mud-caked, part of his keffiyeh drawn over the lower half of his face so
that only the sorrowful eyes showed.
More
battle-weary and grimy men-at-arms and a few knights were filing dejectedly
into the hall, leaving a trail of armor and helmets and weapons as squires
helped them to disarm, and Carolus gave brisk orders for their hosting before
taking his father's arm and leading the way into a withdrawing chamber behind
the dais. When he had settled the king in a high-backed armchair, Carolus
motioned the black-clad Hassan nearer. They were only six now: the royal
family, Char-issa, and the Moor. Hassan uncovered his face as he knelt once
more before king and crown prince.
"Very
well, what happened?" Carolus asked.
Hassan
lowered his eyes. "The Haldane waxed stronger, O my prince. What more can
be said? The infidel overwhelmed my master with stolen magic and then cut off
his head. We had no idea he possessed such power. Al Marluk should have
been able to smash him like an insect!"
"Al
Marluk was betrayed by a fellow Deryni!" Charissa said bitterly,
speaking for the first time through her tears. "The half-breed Alaric
Morgan helped the usurper. The taint of his magic surrounded the Haldane
princeling like a mantle. My father fell by treachery!"
Wencit
exchanged a glance with his brother, then glanced at the king. The old man was
stunned by the news, taken anew by a bout of palsy; but his mind had not
slipped, even if the aging body insisted upon betraying him.
"Morgan
helped him?" the king whispered. "The Haldane's squire? But he's
still a boy."
"A
boy older than I, Sire," Charissa replied haughtily, gathering the shreds
of her eleven-year-old dignity as she drew away from Aldred to stand alone.
Wencit said and did nothing, but he could not help but feel pride. She was a
Festil; but she was also a Furstan, and might have been his own. Her father
would have been proud.
"How
do you know Morgan helped the usurper?" the king persisted.
Charissa
loosed the clasp of her cloak and let it fall to the floor, moving closer to
the table beside the king's chair. There she poured dark red wine into an
earthen cup, almost brimming the edge. Wencit stiffened, then moved closer to
reinforce her if there was need. He knew what she was about to try, though he
could tell that Aldred did not, and Carolus only suspected. The king knew, too,
and nodded faintly as she took the cup in both hands and raised it to chest
level.
"See
my father's death through my eyes, Sire," she said softly, bowing her head
over the cup and murmuring words under her breath as she passed a hand over the
wine. "If I can hold the power long enough, you shall see for yourself and
decide whether Brion Haldane was acting alone."
As
she set the cup on the table and drew a stool closer, sitting, the others
drifted nearer. The king, Carolus, and even Hassan obviously understood now
what she was about to do, and Wencit knew that they could have done the same;
but young Aldred had not yet mastered the technique, even though he was four
years older than Charissa and a year older than Alaric Morgan. Wencit doubted
it would give Morgan a moment's hesitation.
Knowing
what she planned, he doused all the torches in the wall sconces with a gesture,
leaving only the candles on the table burning. Charissa gave him a taut half
bow of thanks before snuffing out all but one of the remaining candles.
Stillness spread from her like mist as she began to stare into the wine.
"See
the clearing at the end of the Llegoddin Canyon Trace, where we met the
Haldane's forces," she murmured, breathing on the surface in an arcane
pattern. "See my father's host gathering as we waited for the Haldane.
Feel the sunlight on your hands and faces and the breeze stirring your hair.
See the banners unfurl, silk and gilt, and hear them snapping overhead. Smell
the sweat and the fear and the clean, sharp scent of water and pine and trampled
earth..."
Images
formed on the surface of the wine as she spoke, hazily at first, but then with
greater clarity and focus as the watchers themselves slipped into trance and
became receptive to the spell she cast. Wencit let himself become a part of it,
truly seeing through her eyes and memory, feeling her fears and joys and all
the rest as the recollection unfolded.
Sunlight
shimmered on the mail and weapons of the Tolan men as they formed a line across
the meadow and waited for the enemy to appear. Hogan, mailed and helmed and
clad all in white, sat his sorrel great-horse beside Charissa like an elder
god, gazing intently across the meadow to the shadowed defile where his archfoe
would shortly emerge. Only when all his men were set did he turn his golden
eyes to his daughter.
"Be
brave, Cara mia," he whispered, shifting his lance to his shield hand so
that he could reach across and brush the line of her jaw with a gloved finger.
"This is but a temporary diversion. Whatever happens, you carry my blood, the
blood of kings. That shall go on."
She
shook her head and seized his hand, cradling it against her cheek. "I
don't care about blood. I care about you. Promise me you'll come back."
He
smiled. "You must care about blood, my dearest one. One day you shall be a
queen. But if it is within my power, you know I shall always come back to
you." He laid his gloved hand briefly on her head. "If it is not
possible, then I leave you with my father's blessing. God keep and protect you,
Cara mia."
"You
speak as if you mean to die," she whispered, eyes filling with tears.
"You must not die. You must not!"
"We
must accept what the Fates have decreed for us, Cara mia," he replied,
pulling away to take lance once more. "I do not plan to die, but if God
wills it, then you must be strong and carry on, and never forget who and what
you are."
A
sob caught in her throat, but he turned back toward the meadow anyway. Then he
was setting spurs to the big destrier and moving out in front of his men, the
lion jambes and ermine of Tolan quartered with the Haldane lions
floating above him on the banner which followed.
Of
a sudden, the enemy was before them, the pretender Brion and his brother
emerging from the streambed at the canyon mouth on matching greys.
Morgan,
looking astonished and a little scared, rode behind them on a black, with the
rest of the Haldane men. Above them, supported by Prince Nigel's hand, flew the
lion of Gwynedd, which also gleamed on the pretender's breast. But Charissa had
eyes for little further detail, for it was the man in the lion surcoat who must
be vanquished. The others were as chaff before the wind.
Only
a few of the Haldane's men had cleared the stream and canyon narrows before
Hogan lowered his lance and signalled the attack. The weight of the Tolan greathorses
shook the earth as they galloped toward the surprised enemy. As the distance
closed, someone on the other side shouted, "A Haldane!" but
even when the cry was taken up by others of the pretender's party, it only beat
ineffectually against the wordless roar of the Marluk's charging cavalry.
They
met with a clash like thunder and lightning, the brittle, hollow shattering of
lances weighed against the ring of steel on steel and the more sullen,
sickening butcher-sounds of edged metal cleaving flesh, bone, and even mail.
Through it all, the Festil banner floated bright and unassailable above the
fray, marking Hogan's place, ermine quartered with red, lions jambes dancing
beside golden Haldane lions. The two would-be kings were swept apart repeatedly
in the heat of battle. It was the Haldane who finally seized the initiative,
wheeling his screaming battle stallion in a tight circle as he raised his sword
and shouted her father's name.
"Gwernach!"
She
saw the melee part. Her father had lost his helmet, or perhaps tossed it aside,
and his pale hair floated around his head like a halo as he pushed back his
mail coif. Light seemed to radiate from his head and hands, but perhaps that
was only the imagination of an eleven-year-old girl. He jerked his horse to a
rear, brandishing his own sword above his head, then laughed as he shouted
defiance at the man he had come to slay.
"The
Haldane is mine!" he cried, cutting down a Haldane knight as he spurred
his way toward the long-awaited enemy. "Stand and fight, usurper! Gwynedd
is mine by right!"
As
the two clashed, their men parting to watch the battle of contending kings,
Charissa's vision wavered. To the child, the details of one battle were rather
like another, even with her father as one of the principals fighting for his
life. She gasped when the horses were slain, first the sorrel and then the
grey, turning her face away with tears welling in her eyes for the faithful,
unfortunate beasts; but it was not until both men staggered apart to lean
panting on their swords that the image again sharpened to specific detail. The
men's voices were too low to be heard, but much could be inferred from their
actions.
The
two seemed to settle down to almost amiable discussion, Hogan's white teeth
flashing several times in sardonic grin as he made some point against the
Haldane's liking. Once he gestured toward his daughter with his sword, and
Wencit could sense the girl's pride as she drew herself up more regally in the
saddle.
First
the Haldane and then Hogan traced symbols in the dust with their swordpoints
then—ritual challenge being offered and accepted. The Haldane faltered at what
Hogan drew, but then he caught himself and angrily erased the offending sigil
with his boot. Hogan did not appear at all surprised.
Wencit
was surprised, though, and startled almost out of the spell, for he knew what
Hogan had been trying to do. Though any Deryni even partially trained in the
formal use of magic would have known the spell, the Haldane should not have;
but Morgan would have, and could have taught his master. Charissa was right
about the half-breed's treachery!
Wencit
watched as Charissa's vision showed the two backing apart, warding circles
being raised, crimson and blue—circles of which the Haldane also should have
had no knowledge. Then battle was being joined once more, this time with
energies arcing from sword to sword like directed lightning.
The
battle lasted long, though this one was followed with far more interest and
understanding on Charissa's part than the physical battle earlier. Neither man
moved, but the power flowing between them, flung and deflected, was enormous.
When
even Charissa's vision could not pierce beyond the forces being contained in
the dueling circle, Wencit shared her brief, queasy moment of apprehension. A
little after that, the haze of the circle's dome cleared to reveal one figure
staggering to its knees, sword still half-raised in a desperate but futile
warding-off gesture. Heartsick, Wencit knew that it was Hogan.
The
Haldane towered above him for a long time, weapon poised overhead to strike,
but for a long moment something seemed to stay his hand. Fleetingly Wencit
dared to hope that Hogan might yet prevail, might yet call forth extra power
from some long-forgotten reservoir of strength to blast this base, pretending
Haldane from existence.
But
then the energies rippled again, and the weapon fell from Hogan's hands. As he
fell forward on hands and knees, utterly spent, the victor's sword descended.
Charissa
gasped and turned her head away, breaking the spell, and the image on the
surface of the wine vanished. A sob caught in her throat, but when Aldred and
even Carolus tried to comfort her, she shrank from their touch and shook her
head, blinking back new tears and raising her head like the queen she surely
was.
"No,"
she said steadily. "Now I must learn to stand alone and be strong. He is
gone, but I shall not forget the manner of his living and dying. Nor shall I
forget who was responsible for the latter. I shall avenge him."
"But
Charissa," Aldred whispered, "for generations the Haldanes have held
the potential for power like our own. What made your father think this Haldane
would be different?"
The
king cleared his throat and shook his head, brushing tears from rheumy eyes.
"We had hopes," he said. "When Brion Haldane's father died,
Brion was young. We believed there was no one left to guide him in the
assumption of his powers. And when he evidenced no sign of those powers in the
past ten years he has been king, we assumed the powers lost. Who would have
thought the boy Morgan could do as he apparently has done?"
Flexing
the fingers of one hand against the other, Carolus nodded. "We did
misjudge him," he agreed, "but it will not happen again. The Haldane
still is a usurper. When Aldred and Charissa are wed, we must ensure that their
joint inheritance shall include both these kingdoms. We shall be watching both
the Haldane and this upstart Deryni half-breed."
As
the others nodded agreement, and the king and Carolus began questioning Hassan
more fully, Wencit silently reviewed the battle and the following discussion,
marking many points to be considered at more leisure. He had learned more than
one important thing today. For one, Aldred was a fool. If he came to the throne
after Carolus, he could no more hold it than Hogan had been able to stand
against the Haldane. Nor did Carolus himself show much better promise, though
Wencit had never thought to look at his brother in this light before. That
alone was food for much solitary thought and contemplation.
As
for the Haldane and Morgan, they, too, merited further study, especially the
latter. Though the half-Deryni youth was still scarcely more than a boy, he
clearly was going to be a factor to be reckoned with in the future—and he was
surely part of the key to eventually destroying the Haldane. Perhaps, if the
Fates willed it so, Wencit himself might even be the instrument of Morgan's
eventual downfall. Far less likely things were possible....
Over
the years, one of my most popular non-Deryni characters has always been Sean
Lord Derry, Morgan's aide. He's an intriguing fellow: loyal, competent,
sensitive—and very human. I've often been asked how Morgan and Derry met and
how Derry came to be in Morgan's service. So this is that story.
Interestingly
enough, it almost didn't get written. Originally, I started writing it from
Morgan's point of view, and was having a terrible time getting it to flow.
After spending nearly a week working on genealogical charts and
time-lines—anything to avoid actually sitting down to write it (though at least
I now know how Morgan and Duncan are descended from Rhys and Evaine's
children)—I finally spent an entire day grinding out about five pages. That was
a Friday. I write on a computer these days; and when I sat down at the machine
on Monday to resume work on the story, I could not get the computer to access
the file on the disk. I couldn't get into the file; I couldn't copy the disk; I
was locked out. Apparently, the disk had gone bad.
So
I made a lame attempt to reconstruct—which almost never works—then dumped
everything and started over from scratch, on another disk, only from Derry's
point of view, this time—anything to get the words moving again. And this time
Derry came alive, and the story flowed.
I
almost wish I could say that a later attempt to get into the original file
yielded no impediments, once I'd changed the perspective of the story; but it
didn't happen that way. Nor am I bold enough to expect divine intervention of that
magnitude on a regular basis. Like Denis Arilan, I tend to think God works
most often through mortal agents—or perhaps, sometimes, through mechanical
devices constructed by mortals. Suffice it to say that the first attempt was
lost, and good riddance; and that the process of coping with that loss gave me
the impetus to rethink my approach and let the story come out the way it should
have done in the first place.
The
result, whatever sparked it, certainly fills in some interesting background
about Derry and his family. Why, after all, would a young nobleman of apparent
promise want to become a duke's aide, rather than remain his own master? Alaric
Morgan's by then undeniable personal charisma is certainly a very important
factor, but might not another part be the wonder of Brion's court, as seen
through the eyes of a relatively unsophisticated minor lord of only eighteen,
newly knighted, who has only ever seen his king a few times and never spoken to
him face-to-face?
We
catch another glimpse of the maturing Denis Arilan, too, ten years after his
ordination to the priesthood, and see how his role in royal circles has
evolved.
the knighting of derry
Sean
Lord Derry, eighteen and less than a fortnight from knighthood at the hands of
King Brion of Gwynedd, let out his breath in a sigh of longing as he watched
the horse handlers parade their charges along the narrow, rail-fenced track
that led toward the auction yards of the spring horse fair at Rhelledd. The
particular object of his longing had yet to appear in the procession, but that
hardly mattered, since even the starting price set on the animal Derry wanted
was quite beyond his means. An earl he might be, but his holdings in the
eastern Marches were quite modest, as earldoms went, and only recently begun to
recover from the death duties due the Crown after the demise of Derry's father
nine years before. His Uncle Trevor, hardly better off than he, had offered
what was, for him, a generous subsidy, as his own gift on the occasion of his
only nephew's knighting; but Derry knew that even the combined sum was not
nearly enough.
"The
bay isn't bad," Uncle Trevor murmured, pointing out a quiet-mannered
animal with broad white stockings on its forelegs. "I don't care for his
markings, but he has a good chest and kind eyes. I checked his bloodlines, and
they're respectable enough. Or, there was a dark brown earlier. You remember
him. We could afford either of those, I think."
Derry
shrugged, not taking his eyes from the horses still emerging from the far
holding yard.
"They're
all right," he conceded. "The chestnut though..."
"Well,
I can't blame you for wanting him," Trevor said sympathetically, as the
stallion in question appeared at the far end of the track. "He's a horse
fit for a king, Sean. I only hope you won't be too disappointed if we can't
afford him."
"I
know we probably can't," Derry replied. "I'm prepared for that. The
bay or the brown will be all right, if we don't get the chestnut, but God, how
I'd love to have that fellow!"
"You
and every other horseman present," Trevor muttered.
Nodding
distracted agreement, Derry eased up another rail on the restraining fence and
craned in the direction of his intended prize, chewing at his lower lip as the
stallion was led very near their vantage point. His blue eyes drank in every
ripple of hard muscles playing under satin coat as the animal pranced and
curvetted against the restraint of his two handlers and occasionally whinnied
defiance at the lesser stallions ahead and behind him.
"Sweet
Jesu, he's magnificent!" Derry breathed, ducking his head in
apology to his uncle's scowl of disapproval at the near blasphemy. "Sorry,
Uncle."
The
stallion was magnificent, though: a deep-chested liver chestnut with not
a speck of white on him, the finest R'Kassan bloodlines proclaimed in high
crest, powerful jowls, and large, intelligent brown eyes. With a stallion like
this standing at stud and a careful breeding program, Derry could change the
entire character of Marcher remounts within five years. Nor would stud fees
from local tenants and lesser nobility in the area hurt Derry's economic state.
Such a mount would also do Derry proud when he rode into Rhemuth town to be
knighted. It was hardly a week away...
He
was dreaming of that glorious day, himself mounted on the chestnut in full
warrior's panoply, bright blue bardings glowing in the sunshine, when disaster
erupted. Without warning, a small child with flapping skirts and sleeves ducked
under the lowest rail of the restraining fence to dart to the other side—and
tripped, nearly under the nose of a nasty-tempered grey fidgeting just behind
the chestnut.
The
startled grey needed no further excuse to explode. Tossing its head and
squealing indignation, it went back on it haunches in a perfect levade, yanking
its startled handler off his feet, then snaked its long neck around to clamp
powerful jaws on the man's shoulder and shake him as a terrier might shake a
rat, only letting go as the chestnut also reared up at the commotion and
whirled to scream a challenge, shedding his handlers with no more effort than
if he had shaken off mice.
Derry
was already vaulting over the top rail as he heard the sickening, hollow thud
of steel-shod hooves connecting with the chest of one of the handlers, and he
only narrowly avoided the same fate as he dashed behind the grey to tackle the
cringing child and roll both of them clear. The stallions were fighting in
earnest by the time he could pick himself up and hoist the child over the rails
and into the waiting arms of another man, and grooms and handlers were swarming
everywhere, trying to get the other stallions away before more were drawn into
battle. In the clouds of dust being raised by the fray, Derry had a hard time
seeing what had happened to the original handlers, but he thought he saw one
dust-covered form lying motionless near the railing—and another man curled in a
ball almost directly beneath the plunging hooves, arms raised in futile attempt
to protect his head.
"Sean,
no!" he heard his uncle shout, even as he dashed out to attempt a second
rescue, snatching for the trailing lead rein of the chestnut.
He
managed to get a hand on it, but the stallion jerked its head and pulled him
off balance before he could let go, throwing him squarely in the path of one of
the grey's plunging forelegs. It was a knee that slammed into his jaw rather
than a hoof, thank God— but it still made him see stars as he recoiled and
rolled to his feet again. Another hoof flashed dangerously close to his head
and grazed his shoulder, opening a deep gash but deflected from bone-breaking force
by two men in black suddenly hauling at the grey's headstall and tackling its
neck.
The
diversion provided an opportunity for the man on the ground to roll clear,
however; and by the time Derry could make another try for the chestnut,
twisting one sweat-lathered brown ear to get the stallion's head down, the two
black-clad men had the grey subdued.
"Easy,
boy! Whoa! Whoa!" Derry crooned, letting up on the ear as the stallion
subsided.
One
of the men in black had whipped off his leather tunic and used it to blindfold
the grey, the better to lead him away from his rival, and Derry's chestnut
likewise quieted as Derry stroked and soothed, turning its head away from the
grey. But the movement, as the animal pivoted obediently on the forehand,
revealed a serious limp to the rear, and the near hind leg was bleeding. Derry
could feel every tortured muscle in his own body protesting as he handed over
the lead rein to a couple of grooms who suddenly materialized beside him, now
that the danger was over, and automatically moved back to check the injured
leg. A sick feeling knotted in the pit of his stomach as he ran trembling hands
down the sweaty flank and found the damage.
"A
nasty bite," said a low, pleasant voice almost at his ear. "And a
bowed tendon, I should think. What a pity."
Derry
glanced up only long enough to see that it was one of the black-clad men who
had caught the grey stallion—the one who had given up his tunic as a blindfold.
Bright mail glinted on the man's chest—unusual to wear under riding leathers—but
Derry dismissed that oddity for the moment as he manipulated the injured leg,
one hand gentling the stallion against the pain the movement obviously cost.
"I
don't think it's torn all the way through," he murmured, kneeling as he
set the hoof back on the ground. "If we can stitch and immobilize it, and
keep him from ripping it further, he may be all right."
"He'll
never be sound for battle," the man said. "Best to let them put him
down."
"No!"
Derry said. "I have a blacksmith who can make a special shoe to support
the leg until it heals. Uncle Trevor, see if you can find me a medical kit,
would you? And somebody make sure he doesn't put any weight on that leg. It's
worth a try, isn't it?"
As
the mail-clad man signalled to someone Derry could not see, taking the horse's
head to stroke and soothe, another man in brown leathers came to peer over
Derry's shoulder.
"Bowed
tendon, eh? Blast the luck! Thanks for your efforts, son, but my man will take
over from here. Maclyn, we're going to have to put him down."
"No!
You can't!" Derry cried. "At least let me try to fix him."
"It
isn't worth the trouble, son. He's never going to be sound."
"Not
for battle, no. He could still be used for breeding though. He doesn't have to
be sound for that, as long as he isn't in pain."
"It's
no good, son."
"Are
you the owner?" Derry demanded.
"Yes."
"Then,
I'll buy him for what he'd bring from the butchers! And I—I'll buy another
proper horse from you as well. I had my eye on two others."
The
man stroked his jaw thoughtfully.
"Which
two?"
"Well,
there was a dark brown one—very muscular—and a bay with odd white
forelegs."
"Ah.
The bay is one of mine," the man said. "I'm asking two hundred gold
marks for him. Give me three and you can have him and this one."
"Julius!"
the man in mail admonished. "That's usurous! Dead, this animal isn't worth
twenty, hide and all."
"He
is if he can eventually stand at stud, my lord," Julius said.
"But
that's a gamble," the mail-clad man pointed out. "And you were ready
to put the animal down. Let the boy have both for two-fifty, and you'll have
made far more from your bad luck than you deserve."
"Well—"
"Come
on, Julius," the man wheedled. "I'll buy that black mare at the
ridiculous price you're asking."
"And her
foal?"
"And her
foal," the man agreed. "But only for an additional fifty. And that's
doing you a favor!"
"Oh,
very well. You drive a hard bargain, my lord."
As
the two men shook hands, Derry could hardly believe his good fortune, for the
agreed price was hardly half what the chestnut was worth—if Derry could
make good his boast to repair the injury.
A
groom brought a bucket of water, and Derry began carefully sponging out the
stallion's wound, amazed that the animal did not protest. Indeed, the powerful
warhorse had grown as meek and quiet as a lamb under the hands of the stranger
lord in mail. Derry's head was beginning to throb from the blow to his jaw, and
his own blood ran down his left arm as he worked, mingling with the stallion's,
but he paid it no mind— nor to his own growing discomfort. He would be all
right until he stood up, at least. His Uncle Trevor came to crouch beside him,
unrolling a small medical kit with needles and sutures, and Romare, the
blacksmith from Castle Derry, eased closer to inspect the injury.
"I've
boasted about your talents, Romare," Derry murmured, "but you've
taught me everything I know about horses. Can we save him?"
"Since
you've bought him, it's certainly worth a try, m'lord," Romare replied.
"But why don't you let me take over here? I can throw sutures as well as
the next man. And someone ought to see your arm. You're bleeding more than you
think."
"He's
right, you know," said the man in mail, reaching across to grasp Derry's
arm below the laceration as Derry rose wobblingly, steadying himself with a
hand against the stallion's side. "From the looks of it, you're going to
need a few sutures yourself. That's quite a lump you've got on your jaw,
too." Bloodstained fingers lifted to lightly brush the knot, already
bruising. "Randolph, would you take a look at this, when you're finished
with the groom?"
Derry
had time to note only pale grey eyes and a shock of short-cropped yellow hair
above the man's mail shirt before his vision went dark, and he fainted.
Derry's
next awareness was a resurgence of the throb in his jaw, a stinging pain
overlying the ache in his left upper arm, and someone humming tunelessly, close
to his head. He opened his eyes to see a pleasant-faced man in black bending
over him, drawing a damp length of black silk from the bloody ruin of his left
shirt sleeve. The stout blue linen had been slit from elbow to shoulder to bare
a laceration as long as a man's hand, and the sharp stinging came from the
needle the man was using to close the wound.
"Well,
hello," the man said, smiling as he drew his thread snug. "You're
among the living again, I see. When you fainted, I feared you might have a
concussion, but now I think it was simply from the shock. You ought to be fine
when you've had some rest."
"How
long was I out?" Derry murmured.
"Oh,
not very long. I've only just started sewing you up. Actually, I suppose we
could have just cleaned and bandaged it, but this will leave you with less
scarring. You young men of the nobility end up with enough scars, as it is.
Murderous sharp, those warhorses' shoes—and filthy, too, though I think I've
gotten the wound clean enough. If you had to miss the cleaning or the suturing,
I think you got the best of the bargain by sleeping through the former—not that
this is pleasant, I'll grant you. I'm Master Randolph, by the way, and I'm
trained to do this, so you needn't worry. My lord didn't want you turned over
to just any local barber-surgeon."
Derry
did his best not to gape as the man's monologue wound down, though he did stare
a bit. The man who had identified himself as Master Randolph appeared to be in
his mid-thirties, and bore a small gryphon's head on the badge embroidered on
his left breast—shades of green and gold on black, the shield outlined in gold.
Derry blinked, vague recognition of the badge nibbling at the edges of memory,
then raised his head for a better look at what the man was doing, grimacing as
the needle bit again into the edge of the wound.
"You
do neat work," Derry murmured, as he laid his head back down and tried not
to flinch. "I'm Sean Derry."
"Yes,
I know. The Earl Derry. Your uncle told me," the man replied.
"Incidentally, he's gone to settle accounts with Julius. Your smithy's
working on the chestnut. And you've either driven a very shrewd bargain or
bought yourself some very expensive horse-meat and hide."
"I
know," Derry replied, laying his good arm across his eyes. "It's a
gamble I probably shouldn't have taken. We've spent so much already, getting me
outfitted for my knighting. I probably could've gotten the bay for far less,
too, if he'd gone to auction. His confirmation is good, but those white legs
would've brought the price down."
"Hmmm,
he'll be a serviceable mount for you," Randolph said. "And those
white legs will make him— distinctive."
Derry
started to chuckle at that, stifling a yelp as one of the stitches pinched, and
picked up his head to see what Randolph was doing. The wound was perhaps a
third closed. As he murmured apologetically and laid his head back, turning his
face away, he was startled to find another man crouching on his other side—the
man in the mail shirt. Derry wondered when he'd come in.
"Well,
young Lord Derry, how are you doing?" the man asked, smiling. "Is the
good Master Randolph just about finished torturing you?"
His
grey eyes held a hint of fog and summer rain, but lit with sunlight. And
contrary to Derry's earlier impression, he was probably little older than Derry
himself—mid-twenties, at the most. Derry found himself liking the man
instantly.
"I'm
afraid you have me at a disadvantage, sir," he said, smiling tentatively.
"You both seem to know who I am, but I'm afraid I don't know
you."
"Hmmm,
that isn't important just now," the man murmured. "What is important
is getting you patched up. You were quite a hero today, you know. The parents
of the child you saved are ready to nominate you for sainthood. How's that lump
on your jaw? He didn't hit his head anywhere else, did he, Ran?" he asked
the surgeon, probing with both hands in Derry's curly brown hair to feel for
swelling.
About
to pursue the question, Derry felt an almost uncontrollable urge to yawn—and
winced in the middle of it, as Master Randolph's needle continued its annoying
work.
"Think
about something else," the man in the mail shirt said softly, those
incredible silvery eyes gently catching and holding his as the man's hands
braced his head from either side. "Close your eyes and imagine yourself
somewhere else. Detach yourself from the discomfort."
Yawning hugely, Derry obeyed, and found that the discomfort did diminish. In fact, he even dozed. When he came to his senses again, the man in the mail shirt was gone, and Master Randolph was tucking in the last ends of the bandage on his shoulder. Uncle Trevor was sitting on a stool, looking down at him anxiously.
"How
do you feel?" Trevor asked.
"Like
I've been kicked by a horse in the shoulder and jaw," Derry replied,
stirring gingerly to raise himself on his elbows. "Where did my mysterious
benefactor go? I wanted to thank him. And who was he?"
Master
Randolph smiled as he tossed the last of his instruments in a medical satchel
and closed its flap.
"He's
gone to take care of business—and he knows you're grateful, son." Randolph
stood and slung the satchel's strap over his shoulder. "As to who he was,
I expect he'd have told you if he wanted you to know just now. But you'll
figure it out. Good day to you, young Lord Derry, and Baron Varagh."
He
was gone before Derry could protest. Mystified, Derry sat up and glanced at his
uncle.
"Do
you know who he was?" he whispered. "Obviously some high-born
lord—"
"Among
the highest born," Trevor said quietly. "What did he do to you?"
"Do to
me? What do you mean?"
"Did
he touch you? Do you remember anything he said?"
"Well,
yes, he touched me! He was checking to see if I'd hit my—who was he,
Uncle?"
Trevor
snorted, biting back a bitter grimace. "The Duke of Corwyn, Alaric
Morgan."
"Cor—Alaric
Morgan! The Deryni?" Derry breathed.
"Aye."
"Well,
bloody hell!" was all Derry could think to say as he lay back again,
laying his forearm across his forehead and trying to remember all that had
transpired. "So that was the great Morgan."
He
knew he probably should be afraid, for the magical Deryni were said to be able
to corrupt a man's soul with a glance, much less a touch; but somehow he could
not feel anything but admiration for what Morgan had done for him, both in the
horse yard and after, while Master Randolph tended his wound. He still liked
what he had seen in the pale, silvery eyes— and he was not sure he had ever
believed what the priests taught about the Deryni as a race.
As
for Morgan's forbidden magic—well, if Derry had tasted it when Morgan told him
to put the pain from his mind, that hardly smacked of evil in Derry's book. To
be free of pain while a surgeon worked—that had to be a blessing, not a
curse, for any fighting man. And if Morgan had other, less benign powers?
He
decided not to think about that possibility. He refused to judge any man on
hearsay—even a Deryni. Fearsome powers Morgan might have, but everything Derry
had observed of the man spoke of temperance, compassion, and a noblesse
oblige that could only be born—never created by mere rank. He wondered
whether he would see the Deryni duke at court when he went to Rhemuth to be
knighted. Morgan was said to be the king's friend, after all. And now that
Derry knew who Morgan was, a proper thank-you for his help at Rhelledd seemed
entirely appropriate.
The
week that followed would have been frantic enough for Derry, dashing about to
complete the final preparations for his journey, but it was made all the more
grueling by the aftermath of his injuries—nothing serious, but enough to slow
him down considerably, for every bone and muscle in his body ached for several
days after the incident, and his head throbbed for nearly a week. Because of
the possible head injury, Uncle Trevor insisted that Derry return to Castle
Derry in a horse litter, himself making the necessary arrangements to leave the
chestnut stallion temporarily in a stall at Rhelledd, with the smithy Romare to
care for him. Derry's mother, when she was not scolding her only son for having
squandered his meager funds on a potentially useless animal, fussed over him
unmercifully until it finally was time to leave for Rhemuth.
And
so, accompanied by his mother, his sister and her family, and his Uncle Trevor,
who would stand as his sponsor, Derry worried about finances on the leisurely
ride to the capital, rather than devoting much time to thinking about the
Deryni duke, Alaric Morgan. Trevor's son, the eleven-year-old Padrig, rode at
Derry's side as page, thrilled to be visiting the capital for the first time;
and the boy's enthusiasm helped to restore some of Derry's good humor for the
journey. The white-legged bay proved to be a smooth-gaited and even-tempered
mount, worth every penny Derry had paid for him and the chestnut; and
Romare's last report before they left declared the chestnut to be mending
well—so perhaps Derry's financial straits were not as desperate as he had
feared at first.
Once
Derry arrived at Rhemuth, he had little occasion to consider Morgan either. The
duke was not in evidence as Derry and the other knightly candidates went
through the final rehearsals for the ceremony, though the young Sieur de Vali
declared Morgan to be his sponsor when asked. Derry was attended by his Uncle
Trevor at the ritual bathing of the candidates that night, receiving the robes
of white, black, and red from him before making confession
and beginning his all-night vigil over his arms in the basilica within the
walls of the castle, but someone else did that duty for Morgan's candidate.
Not
until the actual morning of the knighting ceremony did Derry even see Morgan,
waiting quietly at the back of the great hall beside de Vali, whose overlord
Morgan was. As Derry passed him with Trevor and Padrig, that mere glimpse set all
the unasked and unanswered questions about the man whirling through Derry's
mind.
Morgan
certainly did not look like a powerful and sinister Deryni sorcerer to
Derry—though the ducal image was there, if more subtle than that of most other
men of equivalent rank. Morgan wore a coronet, but it was only a simple band of
hammered gold circling his brow. And his attire—
Well,
Derry had heard before that Morgan nearly always affected stark black, as he
had at Rhelledd, but Derry had expected something more—well, sumptuous, for
as important a court function as a mass knighting, especially since Morgan
apparently was, indeed, standing sponsor to the Sieur de Vali.
Sable
silk with a rich, nubbly texture swathed the duke from throat to gold-spurred
heels, formally high-collared and severe yet somehow relaxed as well, subtly
enhanced by an intricate bordure of double tressure flory-counter flory worked
in gold bullion around collar, sleeves, hem, and down the long slits fore and
aft. The white belt of Morgan's knighthood also relieved the blackness, but the
leather-wrapped hilt of his sword passed almost unnoticed in the shadow of his
left sleeve, its plain black scabbard all but invisible against the folds of
the long court robe. It was Morgan's only apparent weapon, but Berry would not
even allow himself to consider what other defenses the Deryni lord might have
at his disposal. He probably wore mail under his robe, too, as he had under the
riding leathers at Rhelledd.
Once
Derry's name was called to come forward, though, he did not think about Morgan
during his own knighting. He was too busy making the proper responses, kneeling
for Uncle Trevor to buckle on his sword and spurs, bowing his head for the
royal accolade at King Brion's hands. He shivered as the blade of the king's
sacred sword touched his shoulders and head, awed to be kneeling at last before
his sovereign, whom he had only even seen a few times in his life, and
then at a distance. And the ancient vows he recited as he set his hands between
those of the king and swore his oath of fealty were the first words he and
Brion Haldane had ever exchanged.
"I,
Sean Seamus O'Flynn, Earl Derry, do become your liege man of life and limb, and
of earthly worship. Faith and truth will I bear unto you, to live and to die,
against all manner of folk, so help me, God!"
He
kissed the royal hands before the king raised him up, flushing with pride as
the court cheered his new estate and Queen Jehana girded him with the white
belt of his knightly rank. After she had kissed him on both cheeks in
congratulation, he bent over her hand in courtly salute, bowed to the king and
to the eight-year-old Prince Kelson, seated at his father's right, then moved
to the side with a beaming Uncle Trevor to witness the other knightings. As an
earl of however modest means, Derry had been among the first to receive the
accolade. Hence, he was able to stare with relative impunity when Duke Alaric
finally came forward to sponsor the Sieur de Vali, who was only of baronial
rank.
Morgan
did his best to remain unobtrusive as his young vassal knelt to beg knighthood
of the king, himself kneeling with bowed head to affix the golden spurs to de
Vali's heels, but even Derry, relatively unsophisticated as he was, could sense
the heightened interest of the court in this particular dubbing—or at least in
the candidate's sponsor. The sword with which Morgan invested his charge at the
king's command was well made but of no particularly lavish embellishment, but
from the court's attention, as the weapon changed hands, Derry wondered whether
they expected it to burst into flames.
It
did not. Nor did Morgan. Like any ordinary man, the Deryni duke remained
kneeling quietly to one side as de Vali received the accolade, made his vows,
and rose to receive his white belt from the queen. Then Morgan melted into the
crowd as the court cheered the newmade knight. Derry did not see him again
until much later in the day, well after the feast, when he found the Deryni
duke sitting alone in a window embrasure that opened off the rear of the great
hall. The high collar of the black court robe was unfastened at the throat, the
coronet of earlier in the day set aside on the cushion beside him, but the
sunlight made of the duke's golden hair its own crown of fire as he hunched
over the stiletto he was using to pare his fingernails.
Derry
paused at the entrance to the embrasure, uncertain whether to intrude—or even
why he wanted to—but Morgan looked up almost immediately and rose.
"Ah,
young Lord Derry," the duke said, the stiletto disappearing so quickly
that for an instant Derry considered whether Morgan might have used magic.
"Or, should I say, Sir Sean, since you are so newly knighted?" Morgan
went on, making him a courtly little bow with both empty palms extended. "In
any case, my heartiest congratulations to you, Sir Knight. You are well
deserving of the honor bestowed upon you today."
Derry
flushed and returned the bow, thinking he probably should be uneasy at being
singled out for a Deryni's attention, but only feeling a little self-conscious
to be receiving any duke's notice.
"I
wouldn't know about that, Your Grace, but I thank you for the compliment,
nonetheless. And you can call me Derry, if you like," he added recklessly.
"I was only nine when I became an earl, so the title has become almost
like a given name, over the years."
"Ah,
that can happen," Morgan agreed. "I remember your father. You carry
his name as one of your own, do you not?"
"Aye,
m'lord. He was Seamus Michael O'Flynn. I am Sean Seamus."
"So
I recall, from your oath." Morgan cocked his head and tendered a hesitant
little smile as he continued. "I was the king's squire on the campaign
when your father received his wounds. I remember he fought very bravely. I was
sorry to hear he had later succumbed to his injuries—for your sake, as well as
his own. I, too, was only nine when my father died."
Derry
blinked in surprise. He had not realized Morgan knew so much about him.
"Then,
we—have something in common, Your Grace—besides a love of fine horses. May—may
I sit down?" he blurted.
Morgan
raised a fine blond eyebrow and crossed his arms casually on his chest.
"Are you certain you want to risk being seen with me by choice? You know
what I am."
"I
do, my lord."
Derry
managed not to flinch as Morgan's pale, silvery gaze flitted across his face,
down to his toes and back up again. When Morgan turned half-away and sat down
again, gesturing vaguely toward the opposite bench in the window with one
graceful hand, Derry felt almost physically relieved.
"Please
join me, then," Morgan murmured, "and tell me how fares the stallion
we saved from the knackers."
Derry
swallowed his trepidation and obeyed, making himself move farther into the
embrasure before sitting gingerly opposite the Deryni duke.
"The
stallion fares well, my lord," he said. "I thought you might like to
know; that's why I sought you out. I also wanted to thank you for helping me
drive the bargain that bought him. My smithy's fitted him with a special shoe
to keep the injury immobilized while it heals, and I'm told he flourishes—though
he's restive, confined to a stall this past week."
"And
will grow more restive yet, before he's mended enough to be turned out,"
Morgan observed. "Still, it's better than putting him down. A pity, even
so. I'd hoped to buy him for the king. His Majesty usually favors greys, but
that fellow was a mount almost worthy of my lord."
Derry
nodded, remembering his own reaction to the stallion and appreciating Morgan's
confirming judgment.
"Aye,
he was, Your Grace. But if he recovers, could the king not breed to him still?
If all goes well, I hope to have him standing at stud by the spring."
Chuckling
pleasantly, Morgan raised a droll eyebrow.
"I
would venture to guess that the king would be most interested in that
prospect," he said. "You must promise me, however, that you will
extract a suitable stud fee from the royal purse."
"Charge
the king?" Derry gasped.
"Well,
if you're to build yourself a reputation as a judge of fine horseflesh, you
must put a fitting value on your expertise," Morgan replied.
"Besides, you can't tell me that your estate coffers couldn't use the
extra income."
"But,
the king—"
"Derry,
did the king have anything to do with your getting that stallion?"
"No,
sir."
"Well,
then." Morgan grinned impishly. "On the other hand, if it were I, and
not the king, who wished to engage the services of your stallion, and I were to
suggest certain, ah, concessions..."
He
shrugged eloquently, adopting an expression of innocence quite at variance with
his prosperous if sober appearance, and Derry suddenly realized Morgan was
testing him, albeit gently.
"I
think I understand, Your Grace," he said carefully. "But might I not
also be well advised, if I wish to establish my reputation as a judge of fine
horseflesh, not to diminish the value of my expertise, even to a fellow
expert?"
Morgan
only shrugged again, rather more casually than the first time, but the mirth
Derry sensed in the grey eyes was well worth any momentary anxiety he might
have experienced.
"Well
said, my young friend," Morgan said with a nod. "We'll teach you yet
to drive a hard bargain. Incidentally, how did that white-legged bay turn out?
Other than those outlandish legs, he looked quite the goer."
Derry
allowed himself to smile, relaxing a little in the easy, horsey banter.
"He's
the bargain of the lot, sir: smooth-gaited, even tempered. If I use him for
breeding one day, I'll hope to avoid the odd markings, but I have no
complaints."
"No,
nor have I."
As
Morgan turned the pale grey eyes directly on Derry again, Derry suddenly felt
himself the subject of intense scrutiny—and more than just visual inspection.
He nearly stopped breathing. He was not sure he could have broken away from
that compelling gaze, but he felt no particular urge to try. He was not afraid,
but he grew more curious by the second. And when Morgan did not speak, Derry
decided to be bold.
"Are—you
reading my mind, my lord?" he whispered.
Morgan
smiled and blinked, but did not break his steady gaze.
"No.
Do you want me to?"
Derry
managed an audible swallow and tried fleetingly to glance away, just to see
whether he could, but found himself only shaking his head slightly.
"Why
not?" Morgan asked softly. "Are you afraid?"
"No."
"Good."
With
that, Morgan deliberately looked away, breaking the contact, and Derry could
breathe again.
Derry
was not afraid, though. Respectful, yes—as he would have been of any
clever man who was the king's friend and a duke—but he didn't think that had
anything to do with Morgan's magic. Perhaps Derry was naive, but Morgan seemed
to be a man of honor, for all that he was Deryni and supposedly to be suspected
and shunned by God-fearing men.
Derry
was curious as to whether Morgan had used his powers that first day they
met, however. He had had little time to think about it before, but it now
seemed rather odd that he had managed to drift off to sleep while Master
Randolph sewed up his arm.
"Did
you read my mind before?" he found himself asking timidly, recoiling a
little as Morgan turned to look at him again.
Morgan
cocked his head in question.
"When?"
"In
Rhelledd, when your Master Randolph was stitching up my arm."
"Ah."
Morgan smiled fleetingly. "Not really. I did— ah—help you a little with
the pain, however."
"How—help?”
Derry persisted. "Did you use your powers on me?"
Morgan
lowered his eyes briefly, then met Derry's again, though not with the previous
compulsion.
"Yes.
There seemed no point to making you endure more pain, when I could ease it for
you. I—hoped I'd been subtle enough that you didn't notice."
"I
wouldn't have, if we'd never talked this afternoon," Derry replied.
"Why do the priests say that what you do is evil?"
Morgan
intertwined his fingers and stretched his arms out in front of him, turning the
palms away until the knuckles cracked, apparently using the movement as an
excuse not to look at Derry.
"They
speak out of ignorance," the duke said after a moment, glancing out the
window as he let his hands drop to his lap. "They are slaves to old
prejudices, to old grievances done by misguided individuals. The Church did not
always view our talents thus."
Derry
thought about that for a moment, then shook his head.
"Well,
it makes no sense to me, Your Grace. I don't see why everyone can't just live
and let live."
"Would
that it were that simple."
"Yes.
Well." Derry sighed and glanced back into the hall, knowing he should
rejoin his uncle soon, but he really did not want to leave.
"I
won't be offended if you go now," Morgan said quietly, again studying him
with those incredible grey eyes. "And no, I'm not reading your mind. It's
only logical to wonder whether you've been missed, though, and to wonder
whether anyone has noticed with whom you've been conversing."
"Well,
your logic is correct," Derry conceded, shrugging sheepishly. "Do you
do that often?"
"Do
what?"
"Simply
guess what people are thinking, as any ordinary mortal would do, and then let them
think you did it with magic?"
As
Morgan raised both eyebrows in surprise, Deny sensed he was on to something.
Throwing all caution to the winds, he went on.
"You
do do that, don't you, Your Grace?" he ventured. "I'd heard
stories before, but until I saw you today, all in black, deliberately
cultivating that faintly sinister air—"
All
at once, Morgan burst out laughing, slapping a black-clad thigh with one hand
and shaking his head as he looked at Derry with mirth and a little wonder.
"You,
sir, are far more perceptive than I dreamed.
Perhaps I should have read your mind—though I'll swear, all I
ever did was block your pain that other time and Truth-Read you today, which
hardly even counts. Where do you come by all this wisdom?"
Derry
gaped, not comprehending what he had said to cause such a reaction.
"My
lord?" he whispered.
"Never
mind," Morgan said with a wave of his hand, still chuckling. "I'll
tell you this, though, Sean Lord Derry, new-made knight. I like your style.
Honesty such as yours is rare enough in this world, and especially toward men
like myself—and I don't refer entirely to my more unusual functionings. I
suspect you'll find, now that you've been confirmed in your knightly rank, that
earls have the same kinds of problems as dukes, in knowing when people are
dealing honestly with them."
"Well,
I'm only a very minor earl, Your Grace," Derry protested weakly.
"All
the more reason you may be just the man I've been looking for," Morgan replied,
almost to himself. "Tell me, would you find it of interest to consider
entering my service as an aide?"
"Y-Your aide,
sir?" Derry managed to murmur.
"Well,
unless I've read you totally wrong, and you don't want to work for me.
Any prestige normally attached to the position of a duke's aide is dubious, in
my case, as I'm sure you're smart enough to have figured out; but it's
essential that I have someone I can trust. I think you could be that man."
"But,
you hardly know me, Your Grace."
Morgan
smiled. "What makes you think I didn't check you out thoroughly before we
had this little talk?"
"You
did?" Derry said in a very small voice.
"I
did."
"But—I
came to you! How could you have known—?"
"Well,
I didn't know, of course," Morgan replied. "Not that you'd
approach me in precisely this way. And I certainly didn't know you'd prove to
be so— perceptive was the word I used before, I believe, wasn't it?"
"Yes,
sir."
"Well,
then. Do you think you might be interested in the post? You don't have to tell
me whether you accept or not—just whether you'd like to consider it. The
financial benefits are only moderate, and the hours are long; but I think you'd
find me a fair and honorable lord. And it would never be dull."
Derry
was sure of that—and just as sure, without having to think about it any
further, that he wanted the position. Lifting his eyes to Morgan's, he let
himself be snared in the pale, silvery gaze, allowing himself the most
tentative of smiles as he held out his right hand to the Deryni duke.
"Here's
my answer and my hand on it, my lord," he said softly. "I don't need
to consider it any further. I am your man, if you'll have me."
Grinning,
Morgan clasped the offered hand and held it.
"You're
sure? I can be very demanding, you know. And I can't guarantee that I'll always
be able to explain my actions to your satisfaction; only that I'll always try
to act in honor, and for Light rather than Darkness."
"What
man could ask for more, my lord?" Derry breathed.
"How
do you feel about the Church?" Morgan asked, releasing Derry's hand.
"They don't much approve of me, you know. That's why I stayed away from
the basilica last night, even though young Arnaud would love to have had me
present. Fortunately, I have an indulgent bishop and a very flexible confessor,
and the king's chaplain looks out for me at court, but there are those who
would stop at nothing to find an excuse to excommunicate me. It's very
fortunate, for example, that the new Archbishop of Valoret was not present
today. Edmund Loris does not like me at all. You could be damned by
association."
Derry
shrugged. "It seems to me I'd be in good company, my lord."
"That
depends upon one's point of view," Morgan muttered. "On the positive
side, however, you'd have the king's protection for yourself and your family—
after my own protection, of course. And I think it safe to say that His Majesty
would look kindly on the Earldom of Derry and its dependents."
"Then,
what have I to fear, my lord?"
Morgan
sighed happily. "Why, nothing, I suppose. God, I never dreamed it would be
this easy to convince you. Shall we go and ask the king's blessing, before you
change your mind? Our oaths should be witnessed."
"By
the king?" Derry breathed, his eyes going wide.
"Of
course, by the king!" Morgan muttered, rising and shooing Derry out of the
window embrasure as he snatched up his coronet. "Here, take this for me.
By all the saints, I think you're more in awe of him than you are of me!"
"Well,
he is the king, my lord!" Derry whispered. Morgan's coronet seemed
to tingle in his hands. "Before today, I'd only even seen him half
a dozen times—and never had him speak to me."
Morgan
only shook his head and chuckled as he guided Derry along the perimeter of the
hall toward the royal dais. As at the Sieur de Vali's knighting, the Deryni duke
did nothing to call attention to himself or his companion, but his mere passage
accomplished that. Derry was very aware of being watched, and of how
conversations fell off, then resumed after he and Morgan had passed by. He
sensed—not precisely an overt hostility toward Morgan, for no one would dare
that to the king's friend, in the king's hall, with the king present, but at
least a caution, bordering on suspicion; and it was now directed at himself as
well as Morgan. Derry could feel their eyes following him, marking how he
carried Morgan's coronet, and he avoided looking at his uncle as he passed
close to where Trevor stood chatting with one of the barons who held lands
adjoining his—though he saw Trevor's shocked expression out of the corner of
his eye.
By
the time they reached the royal dais, where Brion and a youngish-looking priest
sat listening to Queen Jehana tune a lute, young Prince Kelson sitting
cross-legged at their feet, Derry had nearly forgotten how awed he was of the
king—though that came flooding back into consciousness as Morgan paused at the
foot of the steps to bow, Derry nervously echoing his salute. Brion had set his
crown aside during the afternoon's feasting, but even without it, there was no
mistaking who was Master of Gwynedd.
"Well,
Alaric, I see you've been making the further acquaintance of one of our newest
knights," the king said easily, setting aside a cup of ale. "Sir Sean
O'Flynn, the Earl Derry, I believe?" As Derry made another nervous bow,
King Brion grinned. "And I'll bet you thought I wouldn't remember, didn't
you, what with all the other new young knights I made today?"
Derry
swallowed hard, unsure how to take the royal bantering.
"Sire,
you've made the lad speechless," Morgan said, coming to Derry's rescue
with a smile. "You must make a point in future to speak to your young
knights at other times besides at oath-givings, before full court. I
don't seem to intimidate him."
"Oh,
and does he not, young Derry?" the king said, turning his grey Haldane
gaze full on Derry in mock seriousness. "And what mischief is this afoot,
that my Deryni duke and one of my newest knights come before me like
this?"
"Tis
no mischief, Sire," Derry managed to blurt out, summoning his courage from
God knew where. "His Grace has asked—" He glanced at Morgan for
support and got a nod of approval. "His Grace has asked that I enter his
service, Sire. With Your Majesty's approval, I would ask that you witness our
oaths, for I have accepted his offer with all my heart."
Brion
nodded, his faint smile almost lost in the close-clipped black beard, and Queen
Jehana set down her lute with a cold composure and rose.
"If
you will excuse me, my lord," she murmured, "I have just recalled an
errand elsewhere. Good day to you, Father Arilan."
Kelson
glanced up at his father anxiously as his mother left, but Brion did not seem
at all surprised at his queen's behavior. Nor did the priest.
"You
must forgive the queen, young Derry," Arilan said softly. "I fear Her
Majesty does not share our lord king's affection for his Deryni duke."
"Now,
Denis," the king replied. "We mustn't give the lad the wrong
idea."
"Best
he knows what he will have to face, Sire, if he intends to serve a
Deryni," the priest said. "Few are as tolerant as Your Majesty."
Brion
snorted, laying a hand on his son's shoulder, then glanced at Morgan, who had
not changed expression throughout the exchange.
"Well,
Alaric, it does not seem that all my young knights are as tongue-tied as
you would have me believe," he said lightly. "Young Derry has spoken very
well. Would that I had learned his mettle sooner, for I would have taken him to
my own service."
"Ah,
but by granting him to me, Sire," Morgan pointed out, "you likewise
gain his service, for by serving me, he serves you as well."
Brion
chuckled, shaking his head in defeat.
"Enough,
both of you. I know when I am bested. Denis, would you please hand me my
crown?"
Morgan
put on his own coronet as the priest rose to obey, and Brion glanced
conspiratorially at Derry as he and Morgan knelt.
"You'll
want to make the further acquaintance of Father Arilan, if you spend much time
with Morgan," Brion said, as the priest handed him his crown and sat down
again. "He's one of the few priests at court who won't lecture you about
why you shouldn't consort with a Deryni. He's my confessor, and young Kelson's,
and I recommend him highly."
Derry
darted a quick glance at Arilan, but the priest only shrugged and smiled,
gesturing with his eyes toward the crown Brion now held toward the two about to
exchange oaths. Morgan had already laid his right hand upon it, and Derry
quickly followed suit, awed to be actually touching the crown of Gwynedd.
"Sean
Seamus O'Flynn, Lord Derry," Brion said, "do you, here before myself
and God as witnesses, solemnly swear that you will render faithful service to
Alaric Anthony Morgan, Duke of Corwyn, in all matters saving your duty to your
king and the honor of this realm, so help you, God?"
"I
do solemnly swear it, my Liege, so help me, God!" Derry whispered
fervently.
Brion
shifted his gaze to the smiling Morgan.
"And
do you, Alaric Anthony Morgan, Duke of Corwyn, here before myself and God as
witnesses, solemnly swear that you will be a true and honest overlord to this
knight, Sean Seamus O'Flynn, Earl Derry, in all matters saving your duty to
your king and the honor of this realm, so help you, God?"
"By
my honor and by all the powers I have to command, I swear it, my Lord and my
King, so help me, God," Morgan said steadily. "And if ever I should
break this oath, may my powers desert me in my hour of need. So be it."
Brion
smiled, raising the crown out of their touch to hand it back to Arilan.
"So
be it, then," he repeated. "And I wish you both well of the
partnership," he added, gesturing for them to rise. "Now, Alaric,
have you spoken to Nigel yet about those archers of his? What can he
have been thinking when he allowed them to use Bremagni bows?—though you
mustn't let Jehana hear me speaking ill of her homeland. Still, everyone knows
that the R'Kassans are the finest archers around. And Derry, see whether you
can find Lord Rhodri, would you? Denis
will help you. He's somewhere in the hall. I can't imagine what's happened to
the musicians he promised for this afternoon's entertainment."
"I'll
come, too," said the eight-year-old Kelson, scrambling to his feet as
Arilan rose to show Derry the way.
So,
with that royal and priestly escort, did Scan Lord Derry begin his service both
to the Crown of Gwynedd and to Alaric Morgan.
Writing
"Trial" was one of the more challenging projects I've undertaken in
the Deryni world. It didn't come as an answer to a question I asked myself or
my characters about the Deryni; it came of putting together elements that I was
given, and weaving them into a story. I should explain.
In
the winter of 1984, I went to a small, new science fiction convention in the
western United States. As sometimes happens to small, new conventions, this one
had underestimated its costs and had run into financial difficulties. To raise
money to get themselves out of their monetary crunch, the Con committee asked
each of the pros present to donate something to be auctioned off: an
autographed copy of a book, a manuscript, a dead ballpoint pen used by the
author—whatever might induce fans to part with some of their cash in a worthy
cause. I thought about the request, then offered the following: I would write a
one-page scene involving the successful bidder with the Deryni character of his
or her choice, general theme to be specified by purchaser.
Well,
I never dreamed what a stir this would create; no one did. The committee
put the scene as the last item on the auction, and the fans went bonkers. When
the bidding reached three figures, and people began forming consortia to pool
their resources, I upped the ante to a two-page scene, if two or more people
won it, with two Deryni characters of their choice.
I honestly don't recall how much the scene brought, though I believe it would have been a quite respectable payment for the average length short story in a typical science fiction or fantasy magazine, but the irony was that the two gentlemen who bought the scene had never read any of the Deryni books! The first buyer, an intense young man with a blondish mustache and the mythically suggestive last name of Stalker, wanted to be a King's Ranger, and voiced a preference for a pretty Deryni lady as companion in the scene—perhaps a minstrel. The other buyer, who goes by the name of Ferris and affects a Norse personna in the SCA (Society for Creative Anachronism), is a swordsmith who shows up at a lot of conventions selling weapons and armor. He wanted to be a version of his SCA self. But they both agreed that I could use my own discretion and put them with whatever Deryni characters I wanted.
So
I took down physical descriptions and addresses and promised to get back to
them as soon as I could. And I thought a lot, for several months—until
suddenly, a storyline started to develop.
Well.
I hadn't intended for the exercise to turn into a whole story, but I got
carried away. (In fact, as the story began to materialize, I even entertained
the notion that I might use it as my contribution to the Andre Norton
anthology—but it soon turned the wrong direction for that.) Before I knew it,
Ferris was an itinerant swordsmith from Eistenfalla, off the map north of
Torenth, who had come to Kiltuin in Corwyn, Morgan's territory, to peddle
weapons. Kiltuin, just downriver from Fathane but on the Corwyn side, is a port
town held by Ralf Tolliver, Morgan's bishop; and Tolliver runs a tight ship—no
lawlessness in Kiltuin.
But
Ferris is a foreigner in town and doesn't speak the language very well; and he
gets set up by—
But,
read the story and see what happens. Stalker didn't get his Deryni minstrel
girl, but he did get to be a King's Ranger; and Ferris got far more than he
bargained for.
trial
Pain
dragged Ferris back to consciousness—a head-splitting point of fire pulsing
behind his right ear, someone kicking him repeatedly in the ribs, and pressure
crushing the fingers of his sword hand around something hard and sticky-warm.
"Jesu, she
bled like a stuck pig!" someone muttered, "Watch out he doesn't get
you with that knife!"
"He
isn't getting anybody now!" a second voice answered, another kick
punctuating the words. "Let's take care of the bastard!"
More
voices joined in—harsh, urgent, conspiratorial—in a tongue Ferris only barely
understood, even fully conscious; but their mood was clear even if the exact
meaning was not. Sheer survival instinct made him try to arch and roll away
from his tormentors, but he could not get the weapon in his hand to connect
with anything but air. Two of them pinned his arms then, while two more
continued pummeling and kicking. One particularly vicious blow connected with
his solar plexus, eliciting a Whoof! of anguish and shoving him
perilously near unconsciousness.
Where,
in the name of the All-Father, was he? And why were these men trying to kill
him? The last thing he remembered, he'd been leaving the Green Man Tavern,
happily inebriated after drinking part of the profits of a very good sale. In
fact, he'd sold the sword off his own belt.
But
when he'd heard screams and the sound of a scuffle, and then the scrabble of
running feet—
"Here
now! What's going on?" a new voice demanded, the snap of authority causing
the kicking to stop and Ferris' tormenters to draw back a little in
consternation as light bobbled toward them and hard-shod footsteps approached.
"Damn,
it's the watch!" one muttered.
"Get
the knife away from him!" another responded, wrenching the hilt out of
Ferris' numb fingers. "Ho, the watch! Come get this fellow! He's murdered
the girl!"
It
was only then, as they jerked him to his feet by both arms, that Ferris saw the
crumpled body sprawled where he had just lain—and the dark stain spreading on
the cobbles around her, bright crimson even by light of the approaching
lantern. It soaked her fine linen gown and pooled where it still seeped from
terrible wounds in her chest and a gaping slash across her throat.
"Hold
him! Don't let him get away!"
But
he was not trying to get away. After the beating he had taken, it was all he
could do just to stay conscious. A groggy glance at his own clothing revealed
that he, too, was covered with blood, and he feared yery little of it was his
own. His buff leather jerkin was slick with it, and he could feel it stiffening
already in the fine hairs on the backs of his hands, clotting in his hair and
beard where it had spattered.
"Please,
I have done nothing!" he managed to gasp, as the man with the lantern
pushed closer, muttering orders to the liveried men following him—and backed
away almost immediately to fend off a second man who was trying to get a better
look.
"Oh,
God, is it Lillas?"
"You
don't want to see this."
"He
killed her! The bloody bastard's killed her!"
"I
never saw her before!"
"Quiet,
you!"
A
knee to Ferris' groin doubled him up with pain, but he knew he must not let
them silence him.
"No!
By all the gods, I swear it!" he cried. "These men attacked me. I
have killed no one!"
"By
all the gods, he swears, eh?" One of the men holding Ferns forced him to
his knees with a vicious twist of one of his already aching arms. "Heathen
bastard!" He spat contemptuously in Ferris' face. "The hell he
didn't!"
"Aye,
there's no mistaking that!" another chimed in. "He's carved her up
right proper, he has. God, would you just look at all this blood?"
The
second man paid little attention to the exchange, still intent on getting past
the sergeant for a look at the girl's body; but he pulled up short when he had
seen her, shock and anguished disbelief quickly giving way to cold loathing as
he straightened and turned to stare at Ferris.
"Stalker,
no!" the man with the lantern cautioned, seizing a handful ef the other's
sleeve. "Don't do anything stupid!"
But
the man addressed as Stalker only shook off the restraint and drew himself a
little taller, staring down at Ferris as if he might slay him with a glance,
his face white in the lantern light. Unlike the watch, in their town livery of
russet and gold, he wore the ciphered leather doublet and thigh-high boots of a
King's Ranger, a cockade of egret feathers jutting from the crown of his green
leather hunt cap. He might have been of an age with Ferris—certainly no more
than thirty—but his face, in his tight-leashed grief, had taken on an ageless
and almost androgynous beauty, like statues of the Old Ones Ferris once had
seen in the temple at Eistenfalla. For an instant, the man
called Stalker was one of those Old Ones—and Ferris greatly feared for
his very soul, even though he knew he was innocent.
"He's
guilty as sin, Ranger," one of Ferris' captors volunteered, taking
advantage of the taut silence. "We caught him with the knife in his
hand."
"That's
right," another agreed. "She was on the ground by the time we got
here. There was nothing we could do."
His
captors spoke far too fast for Ferris to catch most of what they said after
that, but he did not have to understand every word to know that he was in
serious trouble. He tried several times to argue his innocence, but he was not
fluent enough to think of what to say until the moment was already past to say
it— and his head was still spinning from the combined effect of drink and the
blows he had taken.
The
situation was a classic setup: the stranger in town framed for the crimes of
the locals. And a stranger who was a foreigner as well, and who spoke the
language badly, would find it nearly impossible to prove his innocence,
especially when he appeared to have been taken literally red-handed.
"Well,
I don't think we need to waste any more time arguing in the street," the
watch sergeant finally said, stepping closer to the ranger. "It's pretty
clear what happened."
"Aye,
sir," another man of the watch chimed in. "Fresh fruit for the
gallows tree, eh, lads?"
The
men laughed; and Ferris stiffened, for he understood those words all too
well. He had seen the rotting bodies gibbeted outside the town gates. For an
instant he wondered whether they meant to hang him now, without a trial.
Not
that a trial would necessarily help. Kiltuin town belonged to the Bishop of
Corwyn, who had the meting of High as well as Low Justice within its bounds—and
Kiltuin, rowdy port town and near to the border with hostile Torenth, was a
place where the High Justice must often be invoked. The right to impose capital
punishment went with the meting of High Justice, and murder was second only to
treason in the list of crimes meriting the death penalty.
Nor
might murder be the only crime of which Ferris was accused. Bishop Ralf
Tolliver was said to be a fair and honest judge, but he was also a Christian
bishop; and while Ferris respected the faith practiced in Gwynedd, he embraced
another religion. Just what religion might become all too clear during
trial before a man like Tolliver. In times not too far past, even in parts of
Ferris' own homeland, those who followed the path of the All-Father had
suffered nearly the same kinds of terrible persecutions as the Deryni, whose
magic was said to damn them to the Christians' version of the Seven Hells
Ferris feared. Ferris had heard it rumored that Corwyn's Duke, Tolliver's
temporal overlord, was half Deryni, but he did not know whether to believe that
or not. He had never personally met a Deryni.
"Sergeant,
take him before I do something we may all regret," the ranger said
finally, the temperate words obviously uttered only with the greatest of
difficulty as he averted his eyes from Ferris and the body stretched motionless
beside them. "Only the bishop may determine what fruit the gallows tree
shall bear. His Excellency will see justice done."
The
sergeant of the watch let out a sigh of relief and motioned his men forward
with a jut of his chin.
"Right.
Let's bind him securely, then, lads. He looks like a scrapper. What's your
name, man?" he demanded, as they looped the leather around Ferris' wrists
and drew them roughly behind him.
That,
at least, Ferris understood perfectly well. It was the first time they had
bothered to ask him anything. If only he could get them to listen.
"My
name is Ferris." He winced as the thongs tightened on his wrists and
another was looped around his neck like a halter. "I make swords. I did
not kill the girl."
"Sure
you didn't," the sergeant said. "That's what they all say. Take him
away, lads. The bishop will try him in the morning."
To
Ferris' surprise, he suffered no further physical abuse once the watch had him
in their charge and led him away. The dungeons beneath the bishop's hall were
clean enough and occupied by only a handful of other wretches awaiting justice
the next morning, so Ferris was given a cell of his own—though not an
opportunity to wash off the blood of the girl he had not slain.
He
spent what was left of the night nursing his bruised ribs and throbbing head,
the latter made doubly agonizing by his hangover and a tender knot behind one
ear. Lying there on the straw, pain dulling his ability to reason, his hand
itched for even one of the many blades he had forged over the years, and a
chance to use it—if not to fight his way out of here, then at least to cheat
the hangman of his prey and die in a manner of his own choosing, for he had
little hope that his word would be taken over that of the four toughs
who had framed him. In fact, it was probably they who had killed the girl and
had seized on his vulnerability— drunk and a stranger in town—to pin the blame
on him. Ah, gods, it was hopeless!
It
got worse, too. The guards who came to get him shortly after dawn had been well
trained, and he never had a chance to even try to escape. All too efficiently,
they cuffed his hands in front of him with fine, key-locked manacles, the
workmanship worthy of his own skills, and virtually escape-proof. Then they
laced a stout wooden bar through his bent elbows and behind the small of his
back.
He
had expected the restraints, but he had not expected the leather gag
they buckled tightly around his head, with its wooden mouthpiece like a horse's
bit thrust between his teeth and partway down his throat. He retched and gagged
almost uncontrollably as they fitted it on him, and found that any attempt to
make a sound produced a similar gagging reflex.
"Keep
quiet and it isn't all that bad," one of the guards said, as Ferris caught
his breath and straightened cautiously to stare at them in shock. The man was a
different guard from any of the night before. "You'll get your chance to
speak. The witnesses said you'd a foul mouth on you. His Excellency doesn't
like to be interrupted when he's hearing a case."
Well,
there was little likelihood of that, Ferris thought bitterly, as they took him,
staggering a little, up the steep stone stairs and into the bishop's hall,
steering him by the ends of the bar through his arms. Had they troubled to ask,
he would have given them his word of his silence, but why should they bother?
As far as they were concerned, his guilt was a foregone conclusion. All that
remained was the bishop's confirmation. As they led him down the length of the
hall toward the dais and Bishop Tolliver's chair of state, Ferris made himself
study the man who held his life and death in his hands.
The
bishop was younger than Ferris had expected: fortyish and fit—no paunchy
churchman, he. The tonsured brown hair was scarcely touched with grey, and his
clean-shaven face glowed with the healthy tan of one who enjoyed regular
outings in the open air. His waist probably had gained no more than a few
finger-widths since adolescence.
Polished
riding boots with spurs protruded beneath the hem of his purple cassock, and he
wore the purple mantle of his office like the prince he was. The hand adorned
with a bishop's amethyst was quick and graceful as it made some signal to a
clark reading back the transcript of the trial just completed, and Ferris
thought it might have wielded a sword or a crozier with equal facility.
The
steely-eyed appraisal of the trained warrior was in Tolliver's eyes as he
flicked his gaze briefly toward the approaching Ferris, and the swordsmith
found himself automatically measuring the man for one of his finer blades—until
the bishop's glance shifted to the four well-dressed men lounging on a bench
opposite the prisoner's dock. With a start that almost made him choke on his
gag, Ferris realized that the men were the same who had accused him the night
before—clearly men of substance and some standing in the town!
The
shock of that discovery, and the resulting futility of his own position, kept
Ferris from paying very much attention to what happened next. He had enough
presence of mind to incline his head in respect as his guards paused to salute
the bishop—an act that clearly startled more than one person in the hall, not
the least of whom was the ranger seated with the clarks to the bishop's
right—but mounting the prisoner's dock was an indignity he had hoped never to
face. He might be a foreign devil in their eyes, but, by the gods, he was an
honest man!
His
guards remained with him once he was in place, each with a hand resting on an
end of his controlling bar, as if they expected him to try to bolt for freedom.
The three men of the previous night's watch sat on a bench between the dock and
the bishop. Other people were in the hall as well, but Ferris had no idea
whether they had business with the court or were merely curiosity seekers. Far
at the back of the hall, on a black-draped catafalque, lay a coffin covered
with a black pall. He guessed, with a sickish feeling in his guts, that it was
the girl's. Lillis, the ranger had called her.
Ferris
tried to follow what his accusers said, but the language barrier and the
frustration and discomfort of his own physical situation served to run most of
what was said into a vague blur of mounting evidence against
him—circumstantial, to be sure, but weighted by the stature of the men who
accused him. Each new testimony embellished on the previous one and damned him
further.
An
unexpected development came with the statement of one of the two black-habited
nuns who had prepared the girl's body for burial. Ferris gathered, from what he
could catch of the woman's soft, self-conscious testimony, that the girl had
been of good family and reputation, convent-educated, and betrothed to the royal
ranger seated with the clarks—admirable traits, but hardly pertinent to whether
or not Ferris had killed her, so far as he could tell.
But
as the bishop pursued his questioning of the woman, the reason suddenly became
all too clear. For suddenly she burst into tears and babbled out a short but
impassioned accusation, the most prominent word of which was rape.
"I'll
kill him!" the ranger screamed, launching himself across the hall at
Ferris as the four accusers leaped to their feet and added their own verbal
abuse.
Until
the ranger actually had his hands around Ferns' throat, Ferris could not
believe what he had heard. His vision was going grey by the time the guards
could prise the ranger's hands loose and drag him, cursing and weeping, to the
foot of the dock to hold him. Ferris' guards hoisted him back to his feet by
the bar across his back, checking his gag to make certain he could breathe
again, but Ferris hardly cared as he gasped for air. He had caught the sense of
the new accusation, if not the exact terms, and it was even more outrageous
than the first—and doubly damning.
But
while the bailiffs were restoring order to the court, and before the bishop
could admonish those responsible for the outburst, two newcomers appeared in
the doorway whose presence produced an instant hush and cessation of activity.
People on either side of the center aisle rose as the two came forward, the
women bobbing self-conscious curtsies and the men tugging at forelocks in
respect.
No
one told Ferris who they were, of course. The younger one in the bright blue
cloak appeared to be a squire or aide—a fresh-faced lad probably still in his
teens, moving with the grace of good training, merry blue eyes peering from
beneath a mane of untamed brown curls. But the other—
It
was he who had brought the proceedings so abruptly to a halt, though he
was hardly more than a lad himself. No accoutrement of rank or feature of
attire had caused the deference he received as he strode toward the dais with
the boy at his side. His travel-stained black riding leathers were quite
unremarkable for a man whose appearance has just elicited so dramatic a
response, the sword at his belt no more than serviceable, so far as Ferris
could tell from his own vantage point, though certainly a constant and accustomed
part of his life.
Nor
was the man particularly physically imposing or menacing, though there was that
about him which spoke of unmistakable power come of authority that is not
questioned. He was a bit above average height, with the lean, graceful physique
of a man accustomed to rigorous physical activity—he was probably a master of
the weapon at his side—but he had none of that hardness one often saw in
mercenaries or other professional soldiers. On the contrary, his features
declared gentle breeding: grey eyes in a handsome, clean-shaven face; firm jaw;
a close-cropped cap of pale gold hair, straight and fine.
What
was there about him, then, that elicited the respect and subtle apprehension
Ferris was noting in the rest of the observers? It was more than mere command
presence or even rank. Even the bishop rose as the man reached the foot of the
dais steps and continued right up them, his companion pausing to bow before
following after. And the bishop bowed to the man before the man bent to kiss his
bishop's ring.
"Your
Grace, you are most welcome," the bishop said, gesturing for one of the
bailiffs to bring another chair. "Pray, what brings you to Kiltuin? I
thought you were in Rhemuth."
The
man passed a parchment packet to the bishop as he glanced casually around the
hall.
"I
was. Business recalled me to Coroth, however, so His Majesty asked me to
deliver these deeds into your keeping. But, I'm surprised, Ralf. Do you often
permit such outbursts in your court?"
Tolliver
proffered a grim and tight-lipped smile as he glanced briefly at the documents
and then passed them to a clark as the bailiff placed another chair at his
right.
"Now,
you know better than that. The case has aroused local anger, however. Would you
care to assist me in hearing it?"
"Certainly.
But as an observer only." The man declined Tolliver's gesture toward the
high chair and took the lesser one instead, leather-gloved hands laying a
riding crop across leather-clad knees. "What's the fellow done?"
And
as he turned his gaze on Ferris, standing dumbfounded in the prisoner's box,
Ferris had the fleeting sensation that the man saw into his very soul. He could
not look away so long as the grey eyes held him, but as soon as the man's
glance shifted back to the bishop, following the low-voiced summary the bishop
gave, Ferris desperately turned his face toward the nearer of his two guards in
question.
"That's
the duke," the man murmured, obviously aware what he was trying to ask.
"Now you're really in for it."
And
Ferris, glancing back at the man in black, knew a moment of even greater
apprehension than before— for if the Bishop of Corwyn was known to be a stern
judge, then the Duke of Corwyn held that reputation doubly. And Alaric Morgan,
Duke of Corwyn, was said to be Deryni, privy to dark powers undreamed by
ordinary mortals!
"I
see," Morgan murmured, still in converse with the bishop. "And the
gag?"
Tolliver
shrugged. "The witnesses said he was belligerent, that he would be a
disruption in the court," he replied, gesturing toward the four well-dressed
accusers sitting in the front row, who looked a little less sure of themselves
since Morgan's arrival. "It's a common enough precaution, until it's time
for the accused to speak."
"Hmmm.
It seems to me that yon ranger was more of a disruption than the
prisoner," Morgan replied drolly, with a slight nod in the direction of
the now reseated and embarrassed Stalker.
"Aye.
But the murdered girl was to be his bride, Your Grace," Tolliver said.
"And just before you arrived, the good sisters who prepared the body for
burial revealed that her attacker's crime was rape as well as murder."
"Ah."
Morgan's
face hardened at that, and Ferris could not help shrinking a little harder
against the back rail of the dock as the duke's glance flicked disdainfully
over him again—though he was as innocent of the one crime as the other.
Not
that innocence had much to do with what was happening here today. Even if
Ferris were given a chance to tell his side of the story, he knew no one would
believe him. Not over the word of the four men who accused him. He was stunned,
then, at Morgan's next question of the bishop.
"Have
you heard his testimony yet?"
"No,
Your Grace. We had just finished the testimony of the witnesses."
"Very
well." Morgan gestured toward the guards still standing at Ferris' sides.
"Take that bridle off and bring him here."
"Out
of the dock, Your Grace?" one of the bailiffs asked, shocked, as the
guards moved to obey.
"Unless
you intend to have the dock brought here as well," Morgan replied with a
wry quirk of his mouth. "Do you think I can't keep him under control, even
without the arm restraints?"
Ferris
could not help being amazed at the touch of wry humor, even though he also felt
apprehension at the vaguely implied threat of Morgan's words. He decided he
might even like the man, under other circumstances—and he could hardly blame
Morgan for feeling hostility, given the crimes of which Ferris was accused. Was
it possible that he might get a fair hearing after all? Both the bishop and
Morgan were said to be fair and incorruptable, but would that hold true where a
stranger was concerned?
He
worked his jaw nervously several times when the gag had been removed, relieved
of the discomfort of the bit and straps, and tried not to let his fear show as
the two guards walked him out of the dock and toward the dais steps. He thumped
to both knees at the bottom of the steps before the guards could make him
kneel, giving Morgan and the bishop a deeply respectful bow of his head.
"Please,
my lords, let me speak," he pleaded as he straightened to search their
eyes. "I—do not know your language very well, but I—am innocent. I swear
it!"
The
bishop only sighed patiently at the expected denial, but Morgan became more
thoughtful, his eyes narrowing a little as he stared back at Ferris.
"This
is not your native tongue?" he asked.
Ferris
shook his head. "No, my lord. I come from Eistenfalla. I make swords.
I—understand well enough to trade in weapons, but not—too fast."
As
the bishop shifted in his chair, apparently about to intervene, Morgan waved
him off.
"I
see. Well, I don't think anyone here speaks your language, so we'll have to
make do. Do you understand why you are here?"
Ferris
nodded carefully, amazed and grateful that the duke seemed to be willing to
listen to his side.
"They
say that I killed a woman, my lord—"
"And
raped her," the bishop interjected.
"No,
my lord!"
"That
is what they say, is it not?" Morgan replied.
"They
say it, yes. But I did not do it, my lord!"
"The
holy sisters say otherwise, Alaric," the bishop murmured exasperatedly,
"and he was taken with the bloody dagger in his hand. That's her blood all
over his clothes. Four witnesses of excellent reputation say they saw him do
it."
"Really?"
Morgan murmured, coming to his feet with casual grace. "That's very
interesting, because I think he's telling the truth."
And
as his words sank in and a whisper of surprise and apprehension rippled through
the hall, the bishop looking the most startled of all, Morgan glided down the
dais steps to stand directly before the kneeling Ferris.
"No
one has told me your name," Morgan said, handing off his riding crop to
his aide and briskly stripping off his black leather gloves. "What is
it?"
Ferris
could not take his eyes from Morgan's.
"F—Ferris,
my lord," he managed to whisper.
"Ferris,"
Morgan repeated. "And do you know who I am?"
"The—the
Duke of Corwyn, my lord."
"What
else do you know about me?" Morgan persisted.
"That—that
you are a man of honor, my lord."
"And?"
"And
that justice is done in your courts."
"And?"
Ferris
swallowed, not wanting to say it.
"Go
ahead. What else?" Morgan demanded.
"That—that
you are D-Deryni, my lord," Ferris managed to choke out, unable even then
to tear his eyes away from Morgan's.
"That
is correct," Morgan said, flicking his gaze for the merest of instants to
the four witnesses watching with wide-eyed fascination. "Can you tell me
what that means to you, that I am Deryni?" he asked quietly.
"That—that
you consort with black magic," Ferris found himself saying, to his horror.
Morgan
grimaced and gave a heavy sigh. "Magic, yes. The color is rather open to
interpretation. I have some special powers, Ferris, but I try to use them only
in the cause of justice."
At
Ferris' look of uncertainty—for Morgan's vocabulary had begun to exceed his
understanding again—the duke stopped and gave him a patient smile.
"You
don't understand but half of what I'm saying, do you?"
Ferris
dared to shake his head slightly.
"Do
you understand when I say that I can tell when a man is lying?"
"I
am not lying, my lord!" Ferris whispered desperately. "I did not kill
the woman! I did not rape her, either!"
"No, I see that you did not," Morgan replied. And as Ferris gasped in astonishment, tears welling in his eyes that he had finally been believed, Morgan added, "But perhaps you can tell us who did."
"But
I—I do not know, my lord!" Ferris started to protest.
"Remember
last night," Morgan commanded, taking Ferris' head between his hands,
thumbs resting on the temples, his eyes holding Ferris from any attempt to draw
away.
Ferris
feared he might drown in those eyes. He could see nothing else. And Morgan's
touch bought a heady helplessness, a sweet-sickly sense of vertigo that started
at the top of his head and swooped down to the pit of his stomach, making his
knees go to jelly.
He
felt the guards supporting him by the ends of his control bar as he sank back
on his haunches, beyond any ability to resist what was happening to him; but as
his eyes fluttered closed, he lost all awareness of Morgan, the guards, the
hall, or any of the rest of his present situation. Suddenly it was night, and
he was stumbling down an alley that he hoped led back to the inn where he was
staying, wondering whether he should have drunk so much.
Cries,
then—shrill and terrified, in pain. Running to see who called—and the sound of
footsteps in the shadows. He caught only a glimpse of a still, slight, form
clad in light-colored clothing, and dark figures scattering at his approach,
before someone struck him solidly from behind, and everything went black.
The
next thing he knew, he was being beaten and kicked, his head aswim from drink
and the blows, covered with blood, trying to cringe from the booted feet. And
then the watch was there, and his captors were saying he had done it, and he
had no words to tell them of his innocence.
"Release
him," he heard a voice say, as he abruptly became aware of his body again
and the hands clamped to his temples were removed. "He didn't do it. I
think, however, that I know who did."
He
opened his eyes in time to see Morgan turning to survey the four witnesses
ranged on the bench behind and to his left. The men rose nervously as Morgan
looked at them, no longer as self-confident as they had been only minutes
before. Their nervousness increased as the bishop signalled half a dozen guards
to move in behind them, though the guards made no attempt to touch them.
It
was quickly done, to Ferris' continued surprise and awe. While his guards
untied his hands and released him, helping him to his feet, Morgan moved before
the four witnesses, one by one, and asked each the same three questions:
"Did you kill the girl?" "Did you participate in the rape?"
"Did you agree among yourselves to accuse the swordsmith?"
The
Deryni lord did not touch them; only fixed each with that cool, irresistible silver
gaze and commanded the truth. And though only one answered yes to the first
question, all four, without exception, answered yes to the second and third.
They appeared to be a little dazed as Morgan returned calmly to the dais and
the guards moved in to bind their wrists behind them.
"I
trust you don't think I've stepped out of line, Bishop," Ferris heard
Morgan murmur to Tolliver as he sat once more in the chair at the bishop's
right. "Is there any doubt in your mind that justice has been done?"
Tolliver
slowly shook his head. "Thank God you arrived when you did, Alaric,"
he replied softly. "Otherwise, we should have hanged an innocent
man."
"Aye,
he is," Morgan replied, glancing out at Ferris again, who was rubbing his
wrists absently and staring at the Deryni lord in awe. "You are free to
go, sword-smith. The men who accused you falsely shall hang for that, and for
their other crimes." He ignored the murmurs of consternation as his words
sank in on the four guilty men. "I only wish there were some way to repay
you for what you have suffered."
Ferris'
jaw dropped in amazement, and he wondered whether he had understood correctly.
The duke had already given him his life, when he had thought never to see
another day. It was he, not Morgan, who should be offering some token of
recompense; and glancing at the blade lying close along Morgan's thigh— too
short, by a hand-span, to take full advantage of the man's reach, and probably
ill-balanced, to boot— Ferris thought he knew what would please.
"You
have already paid any debt to me by giving of your justice, my lord,"
Ferris said, dropping to one knee and giving salute with right fist to heart in
the manner of his people. "But may I—ask one favor of Your Lordship?"
"What
is it?" Morgan asked.
"I—I
would rather speak with you in private, if I may, my lord."
At
Morgan's gesture, Ferris rose and mounted the dais steps, bowing slightly to
the bishop and then asking with a glance whether he and Morgan might withdraw a
little further. With a nod, Morgan got up and led him off the dais to one side,
hand resting easily on the hilt of the sword that had given Ferns'
sword-smith's eye offense from the floor of the hall.
"I
thank you, my lord," Ferris murmured, controlling a smile as he noticed
Morgan's young aide taking up a position of vigilance at a discreet distance
outside the window embrasure they entered. "I—have not the words in your
tongue to express my gratitude. I do not understand how you did—what you did. I
think, from the look on your bishop's face, that he almost wishes you had not
done it, for he fears your power, even though he respects you as a man—but I
wanted to tell you that—that I will no longer be afraid when people speak of
the Deryni."
"No?"
Morgan replied with a wry little smile. "Then you will be but a rare one
among the many who are."
"You
have a skill that you use for the cause of truth," Ferris said stubbornly.
"My people value the pursuit of truth. The All-Fa—"
"You
need say no more," Morgan said quietly, a more wistful smile playing about
his lips. "I suspected, from the start, that you worshipped the
All-Father. Your people and mine have both suffered because of their
differences, I think. Is that what you wanted to tell me?"
"Not—all,
my lord," Ferris breathed. "Would you—would you draw your sword for
me?"
"My
sword?"
"Yes,
my lord. I am a master swordsmith, as I have said. I noticed that your blade
seems short for the reach of your arm. Can you show me your stance?"
trial 227
Raising
one blond eyebrow, Morgan stepped back a pace and eased the weapon from its
sheath, at the same time telling his aide, by sign, that there was no danger.
When, at Ferris' direction, he had swung the sword through several basic
exercises, he saluted with a flourish and tossed the hilt into Ferris' waiting
fist.
"So,
swordsmith, is it a goodly blade or no?"
"The
swordsman is goodly, my lord," Ferris muttered, as he hefted the blade in
his own hand, "but he could be better still, with the right weapon."
Ignoring
the duke's look of surprise, Ferris moved farther into the window and laid the
blade across his forearm while he turned it to and fro in the light, sighting
along the steel for ripples or other imperfections— of which there were none.
When he had flexed it between his hands, he motioned Morgan to step back and ran
through his own set of exercises designed to test the balance of a blade. When
he was done, he flipped it into the air and caught it just beneath the
quillons, then extended it back to Morgan, hilt-first.
"Well?"
"It
is, indeed, a goodly blade, my lord, but not for you," Ferris said
happily. "Save it for your son. I can make you a better."
"Can
you?" Morgan replied, the one eyebrow rising in wry if dubious question as
he slid the weapon back into its scabbard, to the watching aide's obvious
relief. "And what might such a blade cost me, master sword-smith?"
"A
place to work," Ferris said promptly. "The steel from which to forge
it. Enough of your time to fit the weapon to your own style. You deserve a
gallant blade, my lord. It is the least I can do. And if you are pleased with
my work, perhaps—perhaps you would take me into your service?" he asked
recklessly.
Morgan
stared into his eyes for so long that Ferris was sure the Deryni lord must be
reading his mind, but he did not care. He liked this man. He suspected
he would have liked him even if Morgan had not saved his life. What was
more, he respected him. The Duke of Corwyn was a man he could happily serve.
"You
know that Deryni can read men's minds, don't you?" Morgan suddenly said,
in a very low voice. "Surely that must frighten you."
"I
have nothing to hide from you, my lord," Ferris said slowly, meaning every
word. "You would be a fair and honest master and do honor to my work. I
could not ask for more."
"Only—"
Morgan murmured.
Ferris
swallowed, suddenly ashamed of his misgiving.
"Only
what, my lord?"
"Only,
you are just a little afraid," Morgan said gently, "which is
certainly understandable." He sighed wearily as he turned to gaze out the
window. "You wonder whether I was reading your mind just now, and whether
I would in the future. I cannot blame you for that."
"Forgive
me, my lord," Ferris whispered, certain that any chance of serving the
Deryni duke was now gone.
"No,
you have a right to wonder," Morgan said. "And you deserve an answer
to your unspoken question. 1 was not reading your mind just now; and I would
not in the future, if you served me, except for a specific reason—and then it
would only be with your permission, unless there were dire reasons
otherwise." He quirked a strained, lopsided smile in Ferris' direction.
"I'd have to touch you, in any case."
"As
you did out there?" Ferris breathed, remembering the eerie, helpless
sensation as Morgan had ordered him to remember.
"Yes.
It would be easier if you were cooperating, if I had to do it again."
"But
you didn't touch the other four," Ferris pointed out.
"No,
but I wasn't reading their actual thoughts, either. I was Truth-Reading.
There's a difference."
"Oh."
Ferris swallowed uneasily and tried to assimilate all that Morgan had just
said.
"I
don't know why I'm telling you all this," Morgan muttered. "A man
shouldn't tell a total stranger about his limitations." He gave Ferris a
sidelong glance. "Maybe it's because I think I would like to have
you serve me—and it's only fair that you know what you're getting into, if you
do. Maybe it's also that I sensed your basic honesty and integrity, when I did
have to read your mind."
"I
would be loyal to you, my lord!" Ferris said fiercely. "I
swear by all the gods, I would!"
Smiling,
Morgan glanced down at the hilt of the sword at his waist, then back at Ferris.
"By
all the gods, I think you would. But this is not the time for either of us to
make that kind of commitment. I've just delivered you from the jaws of a very
unjust death. It's only natural that you should be grateful. You've offered to
make me a better sword in return. I accept. So why don't you ride back to
Coroth with me and my aide this afternoon, and I'll put you to work? When
you've delivered the sword, then we'll decide about the future."
"Done,
my lord!" Ferris said, as he and Morgan began moving out of the window
embrasure to rejoin Morgan's aide. "But I know what my decision
will be."
C = Catalyst
HS = Healer's Song
V = Vocation
B = Bethane
PA = The Priesting of
Arilan
L = Legacy
KD = The Knighting of Derry
T = Trial
* = Character or Place
appears in one or more of the Deryni novels.
aldred, Prince—grandson of Nimur II of Torenth and nephew of
Wencit; Deryni; age 15 in June of 1105. (L)
alister Cullen, Bishop—Deryni Chancellor of Gwy-nedd and Bishop of
Grecotha in 914; alter ego of Camber MacRorie. (HS)*
argostino, Father—heavy-set young Llanneddi priest ordained with Denis
Arilan in 1105. (PA)
ariella, Princess—sister and lover of Imre, the last Festillic King
of Gwynedd; Deryni. (L)*
arilan, Father Denis—Deryni ordained priest in spring of 1105 at Arx
Fidei Seminary, age 21. By 1115, he was Confessor to King Brion. (PA; KD)*
arilan, Sir Jamyl—elder brother of Denis; age 25 in 1104-5; close
friend and confidant of King Brion; member of the Camberian Council. (PA)
arnulf, Father—aged household chaplain at Castle d'Eirial in 977.
(V)
augarin Haldane, King—first High King of Gwy-nedd. (L)*
barrett de Laney—young Deryni lord who negotiated the freedom of a
score of condemned Deryni children by offering himself in their place; blinded
before rescued by Darrell; later, a member of the Camberian Council. (B)*
benjamin, Father—seminarian at Arx Fidei, ordained with Denis
Arilan in 1105. (PA)
bethane—old woman who keeps sheep near Culdi; wife of Darrell.
(B)*
brion Haldane, King—King of Gwynedd, 1095-1120; father of Kelson and
brother of Nigel. (PA; L; KD)*
calbert, Father—energetic young Abbot of Arx Fidei Seminary
in 1104-5. (PA)
camber MacRorie—Deryni Earl of Culdi; father of Cathan, Joram,
Evaine. (C; HS)*
caprus d'Eirial, Lord—seventeen-year-old younger son of Sir
Radulf, Baron d'Eirial in 977, and half-brother to the heir, Sir Gilrae d'Eirial.
(V)
carolus, Crown Prince—elder son of Nimur II and father of Prince
Aldred; Deryni; brother of Wencit; 35 in 1105. (L)
cathan MacRorie—eldest son of Camber; Deryni; 15 in 888. (C)*
charissa, Lady—daughter and only child of Hogan Gwernach, The Marluk;
Deryni; age 11 in summer of 1105. (L)*
charles FitzMichael, Father—young priest ordained with Denis Arilan
in 1105. (PA)
cullen, Alister—see alister Cullen.
darby, Father Alexander—newly appointed pastor of St. Mark's
Church, near Arx Fidei, in 1104. His treatise on Deryni, written when he
was a seminarian at Grecotha, became required study for all aspiring clergy.
Trained as a physician. (PA)
darrell—husband of Bethane; a teacher of mathematics in Grecotha
and secretly Deryni; killed rescuing Barrett de Laney. (B)*
de courcy, Jorian—see jorian de
Courcy.
de nore, Archbishop Oliver—Archbishop of Valoret and Primate of All
Gwynedd in 1104-5, who ordained Denis Arilan; known to have burned Deryni in
the south as a itinerant bishop. (PA)
derry, Lord (Sir Sean Seamus O'Flynn)—Marcher earl knighted by
King Brion in spring, 1115; aide to Alaric Morgan. (KD; T)*
de vali, Arnaud, Sieur—young vassal of Morgan, knighted with Derry
in 1115. (KD)*
deveril, Lord—Duke Jared's seneschal in 1100. (B)*
elgin de Torres—junior seminarian at Arx Fidei in 1105. (PA)
erdic, Father—chaplain to the d'Eirial family in the 960's. (V)
evaine MacRorie—daughter of Camber; Deryni; 6 in 888; later, wife
of Rhys Thuryn. (C; HS)*
ferris—a swordsmith from Eistenfalla; makes a sword for Morgan in
1118-19. (T)
festil i—a younger son of the Torenthi royal house who, in 822,
established the Deryni Interregnum in Gwynedd and founded the Royal House of
Festil, which reigned for 82 years. (L)*
gilbert, Master—d'Eirial battle-surgeon. (V)
gilrae d'Eirial, Sir—twenty-year-old heir to the Barony d'Eirial,
who wants to be a priest; elder half-brother of Caprus d'Eirial. (V)
gorony, Father Lawrence—chaplain to Archbishop de More in 1104-5.
(PA)*
haldane—scc augarin; brion; kelson;
nigel; UTHYR.*
hassan—Hogan Gwernach's Moorish Deryni tactician, and bodyguard to him
and Charissa. (L)
hogan Gwernach—see marluk, the.
imre of Festil, King—last Festillic King of Gwynedd, during the Deryni
Interregnum; fathered a bastard son on his sister Ariella. (L)*
jebediah of Alcara, Sir—Deryni Earl Marshal of Gwynedd and Grand
Master of the Order of Saint Michael in 914. (HS)*
jehana, Queen—consort to King Brion and mother of Prince Kelson;
Deryni, but unknown until Kelson's coronation. (KD)*
jocelyn, Lady—Camber's countess; Deryni; mother of Cathan, Joram,
and Evaine. (C)*
joram MacRorie—son of Camber; Deryni; 10 in 888; later, a priest and
Knight of Saint Michael. (C; HS)*
jorian de Courcy, Father—young Deryni ordained to the priesthood
in 1104, age 21; discovered and executed by archbishop's tribunal. (PA)
julius—a horse dealer at the Rhelled horse fair in 1115. (KD)
kelson Haldane, Prince —heir of King Brion, 8 in 1115 (KD)*
laran ap Pardyce —
Deryni physician and scholar, age 46 in 1104; an ally of Jamyl and Denis Arilan
and member of the Camberian Council. (PA)*
lillas—betrothed of Stalker, a King's Ran and killed in Kiltuin in 1117.
(T)
lorcan, Sir—d'Eirial seneschal in 977. (V)
loris, Archbishop Edmund—newly appointed Archbishop of Valoret in
1115; does not like Morgan. (KD)*
loyall, Father—abbot's chaplain at Arx Fidei in 1104-5. (PA)
maclyn—a horse-handler employed by Julius at the Rhelledd horse fair of
1115. (KD)
macon—Duke Jared's battle-surgeon in 1100. (B)
mark of Festil, Prince—son of Imre and his sister Ariella, and ancestor
of Charissa. (L)*
marluk, the—Hogan Gwernach, Deryni; father of Charissa; scion of
the Festillic line claiming the throne of Gwynedd; killed by King Brion, June
21, 1105, age 45. (L)*
MacRORIE—See CAMBER; CATHAN; EVAINE; JOCELYN; JORAM.
malachi de Bruyn—junior seminarian at Arx Fidei in 1105.
(PA)
melwas, Father—young priest ordained with Denis Arilanin 1105. (PA)
morgan, Sir Alaric—Deryni Duke of Corwyn. (B; PA; KD; T)*
nigel Haldane, Prince—King Brion's younger brother. (L; KD)*
nimurii, King—Deryni King of Torenth, 1080-1106; father of Princes
Carolus and Wencit. (L)
o'flynn, Sir Seamus Michael—Earl Deny; father of Scan Lord Deny;
died 1108 of wounds sustained on Mearan campaign with King Brion in 1107. (KD)
o'flynn, Scan Seamus, Earl Deny—see derry.
oriolt, Father—young priest ordained at Arx Fidei with
Jorian de Courcy in 1104, age 21. (PA)
padrig Udaut—Derry's eleven-year-old cousin; son of Trevor Udaut,
Baron Varagh. (KD)
radulf d'Eirial, Sir—Baron d'Eirial; dying father of Gilrae and Caprus.
(V)
randolph, Master—Morgan's physician/battle-surgeon. (KD)*
rhodri, Lord—royal chamberlain at Rhemuth in 1115. (KD)*
rhys Thuryn—Deryni foster son of Camber; 11 in 888; later, husband of
Evaine MacRorie, and a Healer. (C; HS)*
romare—Derry's blacksmith. (KD)
riordan, Father—Master of Novices at Arx Fidei Seminary in
1104-5. (PA)
sereld, Dom—the King's Healer in 888, approaching 50. (C)
simonn—Healer-hermit at ruined St. Neot's in 977. (V)*
stalker—a King's Ranger based at Kiltuin, a port town near the
Torenthi border, in 1118. (T)
stefan Coram—a Deryni ally of Jamyl and Denis Ari-lan and member
of the Camberian Council; in his late 20's in 1104-5. (PA)*
tarleton—guard captain who negotiated with Barrett de Laney for the
release of Deryni children. (B)
thuryn—see rhys; tieg Joram.
tieg Joram Thuryn—infant son of Rhys and Evaine; a future Healer. (HS)*
tolliver, Bishop Ralf—Bishop of Corwyn in 1118; holds Kiltuin town
directly of Morgan. (T)*
trevor Udaut, Baron Varagh—Derry's uncle (mother's brother) and
his sponsor for knighthood in 1115; father of Padrig. (KD)
udaut—see padrig; trevor.
uthyr Haldane, King—King of Gwynedd, 948-980.
(V)*
varagh, Baron—see trevor Udaut.
wencit, Prince—second son of Nimur II, King of Torenth; Deryni and
brother of Prince Carolus; 32 in 1105. (L)*
arx fidei seminary—near Valoret, where Jorian de Courcy and
Denis Arilan studied for the priesthood and were ordained. (PA)
bremagne—kingdom to the east; homeland of Jehana. (KD)*
cardosa—fortress city in the Rheljan Mountains, on the
Gwynedd-Torenth border. (L)*
castle derry—seat of the O'Flynns of Derry, a small
earldom in the eastern marches, between Cardosa and Rengarth. (KD)
corwyn—Morgan's duchy. (KD; T)*
culdi—Camber's earldom, in northwest Gwynedd. (HS)*
eirial, Barony d'—holding of Sir Radulf d'Eirial; formerly part of
Michaeline holding of Haut Eirial. (V)*
grecotha—site of a famous university and seminary. (B; PA)*
gwynedd—central and most powerful of the Eleven Kingdoms, ruled by
the House of Haldane.*
kiltuin—port town near the Corwyn-Torenth border, held by the
Bishop of Corwyn from the Duke of Corwyn. (T)
meara—client-princedom west of Gwynedd, where Derry's father received
the wounds from which he later died. (KD)*
rheljan Mountains—along Gwynedd-Torenth border. (KD)*
rhelledd—site of a famous spring horse fair in northern Corwyn,
near the Torenthi border. (KD)*
rhemuth—capital of Gwynedd under the Haldanes. (PA; KD)*
r'kassi—kingdom to the east, famous for its horses and archers.
(KD)*
rustan—town in the Rheljan foothills where Brion was to meet the Marluk.
(L)*
appendix 243
saint liam's abbey—site of a school run by the Order of
Saint Michael, near Valoret. (Q*
saint mark's church—parish church near Valoret. (PA)*
saint neot's abbey—mother house of the Gabrilite Order,
which trained Healers; in the Lendour Mountains of southern Gwynedd. (HS; V)*
sheele—Rhys and Evaine's manor near Valoret. (HS)* tre-arilan—the Arilan family seat near
Rhemuth. (PA)
valoret—Festillic capital of Gwynedd; seat of the
Archbishop-Primate of Gwynedd. (PA)*
822 Festil, Deryni youngest son of the King of Torenth,
successfully invades Gwy-nedd and accomplishes a sudden coup, massacring all
the royal family except the two-year-old Prince Aidan Haldane; establishes his
capital at Valoret and reigns 17 years.
839-851 Reign of
King Festil II.
c. 850: final days of St. Torin of Dhassa.
846 Camber Kyriell MacRorie born: third son of the Earl of Culdi.
851 -885 Reign of
King Festil III.
860 Prince Cinhil Haldane born.
875 Ariella of Festil born.
881 Imre of Festil born.
885-900 Reign of
King Blaine of Festil.
888 Fall: "Catalyst."
900-904 Reign of
King Imre of Festil.
903-904 Camber
ofCuldi. Prince Aidan Haldane dies in Valoret, but reveals that a grandson
survives. Prince Cinhil Haldane found in a monastery and brought out by
Camber's children to spearhead a restoration; marries Lady Megan de Cameron.
904 December 1 -2: The Restoration. Imre of Festil deposed by
Cinhil Haldane and dies.
December 25: King Cinhil crowned, age 44.
905-907 Saint
Camber. January 31: Mark born to Ariella in Torenth.
June 25: Unsuccessful attempt by Ariella to overthrow the
Restoration. Alister Cullen dies killing Ariella, but his identity is taken by
Camber, who officially "dies" on this date.
906 Spring/Summer: Cinhil receives homage of Sighere of Eastmarch
and goes north to help quell a rebellion in Kheldour. November 14: Saint Camber
canonized.
917-918 Camber
the Heretic.
917-921 Reign of
King Alroy Haldane.
917 February 2: Cinhil dies and is succeeded by his
twelve-year-old son Alroy. The young king's regents shift the court to Rhemuth,
the old capital. After the murder of the Deryni Archbishop Jaffray,
Camber/Alister chosen to succeed him, but election overturned by the regents;
Michaelines dispersed. December: Rhys killed; Council of Ramos
begins sessions, lasting into spring, repudiating Camber's sainthood and
limiting rights of Deryni in Gwynedd; Trurill Castle sacked. 918 Jebediah
killed; Camber goes into limbo.
921-922 Reign of
King Javan Haldane.
922-928 Reign of
King Rhys Michael Haldane.
928-948 Reign of
King Owain Haldane.
948 Mark, son of Imre and Ariella, attempts to retake his throne.
In this century, Rolf MacPherson, a Deryni lord, rebels against the Camber-ian
Council.
948-980 Reign of
King Uthyr Haldane.
977 December 24: "Vocation."
980-983 Reign of
King Nygel Haldane.
983-985 Reign of King Jasher Haldane.
Durchad Mor puts his armored infantry against the forces of Jasher
Haldane, in behalf of Prince Mark-Imre, great-grandson of Imre of Festil.
985-994 Reign of
King Cluim Haldane.
994-1025 Reign of King
Urien Haldane.
1025 Massive move against Gwynedd by Imre II (972-1025) results in
anihilation of the male Festillic line through four generations.
1025-1074 Reign of King
Malcolm Haldane. He marries the Princess Roisian of Meara, elder daughter and
sole heiress of Jolyon, the last Prince of Meara, who had sided with Imre II.
The marriage was to have settled the Mearan succession on the House of Haldane,
but Jolyon’s widow, the Princess Urracca, spirits away her two younger
daughters, one of whom (Annalind) is twin to Roisian, and heads a party
claiming Annalind is the senior and legitimate heiress.
1027 King Malcolm leads an expedition into Meara to hunt Mearan
dissidents.
1045 King Malcolm leads a second Mearan expedition.
1060 King Malcolm leads yet another expedition into Meara to hunt
Annalind's son Judhael.
1068-1070 Barrett de
Laney blinded saving Deryni children. About this time, Lewys ap Nor-fal, an
infamous Deryni, rejects the authority of the Camberian Council.
1074-1095 Reign of King
Donal Blaine Haldane.
1076 King Donal leads an expedition into Meara to hunt Prince
Judhael again.
1080 King Donal marries Richeldis of Llan-nedd.
1081 Prince Brion Haldane born.
1087 Prince Nigel Haldane born.
1089 King Donal leads another Mearan expedition.
1091 September 29: Alaric Morgan born.
1092 February 2: Duncan McLain born.
1100 Summer:
"Bethane."
September 24: Sir Kenneth Morgan dies;
shortly, the nine-year-old Morgan is sent
to court as a page.
December: Morgan meets King Brion for
first time at Christmas Court.
1104 January 6: Brion marries Jehana of Bre-magne.
August 1: Jorian de
Courcy, Deryni, ordained priest but is discovered. "The Priesting of
Arilan." November 12: Jorian executed.
1105 February 2: Denis Arilan, Deryni, ordained priest without being
discovered.
Spring/Summer: The Marluk, Festillic heir, challenges King Brion
and is killed. June 21: "Legacy."
July/February: Jehana winters at St. Giles Abbey.
1106 November 14: Prince Kelson Haldane born. His designation as
Prince of Meara triggers a new rebellion there.
1107 Spring: Brion puts down the Mearan rebellion, but Caitrin of
Meara, daughter of Prince Jolyon, escapes. Her husband and son killed. Sicard
MacArdry marries Caitrin.
Duncan McLain secretly handfasts with Maryse, daughter of Sicard's
elder brother Caulay, after her brother is killed in a brawl with a McLain man.
To avoid bloodfeud, the two families part, but Maryse has conceived.
1108 January 3: Maryse is delivered of a son, Dhugal, but dies of
birth complications; her mother, Adreana, raises the boy as twin to her own
daughter, born the same time.
Spring: Duncan hears that Maryse died of a winter fever and puts
thoughts of her aside, pursuing earlier inclinations toward the priesthood.
1110 Alaric Morgan is knighted by King Brion.
1112 Denis Arilan, anticipating Duncan's ordination, has himself
transferred to Rhe-muth to facilitate it.
1113 Easter: Duncan is ordained priest at Rhe-muth Cathedral,
thanks to secret intervention of Denis Arilan; assigned to parish at Culdi,
near his family.
1114 Duncan is sent to the University at Gre-cotha for two years'
further study.
1114-1115 Winter:
Duchess Vera, Duncan's mother, dies, thus ending Duncan and Morgan's only
source of Deryni training. Monsignor Denis Arilan becomes King's Confessor to
Brion.
1115 May: Scan Lord Derry is knighted at Rhemuth and becomes
Morgan's aide; "The Knighting of Derry."
1116 Spring: Denis Arilan brings Duncan to Rhemuth as his
secretary and assistant. Summer: Duncan becomes tutor to Prince Kelson, nearly
ten.
1117 Duncan's success as Kelson's tutor leads to an additional
appointment as Prince's Confessor.
1118 Denis Arilan, age 35, becomes Auxiliary Bishop of Rhemuth
under Archbishop Corrigan and is also appointed to Brion's privy council.
"Trial"
1120 June: Brion signs a new border treaty with Wencit of Torenth.
September: Morgan goes to Cardosa to observe border activities. November: Deryni
Rising. November 1: Brion killed by Charissa's magic.
November 4: Brion's funeral. November 14: Kelson's birthday;
Morgan returns to Rhemuth. November 15: Kelson defeats Charissa and is crowned
in Rhemuth.
1121 Summer: Deryni Checkmate and High Deryni. Troubles
with Loris and the bishops, and campaign against Wencit of Torenth, ending with
Wencit's defeat at Llyndruth Meadows.
1121-1122 Winter:
Consolidation of Kelson's court at Rhemuth. Morgan spends most of winter going
back and forth between Rhemuth and Coroth, counseling Kelson and reestablishing
his hold in Corwyn. Duncan travels back and forth between Rhemuth and Cassan/Kierney,
attending to his father's affairs and getting his new inheritance in order,
privately settling back into his priestly vocation. Baron Jodrell, a bright
young Kierney lord, becomes a staunch supporter and returns to court with him,
where Kelson takes an instant liking to him and appoints him to the privy
council.
1122 January: The Council of Rhemuth officially censures Loris (in
custody since
the previous summer), relieves him of his rank, and sends him into
perpetual exile at St. Iveagh's Abbey in Rhendall. (Cor-rigan died of a heart
attack the previous fall, before action could be taken against him.) Bradene of
Grecotha elected Primate and Archbishop of Valoret in Loris' place; Cardiel
becomes Archbishop of Rhemuth; Arilan is given Dhassa. Various other
reshufflings of bishops and sees.
1122 May 1: Morgan marries Richenda in Mar-ley, with Duncan
officiating and Kelson in attendance. Afterward, Morgan takes his bride and new
stepson back to Cor-wyn for the summer. Summer: From Marley, Kelson heads north
to progress through his Kheldish lands and evaluate military readiness, keeping
a wary eye on Torenth. Meets his Aunt Meraude's brother, Saer de Traherne, the
young Earl of Rhendall, and brings him back to court as another counsellor.
Duncan spends most of the summer touring his lands and setting up
feudal mechanisms for governing mostly in absentia. By the end of the
summer, rumors become more strident that supporters of the old Mearan royal
line are agitating for Mearan independence, sparked by dissatisfaction that a
Deryni priest-duke now rules part of Old Meara.
1122-1123 Winter:
Kelson further consolidates his
authority, making plans to progress through Cassan, Kierney, and
Meara the following summer and squelch the separatist rumblings with a show of
the royal presence. Courts of justice through the winter. Morgan is back and
forth several times because Richenda is expecting their first child.
1123 January 31: Richenda is delivered of Morgan's daughter,
Briony Bronwyn Morgan.
Spring: Young King Alroy of Torenth, only a few months past his
14th birthday, is killed in a fall from a horse while hunting. Rumors begin
almost immediately that Kelson engineered the accident, fearing the power of a
Torenthi king who had come of age. The nine-year-old Liam becomes king, with
his mother Morag again as Regent and various Torenthi lords vying for her hand
in marriage. Summer: Kelson turns his attention toward the worsening Mearan
situation, progressing through Meara, Cassan, and Kierney with Duncan, as planned.
Morgan spends most of the summer in Corwyn, just to make sure there will be no
Torenthi threat, but joins Kelson in Culdi after the ailing Bishop Carsten of
Meara dies, leaving the important See of Meara vacant.
Late November: The Synod of Bishops meets in Culdi to choose a new
Mearan prelate, but first elects several new itin-
erant bishops, Duncan among them (Auxiliary Bishop of Rhemuth,
CardieFs assistant). 1123-4 November-February: The Bishop's Heir.
1124 May-July: The King's Justice.
1125 March-April: The Quest for Saint Camber.
How the series began
Over the years, the question most often asked by my readers (other
than, "When will the next book be out?") probably has been, "How
did you get the idea?" My usual response has been that I had this dream...
It's a complex process by which a dream becomes a universe that
many readers regard as real, if tucked away in some other dimension. For those
interested in that process, I present the stages of evolution between dream and
what we now know as THE CHRONICLES OF THE DERYNI.
Though none of the following material should be considered
canonical (in the sense that the novels and the short stories in this volume are
canonical—that is, the "official" or "established
version" of Deryni history), it certainly is proto-matter without which
there would have been no Deryni series.
the dream that became deryni
On October 11, 1964, I had a very vivid dream and wrote the
following on two 3x5 cards when I woke.
Scene: audience chamber of a castle. The young widowed Empress
(25) holds audience with her husband's faithful general (40) and his aide (20).
She wears a white flowing robe with a black wimple and a simple emerald tiara.
Her small son sleeps in the next room. The general endeavors to unlock the
secret to the late Emperor's powers, which were left locked in an intricate
emerald and gold brooch—he was unable to give her the key—was assassinated by
the Blue Witch, who now rules. General is very wise and powerful man; shows
Empress how to gain access to her husband's power—(he was left clues by his
late Comm-Chief)— key is to jab pin of clasp through hand—10 sec. later, power
transference begins, lasts 5 min. Transfer is successful; Empress tries
power—works well. Possibility of love between Empress and General after power
is regained and mourning over.
lords of sorandor: the proto-deryni
rising
About a year alter I had the dream above, I wrote the novelette
called "Lords of Sorandor." A great deal changed. The kingdom acquired
a name—Sorandor—though that would change to Gwynedd in its next incarnation.
The infant in arms had become the fourteen-year-old Prince Kelson. The
character that would become Jehana (called Sanil in this version) aged enough
to have a teenaged son and became a far lesser character—who definitely had no
romantic interest in Morgan. And though the Deryni had yet to make an
appearance as such, magic certainly had become a major factor.
The basic form of the universe had been established, however—and
recognizable parts of "Lords of Sorandor" survive to this day in Deryni
Rising.
lords of sorandor
—by katherine kurtz
october, 1965
Sanil of Sorandor stood, smoothing the dark mourning veil over her
coppery hair as she had done each day for the past month. Resting pale hands on
the dresser before her, she studied the green eyes which peered back at her for
a long moment, then placed the simple, jet-studded circlet firmly upon her
head.
"Your Majesty?" inquired a servant girl softly.
"General Sir Alaric Morgan wishes to see you. Shall I say that Your
Majesty is receiving no visitors?"
"Morgan? I—no, I suppose I must see him. Where is he
now?"
"In the garden, my lady."
"Very well. I'll receive him on the sun porch."
Sanil stepped into the sun room and seated herself on the small,
black-draped chair, spreading the somber velvet of her gown in graceful folds
around her feet. Several ladies-in-waiting hovered around her person, and in a
corner of the room, a young musician strummed softly on a mellowed lute.
The garden door swung open and a tall, black-leather clad figure
strode into the chamber, sword and mail glinting dully in the diffused
sunlight. Bowing his golden head in obeisance, he knelt at the feet of the
queen in a single, fluid motion, his gloved fist going to his chest in salute.
Sanil beckoned him to rise.
"Yes, Sir Alaric?"
"Your pardon, my lady. I would have come sooner, but the men
have been restless under this new truce, and they feel Brion's loss deeply. He
will be much missed."
"Yes, he will." She waited expectantly.
"My lady, I must speak with you alone; it is of the utmost
importance."
"Sir Alaric, I... Very well." She dismissed the
ladies-in-waiting with a curt nod, then motioned to a chair nearby.
"Sir Alaric, out of the love my husband bore for you, I have
done as you requested. Brion spoke of you often, you know—that is, when he
spoke of government and such at all." She gazed across the room, not
seeing him. "Perhaps if he had told me more of what he was doing, I would
have been better prepared for what happened," she said, glancing down
bitterly at her folded hands. "As it was, I never knew of the constant
danger he always lived in until he was already gone."
Looking up, she continued briskly. "But you didn't make this
trip to hear me talk about Brion, did you, General?"
"No," answered Morgan, shaking his head. He rose
explosively and began pacing the floor, his gloved hands clasping and
unclasping.
"My lady," he began, "before your husband entered
that last battle when he fell by the hand of the Blue Witch, he spoke to me at
length of his divine power of rule, which has been handed down since his royal
line began many years ago. He, no doubt, spoke to you on this subject, at least
in passing, but you prob-
ably dismissed such talk as idle superstition, passed on through
the years as justification for divine-right rule. With most men, you would have
been correct— but not with Brion."
He turned slowly toward her. "My lady, had he known of the
plot of the Blue Witch in time, Brion could have saved himself—indeed, under
the right circumstances, he could have destroyed her. But unfortunately, Brion
underestimated the Blue One—and worse, he underestimated the extent of her
influence among his own men."
His face convulsed in bitter remembrance as he spat out the words.
"He was betrayed by a friend!"
He slammed one fist into the other hand, then recovered,
remembering where he was. Turning to the queen with a strained smile, he
continued.
"Do you remember Brion's aide, Colin of Fianna? Ah, poor
Colin," he mused. "The Blue One bewitched him, you know. She induced
the smitten lad to drug the king's wine. It was not enough to kill him, she
said. It would only make him sleep.
"Colin did as he was bidden, and next morning, the Blue One
slew Brion on the field of honour with a blast of magic which he never
anticipated—he was too groggy from the drug to catch her intention in time. And
Colin, when he saw what he had done, fell on his sword, too proud to die a
traitor's death, but too miserable to live."
Morgan sank wearily into his chair, head in hands. "So now we
stand under the Blue One's truce," he smiled grimly, "her last token
of respect for a most bitter enemy."
Sanil's low sob finally broke the stillness.
"I'm sorry, my lady. I did not mean to open old
wounds, but I thought you should know." He stared at the
floor.
"How is Prince Kelson?" he asked, striving to change the
subject.
"He is well," answered Sanil, straining to regain her
composure. "Tomorrow is his Coronation, you know." She looked at him
beseechingly. "I had hoped that was why you came: to see him
crowned."
"It is, my lady," he answered. "But to see him
crowned a true king—like his father."
"No!" she whispered, horrified. "Brion's powers
died with him, if, indeed, he had them. Kelson must reign as a mortal!"
She turned wide, afraid eyes on him.
"Kelson cannot rule as a mortal, my lady. The Blue One would
slay him even as she did his father; you know that."
"Brion's power did not save him. Besides, she surely
would not strike down a defenseless boy!"
"You know better than that, my lady," answered Morgan.
"But, God willing, Kelson will not have to face the Blue One powerless to
stand against her. I have the key to Brion's power—and it must be
Kelson's."
"No!" she hissed, half-rising to her feet. "I will
not let you do it. Kelson is but a boy."
"Don't be a fool, my lady," he said, grasping her
shoulders and forcing her back to her chair. "Think a moment. Tomorrow
Kelson will be fourteen, of legal age as far as the monarchy is concerned, and
he will be crowned king as such. Would the Blue Witch, who killed his
father," he paused for emphasis, "spare the father's son merely
because of his youth? She means to rule, lady. Will she let any mere
mortal stand in her way?"
"No." She forced the word out in a hoarse whisper,
relaxing dully into the cushions of the chair.
Morgan released her and stepped back. "Then, you'll permit me
to speak with him?"
"Yes," she whispered dazedly, "within the
hour."
But her face clouded with resentment as her eyes followed him
through the sunny garden door.
II
"What did you tell my mother?"
Morgan's black silken cloak rustled crisply in the sunlight as he
whirled to identify the unexpected voice.
"Kelson." Tension turned to pleasure as he recognized
the speaker, and a smile flickered across his face. "How did you know I
was here?"
The boy sprang lightly down the few stone steps of the summerhouse
and walked briskly to the young general's side.
"I saw you leave my mother's chamber, so I followed you. Did
I do wrong?" he asked, his grey eyes clouding with apprehension as he
sensed his friend's surprise.
"Of course not, my prince," replied Morgan, clapping the
boy on the shoulder. "I really came to see you, not your mother. I must
admit, however, that she's not terribly fond of me at the moment," he
continued. "I reminded her that you are a king."
Kelson snorted mischievously. "She still thinks of me as her
'little boy'. She just doesn't seem to realize that tomorrow I'll be
king." He glanced up wistfully. "I wonder what else she thinks the son
of Brion could do besides rule? Tell me, Morgan. You knew my father
well. Do you think that I shall ever be able to fill his place?
Answer truly, now, for I shall know if you're only flattering me."
Morgan, hands clasped behind him, walked thoughtfully around the
young man, noting the apparent frailness of the slim, young body, yet recalling
the tensile steel strength and catlike grace with which he moved. Looking at
Kelson, he saw Brion staring back at him, the wide, grey gaze under a thick
shock of glossy black hair, the regal carriage of the proud head, the ease with
which he wore the royal blue. It was Brion of the Laughing Eyes, Brion of the
Flashing Sword, of the Gentle Moods, teaching a young boy to fence and ride;
holding court in all the splendor of the monarchy, the boy spellbound at his
feet; Brion, asking a friend dearer than life to swear that the boy would
always have a protector, should his father die untimely; Brion, on the eve of
his death, entrusting the key to his divine power to the man who stood now
before his son.
Morgan snapped out of his reverie and motioned the boy to be
seated.
"You are the image of Brion, my prince," said the young
general, taking a seat on the stone steps. "And he left you well prepared
for the task you will undertake tomorrow. I think he knew full well that you
might come to the throne at an early age—in fact, he probably expected it, for
he gave you the very finest training he knew how. '
"From the time you could sit unaided, he had you on horseback
daily. Your fencing masters were the finest to be had on the continent, and
when they had taught you what they knew, he supplemented them and soon had you
out-fencing your former instructors. You
studied the old annals of military history and strategy,
languages, mathematics—he even let you touch on astronomy and alchemy.
"There was a practical side to your education, too, though.
For there was wisdom in the seeming unor-thodoxy of allowing a young and
sometimes fidgeting crown-prince to sit at his father's side in the council
chambers. From the beginning, though you were doubtless unaware of it at first,
you acquired the rudiments of the impeccable rhetoric and logic that were
Brion's trademark as much as his swordsmanship or his valor. You learned to
counsel, and to receive counsel, wisely and unpretentiously. And through it
all, you were made to understand that a wise king does not speak in anger, nor
judge until all the facts are before him."
Morgan fell silent for a moment, then continued thoughtfully.
"I think that in some ways you will be even more a king than Brion was, my
prince. You have a sensitivity, an appreciation of the arts, literature, music,
that he never quite grasped, though I don't suppose it made him any less a
king. Oh, he listened dutifully to the philosopher as well as the warrior, but
I was never sure he really understood them. You do understand."
Kelson turned his face to lock the eyes of the general. "You
forget one thing, Morgan," he said quietly. "I do not have my
father's power, and without it, I fall." He rose impatiently. "Did he
give you no clue as to how I am to remain king? What of his assassin? Am I, a
mortal, to stand against the Blue Witch without armor? Morgan," he asked
his father's friend beseechingly, "what am I to do?"
"You have come to the crux of the matter, my prince,"
smiled Morgan. "Come. We have been here too long already. It would never
do for your mother to find us here at this stage of the game."
Taking the young prince's arm, he began to guide him through the
garden, away from the vicinity of the queen's chambers.
Just then, a plump and very out-of-breath lady-in-waiting came
scurrying into the garden.
"Your Highness," she squealed, coming to a rather
undignified stop. "We have been searching for you everywhere. Your mother,
the queen, was extremely worried, and you know she doesn't
approve of your wandering off alone. It's very dangerous." Her speech
slowly ground to a halt as she realized that the prince was, by no means,
alone.
"Do you hear that, Morgan?" said Kelson, turning to his
friend. "'It's very dangerous.' Lady Bolliston," he continued dryly,
"would you please inform my lady mother that I have been quite safe here
in the garden with General Morgan?"
Lady Bolliston's eyes grew round as she realized Morgan's identity,
and a plump hand flew to her lips to mask the scarcely breathed "Oh."
She bobbled a hurried curtsey and stammered, "I did not recognize Your
Grace."
"That is understandable, Lady Bolliston," he nodded,
"for I have not been here in some time. However, I would hope that in the
future you would show a bit more respect for your king." He smiled kindly.
"Your entrance was not a model of decorum."
Lady Bolliston smiled in spite of herself, thinking that perhaps
the late king's general was not such an ogre as the queen pictured him at all,
and she murmured an apology.
"But your lady mother does wish to see you immediately, Your
Highness," she added.
"Is it about General Morgan?" Kelson querried. When she
did not answer, he continued. "I thought as much. Well, tell my lady
mother that I am already in council with Sir Alaric and do not wish to be
disturbed. You might add that I will be quite safe," he concluded dryly.
"Yes, Your Highness," she curtsied, and fled across the
grass to deliver the message. When she was out of sight, Morgan and the prince
dissolved into peals of laughter.
"You know, I don't think she meant to let me see you after
all, my prince," said Morgan, clasping a black-gloved hand to the
younger's shoulder. "We'd best leave before your 'lady mother' comes
looking for us herself."
Kelson nodded in agreement, and the two made a rapid exit.
III
Looking up casually from the stoup he was filling, Father Duncan
McLain inspected the two young men making their way across the courtyard. He
straightened quickly to shade his eyes against the intense glare of the mid-day
sun. The younger would be Prince Kelson, the gold-embroidered edge of his
velvet cloak glistening in the sunlight. But the older—the young priest's eyes
lit with pleasure and surprise—why, it was Alaric!
Placing the now-empty bottle on the floor, he smoothed his rumpled
cassock and walked briskly to the portico.
"Alaric," he cried, clasping the other's hand.
"This is a pleasant surprise. And Kelson." He flung an arm
about the shoulders of the grinning young prince to include him in the
greeting.
"I really don't believe this," he said, guiding them
into the coolness and quiet of the narthex. "My two favorite people, both
in the same day. Ah, but Kelson, I see by the look on Alaric's face that this
is not purely a social call, is it?"
"You're too perceptive, Duncan," smiled the young
general. "I never could fool you, even when we were children. I wondered,
though, whether Kelson and I might borrow you and your study for an hour or so
of counsel."
Duncan grinned wryly, but nodded assent. "I might have known
it would take business to drag you out here, Alaric," he said, scooping up
the empty bottle and leading them down the nave. "You know, perhaps I
should be your confessor—at least I'd see you once a year that way. But, on
second thought, I don't suppose that would be a good idea at all—I know you too
well."
The three paused at the transept to bow before the High Altar.
"Oh, come now, Duncan," said Morgan, chuckling softly as
he followed the priest out the side door, Kelson close at his heels. "I
see you more than that; and besides, it's fifty miles from my castle to the
capital."
"No, Alaric, I shall tolerate no more excuses. Either you
promise to come visit me more often, or I shall turn you out of my study, and you can find
someplace else to discuss your business." He closed the door securely
behind him and walked to a small, round table near the center of the room.
"Very well, Duncan," laughed Morgan, as he motioned the
two to be seated. "You have my word."
Morgan took a small leather pouch from his belt and began fumbling
absorbedly with the cords.
"Now, have you a cloth I can put down, Duncan?" he
asked, opening the bag.
Before the priest could answer, Kelson produced a soft, white silk
handkerchief from his sleeve and spread it out before the general. "Will
this do, Morgan?"
"Very well, my prince," he answered, reaching into the
bag and gingerly extracting a bit of gold and brilliance which he laid on the
silk. "Do you recognize this, Kelson?"
Kelson exhaled softly, his grey eyes wide with awe and wonderment.
"It is the Ring of Fire, my father's seal of power."
"May I see that?" asked Duncan, anxiety written in his
eyes.
Morgan nodded assent.
Gathering the silk carefully around his fingers, the young priest
picked up the ring, turning it in the dim light. The scarlet stones cast
scintillating rays on the damasked walls, and the burnished metal shone warmly.
Duncan examined it minutely, then replaced it on the table, smoothing the
rumpled silk.
"So far, so good," he breathed, a trace of hopefulness
crossing his face. "There is more?"
For answer, Morgan reached once more into the leather bag and
brought forth a heavy enamelled brooch
the size of a man's fist. A rampant golden lion shone on the
crimson background, and gold-etched scrollwork traced the deeply carved edges.
"What—?" began Kelson, brows knitting in bewilderment.
"The key, my prince," murmured Morgan, leaning back in
his chair. "The key to your father's power."
He passed the brooch to Duncan, who scrutinized it briefly, then
handed it on to Kelson.
"Brion told me of it the last time I saw him alive. He must
have sensed impending danger, for he made me swear that if he fell, the brooch
and ring should somehow get to you, Kelson. There is a verse which accompanies
the brooch."
"What verse, Alaric?" questioned the priest, leaning
forward expectantly. "You have it?"
"Aye," he answered wearily. "But it makes little
sense. Listen."
His face assumed a far-away expression as he began to recite:
"The eve of Coronation Day Must power increased to you
convey. A holy man shall be your guide; A champion bold kneels by your side.
The sinister hand held bravely so: The Lion's tooth through flesh must go. The
ringing of the sinister hand Gives all the power you demand."
"Well," said Duncan, leaning back in his chair and
raising an eyebrow. "He didn't give us much to go on, did he?"
"Now, wait, Father," began Kelson agitatedly. "The
first part is clear enough: 'The eve of Coronation Day I Must power
increased to you convey''—this merely says that whatever happens must
happen tonight.
" 'A holy man,' you, Father, 'shall be your guide,/
A champion bold kneels by your side.'" He looked to Morgan for advice.
"Correct, my prince," he nodded. "This clearly
shows the roles that Duncan and I are to play, but what of yours? Now, I don't
understand the third stanza at all yet, but the fourth is evidently a reference
to the portion of the Coronation ritual when the archbishop places the ring on
the king's—the sinister hand! Why didn't I think of that before?"
"Yes, of course," chimed in Kelson. "Father often
spoke of such things in heraldic terms. This would be just like him."
"Picking up the brooch, Kelson extended his left hand. "
'The sinister hand held bravely so:/The Lion's tooth through flesh must
go.'"
He looked at the brooch, then at his friends, a quizzical
expression on his face. "Morgan, I don't understand. This lion has no
tooth. How can...?"
"Wait." Duncan sprang to his feet, reaching for the
enamelled ornament. "Let me see that."
Taking it in his hands, he began to inspect it closely, then
turned it over to finger the clasp.
"Yes, of course," he whispered, his eyes focused on
something beyond. "There is always the obstacle, the barrier, the need for
bravery."
Morgan rose slowly, his full attention on Duncan.
"The clasp," he whispered icily, "is the Lion's
tooth?"
Duncan's gaze flickered to the present. "Yes."
Kelson stood and reached across the table to run his finger along
the three inches of slim golden clasp. He swallowed.
"The Lion's tooth must pierce my hand?"
Duncan nodded impassively.
"It—it will be very painful, won't it?" Kelson asked,
his voice very small in the stillness.
Again, Duncan nodded.
"But there is no other way, is there?"
"None, my prince," replied the priest, his face pale
against the dark cassock.
Kelson lowered his eyes. "Then, it must be done. Will you
make the proper arrangements, Father?"
"Yes, my prince," he replied. "You and Alaric
should be back here no later than the hour after Compline." He bowed low.
Kelson inclined his head in thanks. "I will go, then, Father.
Between now and Compline, I must learn to be a true king."
He spun on his heel and went out, Morgan close behind, and the
weight of kingship rested already heavy on his shoulders.
"God bless you, my prince," breathed the priest, as he
raised his hand in benediction.
IV
Morgan followed his young lord silently across the courtyard,
sensing the boy's need to be alone with his thoughts. Not until they had nearly
reached the entrance to the royal apartments did Kelson speak.
"Morgan," he asked suddenly, "do you really think
we know what we're doing?"
"Well," Morgan countered wistfully, "if we don't,
and Brion's magic is lost forever, at least we will have tried. That's
all men can do, is try, isn't it, my prince?"
"You're right, of course, Morgan," he answered.
"But suppose I'm not ready?"
"You are better prepared than you know, my prince,"
replied Morgan, reaching for the door.
But before he could touch it, the heavy oak door swung slowly open
to reveal a startled and angry queen and her retinue.
"Where have you been, Kelson?" she demanded.
"With General Morgan, Mother. Didn't you get my
message?"
Sanil turned her glare on Morgan. "What did you tell
him?"
Morgan regarded her thoughtfully, his hands clasped behind him.
"I told him about his father, my lady. Beyond that, you will have to ask
him."
"Well, Kelson?" she snapped. "What lies has he been
filling your head with?"
"Please don't make a scene, Mother," replied Kelson,
moving quietly toward his suite. "I scarcely think I need tell you what
he said; you know what I must do."
When she did not respond, he turned his attention to the officer
in charge of his guard.
"Lieutenant, I am retiring for the day, and I do not wish to
be disturbed by anyone until morning. Is that clear? General Morgan will spend
the night in my quarters."
"Yes, Your Majesty."
"Very well, then," he said, and turned to his mother.
"Good night, Mother. I shall see you before the procession tomorrow. I
must get some rest."
Pivoting precisely, he entered the apartment, Morgan close behind
him, and the bolt shot home with a note of finality. The queen, after a
moment's hesitation, retired resignedly down the corridor.
But in the shadows of the columns, there lurked one who was not at
all dismayed to see the prince seek seclusion for the remainder of the day.
Smiling grimly at the show of royal discord, he waited until the last footsteps
of the queen and her retinue had receded down the long passageway, then slipped
out the main door, gathering his squire's cloak around him. Going immediately
to the royal stables, where a fast horse lay saddled and waiting, he exchanged
royal livery for a somber-hued traveling cloak, pulling the voluminous hood
well over his face before he set out.
Soon, he was riding away from the city, and within an hour he
reined in and left the main road to follow a winding, little-ridden track into
the foothills. As he descended the torturous slopes of a steep gorge, he
glanced casually around him, and when he reached the bottom, he was not at all
surprised to find himself surrounded by fierce, blue-clad warriors.
"Who goes there?" challenged the commanding officer,
hand on sword hilt.
"Lord lan to see the countess," answered the lone rider,
throwing back his hood and dismounting as he spoke.
Bowing unctuously, the officer took the horse's reins from lan and
immediately changed his tone of voice to a more servile one.
"My apologies, m'lord. We did not recognize you."
"That is not at all surprising to me," remarked the
young lord dryly, "since I did not wish to be recognized. Open the
portal."
He gestured imperiously and the men moved to comply with his
order. A lieutenant pressed his fingers fleetingly over a series of small
depressions in the rock, and a large stone slab withdrew to reveal a passageway
into the side of the gorge. lan stepped inside, followed by the men, and the
opening was walled off once more. The men dispersed to their various duties,
and the newcomer swung down the hallway.
Boots echoing on the marble flagstones, lan strode resolutely,
reflecting on the strange company one was often obliged to keep in order to
further one's goals. The Blue One trusted him almost completely now, and there
would be time enough after the young prince was deposed to seize the power of
the Blue One for himself.
Silver spurs jangled as he clattered confidently down the granite
staircase, and the torches in their wrought-iron holders cast russet highlights
on his chestnut hair, reflecting, perhaps, the even more russet thoughts
beneath it.
He passed the guardpost and took the precise salute nonchalantly,
then approached a pair of golden doors and slipped through. Leaning back
against the ornate handles, he fixed his gaze intently upon the woman who sat
brushing her long, blued silver hair, all thoughts of malice gone for the
present, at least from his face.
"Well, lan?" she querried, her full red lips curving
upward with more than a trace of ire.
"The Son of the Lion is caged for the night, my pet," he
said silkily, sauntering toward her with a careless intensity. "And there
is discord in the royal household. The son is cool toward the mother who is so
protective, and the mother quarrels with the general, who has fired the son
with tales of the father's valor."
He unclasped the heavy cloak and flung it across a low bench, then
sank onto a wide, satin-draped couch, unbuckling his sword as he did.
"And the young prince?" she inquired. "Does he seem
ill-at-ease over his imminent coronation?" Her voice was edged with mockery
as she laid the silver-backed brush on the dresser top and stood, gathering the
gossamer folds of her gown about her in a soft azure cloud.
"I think he is well discomfited," smiled the young lord,
reclining on one elbow. "He retires to rest, and has given orders that
he's not to be disturbed until morning. If he leaves, we will be informed
immediately." His green eyes followed her every move hungrily.
"It is good, lan," she whispered, her voice lilting into
low, bell-like tones as she glided toward him. "You have done well."
She rested delicate fingertips on his shoulder and smiled. "The Blue One
is pleased to give the same orders for the night."
As the Vesper chimes finished their pealing in the distance,
Morgan rose cat-like and stretched. Strolling to the window, he drew the
drapery slightly to survey the mounting darkness, then let the drape fall
heavily into place. He suppressed a yawn as he crossed to an
ornate candelabra and struck a light, then carried it to a place
near the royal couch.
Kelson opened his eyes abruptly and looked around.
"I must have fallen asleep," he said, raising to one
elbow. "Is it time?"
"Not yet, my prince," replied Morgan, going to the
wardrobe and casually surveying the garments. "It is yet a while before
Compline is rung."
He selected a deep grey silken tunic, the edges worked in gold and
pearls, and tossed it on a nearby chair. "This will be suitable, I
think."
Sinking wearily into a chair by the fireplace, he contemplated the
flames for a few moments as he ran idle fingers through his burnished hair.
"Nay, on second thought, perhaps you'd best get ready."
"You are a strange man, Morgan," declared Kelson as he
cocked his head at the young general. "When you told me that I should
rest, I was certain I should not sleep a wink, but with a calm voice and low
word you stilled my fears, and sleep came."
Morgan replied absently, "You were very tired, my
prince." He resumed his air of contemplation, so Kelson, sensing that he
would get no further explanation for the moment, slipped quietly to his
dressing rooms.
After sitting motionless for some moments, Morgan snapped abruptly
out of his melancholy and rose to his feet. Stripping off leather and mail, he
washed perfunctorily at a small basin in the valet's quarters, and was pulling on
light chain mail over his silken jerkin when Kelson reentered the room.
"You expect trouble?" he asked, eying the steel mesh
with nervous distaste.
Morgan chuckled softly. "No, my prince, but 'tis best to be
prepared," he said, lacing up the sides. "And I wish to apologize if
I was somewhat boorish earlier. I spoke shortly to you when I should have been
reassuring. It was thoughtless of me."
Kelson smiled weakly as Morgan buffeted his shoulder in passing,
and he gave a deprecating shrug.
"Not so serious, my lad," said Morgan, as he rummaged in
his saddlebags to produce a gilt-edged black velvet doublet, which he tugged on
over the mail. "Your father would not have used magic to harm his own
son—the veiled threats are meant to discourage usurpers, not the rightful
heir."
Buckling on sword and cloak, he moved to the wardrobe and took out
a wine velvet cloak and held it toward the young prince. Kelson settled the
black fox collar of the garment firmly around his shoulders and turned toward
the door.
"Not that way," said Morgan, grasping his arm and
guiding him to a spot near the balcony window. "Now watch," he
commanded.
Pacing off a distance from the wall, Morgan surveyed his position
closely, then stood with feet planted firmly on the flagstone floor. He traced
an intricate design in the air before him with an outstretched forefinger, and
with a sigh, a portion of the wall recessed to reveal a dark stairwell.
Kelson gaped incredulously at Morgan. "How did that get
there?" he asked, pointing unbelievingly.
"I imagine someone built it, my prince," remarked the
general as he entered the passageway. "There are many like it in the
palace. Come."
He held out a hand to the prince as the distant bells rang Compline, and Kelson
clambered after him. Ten minutes later, the two stood at the edge of the dark
courtyard, the massive presence of the church looming dark against the night
sky. Muffled in darkness, they made their way to the portico and stood in the
narthex unobtrusively.
The deserted church was silent now, and the darkness was broken
only by the low blaze of votive candles, which splashed their ruby glow over
the stone floors and dark stained glass. In the sanctuary, a lone, black-clad
figure bowed before the High Altar, his features obscured in the pale crimson aura
of the vigil lamp. He turned at the sound of Morgan and Kelson's footsteps in
the side aisle and came to meet them in the transept.
"All is ready," whispered Duncan, drawing them toward
his study. They were seated around the small table before he spoke again. The
Lion brooch winked ominously from its crimson cushion before them.
"Kelson," began the priest softly, his hands folded
before him, "what I am about to say concerns mainly you."
Kelson nodded gravely, his face pale in the candlelight, and Duncan
continued.
"The ritual we will use is a very simple one: we will enter
the church. You will both kneel at the rail. I will give you my blessing,
Kelson; and then you, of your own action and volition, must thrust the Lion's
tooth through the palm of your left hand. If God is with us, you will feel the
surge of power almost immediately. There will be a spinning sensation. You may
lose consciousness. This last, I am not sure of. Only time and the deed will
tell."
Kelson exhaled softly, his face ashen. "Is there anything
more that I am required to know, Father?"
"No, my son," answered Duncan gently.
"Then," the prince continued in a shaken voice, "if
there is time, I should like to be alone for a while before it begins."
"Of course, my prince," replied the priest, rising and
catching Mofgan's eye. "Alaric will help me to vest."
In the sacristy, Morgan broke the silence.
"What if something goes wrong, Duncan?" he asked,
holding out the snowy surplice which the priest took carefully. "Suppose
it kills him?"
"This is the chance we must take," Duncan answered.
"You and I both know what would happen were he to face the Blue One
without power—that is a certainty."
He touched a brocaded stole to his lips and settled it around his
shoulders. "At least the boy has a chance this way. Brion knew his
own son. I do not think we can be far wrong. Come," he said, laying a hand
on Morgan's shoulder. "We had best get on with it."
They made their way back to the study where a young prince awaited
his destiny.
Kelson sat thoughtfully in the study, his eyes focused through the
flame of the single candle. Soon, he would either know his father's power, or
he would know nothing, and his heart went out to the two loyal friends who were
now so totally involved in the awesome drama: Morgan, his father's comrade, who
had been almost a second, though younger, father to him; and Duncan, the young
priest who had been his tutor almost since he could remember, even before his
ordination.
He chided himself briefly for ever having doubted the wisdom of
these loyal two, and was comforted by the knowledge that they would stand by
him no matter what happened tonight. He rose, smiling, to his feet as the door
swung softly open, and Morgan returned the smile reassuringly as he caught
Kelson's note of confidence.
"Are you ready, my prince?" asked Duncan, as he picked
up the brooch on its cushion and handed it to Morgan.
"Yes, Father," came the reply, and the three filed into
the church.
Prince and champion knelt at the altar rail, ungirding their
swords and placing them on the floor before them, as the priest stood at the
foot of the altar in prayer. Signing himself, Duncan mounted the steps and
kissed the altarstone, then turned to the two, his arms outstretched.
"Dominus vobiscum."
"Et cum spiritu tuo," came their reply.
"Oremus."
The priest turned back to the altar and bowed again in prayer,
ending it with a solemn, "Per omnia saecula saeculorum."
Morgan and Kelson responded with a low "Amen."
Descending the steps, Duncan stood before the kneeling Kelson and
placed his hands firmly on the head of the young prince.
"May Almighty God, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, bless
you, Kelson. Amen."
He signed the prince in blessing, then reached down and plucked
the Lion brooch from its velvet cushion and placed it firmly in Kelson's hands.
"Courage, my prince," he whispered, and returned to the
altar, his hands outstretched.
"Domine,fiat voluntas tua!"
Kelson's hands trembled slightly as he poised the golden clasp
over his left palm. Then, steeling himself, he plunged the slender shaft
through his hand. A gasp of anguish escaped his lips as the point, darker now,
protruded on the other side, and he doubled over, moaning softly, as waves of
pain throbbed from the wounded hand.
Morgan half-rose to steady his young lord, but Dun-can whispered,
"No!" as he whirled to face them. "Wait!"
He stared at the agonized prince intently, and Morgan, not daring
to interfere, sank back to his knees.
A heavy silence replaced the prince's moans, and he straightened
dazedly, bewilderment and confusion evident in his look.
"Father," he whispered, "everything is
spinning." He swayed drunkenly, a look of fear coming upon his face.
"Father, the darkness...." He crumpled softly to the floor.
"Kelson!" cried the general, leaping to his aid.
Duncan joined him, and kneeling beside him, gently pried open the
boy's left hand, a look of wonderment in his eyes.
"We were right," he said, withdrawing the slim shaft and
wrapping the hand in a handkerchief. "He has the power now. There can be
no mistaking the signs. Come," he continued, stripping off his vestments,
"we must get him back to his room. He should sleep until morning, but I'll
come with you to see that he's settled for the rest of the night."
Morgan nodded and picked up the unconscious boy, wrapping the red
velvet cloak closer around him against the cold. Duncan gathered up the swords,
and the two made their way back to the warmth of the royal apartment with their
burdens.
Morgan laid Kelson gently on his couch and cleaned the boy's hand
with a few deft wipes of clear, pungent fluid on a silk gauze, then bound up
the hand while Duncan unlaced the prince's boots. He was removing the velvet
cloak when the boy's eyes fluttered open weakly.
"Father? Morgan?" he questioned weakly.
"We are here, my prince," replied Duncan, moving to the
boy's right to clasp his hand and kneel attentively.
"Morgan," the boy continued softly, "I heard my
father's voice, and then the strangest sensation came over me. It was like
being wrapped in woven sunlight or silk. At first I was frightened, but
then...."
"Hush now, my prince," said Morgan gently, placing his
hand on the boy's forehead. "You must go to sleep now and rest. Sleep now,
my prince. I will not be far away."
As he spoke, Kelson's eyelids fluttered briefly, then closed, and
his breathing slowed to that of deep slumber. Morgan smiled and smoothed the
touseled hair, then arranged the blanket snugly around his young lord. Dousing
the light, he beckoned Duncan to join him on the terrace, and the two slipped
outside, their silhouettes dark against the midnight sky.
"He trusts you very much, Alaric," said the young priest
admiringly.
Morgan leaned against the railing, trying to discern
Duncan's face in the darkness. "And you, my friend."
"True," he replied, his hands on the railing before him
as he looked out over the city. "I only hope that we may always remain
worthy of his trust. He is very young for a burden such as we have placed upon
him tonight. God knows, our task as his champions will not be easier for his power."
Morgan chuckled softly in the dimness. "Did we accept Brion's
charge because we thought it would be easy, or because we loved Brion, love his
son, and because it is right?"
"You're right, of course, Alaric," the priest sighed.
"You know, I sometimes think you understand me better than I understand
myself."
Morgan shoved Duncan playfully. "Not so serious, Father
McLain. You've done your job well tonight. It was I who was at a loss. In spite
of my penchant toward the lighter occult arts, I had no idea what would happen
when Kelson made his move."
"But, of course, if you hadn't gotten the key from Brion, the
whole thing would have been for nothing," answered Duncan. "I
couldn't have helped at all without the brooch and the verse." He laughed
quietly. "We'd better stop complimenting each other so that I can get back
to the rectory. If I were missed there, it would not be too pleasant, and it
would be rather difficult to explain my presence, were I discovered here in the
morning. Besides," he added, going back into the room, "there's
nothing more that I can do for Kelson tonight. Barring some unforseen event, he
should sleep until dawn. And you need to rest, too, Alaric."
Morgan agreed as the two men clasped hands at the passageway, and
then Duncan slipped through the entrance, which whispered shut behind him.
Unclasping his cloak, Morgan pulled an over-stuffed chair near the
prince's couch and sank down wearily, pulling the cloak around him
blanket-wise. He watched Kelson alertly for some moments, and when he had
satisfied himself that the prince still slept soundly, he pulled off his boots
and relaxed confidently, knowing that he would awaken in an instant, should any
situation in the room change.
VI
As Morgan opened one eye, the morning stillness was broken
abruptly by a staccato rapping at the door. Instantly alert, he glided to the
door and shot back the bolt. A scarlet and blue liveried valet bowed
deferentially before him.
"Pardon, Your Grace," said the man earnestly, "but
the dressers wish to know when they may come to robe the King for his
Coronation."
"Send them in about a half an hour," he answered,
"and please ask the guard to send for Father McLain. His Highness will
wish to see him before the procession to the Cathedral."
The valet bowed and hurried away as Morgan closed the door.
Padding softly to the balcony, the general drew the satin drapes to let the
pale morning sunshine stream in, then added wood to the dying fire to warm the
icy room. He had just taken a thick woolen dressing gown from the wardrobe, and
was pulling it on, when he realized he was being watched. He turned and smiled
at Kelson as he knotted the sash around his slim waist.
"Good morning, my prince," he said cheerfully, crossing
to Kelson's couch and sitting on the edge.
"The temperature dropped considerably during the night—it
will be a cold Coronation Day."
"What time is it, Morgan?" asked the prince, sitting up
in bed.
"Not as late as you think, my prince," laughed Morgan,
pushing Kelson back on the couch. "Your clothiers will not be here for
half an hour, your valet has already prepared your bath, and it is two hours
before the procession is to begin. How is your hand?"
He reached across and unwound the bandage to inspect the wounds.
"A little bruised, but no great damage done. We'll dispense with the
bandage. How do you feel?"
"I feel fine, Morgan. Can I get up now?"
"Certainly, my prince." He gestured toward the dressing
room. "I'll send your dressers in as soon as they arrive."
Kelson wrinkled his nose in distaste as he threw back the blankets
and climbed out of bed. "Why do I have to have dressers, Morgan? I can
dress myself."
"Because a king must have dressers on his Coronation
Day," laughed Morgan, propelling the lad toward the door. "After
today, you may fire all your personal servants if you so wish, but today
you will be robed as befits a king—you're not supposed to clutter up your
mind with the mechanics of putting on strange robes when you should be
contemplating the responsibilities of kingship—and this means dressers, six of
them." He raised his eyebrows in mock horror.
"Six!" groaned Kelson, but he chuckled gleefully as he
scampered through the dressing room door. "Morgan, I sometimes think you
do these things deliberately." The rest of his speech was cut off by the
closing of the door.
Morgan chuckled as he strolled toward the fire, but stopped still
when he caught his reflection across the room. Did he really look like that? He
glanced down ruefully at his wrinkled tunic, musing that it had done it little
good to sleep in it, and ran a hand across a sand-papery chin. The clothes
would have to do, since he had no others with him, but the beard... He set to
work with soap and razor and had just succeeded in ridding himself of the
night's growth when there was a knock at the door.
"Come in," he called, wiping soap out of his eye.
The door opened a crack, and two blue eyes, topped by a shock of
straight brown hair, peered around the edge.
"Aha!" said the voice belonging to the eyes. "The
prodigal seeketh to amend his appearance. Here." Duncan tossed a large
bundle at his surprised friend.
"What?" began Morgan. "Duncan, where did you get
these?"
"Oh," said the young priest, as he strolled nonchalantly
to where Morgan burrowed in the clothes, "I thought the King's Champion
might need garments suitable for the Coronation."
"The King's Champion? How do you know?"
"Well, Kelson tells me a few things that he doesn't tell you.
Besides, who did you think it would be, you crazy war horse? Me?"
Morgan laughed delightedly as he shook his head and stripped off
his clothes to begin donning fresh garments.
"How's Kelson's hand this morning?" asked the priest,
handing Morgan a long scarlet shirt of silk. "I thought I detected a scent
of merasha when you dressed his wound last night." He gave Morgan a
sidelong look.
"The hand is fine," retorted Morgan sheepishly, as he
laced up his shirt, "and I was hoping you hadn't noticed the merasha. A
certain aged tutor of mine would be very upset were he to learn that a priest
knew of his dealing in the occult arts."
"Just stay within your own level, Alaric. I'd hate to see you
get mixed up in magic you can't handle." He handed the general black silk
hose and breeches, which Morgan quickly donned.
"Where is Kelson now?"
"In the bath. He was somewhat, ah, 'upset' about requiring
dressers; wanted to know why he couldn't dress himself. I told him that this
was one of the trials of kingship, and that at least for today he would have to
put up with them."
Duncan chuckled. "He'll be glad for them when he sees everything
he has to wear." He sat down, holding out Morgan's light mail jerkin.
"Many's the time I've been grateful for even one assistant to help me vest
for a very high Mass. Aie," he mused, "there are always so many
little laces and ties."
"Here, give me that," snorted Morgan waggishly, as he
snatched the jerkin and slipped it over his head. "You know you love
it." He wiggled his feet into the shining black boots which Duncan
proffered, and there was a knock at the door.
"Kelson's dressers," announced Morgan, giving the
buckles a final tug. "Come in."
Six men in precise scarlet livery marched in and bowed crisply,
their arms laden with robes and boxes and bundles.
"We are the royal clothiers, Your Grace," stated the
first.
Morgan nodded and directed them toward Kelson's dressing room.
When they had gone, he shook his head and smiled.
"I pity the poor boy now. You know how he hates to be fussed
over."
Duncan shrugged noncommittally as he handed Morgan a black velvet
doublet edged with gold and rubies. "It's good for him to know these
things, Alaric."
He helped Morgan adjust the wide, split sleeves to show the
scarlet beneath, then wrapped a wide satin sash around the general's slim
waist.
"My, my, my," he chided, clipping Morgan's sword to a
hidden ring on the crimson sash. "I do believe you'll be the most
devilishly handsome Champion we've had in a long time."
Morgan paraded before the mirror, strutting like a small boy with
a new plaything. "You know, Duncan?" he bantered gaily, "You're
right!"
Duncan nearly dropped the crimson-lined cloak he was holding to
punch Morgan playfully in the arm.
"And you will also be the most conceited Champion we've ever
had!"
He ducked Morgan's retaliatory punch to wag a finger at him in
mock indignation from behind a chair.
"Ah, ah, ah. Remember, I am your spiritual father, and I only
tell you this for your own good!"
He and Morgan nearly collapsed on the floor in their merriment.
"Quick," gasped Morgan, out of breath, "put my
cloak over all this splendor before I explode of puffed-up pride!"
This merely set them laughing again, but they did manage to clip
the cape to Morgan's shoulders before
they lost control and slumped weakly into two chairs.
A red-liveried clothier poked his head through the door. "Is
anything wrong, Your Grace?" he inquired, his eyes round.
Morgan waved him off, still chortling quite delightedly. "No,
no everything is fine," he answered, regaining some measure of composure.
"But is Prince Kelson ready yet? Father McLain must leave for the
Cathedral."
"I'm ready now, Father," said Kelson, sweeping into the
room.
Morgan and Duncan rose in unison, almost unbelieving that this
white-and-gold clad king was the same boy who had knelt with them so frightened
the night before. All in silk and satin, he stood before them like a young
angel, the creamy whiteness of his raiment broken only by the play of gold and
rubies encrusting the edges. Over the whole was thrown a magnificent ivory
cloak, the satin stiff with gold and jewel-work, and in his hands he held a
paid of spotless kid gloves and a pair of gold-chased silver spurs. His raven
head was bare, as befits an uncrowned monarch.
"I see that you have been informed of your new office,
Morgan," he said impishly. "Here," he held out the spurs,
"these are for you."
Morgan sank to one knee, his golden head bowing in obeisance.
"My prince, I am at a loss for words."
"Nonsense, Morgan," retorted the prince, grinning wryly.
"You'd better not be tongue-tied when I need you most." He motioned
him to rise. "Here, take these and let my royal clothiers help you finish
dressing while I speak with my confessor."
He motioned Duncan to join him on the balcony and
closed the doors. Through the glass, they could see the dressers
fussing over an annoyed Morgan.
Kelson smiled. "Do you think he will be very angry,
Father?"
"I doubt it, my prince. He was too proud when you walked into
the room to be angry for long."
The young prince smiled fleetingly and looked out over the city.
"Father," he asked in a low voice, "what makes a man a
king?"
"I'm not sure anyone can really say, my son," answered
Duncan thoughtfully. "It may well be that kings are not so different from
ordinary men after all; except of course, that they have a graver
responsibility." Kelson mulled the answer for a long moment, then turned
and knelt at the feet of the priest.
"Father, give me your blessing," he said, bowing his
head. "I do not feel at all like a king."
VII
Thomas Gray son, Archbishop of Sorandor, surveyed the mounting
crowd in the streets below his archepiscopal palace with awe and not a little
apprehension as he awaited the hour of the Coronation. In spite of the bitter
cold of the November morning, there were more people in the streets then he
could ever remember seeing, even at Brion's Coronation fifteen years before.
And yet, it was not a joyous crowd, as it would have been, but a quiet and
well-mannered one, each upturned face etched in fearful expectation.
They know what their king must face, he thought grimly, and they fear for
him, as do I. And must we
all really stand by and watch him fall, with none to lift a hand
to save him? Or have Morgan and Duncan some plan, some unknown factor we have
not allowed for? Dare I hope?
Sighing resignedly, he turned from his vantage point to prepare
for his vesting. Then, once Duncan had arrived, and the retinue had assembled,
they would all go to the door of the Cathedral to await the arrival of their
new king, and lead him inside to be presented to his people.
Picking up the Lion brooch, Kelson fingered it absent-mindedly for
a moment, then, as an afterthought, pinned it to his tunic.
"The coaches are ready for the procession, my prince,"
called Morgan from the door. "Shall we go?"
"I'm coming," answered Kelson, casting a final look
around the room.
"The room will still be here after the Coronation, you know,
my prince."
"Yes," replied Kelson wryly, "but I was just
wondering whether or not / would still be around."
Morgan marched briskly into the room and took Kelson's arm.
"Now, I want to hear no more of that kind of talk," he stated,
leading the prince to the corridor where his guard of honour waited.
"Three hours from now you will be the legally crowned King of Sor-andor,
and nothing is going to keep that from happening, including your blue
friend."
Kelson smiled grimly as they made their way to the downstairs
courtyard where the procession waited. "I'll keep that in mind," he
said, "though I fear that our blue friend may have other plans for
me."
In the courtyard, the entire royal household was
gathered to see its young master off, and the people parted before
the young prince as he and his bodyguard moved toward the queen and her
carriage.
Surprise at her son's transformation was evident in Sanil's wide
green eyes, and she smiled shyly when Kelson bent to kiss her hand in greeting.
"Kelson, my son," she murmured as he helped her into her
carriage, "you are a man today. I did not know..."
Morgan stood contentedly in the background, studying the change in
the young queen. He noted with approval that she had set aside her mourning
attire in deference to her son's Coronation, in spite of the recency of her
bereavement. And except for the black lace veiling her emerald tiara, she was
clothed in the customary dark green velvet which set off her copper hair and
creamy skin to perfection—-the green that Brion had loved so well.
Now, as she conversed with Brion's son, she was nearly as radiant
as she had been before her tragedy. And when Kelson at last bade farewell, she
gazed fondly after him, wonder and pride for her son apparent in every line of
her body.
As the young king climbed into his carriage, he and Morgan
exchanged triumphant glances, and Morgan signalled the parade-master to begin
the march. Swinging up on his ebony war horse beside the royal coach, the young
general saluted his monarch, and the entourage began to move slowly towards
Sorandor Cathedral.
"Stop pacing, lan," snapped the Blue One, adjusting the
sapphired coronet on her silvered hair. "You make me nervous."
lan stopped almost in mid-stride.
"Sorry, my pet," he replied good-naturedly. "But I
have anticipated this day for many months now, and I'm anxious to be off. You
know how I detest waiting."
"Yes," she smiled enigmatically, "I know. I only
hope you will not be too disappointed. Even though this young upstart prince
does not have his father's power, we must contend with Morgan." She rose
distractedly.
"Ah, yes. Morgan. He is the one to watch for. I fear him,
lan, and I fear the power he might wield over our young prince. You must be
sure to cut him down in the first moments of your duel—otherwise he may
out-fence you. There are rumours that he dabbles in magic, too, though I take
little note of such tales. Nevertheless, he is to be destroyed at all costs. Do
you understand?"
lan bowed unctuously. "Of course, my pet," he intoned as
he gathered up her silken cloak and brought it toward her. And after we have
eliminated Morgan and his prince, I shall gladly eliminate you, he thought
to himself.
He reached his arms around her to fasten the cold, jewelled clasp
at her ivory throat.
"Horses and escort await us at the portal, my lady."
"Thank you, my Lord lan," she retorted, giving him a
sidelong look. "And now, let us be off."
She gestured expansively, and lan, with a bow and a flourish,
threw open the doors. Flanked by four blue-liveried guardsmen, the Blue One and
lan swept down the marble corridor toward their rendezvous with Prince Kelson.
VIII
Kneeling in the great Cathedral, Kelson quickly reflected on the
events of the past hour as the Archbishop's voice droned on and on. After
entering the Cathedral in solemn procession accompanied by Archbishop Gray son
and a dozen prelates of the Church, he had been presented to the people as
their rightful sovereign and had, before them and Almighty God, sworn his oath
of kingship. Then he had been anointed on head and hands with the holy chrism
as a sign of his divine right to rule and knelt for the Archbishop's blessing.
The Archbishop's prayer ended, and Kelson rose to be invested with
the symbols of his office, several priests stripping off the jeweled ivory
mantle he had worn as Prince of Sorandor. The golden spurs of knighthood were
strapped to his heels, and Morgan, as King's Champion, brought forth the sword
of state to be kissed by the young monarch and returned to the altar. Dun-can
and the other prelates were fastening the glittering crimson robe of state
about his shoulders when the silence was broken by the echo of steel-shod
hooves ringing cold against the cobbled streets outside. Beyond the heavy doors
of the Cathedral, chain mail clanked menacingly against naked metal.
As Kelson, his back to the doors, seated himself upon the
coronation chair, he flashed a lightning query at Morgan, who nodded almost
imperceptibly and edged closer. As the Archbishop gave over the royal sceptre,
the Cathedral doors swung open with a muffled crash,
and a gust of icy wind swept down the nave, the only sound save
the low admonition of the Archbishop.
Stiffening slightly, Kelson saw Morgan freeze as footsteps began
to echo down the narrow nave, and he watched the gloved hand of his Champion
creep toward the hilt of the great broadsword as the Archbishop raised the gold
and crimson ring of fire.
Breathing a small prayer that he would be able to face the Blue
One's power, Kelson extended his hand to receive the ring. And as the cool
metal circlet glided into place on his forefinger, he broke into a small but
triumphant smile which was only skillfully kept from being mirrored in the
faces of his two friends. To the side, he saw his mother's face go pale as the
hollow footsteps came to an abrupt and ominous halt at the transept.
The Archbishop, ignoring the interlopers, raised the jewelled and
filigreed crown of Sorandor.
"Bless, we beseech Thee, O Lord, this crown, and so sanctify
Thy servant, Kelson, upon whose head Thou dost place it today as a sign of
royal majesty. Grant that he may, by Thy grace, be filled with all princely
virtues. Through the King Eternal, Our Lord."
The people were hushed in fear as the crown was placed on the new
king's head, and then the silence was broken by the clatter of steel on the
sanctuary steps.
Rising majestically to turn and face his challengers, Kelson
swiftly appraised the significance of the mailed gauntlet resting on the lowest
of the sanctuary steps, then moved confidently to the edge of the area.
"What would you in the House of the Lord?" he demanded,
an aura of quiet power overshadowing his youth.
"Your death, Kelson," replied the Blue One, curtseying
mockingly. "Is that so much to ask? I have killed others to gain your
throne."
She smiled sweetly, and lan and a dozen armed warriors glared
defiance at the newly-crowned king.
"I do not find your humour amusing this morning,
Countess," answered Kelson coldly. "And your manners are distinctly
lacking in allowing your men to come armed into this place. Have you no respect
at all for the proprieties of the people you hope to rule, not to mention your
own truce?"
The Countess shrugged unconcernedly and gestured toward the
gauntlet of challenge on the step between them.
"Have you forgotten my challenge, Your Majesty? I was under
the impression that your illustrious Champion was very eager to fight
mine." She continued coldly, "My challenge still stands, as does my
Champion. But is yours man enough to pick it up?"
His face colouring slightly, Morgan moved to pick up the
challenge, but was halted by Kelson's outstretched sceptre across his chest.
"You would dare to raise steel against me in this
House?" queried Kelson, addressing the blue-clad champion.
Steel whispered against steel as lan bowed silkily and drew his
sword in answer.
"Aye, and in a thousand like it, Prince Kelson,"
retorted the unctuous young lord as he gestured with his sword. "And if he
will not come down and fight, I shall come up and slay him where he
stands."
"Save your words for your victory, traitor," replied
Morgan, his sword singing from its leather scabbard as he vaulted down the
steps to meet his impetuous
challenger and pick up the gauntlet. "I take up your
challenge in the name of King Kelson and answer it thus!"
He flung the gauntlet at the feet of Lord lan.
"Well, Morgan," said lan thoughtfully, his sword point
wandering almost lazily before him as he contemplated his enemy, "at last
we meet. Then, let us resolve this petty dispute once and for all."
Lunging savagely, he sought to pierce Morgan's defense at once,
but the wily general swiftly threw up a singing steel net about him which
easily parried each of lan's renewed attacks. When Morgan had sounded out lan's
technique, he switched to an offensive tack, and within seconds had pinked the
challenger. lan, furious at being touched, charged headlong into the fray as
Morgan had hoped, and even as he parried the general's thrust, Morgan's riposte
left him open to be run through the side. As sword clattered from the surprised
lord's hand, Morgan withdrew his blade, and lan sank to the floor, his face
drained of colour. Morgan, with a contemptuous toss of his head, wiped his
blade on the young lord's blood-stained mantle and strolled calmly toward his
comrades.
"Morgan!" yelled Duncan, gesturing frantically.
Morgan whirled instantly, but he was not swift enough to
completely avoid the dagger which had been aimed at his back. His sword slipped
from numbed fingers as he clutched at his shoulder in disbelief, and lan
laughed brokenly from his position a dozen yards away.
"I am amazed, Morgan," he leered drunkenly as death
approached. "I had thought you more cautious than to leave a wounded enemy
armed. Ah, well,
though," he gasped, sketching a hurried salute, "you may
yet join me in death." He slumped to the floor, silent at last, and Morgan
gazed dully at his former antagonist.
As Duncan and the priests eased Morgan to a sitting position on
the steps, Kelson hovered anxiously, his resplendent cloak gathered over one
arm as he stooped beside his friend.
"My apologies, my prince," murmured Morgan, beads of
perspiration dotting his upper lip as Duncan probed the wound with gentle
fingers. "I was a fool to trust him, even in death." He winced and
clenched his teeth as Duncan withdrew the slim blade, but then relaxed,
half-fainting, as the young priest bound up the wound. Kelson, with a
reassuring touch of his friend's hand, rose and descended several steps toward
the Blue One.
"The little game is over now, Countess. You may leave."
The Blue One, backed by her guards and her magic, smiled
sardonically. "My, but our young prince speaks bold words. One would
almost believe that he had power to back him up."
Her icy gaze swept him from head to toe and back again. "But
we all know that his father's legacy of power died with him a month ago, don't
we?" She smiled sweetly.
"Do we, Countess?" countered Kelson. "But, perhaps
you are willing to stake your life and power on such a gamble. I warn
you, though. If you force me to a show of strength, I cannot promise you
mercy."
"Does the Blue One need your mercy, Kelson? No, I think the
son of Brion is bluffing, and I call that bluff."
Stepping back a few paces, she raised her hands and cast a line of
pale blue fire in a semi-circle behind her.
"Now, Kelson, will you close the ring and duel with me under
the laws of ancient ritual, or must I strike you down with wanton magic? How
say you, Kelson?"
Kelson regarded her disdainfully for a moment; then, with a slight
bow of acquiescence, he handed his sceptre over to a waiting chamberlain and
joined the Blue One in the transept. The wine-dark cloak flowed smoothly from
his young shoulders as he raised both arms in a single, fluid motion. A deep
crimson semi-circle sprang up behind him, its ends meeting those of the blue
arc.
The Blue One nodded patronizingly and began an incantation.
"By Earth and Water, Fire and Air, I conjure powers to leave
this ring. I clear it now. Let all beware. Through here shall pass no living
thing."
Morgan tugged hard on Duncan's sleeve. "Duncan! Does he know
what she's doing? If he completes the spell and joins the two arcs, the circle
cannot be broken until one has lost all power."
"I don't know, Alaric. But if he can complete the spell at
all, we'll know that he has Brion's magic. Kelson was never taught these
things."
Kelson replied:
"Inside, all Space and Time suspend. From here may nothing
outward flee Nor inward come. It shall not end Till two are one and one is
free."
As Kelson finished, violet fire flared where the two arcs had
been, and then a cold violet line, inscribing a thirty-foot circle, marked off
the area where the two must duel.
"You, as Challenged, have the privilege of first strike, my
precocious princeling." Her eyes widened a bit when Kelson declined the
privilege, but perhaps she had actually expected such a move after his
successful completion of the ring, for she nodded acceptance without a word and
stretched her hands out before her, palms together. Murmuring some
unintelligible syllables, she drew her hands apart, and a sphere of blue light
could be seen hovering in mid-air.
Quickly, the thing grew to man-size and took the form of a warrior
in full armour, blue shield over arm and blazing sword in hand. Dripping blue
fire and vapours, he cocked his head at the young king and advanced across the
circle.
Kelson hesitated but an instant, then put right hand to left and
drew forth a glowing crimson sword from his closed fist. When the blue warrior
came within reach, lightning forked from Kelson's left hand, pinning the blue
sword, while Kelson lopped the thing's head off. It struck the floor with a
hollow sound, and then the apparition and Kelson's weapons vanished.
The people rumbled in appreciation at their new king's prowess as
the Blue One's nimble fingers moved vexedly in the next spell.
"Spawn of Dagon, Bael's darling, Heed my call which bids thee
here. Son of Darkness, hear my order. Come: I charge thee to appear.
Smite this young, ambitious princeling, Send him to a death of
flames. Wrest from him the usurped power Which the Blue One justly
claims!"
As she spoke, there was a rumbling in the air before her, and a
dense black vapour condensed into a tall, shadowy form vaguely man-like in
shape, but with scaly hide and long claws and teeth. It stood blinking in the
center as Kelson began a counterspell.
"Lord of Light, in shining splendor Aid me now, if thou dost
hear The supplication of thy servant, Battling for his people here. Lend me
strength to smite this demon, Send it to the depths of hell. Cleanse this
circle of the evil Which the Blue One doth compel!"
As the creature began to lope across the circle, mawing mouth and
claws dripping blue flame, Kelson finished his spell. With a decisive gesture,
the king stabbed a ruby-banded finger toward a spot several yards in front of
the monster.
Just at that moment, the sun burst from behind the clouds to
stream through the high stained-glass windows, casting a brilliant,
multi-coloured pattern on the floor where Kelson pointed. The congregation
inhaled in unison as the creature reached the spot, stepped into it, and began
writhing and exuding blue streamers of flame and smoke. It shrieked in mortal
agony, but could not seem to step out of the blaze of light which seared
its flesh. As it spun in its final throes to crash to the floor,
it cried out terribly and pointed an accusing arm at the Blue Witch, then was
still. It vanished, and only wisps of pungent blue smoke and crimson and gold
flickerings played on the floor where the thing had been.
Kelson lowered his hand, the Ring of Fire winking ominously, and
the sun chose that moment to go back behind the clouds. A low sigh of relief
swept through the church like a whisper of spring, and settled to a hush as
Kelson faced his opponent, grey eyes bright with confidence.
"And now, O Witch, this farce must end. I will no more my
powers lend To thwart your might. I must defend My people, and your power rend.
Therefore, I take the right of claim To instigate the test of flame. I call the
trial of fiery wall Which, in this case, decideth all."
He stabbed a ringed forefinger at his archenemy, and she gathered
her steely composure to answer his challenge. Instantly, the two halves of the
circle became misted with blue or red auras, and where the two met, a violet
fog played along the surface. The line fluctuated wildly for a moment, as each
magician sought out the other's weaknesses, but then the line began moving
inexorably toward the Blue One.
As she began to lose ground, she began inching back, but her
shoulders soon encountered the glassy slickness of the barrier ring. With a low
cry, she glanced
behind her, then sank to her knees, head bowed in her hands, as
the last vestiges of her power were neutralized by Kelson's crimson aura.
When the entire area glowed red, the circle winked out of
existence. And the only things left where it had been were a softly weeping
woman, human now, and a young king, dazed at his first victory.
Kelson dropped his hand softly to his side, his face impassive,
then addressed himself to the Blue One's soldiers.
"Who among you is in charge now?"
The men shuffled uneasily under his steady gaze, and finally a man
wearing the insignia of a lieutenant stepped forward and bowed respectfully.
"I am, my lord." He glanced uncertainly at the huddled
shape of his former mistress, then continued. "My name is Brennan de
Colforth, and I renounce the oath of fealty I took with the Blue One. I swear I
never wished you ill, and I ask forgiveness for myself and my men."
"You treacherous dog!" spat the Blue One, scrambling to
her feet. "How dare you?"
"Silence," said Kelson, turning toward his Champion.
"Morgan? What say you?"
Morgan climbed to his feet and joined the prince, Duncan
supporting him. "Tis a small but noble family of Lanspar to the North, my
prince. Old but proud."
"Father?"
"I have never known a de Colforth to swear falsely, my
prince," remarked Duncan.
"Very well, then. De Colforth, I give you this proposition:
you, and any of your men who will swear loyalty to me, will be pardoned with
one stipulation—that you take the Blue One into exile at Shepara and then
disband and return to your lands, never to molest me and my people
again."
De Colforth dropped to one knee, mailed fist to chest in salute.
"I accept Your Majesty's pardon in full humility, and swear to uphold the
stipulations of that pardon to the best of my ability." Behind him, a
dozen other men joined in the salute.
There was a long moment of silence as all rose to their feet, and
then a voice from the rear of the Cathedral cried out, "Long live King
Kelson!" And the shout was picked up and carried by a hundred hundred
voices.
First Archbishop and clergy, then Champion and peers of the realm,
came to kneel and swear their fealty to the new king. And as Kelson formed his
retinue to process out of the Cathedral, the sun shone again through the
stained glass and cast a puddle of jeweled light at his feet. The church grew
hushed. Looking up casually at the window, Kelson smiled and stepped into the
light, which turned his jewels to flame, and then, amidst cheers of joy and
wonder, he left to show himself to his people.
precis of deryni rising
In the process of developing the Deryni concept for submission, I
wrote the following one-page synopsis for the first trilogy in the Deryni series.
deryni rising
a novel by katherine kurtz
Deryni Rising is
the first of a trilogy dealing with the Deryni—that ancient race of
quasi-mortal sorcerers, metaphysicians, and dabblers in human affairs whose
existence was at once bane and blessing to the people of the Eleven Kingdoms.
Deryni Rising tells
how Kelson Haldane came to acquire his father's magical powers and defeat the
evil
304
Charissa, a Deryni sorceress. More important, it introduces the
central character of all three books, Alaric Morgan: friend and prodigy of
Kelson's father, Brion. Morgan, the half-Deryni General whose talents are so
crucial fora Deryni rising. Morgan's priest-cousin Dun-can McLain, also
half-Deryni, is also introduced.
Deryni Checkmate, second in the series, will establish the socio-political
atmosphere of the Eleven Kingdoms in the months immediately following Kelson's
coronation. Flashbacks of Morgan's long association with Brion; the proposed
and thwarted marriage of Morgan's sister Bronwyn to Duncan's brother Kevin; the
reaction of the Bishops' Curia against Morgan and Duncan; the growing unease as
a militant Deryni-hater maraudes Morgan's duchy—all combine to set the stage
for a new human-Deryni conflict which will be developed in Book III.
Book III will treat the human-Deryni war which is threatened, and
will see most of the conflicts resolved.
Further novels are projected if the Trilogy is successful.
submission outline for deryni rising
This is the outline I submitted to sell the first trilogy,
projecting the course I anticipated Deryni Rising would take. Purists
may wish to compare this outline with the actual novel, though the differences
are largely additions and embellishments rather than changes.
outline: deryni rising chapter one
In far Gwynedd, near the city of Rhemuth, Brion Haldane, Lord of
that land, rides to the hounds with his thirteen year-old son, Kelson, and a
number of his retainers. During a lull in the chase, Brion and Kelson withdraw
to discuss the absence of Morgan, the King's top general, and to speculate on
the most recent har-
assment of the Shadowed One, Charissa, member of the ancient
Deryni race of sorcerers. Brion himself, though not Deryni, has extensive
powers of his own, through which he has held his kingdom for more than fifteen
years—power which will one day be Kelson's. He asks that Kelson promise to send
for Morgan if anything should happen to him, and they rejoin the hunt. Brion
unwittingly drinks some drugged wine, and the hunt resumes.
Lord lan falls behind and enters the forest to the east, where he
meets Charissa. The two discuss their plot to assassinate Brion that morning
and take over the kingdom from Kelson. It is both a power-play and a plan of
revenge for Charissa, for it was Morgan who helped Brion gain his power and
slay her father fifteen years before—Morgan, the half-Deryni Lord who, in her
eyes, has betrayed his Deryni heritage. Kelson will be spared for the moment,
but only as bait to lure Morgan to his death.
lan rejoins the hunt, and the hounds are made to lose the scent.
As Kelson rides ahead to see what has happened, Brion is stricken by what
appears to be a heart attack. When Kelson reaches his side, Brion has only
enough strength to whisper, "Remember...", before he dies. Kelson
sends for General Morgan.
chapter Two
Morgan returns in haste to Rhemuth, arriving the day before the
Coronation. He and his military aide, Lord Derry, are sole survivors of an
ambush which delayed their coming.
Morgan's arrival creates an uproar. As Deryni, he was already
suspect, and now he has been branded a traitor by the lies and rumors planted
by Charissa. His announcement of the slaying of his escort adds fuel to the
fire. Worse, the slaying leaves a pro-Morgan seat vacant on the Regency
Council.
Prince Nigel, brother of the late King, takes Morgan to meet
Kelson in the garden, warning him on the way of Queen Jehana's plot against
him. The queen wants Kelson to assume the throne of Gwynedd, but without his
father's supernatural powers, which she regards as evil. Her method: to bring
Morgan before the Council on charges of heresy and high treason. Nigel agrees
to talk with the Queen and stall for time. But Morgan's fate will depend
ultimately on Kelson's personal ability to manipulate the voting in the
Council.
Morgan reflects on the Deryni background and the beginnings of his
feud with Jehana while he waits for Kelson. When the boy appears with Kevin
McLain, he and Morgan move deeper into the garden to discuss strategy.
Kevin returns to the hall and talks with Derry about the charges
against Morgan. For treason and heresy, the penalty is death.
chapter three
In her chambers, Jehana considers her plans for Morgan. Nigel
arrives and manages to convince her that Brion's death was not a simple heart
attack. But instead of the hoped-for cooperation, Jehana declares she is now
even more convinced that Kelson must rule
as a mortal, without his father's dark powers. Brion's powers did
not save him. Jehana sends for Kelson and leaves for the Council
meeting.
In the garden, Morgan and Kelson discuss Kelson's training for
kingship and his mother's hostility to things Deryni. A Stenrect, a deadly
creature of supernatural origin, comes within inches of Kelson's hand. Morgan
kills it. But from across the garden, his action is seen as attempted murder.
Only Kelson's intervention prevents the guards from arresting Morgan on the
spot.
They dare linger in the garden no longer. Too much must be done
before Morgan is called to the Council, as he is sure to be. They will be able
to find temporary sanctuary at St. Hilary's, the royal basilica, where Morgan's
cousin Duncan is waiting.
Nigel's attempts to stall the opening of the Council meeting are
thwarted. Jehana calls the meeting to order without Kelson and begins
proceedings against Morgan.
chapter four
Morgan and Kelson meet with Duncan, Morgan's half-Deryni
priest-cousin. In Duncan's study, Morgan produces his Gryphon Signet, which
will open a secret compartment in the main altar. Duncan takes the seal and
returns shortly with a flat black box, about six inches square. Inside is a
folded slip of parchment written in Brion's hand, and another similar box which
cannot be opened. The parchment reads:
When shall the Son deflect the running tide? A Spokesman of the
Infinite must guide
The Dark Protector's hand to shed the blood Which lights the Eye
of Rom at Eventide.
Same blood must swiftly feed the Ring of Fire. But, careful, lest
ye rouse the Demon's ire: If soon thy hand despoil the virgin band, Just
retribution damns what ye desire!
Now that the Eye of Rom can see the light, Release the Crimson
Lion in the night. With sinister hand unflinching, Lion's Tooth Must pierce the
flesh and make the Power right.
Thus Eye and Fire and Lion drink their fill. Ye have assuaged the
warring might of 111. New morn, ring hand. Defender's Sign shall seal Thy
force. No Power Below shall thwart thy will.
Morgan has the Ring of Fire in his pocket. But the Eye of Rom, a
ruby set in an earring, was buried with Brion. They must open Brion's tomb to
retrieve it.
Outside, Archbishop Loris, a militant persecutor of Deryni,
arrives with a detachment of royal guards to arrest Morgan. The three agree to
go to the crypt that night. Morgan reassures Kelson, then surrenders to Loris.
Loris seizes Morgan and serves him with a writ commanding him to appear before
the Council and answer to charges of heresy and high treason.
chapter five
The Council is in turmoil when Kelson and Morgan arrive. Kelson
gestures for silence as he takes his place at the head of the table. His eyes
touch briefly on the
empty Council seat as he orders Morgan's sword placed before him
on the table. Jehana wastes no time announcing the Council's vote; six to five
against Morgan. Morgan is doomed.
Kelson polls the Council and learns that Derry was not permitted
to vote in Morgan's absence. Morgan votes for himself, making the vote six to
six. Jehana demands she be allowed to vote, since she is no longer chairman in
Kelson's absence. Therefore, the vote is seven to six against Morgan.
Kelson orders the formal charges against Morgan read out. Basilica
and Cathedral bells toll three as the clerk finishes the reading. Kelson
announces he will fill the empty Council seat before continuing: Lord Derry is
appointed. Derry votes to acquit Morgan, Kelson breaks the new tied vote, and
Morgan is acquitted, eight to seven.
Jehana challenges Kelson's right to appoint Derry without the
approval of the Regents. Kelson retorts that he no longer needs approval since
the Council is no longer a Regency Council. Kelson came of age with the tolling
of the bells. If everyone will recall, it was his afternoon hour of birth which
scheduled the Coronation for tomorrow in the first place. The Council is
adjourned.
Kelson cuts Morgan's bonds, returns his sword, and sweeps out of
the chamber with Morgan and Derry at his heels, leaving a stunned Council in
his wake.
chapter Six
As soon as the three have cleared the Council chambers, Morgan
sends Derry to assure Duncan that all is
well. Morean anrt Kelson will hole up in Keelson's quar-
ters and rest until evening. Derry will return and guard when he
has finished.
As the Council disperses, lan is concerned by the favorable
reaction Kelson's brilliant maneuvering is receiving. He slips away and
overpowers a guard in a little-used corridor, then uses the man as a medium to
contact Charissa. He tells her of the defeat in Council, and the two plot
strategy. lan kills the guard, then smears some of his blood in the rough
outline of a gryphon. When he has some of Morgan's knights discover the body
later that night, they will require little persuasion to believe that their
liege lord is a murderer as well as a traitor.
Morgan wakes shortly after dark. With a set of black and white
cubes, he constructs a Master Ward to guard the sleeping Kelson while he
searches Brion's library for information on the ritual verse. The boy awakens
while Morgan is setting the wards and asks to go along, but Morgan vetoes the
request and puts Kelson to sleep with a touch of Deryni control.
Morgan's search of the library discloses nothing. Wearily, he
meditates on the possible meaning of the ritual verse, using his Gryphon Seal
as a focus for his concentration. For a fraction of a second, he seems to have
a vision. There is the fleeting impression of a man's face surrounded by
blackness, a feeling both of urgency and reassurance—and the moment is past.
Morgan glances around quickly, but there is no one there. Again,
he goes through Brion's books. This time, one well-thumbed volume falls open to
a place marked by a slip of parchment in Brion's hand. But it is the picture
opposite the passage which chills Morgan most. For the portrait, that of St.
Camber of Culdi, is the face he saw in the vision. St. Camber, an Lord.
Intently Morgan scans the passage, absently pocketing the
parchment as he reads. As he closes the volume, he hears the door opening
softly behind him and turns to see Charissa stealthily entering the room. She
pretends not to be startled when Morgan addresses her, and the two exchange
polite conversation and veiled threats. Charissa finally boasts of having
"looked in" on Kelson and laughs as Morgan dashes from the room. Then
she picks up the volume Morgan was reading and flips worriedly through its
pages.
chapter seven
Morgan wakes shortly after dark. With a set of black and white
cubes, he constructs a Master Ward to guard the sleeping Kelson while he
searches Brion's library for information on the ritual verse. The boy awakens
while Morgan is setting the wards and asks to go along, but Morgan vetoes the
request and puts Kelson to sleep with a touch of Deryni control.
Morgan's search of the library discloses nothing. Wearily, he
meditates on the possible meaning of the ritual verse, using his Gryphon Seal
as a focus for his concentration. For a fraction of a second, he seems to have
a vision. There is the fleeting impression of a man's face surrounded by
blackness, a feeling both of urgency and reassurance—and the moment is past.
Morgan glances around quickly, but there is no one there. Again,
he goes through Brion's books. This time, one well-thumbed volume falls open to
a place marked by a slip of parchment in Brion's hand. But it is the
picture opposite the passage which chills Morgan most. For the
portrait, that of St. Camber of Culdi, is the face he saw in the vision. St.
Camber, an ancient Deryni Lord.
Intently Morgan scans the passage, absently pocketing the
parchment as he reads. As he closes the volume, he hears the door opening
softly behind him and turns to see Charissa stealthily entering the room. She
pretends not to be startled when Morgan addresses her, and the two exchange
polite conversation and veiled threats. Charissa finally boasts of having
"looked in" on Kelson and laughs as Morgan dashes from the room. Then
she picks up the volume Morgan was reading and flips worriedly through its
pages.
chapter eight
Morgan returns immediately to Kelson's quarters, but the boy is
safe. Morgan breaks the wards and wakes Kelson. They make their way through a
secret passage to St. Hilary's but Morgan does not mention his strange vision.
Duncan shows them an ancient Deryni Transfer Portal to the
Cathedral where Brion's body lies. Going ahead to be sure the way is clear, he
encounters Brother Jerome, the elderly and half-blind sacristan. Duncan allays
the monk's suspicions and sends him on his way with a Deryni command to forget
what he has seen, then brings Morgan and Kelson through the Portal.
Morgan and Duncan use their Deryni powers to silence two guards
outside the royal crypt. As Morgan picks the lock on the gate, Lord Rogier
comes to check on the guards. Duncan overpowers Rogier, and the
three enter the crypt. Kelson points out Brion's tomb and brings a
candlelabra closer as Morgan and Duncan slide back the cover. After a slight
hesitation, Morgan pulls back the white silk shroud covering the face. It isn't
Brion!
chapter nine
The body in the tomb is totally unfamiliar. After agitated
speculation, Duncan hypothesizes that Brion's body is possibly still within the
crypt, perhaps swapped with another tenant. They begin the grisly task of opening
other sepulchers, only to have Morgan suddenly rush back to the original and
call the others to his side. He contends that the strange body is Brion's,
only under a shape-changing spell. Duncan removes the spell, experiencing
Brion's death as he releases the final essence, and the body resumes its normal
shape.
Morgan removes the Eye of Rom. Duncan leaves his crucifix in
Brion's hands to ward off further spellbinding, and they reseal the sepulcher.
Back in Duncan's study, the three gather the elements for the
power transfer: the Eye of Rom, the Ring of Fire, and the box with the Crimson
Lion. Morgan pierces Kelson's right earlobe and "feeds" the Eye and
Ring with the blood from that piercing. Then Kelson, wearing the Eye of Rom,
opens the box and removes a large, crimson-enameled brooch with a golden lion
emblazoned upon it. They consult the ritual verse again, but they seem to have
reached a stalemate: the Lion has no tooth!
chapter ten
Duncan re-reads the verse. Of course: there is always the
challenge, the obstacle, the need for bravery. The Lion's Tooth is the clasp of
the brooch—three inches of gleaming gold. And it is this which must
"pierce the flesh and make the power right."
Morgan and Duncan leave the boy to prepare himself. Morgan is
frankly uneasy, especially since Duncan plans to use the secret chapel
adjoining his study: a chapel sacred to, among others, St. Camber. Morgan tells
Duncan of his vision, how it led him to the passage in the book—and remembers
the parchment. Withdrawing it, they read, "St. Camber defend us!"
Duncan is hesitant, for as priest as well as Deryni, he is well
aware how slender is the balance between good and evil. And St. Camber's
sainthood was recalled long ago by a fearfu! church. But they have no choice
but to continue. For without his father's powers, Kelson will surely die.
They return to Kelson and enter the chapel. Morgan and Kelson doff
their swords and kneel, and Duncan begins the ritual. At the appropriate
moment, Kelson plunges the golden shaft through the palm of his hand. He reels
drunkenly as a pale aura surrounds him, then hallucinates briefly and passes
out. Apparently, the power transfer has worked, though Kelson will not be able
to use his powers until the sequence is completed tomorrow at the Coronation.
Morgan and Duncan gather up the unconscious prince and return to
Kelson's quarters. As Duncan closes the passage, a voice from the shadows
roars,
"Traitors! Blasphemers! What have you done to Prince
Kelson?" Three armed knights emerge from the darkness and advance on
Duncan and Morgan.
chapter eleven
Morgan catches the sword Duncan tosses and lowers the unconscious
Kelson to the floor. As guards hammer on the door, he and Duncan battle the
three knights. Duncan finally kills his man and overcomes one of Morgan's with
a Deryni power touch. Morgan disarms the third and holds him at bay, blocking
his memory of Duncan as the priest slips out on the balcony to hide. Kelson
staggers to his feet and retrieves Duncan's fallen sword as the guards burst
in.
The prisoner, one of Morgan's vassals, tells of the guard he and
his companions found slain, of the telltale gryphon smeared in the man's dying
blood. The guards are ready to seize Morgan, but Kelson forbids it. Morgan
could not have killed the guard, for he was with Kelson. When asked how he
found the body, the knight replies they "just happened to go there."
Did someone tell them to? Kelson insists, sensing he's getting to the source of
the frame-up. But the man panics, seizes a dagger from one of the guards, plunges
it into his own chest before anyone can stop him. Kelson orders the bodies
removed. Morgan slips outside to discover what happened to the corridor guards.
He finds them all dead or dying, with Derry, too, very near death.
Kneeling desperately at Derry's side, Morgan remembers something
he once read about Deryni. Placing both hands lightly on Derry's forehead, he
con-
centrates through his Gryphon Seal once more, trying to summon up
the healing power which Deryni are reputed to have. For an instant, he has the
impression of another pair of hands on top of his. Derry's eyes flicker and he
passes into a natural sleep, his wounds and injured arm completely healed.
As Morgan stares at his hands in disbelief, he hears a voice
behind him say, "Well done, Morgan!"
chapter twelve
Morgan whirls defensively, half expecting to see the face in his
vision again. But it is Bran Coris who approaches, accompanied by Ewan, Nigel,
lan, and a thoroughly angry Jehana. "Ah, yes. Well done, indeed!"
Bran continues. "You've finally killed him, too, haven't you? Now you're
the only one alive who knows what really happened on that long ride to
Rhemuth?"
"Sorry to disappoint you, but he isn't dead," Morgan
retorts, consigning Derry to the care of the surgeons. Jehana rages at Morgan
about the slain guard, but she dares do nothing against him. She subsides only
when Kelson appears at the door, haggard and worn, and orders them all to
disperse. lan glances back at Morgan as he disappears down the corridor, then
calls a guard to attend him.
As the door closes and Duncan is finally able to emerge from
hiding, Kelson collapses under the strain. He regains consciousness briefly as
Morgan and Dun-can put him to bed, and mumbles about seeing faces during the
ritual. When Kelson drifts off to sleep again, Morgan crosses to the fireplace
and searches rapidly through Kelson's books, finding at last a picture of St.
Camber. There, he maintains, is the face Kelson saw. And
it's the same one Morgan saw in his vision. He tells Duncan then of healing Derry,
and they explore the possibility of a common factor in all three cases.
Duncan comments that at least Kelson seems to have a few useful
talents tucked away: Morgan was very clever to teach Kelson those Deryni
questioning techniques he used on the guard. Morgan objects: he didn't
teach Kelson—he thought Duncan did. Implication: can Kelson be Deryni?
Unless someone else of Deryni blood taught him, which is highly unlikely, it
would be impossible for him to know. But if he is Deryni, how? Brion,
they know, was full human. And Jehana... Khadasa! If Jehana is Deryni, and
doesn't know it, or only suspects, it could explain much of her hostility.
Projections: Deryni blood may give Kelson the edge he needs
tomorrow against Charissa, especially if the power sequence should fail in any
way. On the other hand, it makes Jehana's opposition that much more
unpredictable. On that ominous note, Duncan leaves and Morgan settles down for
some much-needed sleep.
In his room, lan binds his captive guard in another communication
with Charissa. "He's been to the crypt," lan tells her, "and
he's wearing the Eye of Rom. No one else noticed." "Good,"
Charissa replies. "Go back to the Cathedral, then. You know what to
do."
lan erases the guard's memory of the event and sends him on his
way, then slips out of the palace to carry out his orders. Later, he arrives in
Charissa's chambers, where he will remain until morning.
chapter thirteen
Next morning, the royal wardrobers and dressers take Kelson in
hand to prepare him for the Coronation. Derry, fully recovered, arrives to
assist Morgan with last minute details. Elsewhere, lan stops a wardrober and
makes a switch in Morgan's chain of office, substituting one which will relay
information to Charissa.
Duncan arrives and informs Morgan he has been named King's
Champion—a great honor, but one which could prove most arduous if physical as
well as occult challenge is made at the Coronation.
Kelson appears in his Coronation regalia to congratulate Morgan on
his new title. He and Duncan retire to the privacy of the balcony, where the
priest reassures Kelson of his suitability for kingship and hears his
confession.
Inside, Morgan dons the accoutrements of King's Champion, unaware
that his chain of office is now relaying all he says and does to the Shadowed
One.
Nigel arrives in a daze, relating a horrible scene of carnage
found in the royal crypt early this morning. During the night, someone has
ransacked Brion's tomb and stolen the jewels from the body. The two guards were
found with their throats neatly slit, and Rogier is dead with his own hand on
the dagger and an awful expression on his face. Clutched tightly in his other
hand was a gilded crucifix. It is Duncan's.
Before the three can react, Jehana bursts angrily into the
chamber, full of fresh outrage at the slaying, for Rogier was a distant
relative. She knows of the fatal crucifix and confronts Duncan and Morgan with
it. But her anger turns to cold fury when she spots the Eye of Rom glittering
in Kelson's ear. For she knows it came from Brion's tomb.
"Monster!" she screams. "You would desecrate your
own father's tomb, you would murder for this power! Oh, Kelson, see what
this foul Deryni curse has brought you to!"
She swears she will not attend the Coronation. Morgan realizes
explanation is useless at this point, so he issues an ultimatum: either Jehana
will attend, or Morgan will Mind-See to discover whether she is Deryni
as he believes her to be. Jehana is horrified, but the threat is a powerful
one: Jehana has suspected her origin, though she is not willing to
accept it. She agrees reluctantly to go along, but she will have to be watched.
All assemble for the procession to the Cathedral.
Charissa has observed the royal friction with great interest and
now she, too, begins her journey to the Cathedral. En route, she alerts lan to
the new potential threat of Jehana. She also considers her plans for Morgan and
Kelson—and the treacherous lan.
Kelson's procession arrives at the Cathedral. The participants
take their places, Derry keeps watch from a bell tower, and three Archbishops
lead Kelson inside to begin the ceremonies.
Kelson takes the Coronation Oath. During the annointing, Derry
slips in with word that Charissa is
approaching with a band of armed soldiers. The ranking archbishop
invests Kelson with the Ring of Fire and the Sword of State. Morgan comes
forward to redeem the sword and has Kelson touch his Gryphon Seal to fulfill
the final condition of the tirual verse.
But nothing happens. Morgan's Gryphon is not the Defender's Sign.
The Cathedral doors crash open and Charissa stands silhouetted in the doorway.
chapter fifteen
As Morgan and Duncan try desperately to think of some other seal
which might fulfill the verse, Charissa sweeps down the aisle with her
retainers. She forbids the Coronation to continue, then challenges Kelson to
mortal combat for the rule of Gwynedd.
Kelson knows Charissa is trying to goad him into a duel of magic,
but he pretends to understand her challenge as a traditional trial by combat.
He names Morgan as his Champion, and Charissa names lan. The two battle until
Morgan finally inflicts a mortal wound on lan. But the dying lan flings his
dagger at Morgan with his last effort. Morgan's rigged chain of office impedes
his movement and he's gravely wounded in the shoulder. Morgan gets rid of the
chain, but the damage is done.
The duel has decided nothing. Charissa renews her challenge,
calling for trial by magic according to ancient tradition. Kelson hesitates and
Jehana makes her move.
The unleashed power of a full Deryni lashes out at Charissa,
guided by the despair of a mother who must try to protect her child at all
costs. But Charissa has been expecting just such a move. And Jehana's power
is untrained, without control. Charissa tries to kill, but Morgan
and Duncan are able to deflect the killing force. Result: Jehana is imprisoned
inside a Deryni force-field—one which can be broken only by Charissa's will, or
her death.
Charissa regains her composure and taunts Kelson. Will he come
down and meet her in honorable combat, or must she strike out now and slay him
where he stands, without a fight? Kelson must now make a reply.
chapter sixteen
Kelson's mind reels. He is half-Deryni! Can he use this advantage
to gain the power he desperately needs? As he absently rubs the Ring of Fire
and searches for some clue, his eyes light on the inlaid marble floor of the
transept where Charissa stands. The signs of myriads of saints appear there,
and somewhere—yes! There, to the left, is the sign of St. Camber, he who was
long ago called Defensor Hominum, the Defender of Man. Can this be the
Defender's Sign of the verse?
This is the supreme bluff. For in order to survive, Kelson must
now proceed as though he already has Brion's power, trusting that he will receive
it when he steps on the seal. Outwardly calm, Kelson takes up Charissa's
challenge and walks toward her. Duncan and the wounded Morgan, watching from
the steps, realize the gamble Kelson is taking. But as the boy stops on the
seal, they can see no reaction. Charissa begins the spell which Kelson must
complete. And as Kelson raises his arms to answer, the air crackles around him
in response. The power transfer is at last complete!
The duel begins, a series of spells and counter-spells,
as each searches for the other's weakness. Morgan, his strength
rapidly failing, attempts to rediscover the Deryni healing power he used on
Derry the night before. Kelson has been holding his own to this point. But now
Charissa conjures up a creature of the darkness on which Kelson's magic seems to
have no effect. As he attempts spell after spell, the creature continues to
advance across the floor, mawing and shrieking its defiance as it comes.
chapter seventeen
In a last effort, Kelson murmurs a spell and points in the
direction of the monster. At that moment, sunlight shines through a high
stained-glass window, throwing a pool of color on the floor just in front of
Kelson. The beast ignores it—and dissolves in a curl of smoke, writhing and
screaming in rage.
It is the breakthrough Kelson has been watching for. He now
challenges Charissa to the ultimate contest, the binding spell which, once
made, cannot be broken by either until one of them is dead. Charissa accepts.
Kelson defeats the Shadowed One.
With Charissa's death, Jehana is released from her spell. She
watches with awe and a growing pride as Kelson mounts the steps to the altar.
Morgan, now healed, rises to meet him, and Duncan brings forward the Crown of
Gwynedd. As all kneel, three Archbishops elevate the Crown and recite the
formula of Coronation.
But to Deryni eyes within the Cathedral, it is as though a fourth
figure supports the Crown—a tall, blond man garbed in the shining golden
rainment of the ancient
Deryni lords. And the words
he speaks are rather different from those of the Archbishops. Here at last, in
Kelson of Haldane, is a King for human and Deryni— the first in three hundred
years!
Kelson is crowned, the Deryni-seen apparition vanishes, and Morgan
comes forward to kneel in homage to the newly-crowned King. Other lords follow
suit. As the procession from the Cathedral forms, the sun shines once more
through the stained glass, casting a pool of multi-colored sunlight at Kelson's
feet. The spectators are hushed in fearful anticipation, for there was death
before in the colored sunlight. But Kelson, with a faint smile, steps calmly
into the light.
There is no death there now. The pool of sunlight merely turns
Kelson's gems to fire, blazes on his Crown like a hundred sunrises.
And then, amid jubilant cheering, he and his loyal friends exit so
that Kelson may show himself to his people.
about the author
Katherine Kurtz was born in Coral Gables, Florida, during a hurricane and has led a whirlwind existence ever since. She holds a Bachelor of Science degree in chemistry from the University of Miami, Florida, and a Master of Arts degree in English history from UCLA. She studied medicine before deciding that she would rather write, and is an Ericksonian-trained hypnotist. Her scholarly background also includes extensive research in religious history, magical systems, and other esoteric subjects.
Katherine Kurtz' literary works include the well known Deryni and Camber Trilogies of fantasy fiction, an occult thriller set in WWII England, and a number of Deryni-related short stories. The first two books of her third Deryni trilogy were published in 1984 and 1985, with the third book due in 1986. At least three more trilogies are planned in the Deryni universe, and several additional mainstream thrillers are also currently in development.
Miss Kurtz lives in southern California with her husband and son, an orange cat called The Marmalade Bear, and a Bentley motorcar named Basil—British, of course. They hope soon to move to a castle in Ireland.
MAY 2 0 1992
Deryni–
and
Otherwise
There have been many events in the past 230 years of the
half-magical race of the Deryni that were too short to turn into novels. Katherine Kurtz has been
writing these when not occupied with
longer works, and they are now
collected here. Some have
appeared in books and other
sources now hard to locate. More than half of the fiction is new—including a major story of how Denis Arilan became
the first Deryni priest in 200
years.
Katherine Kurtz has provided an introduction and individual headings for each story to indicate her feelings and intents in writing each tale. Additionally, there is the complete first story she ever wrote—the first version of her Deryni vision, and how it all came about.
For all the myriad lovers of the Deryni, this should be a must book—both for pleasure and as a reference!