Other Avon Books by Andre Norton BROTHER TO SHADOWS HANDS OF LYR MIRROR OF DESTINY ANb€ NOKtON This is a work of fiction. Names, characters places and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the author or the publisher. AVON BOOKS, INC. 1350 Avenue of the Americas New York, New York 10019 Copyright © 1998 by Andre Norton Interior design by Kellan Peck Visit our website at http://ivwv.AvonBooks.cornEos ISBN: 0-380-97687-0 All rights reserved, which includes the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever except as provided by the U.S. Copyright Law. For information address Avon Books, Inc. Library of Congress Catalog In Publication Data: Norton, Andre. Scent of magic / Andre Norton.—1st ed. p. cm. I. Title. PS3527.0632S28 1998 98-18173 813'.52—dc21 CIP First Avon Eos Printing; October 1998 AVO EOS TRADEMARK REG U.. PAT. OFF. AND N OTHER COUNTRIES, MARCA REGISTRADA, HECHO EN U.S.A. Printed in the U.S.A. FIRST EDITION QPM 10 987654321 For the support system which has meant so much to me this past year— Rose Wolf Ann Crispin Mary Schaub eluki bes shahar Lyn McConchie Marj Krueger and Caroline Fike 1 r ...: U Qt ben IN e CN- tral watchtower of Kronengred boomed the same warning as it had for more years than the most diligent scholars could remember. A heavy vibration of sound penetrated every one of the aged buildings huddled comfortably together, rising even to the castle on a mount which rivaled the height of the bell tower. Though the dark of the passing winter season still held in thick blots around alleys and doorway, yet the bell's call now sounded to all responsible citizens—those who had kept Kronengred's prosperity and safety alive—to be up and about the day's labors. His Highness, the Duke, might wriggle deeper into the covers of his great bed, but in the tiny cupboard (one could certainly not dignify it with the title of "room") off the vast kitchen of the Wanderers Inn, Walladene sighed herself into sitting up, the musty straws pricking through the ragged cover of the pallet beneath her, meeting her every movement with familiar scratching. Her first real act was always the same. Before she reached for undersmock her hands went to that small bag, warm between her small breasts, and lifted it to her tormented nose. A deep sniff of the crushed spices and herbs within cleared her head, but the dull ache from last night's long service in the taproom did not go away. Now she dressed hurriedly, pulling on clothing which had been cobbled down from a much larger size, so worn that its color was now a uniform muddy gray. Smells—it was always the smells against which she had to brace herself each morning. She was sure sometimes that those invaded her very dreams bringing shadows of nightmares. The kitchen was no flower garden for the pleasuring of some lords daughter, that was certain. She was still twisting her lank hair up under a kerchief when she heard, as she had feared the clang of pans harshly slammed down together on the long table. Aunt Jacoba was the only one who dared to use those utensils without order, and, by the sound of it, she had a monumental temper to work off this morning. "Willa—get you here, you lazy slut!" That voice, which even sounded like a badly scrubbed kettle, arose on the end of one crash. Certainly Aunt Jacoba had deliberately swung the big porridge kettle on its hanger so that it had rebounded from the smoke-darkened stone of the wide hearth. Willadene (sometimes she forgot she had once been called that—it had been years now since the great plague had decimated the inhabitants of the city and she had been grudgingly accepted under the orders of the district Reeve by her father's cousin as a scullery maid, or scullery drudge) hurried into the kitchen. Wisely she had been on guard and so dodged the heavy tankard which might have struck her senseless if it had landed true. There was no easy greeting from Jacoba when she was in this foul mood. Swiftly the girl reached well over her head and pulled down a flitch of bacon. She had to fight with all her strength against the smell of the meat—it was never of the first quality and always kept too long. Jacoba pinched each pence when it came to supplies for the majority of those eating early in the morning. Perhaps they were still so drowsy they were able to choke it down in a dull fog of half sleep. Jacoba had turned to the stirring of the vast pot of porridge which had been set to cook slowly the night before. Figis, the waiting boy, his face still masked with most of yesterday's grime, was slamming bowls onto a tray. He did not look up, but Willadene sighted the bruise near his eye. There was an ever-going feud between Figis and Jorg, the horseboy. She sawed away at the bacon with a knife which Figis should have sharpened yesterday. What she turned off now were not smooth slices but ragged hunks to be put in the footed skillet, when she knelt in the ashes which had drifted out from the fire to thrust her burden close enough to the flames for its contents to begin to sputter. Longing to pull out her spice bag and use it as a defense against the heavy odor of the now-crisping meat, Willadene hunched her shoulders and held on, grimly determined not to attract any attention from Jacoba. The big woman was sawing at rounds of yesterday's black bread—now near stone hard. These were the plates waiting to hold the bacon and wedges of cheese. The fare might be of third or even fourth grade, but Jacoba did not stint on portions. Then she turned to ladling out porridge—there were five bowls waiting. Willadene haunched in upon herself. So fortune had not favored her. Wyche had stayed the night. When she had crept away as the last two candles were near to guttering out in the taproom he had still been there, the huge bulk of his body half sprawling out of the one large chair which the inn owned. The odor of mulled cider of the strongest had not been enough to hide that other stench exuding from him. It was not only that of unclean flesh and/or filthy clothing but something else of which she was aware but could not put name to—though now and then the inn sheltered other patrons who carried the same odor and mostly they had been an ugly lot. She must ask Halwice— "Burn you that and you'll feel the fire yourself." Willadene jerked the skillet back, its three legs grating on the stone. She had wrapped her hand as tightly as she could against the bite of the flames, but she still could feel the heat as she approached the table, striving to hold the heavy pan straight. Jacoba took her time inspecting the bacon. At length she spiked hunks onto the waiting bread, for the most part impartially, though the last portion was doubled. For Wyche, of course. Tilting the skillet now with caution Willadene poured a measure of the sizzling grease over each slab of plate bread. Figis had gone off with the tray of bowls and the pot of honey for the sweetening of their coarse contents. Now he returned for the rest of the meal. "The merchant from Bresta," he said, keeping well away from Jacoba as he spoke, "said as how he found him a roach in his bowl. See—" He had put the bowl on the table and there was no mistaking the black creature. "Said as how he was going to speak to the Reeve—something about meat he had not ordered—" The boy sniggered, easily evading Jacoba's doubled fist. Catching up the second tray of bread, meat, and a large round of cheese he was gone before his mistress could round the table. Figis had little sense, Willadene thought. Jacoba had a very retentive memory. Sooner or later the boy would pay for his pertness. Though what he warned might well be true—a few more complaints to the district Reeve and Jacoba could find herself in trouble. In fact, Willadene had come to wonder, through the days of her servitude here, why the cook had so long escaped any real censure for her lack of cleanliness and her questionable products. The Wanderers Inn was, of course, Jacoba's own. But no building in Kronengred was really owned by anyone but the Duke, even though the same family might shelter in it for generations. The Duke undoubtedly had more important things to think over than the lacks and temper of an innkeeper. It had been five years since the great plague, which had seated Uttobric on the ducal highseat. He had been a relatively unknown and distant member of the family, but the only male fortunate enough to escape the all too devastating death. The only male—but there was one far closer to that honor—the last Duke's daughter Lady Saylana. She had been widowed also by the march of the disease, but she had a son (luckily away from the city when disaster struck), and there were those who lifted an eyebrow significantly, or perhaps even dared to whisper behind a hand, when his name was spoken in passing. Thus Uttobric had a rival—or the threat of one—though Kronen law did not change and by all rights the rule was his. "Get you in to the tap, slut," Jacoba said. "Wyche wants to clear his morning throat. Be sure you draw the best— Hmm—" There was something in that "Hmm" which kept Willadene from immediate obedience. "You are but one and twenty days away from Reeve listing as a full woman, scrawny and stupid as you are. Upchucking good food and saying it makes you sick. Sick! It is only that stubborn will of yours tryin' to lie to your betters. No—you've no looks to you. But youre young and might wash up better. Wyche was taken a fancy to you, girl. Don't you give him any black looks. As one set over you by the Reeve himself I has the right to choose a man to take you off my hands. Wyche must be mazed to want you. Now get in there and, as I have said, do the pretty for him. Be glad you are gettin' a man as has a full purse—sure he has offered enough wed bounty for you to promise that." Somehow the inn mistress had talked herself into a good humor. Now she laughed, roaring coarsely. Willadene was well aware that her utter horror of this promised fate must be read on her face. Halwice—if she could only get to Halwice!—though she could not be sure the Herbmistress would even listen to any plea. She thought longingly of that quiet shop and of all it had seemed to promise since she had first found it. If—if she could serve as Halwice's cook maid—she could cook and well when she had the chance—that would be heaven. But twenty days lay between her and any free choice, and Wyche was waiting, Jacoba moving toward her, a big fist raised. Willadene went, her hands pressed tightly against her bosom as if the faint scent still rising from her bag could arm her against the future. She scuttled around the edge of the wide door intent on reaching the shelf by the already tapped barrel so she could fill a flagon as soon as possible. Giving a quick glance over her shoulder, she saw that the big chair was empty, and she looked a little wildly ahead to her goal—hoping that Wyche was not lying in wait there. However, his broad back fronted those in the room as he stood by the major window, curtaining the light from those behind him. Four of them—all dressed in that sturdy travel-worn leather and heavy cloth favored by out-city merchants. They were all wearing badges which meant they were legal and registered wayfarers, protected by tradition from any trouble within the borders of Kronen—except of course, from those inhabitants now outside the same laws. The eldest of the three was picking with his belt eatingknife at the half-charred bacon before him, disgust plain to be read on his face. He was trimly neat, his short gray hair curling up in the back about the border of his bowl cap. There was a flash of ring on his knife hand, and it was plain he was prosperous in his trade. Now he pushed aside the slab of greasy bread and uttered a sound deep in his throat which brought the full attention of his three companions. Two of them were plainly of lesser rank in their guild, but the youngest had the same wide nose above a smallish mouth and shared the older man's other features to a degree which made it very possible they were father and son. "The road ual as been thinned again." There was an p e older mans statement. "We passed a full half company g down from the west hills bag and baggage—and ot on leave either I tel1 you whoever gives such orders del us like Sese to the poulterer!" Both of tho ated, c)ne c)n either side of him, nodded. But the younge one moved his head in the sallest suggestion of a shake he stared at their leader "The affair ° e highborn," one of the others remarked "seldo are ft to ow satisfaction. Remember there are more d than the Pg There as never been Kronen blood med gst Kronen blood. However. . . ." His voice traile and he hrugged. In Willaden' hands the flagon was now brimming full, but she shran from ossing toward that bulky back, sniffing its foul odor Ho' yche had not changed position She w now that he was entirely intent on what la 01 the bubbled glass of that window. Dare she ease h to mat side ble almost within his reach to em the into the waiting tankards, slip back before he as aware of her? Onl fortu her now. He shrugged his huge width of shoul and turned his head. In his fat puffed face his small d ooed e a p11 o1 ry shriveled raisins But his P1011 gaped in what he might consider a welcoming smil' "Good fare or helly, wench." He swung farther awav from the indow and stuck out his bristly paw of a hand Swiftl ac3iene passed him the tankard. However, when he raised t to his mouth and was ite contents he deliberatel f1 his other hand to slap palm to the wall, cutting off g His blubber lips had pursed, and, bringing down t tankard after that hefty pull, he eyed her from head to fo and back am It seemed to i hen that that odor she had never been able to ide strengthened until she wanted to gag. "Skinny," Wyche remarked, "but you're young and Jacoba swears you are still a maid. Though that state will not be with you for long now." Before she could do more than flatten herself against the wall, her hands again seeking her amulet, his huge face loomed above her, and her skin shrank from the rough touch of his lips. "Yes, a bargain, I'm thinking. There won't be any youngsters hanging around gawking at such as you. Jacoba says you can cook—and a full table before him and a warmer for his bed at night is all any man wants. You're as skittish as a spring lamb." The tip of a fat tongue passed over those thick lips which she felt had left a kind of scum on her own skin. "I likes 'em so—it don't take long to tame 'em—" What more threats he might have added Willadene did not know. Those she had just heard had sickened her. But Wyche's survey of her was interrupted, and she felt the door to the left—the one giving on the outer world—opening. Did she have a chance? But to run without any protector of rank was folly. She could be named vagabond and driven out of Kronengred—though she was sure that Jacoba would not willingly lose the bride price. She heard the tinkle of a small silvery bell as two cloaked and veiled women came in, a girl in a drab cloak at their heels, in her hand a basket already laden heavy enough to draw her childish body to one side. "Food for those in hunger as is the second commandment." The first of the women to cross the threshold swung her bell again, its tinkle echoed by the one in the hand of her companion. Stools scraped across the flagstones as the four merchants got to their feet and bowed. Their leader advanced, digging one hand in his belt purse, and Willadene caught the glint of what could only be a silver coin. "Well has your Great One favored me." The first of the cloaked Sisters of Bright Star was already bringing forth a plump bag of her own into which he dropped his offering, his fellows swift to follow his example. "What prayer would you have us set for you?" the woman asked. It was difficult to see her features so deeply she was veiled. "That of safe travel—for me, Jaskar of Bresta, and for these, my companions. Such petitions are needed in our present days Sister." "Evil always awaits beyond the bonds of light," she returned as Jacoba came into the room. "What's to do—?" the inn mistress began and then, catching full sight of the women, she stopped short. "You"—her attention swung to Willidene—"if the guests be through, then clear the table." Thankfully Willadene put room between her and Wyche. The girl with the basket lugged her burden up to the board, and Willadene hastily crammed in those rounds of wellgreased bread. By the looks of what already lay within the basket the Sisters had had good fortune in their begging round of the taverns and noble houses of the section this morning. "Fortune favor you, goodwife," the Sister commented, but when her small serving maid tried to raise the basket she near sent it and its contents toppling to the floor. "It would please the Great One," the Star follower added a moment later, "if you would lend us this girl of yours to our aid. We have only one more place to cry for alms and she would be quickly back." Willadene knew very well that Jacoba wanted to answer that with one of her angry outbursts. Yet no one refused a Sister, for that Great Mistress was well-known to rule the whims of fortune itself. "Come back, wench"—there was a threat of trouble to come—"as fast as you can. We have dawdled away to near the Second Bell and nothing is done." Willadene eagerly took half share of the handle, and the basket swung between her and the girl as they left. Oddly enough, Wyche was back to the window as if to watch them out of sight. She was breathing fast. Just as there were odors which clung to evil, so there were fragrances which matched good. She had sniffed those many times in Halwice's domain. And there was a strain of what might even be flowers—a mere whiff—as she and the girl maneuvered their way with their burden out of the inn door. Wyche was watching, but she thought that she knew the house the Sisters would seek out now—the section Reeve lived three doors away in the direction the Sisters were taking. His wife was well-known to be both pious and bountiful. She could cut through the alley beside the Reeve's house and, though it was near time for the Second Bell to summon all shopkeepers to the business of the day, she thought she could reach Halwice's without being seen. What would happen then she could not foresee. She had received both kindness and training from the Herbmistress in the past—ever since Jacoba sent her monthly for the scant supply of spices to hide the age of the meat. Now she walked obediently behind the Begging Sisters, fitting her pace to that of the maid whose burden she shared. The girl had not done more than glance at her once, following the rule of the Star's outventuring—eyes to the pavement and no worldly gazing at anything on either side. They had turned the corner to approach the Reeve's kitchen door, as was the custom. As Willadene heard the silver notes of the bells she tensed. The moment she saw the door thrown open and heard a brisk welcome for the Sisters, she herself looked to the girl. There was no time for any explanation—she would just have to go! Shifting her grasp off the basket handle so swiftly that the other girl had to grasp at the house wall to steady herself, Willadene ran. She thought to hear voices behind her and was amazed 10 that such did not come. But the Great One of the Star— perhaps She would spread her shining cloak between those in the house and this fugitive. Turn left here—yes, she could catch sight of the great Maninger House—two streets over and around another corner—Halwice's. She had never taken this way to the Herbmistress's shop before, but she was sure. The morning chill whipped about her and caught at her toes left bare by her house sandals. Willadene was gasping a little, aware of every lighted window, every movement on the street. She tried to force herself to fall to a walk, but within a step or so her pace quickened again. She could not reckon now when she had discovered this haven. It went back to the shadowy days before the plague, for she had known the Herbmistress a very long time. Halwice had a place on the Guild Council. She was far more learned in the properties of her wares than were many of the doctors who strutted in answer to a distress call, their badged robes of fine cut worn with a flick and flourish of hem, their brimmed hats with a dangle of face mask ready to use when one might be called to enter a disease-tainted room, their pride in their calling sometimes—most times— spilling over into arrogance. Yet it was to Halwice that these same "masters of healing" must send for the mixtures they drew upon speedily enough. But healing—though Willadene knew well the importance Halwice placed on such knowledge—was not the only product sold in that shop where spice vied with fragrances and with sharp odors of oils. Those scents themselves had their place of importance. Willadene rubbed her knuckles across her nose. Already she could almost anticipate the feast awaiting her. She always stood just within the door of Halwice's shop for a long moment or two, drawing into her lungs the medley of odors. It was as if she could bathe herself in the freshest air of spring, the headiest perfume of summer, the spice of au- 11 tumn. She could feel it scrub across her salt-sweated skin, her sticky hair—freeing her from Jacoba's hold, somehow stirring within her new thoughts and firming good memories. For Willadene had "the nose." Although each and every one of her kind wore such a feature, only to a very few was the privilege given—the ability to recognize and name the most subtle of mixed scents. Just as the foul odors which haunted Jacoba's kitchen assaulted her to the point of choking and nausea, so could inhaling the perfume of a skillfully blended cream, a packet of dried leaves and petals, liquids so precious they must be dripped one drop at a time from small glass tubes bring her a kind of freedom and pleasure. She could remember Halwices first testing of her "nose," the holding of a small jar of ointment from which there had risen a moisture—golden, luxuriant as any treasure from a jewel casket. And Willadene had confidently named each ingredient of that cream—measures of this and that. Those of the ducal court paid well for their choices from Halwice's array of bottles and jars. Though Willadene was sent only for the coarsest and cheapest of spices, she would linger as long as she dared to drink in a nearly distilled scent, to listen to Halwice's explanations, to regard longingly the lines of tubes and bottles, the stands of narrow drawers—each compartmented and meant to hold powered leaves, petals, snippets of dried fruit rind. She had even drawn back to her a near lost skill in reading by studying the symbols lettered on each container. If Jacoba would only— That frustration which was like a pain never left the girl. For two years now the Herbmistress had made regular offers to buy Willadene's apprenticeship. The cook's spiteful answer was always the same—that her scullery maid had been officially assigned to her from among the children orphaned by the great plague and as a 12 relative she had accepted the Reeve's fee for taking such an unhandy servant. Why the innkeeper wished to hold on to a serving maid who was always deserving of punishment, who was as sickly as a winter-born lamb, Willadene could never understand. There would be a fine-fee for such a change, yes, but she had even heard Halwice offer to pay that. Was the answer what she had learned today—that Jacoba could get a bride price for her? She had sometimes thought that the cook had held on to her from pure spite. Jacoba had this twisted desire to torment. Willadene often thought that she was sent to the herb shop on trifling errands just to tantalize her. But all things come to an end in time. In twenty days she would be of age and Jacoba could not hold her against her will. Then—not yet had she dared suggest to Halwice that perhaps the Herbmistress would take her into her employ. She would not even expect a full apprenticeship— willing to work any number of hours without more pay than a chance to be in the shop, to learn—if Halwice came to think her worthy. The Herbmistress was of calm and unruffled temperament—but she was not cup friend to any of her neighbors. Pleasant to all but not welcoming chances for idle gossip. For the most part she was a silent woman, as if her thoughts occupied her more than her customers. Yet she was ready to serve all, listening to the complaints of those who ailed, mixing cordials and salves which served their purposes so well that all Kronen-bred knew their value. She certainly was not noble born. However, though Halwice went plain of dress and quiet of demeanor, Willadene had seen her more than once reduce some fretful or upnosed housemistress to uneasy deference. She dealt with courtiers as well as stall keepers, and treated both with the same quiet courtesy. The girl gave a start now as the Second Bell boomed out 13 the orders for the day. She slipped out of an alley and hurried down the street. There was rising clatter and sound as the merchants unshuttered their shops calling greetings from one to the other. Halwices shop was the ground floor of a three-story building. And while its neighbors were hung with banners urging this or that product upon the possible customer, her windows were trimmed with boxes—some green and lacy with ferns, others bright with flowers. Even her roof, Willadene knew, had been put to use with racks of shelves each bearing trays of plants, while Halwice's back door gave upon a stretch of well-nourished and tilled land, producing more healthy crops than one might usually find in the heart of a city. Willadene slowed. Jacoba could well guess where she would head. And already she might well be reported to the Reeve for straying. Could she be bringing down trouble on Halwice? The shop shutters were still up and there was no sign that the Herbmistress was starting her day. Willadene's head suddenly came up. That scent—it had the same evil promise that she knew meant trouble. She was at the closed door. Only— The latch cord was out—then why were the shutters closed? With caution, the girl raised her hand to the door. There was something wrong—she stifled a gagging protest. Though she had not been aware of it, she had given the door a nudge and it was swinging open. All the crowding scents she loved were loosed—but with them something dark and dangerous she could not name. . . . Halwice? The shop was dim with the shutters closed. She could see only the bulk of counter and shelves. And she stepped within as warily as if she were certain some trap waited beyond. 14 2 D QReat Del's fiRSt SOUN ing had not awakened the man who had left coverlets trailing behind him from the bed as he had crossed to draw the heavy curtain a little aside and look out on a dawn-grayed city. Uttobric of Kronen had never been an impressive figure even when decked out in the robes of formal ceremony. He was still less so now as he chewed his lower lip, his mind awhirl with the thoughts which had given him very little sleep this past night. His scanty stock of gray-brown hair stood on end above a narrow face worn by deep crevices of wrinkles, two bracketing each side of his thin-lipped mouth, others furrowing his forehead. He stared shortsightedly out into the gloom where the twinkle of a few lights below marked the coming of a new day of— Of course he had regretted the ravages of the plague, as any just man would; however, he certainly was not responsible for becoming the only male left in the straight line of descent. Now he could acknowledge to himself that he had both feared and envied his predecessor on the ducal throne. Wubric had been everything he was not—a ruler secure enough to be able to turn his attention to other matters. Uttobric did not have to turn his head now and look back at the table, where two candles were fast guttering out, to remember what lay there: reports—too many of them. . . . Between them they would pull him to bits if they might. 15 Whom could he trust? Sometimes he even suspected Vazul—though that Chancellor, if Uttobric were swept away, would certainly fall with his lord, since he was not of the old nobility but rather the merchant class, a man of keen wit and wily action, all seemingly at the Duke's service. It was Vazul who had made that suggestion the night before—one which had shocked Uttobric at first. The Duke still thought of his daughter as a child, content to amuse herself with a handful of carefully selected companions, of no proper service to him because of her gender. But what had Vazul pointed out? That very gender might be put to use now. Uttobric loosened his hold on the curtain and padded back to the high-standing bulk of his craven bed. He picked up the holder of an unlighted candle and the miniature which lay beside it on the bedside shelf and then, lighting the candle from one of the dying ones, he dropped into the chair nearby and held the miniature of his daughter closer to his eyes. It was his secret belief that commissioned artists always flattered their subjects; that was only good business for them. Yet Vazul had assured him—and it was true that Mahart took most of her looks from his wife's now-extinct line. He could see the soft rolls of dark brown hair, the slightly triangular face (that pointed chin was certainly his). But above that the mouth was generous, curving in the hint of a smile. Large eyes of an unexpected green were lashed thickly, and the brows delicately marked. Yes, this was no longer the face of a child, and he had to admit to himself that if the artist had not lied with his brush his daughter was possibly fair looking. Beauty might snare the passing attention of a man, but anyone shrewd enough to provide what he, Uttobric, might have to demand could well wish more than just a pretty face and the fluttering attentions of a green girl. Dowry— Uttobric tossed the miniature onto the table among the 16 papers. Favorable port treatment? That would be too ambiguous. No/ he would have to make it plain that on the wedding day he would proclaim the groom his accepted heir. The small man in the tall-backed chair sighed. Could it be done? King Hawkner was over blessed with sons, it was true. He might be willing to provide for, say, a third or fourth one of them in this way, and Kronengred was a rich prize. Once the alliance was set, then changes could be safely made. For Hawkner's army was idle, and idle soldiers need to be occupied lest they view what lay about them and make a few decisions of their own. Uttobric scowled at one shifting pile of reports. Of course he knew that he was stripping the western frontier and the mountain territory dangerously of trained manpower. The complaints of merchants grew louder and longer all the time. Let this Prince of the Blood Royal bring with him enough guards and that could be easily remedied. If—again the Duke bit down upon his lip. If they had time! Saylana—now his mouth twisted as if he would spit— her backing—even Vazul could not pierce deeply into her ranks with his expertly trained spies to learn for certain who would rise for her if there came a day which actually tested them in open opposition. Wubric's daughter, unable by law to claim the throne—though she had a son, Barbric, around whom all her plotting was twisted. However with Mahart wed to a Prince Royal who could call upon Hawkner's own forces, one would think several times about any treachery. He glanced at the miniature. He had never really understood women. Her mother he had first seen at their own wedding—fair enough, yet he had always been pricked by the thought that she led some kind of secret life into which he had no entrance. Though he had not really cared. Then the plague and all his doubts were ended. The fact his daughter had survived had just been one of those jests of fate the raging disease had played throughout the city. 1 He expected no trouble from Mahart. The girl had been close kept all these years and had had no chance to form any interest in some boy of her own age. The thought of being a rincess Royal would be enough to dazzle her into welcome compliance. Yes, he would summon Vazul and— He was startled by the discreet tapping at the door. Though he was no trained warrior he was out of his chair in an instant and reaching for the pillow sword resting each night as the ceremonial defense at the foot of his bed. He flushed as he realized he had to clear his throat be- fore he could harshly answer. Enter!" The door did not open very far, just enough for a very tall and thin figure, robes wrapped about him to aid in speed, to sidle in. The robes shone in the dim light, which also picked out the heavy, gemmed gold chain which lay on the mans narrow shoulders, the signet at its end dangling near his belt. "What's to do, Vazul?" For the Chancellor to seek him out in this fashion was against all custom. Now the visitor was closing the door tightly behind him, almost as if he feared some follower. "Your decision Highness?" In this gloom it was almost impossible to see the face of the speaker, only his height (for which Uttobric secretly could not forgive him) as he loomed over his master as he approached the table. "Why must you come at this hour to know?" demanded the Duke testily. "Time never waits for men—men are its servants." The rich voice was that of a practical speechmaker, one who was able to sway his fellows if the need arose. "And time is running out Highness. The Bat has not returned." Uttobric took a tighter grip on the sword he had not yet relinquished. "Taken?" Vazul shrugged. "Who knows? But he has never failed i8 to report within the promised time before. He is mind blocked to the best of our ability, butwe do not know what resources they may have. There are indications that Her Grace has had contact with several from overseas during the last year. Each land has its men of secrets, and some remain secret save to him who uses them. But this means Highness, that you must move swiftly." The Chancellor stood in the full light of the candle now. He was thin nearly to the point of emaciation, and his robe of crimson patterned on the breast with the ducal arms appeared nearly too heavy for him to support. His hair was cropped short as if he were a fighter, but his incurved cheeks were covered with a short-trimmed beard, while his pale gray eyes appeared to possess the same gleam as a sword blade showed. Only because he knew that Vazul would rise and fall with him, did the Duke trust him. The man had a wily mind seemed sometimes almost able to read the future—at least light upon some of the perils lying in wait there. "But if the Bat did not report—" the Duke now said slowly. "How do I deduce that an alarm is sounding?" The Chancellor shrugged. "Because I know him as you should as well Highness. He is the best of your eyes and ears, and there has never been any fault in the information which he has brought. We know that he crossed the border two days ago—he made touch with our man there. He should have reported at sunset last eve. Whatever chanced to delay him lies within your own realm Highness, perhaps even here in Kronengred." Uttobric slammed the sword back in its sheath and re- turned, his lips curved downward in sullen pout, to the chair he had earlier arisen from. With a wave of his hand he beckoned Vazul to another on the opposite side of the table. But before the Chancellor joined him Vazul picked up a 19 triple candle stand and lit all three candles so that there was enough light that each of them could well see the other. "So we do not even know now whether the plan is feasible," the Duke said, blinking in the glow of light. "He was to tell us how matters lay with Hawkner. What do we do now, approach the King openly with our suggestion? He may take it in one of his whimsical moods and think it a jest, an improper one." Uttobric squirmed in his chair. He had met King Hawkner on only two occasions—one his wedding—and both times he had felt overshadowed and almost a lackey awaiting the King's pleasure, though Kronen was not part of his kingdom—Oberstrand—and never had been. Oddly enough, there was movement on one of the Chancellors shoulders which continued down his right arm until, from under the heavy embroidery of his wide cuff, there appeared a sleek black head. So dark was the fur that covered it that one could only catch a gleam now and then of yellow reflecting the candlelight from two eyes above a narrow pointed snout. The Duke watched distastefully as the whole of Vazul's pet appeared—though the creature seemed more than just an animal and certainly its lithe, long-bodied shape, the very short legs sharply clawed, could not be seen anywhere else in Kronen that Uttobric knew of. He hated the creature, still something had always prevented him from ordering the Chancellor to at least keep the thing out of the ducal presence. It sat up now and licked down its chest. The Duke made an effort to ignore it. Instead he returned to his querulous question of earlier. "Do I go, hat in hand, and approach Hawkner through Lord Perfer? Our ambassador is a fool, and we do not know how much he can be trusted." "Not quite yet." Vazul was drawing his hand down the back of the creature. "Has Your Highness spoken with the Lady Mahart? She is certainly of an age to be thinking of marriage—of a handsome prince—" 20 "She chatters like a hoobird if I welcomed it," snapped the Duke. "Possibly within a breath he would spill it all to that Lady Zuta and then it would be common knowledge." "Just so. However"—the Chancellor continued to stroke his pet—"I did not mean make free with the heart of the matter, merely speak to her of marriage. Who knows such a rumor might bring the Lady Saylana's attention and push her supporters out of their holes to your advantage." The Duke chewed a fingernail; his glance swept from the Chancellor to those piles of reports. Yes, if they could just stir the pot a little some useful steam might arise. "Well enough," he said. "That much can certainly be done. Summon Burris—one might as well get to the thing." The Chancellor arose and went to pull the bell rope which would bring the Duke's personal servant. He neither smiled nor displayed any change in feature. It was becoming very easy to bring Uttobric to his way of thinking—but overconfidence was a sin. The great bell's boom broke into the most pleasant of dreams. Mahart had never seen the world outside these ancient walls since she was a very small girl, but tonight she had skimmed away from her tower to a place she barely remembered when awake—a great open field in which brilliant gems of flowers bent under a breeze which carried the scent of summer itself. The scent of summer—her brows drew together in a faint frown of one seeking a memory. Of course! Now she squirmed free of the tangle of silk and velvet and sat up. Her attention was on the small brazier which sat on the edge of her wide dressing table. No fragrant smoke threads arose upward from it now, but, as she stretched her arms wide, she felt she could purr like one of the guard cats who kept the castle free of vermin. She was indeed a Herbmistress—that Halwice—to produce an incense which supplied such peaceful and comfort- 21 ing dreams. They said she was a mistress of scents so powerful that they could draw or repel another. Mahart's dissatisfied gaze went on to the array of fancifully fashioned bottles on that same dressing table. Many of those held rare fragrances from overseas—her father was very apt on Winter Turn day to present her with something new of that sort. It was as if in his mind a bottle of scent was an excellent substitute for the dolls of an earlier day—though he had actually continued to present those before someone probably Vazul, had pointed out that she was at last grown up. She did not ring for Julta, her maid. Rather, she freed herself from the cocoon of covers, thrust her feet into her waiting fur-lined slippers, and crossed to seat herself on the bench of the dressing table, bending at once to sniff at the last faint remains of the burnt incense. The candles were hardly used and she snap-lighted them—all four—to lean forward a little to study her reflection in the wide mirror. Her hair was still night braided, but its dull brown shade was certainly not her best feature. She envied Zuta those sleek black strands that looked like lengths of satin. But—she was not too plain! For the first time Mahart allowed herself to believe that. There were a number of powders and creams available. She knew that Zuta was zealous in using such, but she had hesitated to try, thinking always of the tittering of maids who always discussed the actions of their mistresses behind their backs, or even arousing amusement in Zuta who would be entirely too kind to tell her the truth. What would she do without Zuta! It seemed to Mahart that her companion lady was born knowing what Mahart had to learn. She could always say the right thing, do the gracious act, and had been quick when Mahart was younger to cover any awkwardness her mistress might cause. Though sometimes—sometimes Mahart wished that she still had Nurse. Nurse had known and served her mother and had been 22 her refuge in childhood whenever her father's impatient avoidance had hurt. But Nurse was of childhood, too, gone away with a generous pension to take care of her daughter's family back in Bresta. Then Zuta had come, dazzling with her sophistication, though she was only three years older. She was an orphan of the plague but of high rank, and seemed well satisfied with her present lot. It had been Zuta who had told her of Halwice, the Herbmistress. Though she was so close kept in this shell, Mahart sighed and wished away all the fantastical carved furniture and comfort around her; perhaps it might be possible sometime to actually meet this purveyor of dreams and mistress of fragrance. Only—she was tired—tired—tired— Her mouth drooped at the corners and the growing depression of the last few months gripped her again. She was tired of her life, feeling stifled at times. If it were not that she had in the past discovered the great library what would she have known at all of the world around her—outside that shell her father had forged? Page by page she had traveled to far countries, confronted strange beasts and stranger peoples—and learned of Kronen of the past and the part her family had played in it. She believed that her father never entered the library; she was very certain that the Lady Saylana did not, though from time to time one of her serving people had come to search out a book, always on the shelves of the oldest ones where the leather backs left dust of decay upon the hands of would-be readers. There was her daily walk, of course, but it was strictly confined to the pocket-sized garden from which even the gardeners were warned away during that time. And her meals were in the stately, hollow magnificence of that dining room, where her father ate in hasty gulps, sometimes with Vazul, neither of them paying any attention to her. She encouraged Zuta to mingle with the other ladies of 23 the court. The gossip she brought back was always enlightening. But, of course, there was no mingling of her own with Saylanas chosen servants. Though that assembly had shrunk in size since the death of the late Duke, his daughter still had her adherents and visitors. Mahart had seen Barbie, her son, from a distance and had not been greatly impressed. His shambling walk and foolish high laugh were certainly not that of a prospective Duke who would do justice to Kronen, but then—what of her father? At each meal he sat beneath the state portrait of her distant cousin and the difference grew more apparent every time she had viewed the two in such contrast. The mighty presence of the former Duke was certainly enough to overshadow most of the men she had seen. Captain Rangle of the Guard would come the closest to the firm jaw, that high-held head, that warrior's stance. Had Wubric really presented that overawing aspect to his subjects or was that his fancied idea of himself? Mahart continued to stare into the mirror. One could see how she appeared—to herself at least. Did she appear with the same nonentity to others? Take away her position here and who would bow and curtsey, ply her with shallow compliments? She rubbed her hand across her forehead wonderingly. Never before this morning had she asked so many such questions of herself. It was as if her dream—though it might not have freed her body—had lit a candle cluster in a dusky part of her mind. She leaned over once again to the brazier to see if she could catch any lingering trace of that fragrance just as a discreet knock on her door announced that she no longer had her privacy and would not for the rest of this long day. It was Julta, of course, her noiseless glide in contrast to her stiff-held back—Julta, who was able to express her reaction to anything by a down curve of lip or a lift of eyebrow. 24 But Zuta had said that the maid was as closemouthed among the servants as she was with her mistress; and she was quiet, deft, and sometimes seemed to fade into the background as if she had stepped into one of the many timefaded tapestries. She placed the silver tray she carried on the dressing table and poured from its matching pot the morning infusion of herbs supposed to enliven one for the day. "Your Grace rested well?" "As ever, Julta." "There is a message from His Highness. He wishes your presence in his cabinet before Second Bell." "Thank you," Mahart said as she sipped the tea. Well, this day was one which was beginning surprisingly. She could count on her fingers the number of times her father had ever summoned her to that chamber which was the heart of his own cramped life. "I will wear the vine dress, Julta." The maid had already turned to the tall wardrobe. The vine dress—of a leaf green with its embroidered borders of silver vines—always gave Mahart confidence. And today there was something about its freshness which warred with the dark age of the room and reminded her of the open field and its gems of flowers. She suffered the pinning and pulling of her hair into the new style suggested by Zuta—divided into two braids which were then coiled one over each ear to be anchored with fine silver nets, the pins holding such sometimes a threat to one's scalp. The rest of the ritual of washing and dressing continued as usual—Julta as closemouthed as always, leaving Mahart to her scrambling of thoughts. What had she done lately which might have actually stirred her father into not only remembering he had a daughter but summoning her at this hour for speech? But her conscience was clear enough. So it was not some miscon- 25 duct of the past but some new regulation of the future that she was facing. As she selected from the jewel casket Julta held open the simple chain of silver leaves which she always wore with this gown there was a second knock at the door. Mahart was allowed to fasten the necklace for herself as Julta went to let in Zuta—though it was early for the lady-companion to appear. As usual Mahart immediately felt drab. Zuta's gown outlined her form as closely as if she wore no chemise beneath. Its dark blue satin, the same shade as her heavylidded eyes, was not, however, cut as low at the bodice as those of the ladies who attended Saylana appeared to find in fashion, and her hair had been all but completely hidden by a gold-patterned baglike headdress. She curtseyed and rose smiling. "I see I chose well Your Grace. You arose refreshed this morning." She glanced from Mahart to the brazier. "True," Mahart agreed, "it was all you promised, Zuta. Surely this Herbmistress has great knowledge. I wish," before she thought (and why did she suddenly believe that this was a thought she did not wish to share?) "that I might visit this famous shop for myself." With a slight frown, Zuta shook her head. "That is not the way Your Grace. Should you wish to know more of what the Herbmistress has to offer, summon her and ask that she bring samples—if His Highness will approve. After all, he has always allowed you to select from Master Gorgias the best material for your gowns, and did he not give you last name day the moss lily scent you liked so well? Remind him of that when you ask to meet the Herbmistress, for it, too, came from her distilling. Now—what is your will?" She stood waiting by the door. Mahart denied herself a last glance in the mirror as she answered. "His Highness desires my presence in his cabinet before 26 Second Bell. I shall have to wait to break my fast this morning, Zuta." For a moment she thought she saw Zuta's lips begin to form a question. If the lady-companion wanted to know why this out-of-custom demand had been ordered, she was trained well enough in etiquette not to ask. So Mahart went alone down the staircase into the busier section of the castle. Guardsmen she was hardly aware of snapped to attention as she passed until she reached the door she sought. There the guardsman thudded the butt of his spear of ceremony on the floor loud as any fist against that portal. There was a muffled answer from within and the guardsman unbent enough from his statue pose to open the door and announce: "Her Grace, the High Lady Mahart, Your Highness." Mahart took a deep breath and stepped forward. The heavy draperies at all the windows had been pulled open, and there was a measure of daylight added to by candles on the wide desk. He was not alone; standing to one side and curving forward in a formal bow was Vazul. Mahart's eyes widened, but she swept the deep, formal court curtsey to her father. Why the Chancellor should be present was an added puzzle. "Give you a fair day Father, and may fortune favor you." She was glad that her voice sounded steady enough. "Yes, yes—" The Duke waved an impatient hand, and his aspect was certainly not welcoming. But he stared at her strangely. His eyes actually seemed to open the wider, as if she were some curiosity being presented to his notice. "Sit—" He jerked his hand again, this time toward a chair which the Chancellor had drawn forward. Sit she did, but now uneasiness was fully awake in her. What did they want of her? That Vazul was a part of her being here she did not doubt. "You are of age." Uttobric was now shuffling papers 27 back and forth on the desktop as if he were discovering that he was finding it difficult to select the proper words. "Of age," he repeated quickly "to be betrothed." Mahart's folded hands tightened on each other. She knew well that in this subject she had no choice at all. He paused and was looking at her expectantly. "Yes, Father." She pinched out the answer he seemed to have been waiting for as he now continued. "As a woman matters of statecraft are beyond your judgment. But this is something which you must understand, for it means the safety of the duchy. As you well know, I was not in the direct line of descent but was elevated to serve Kronen by fate when my second cousin and the other male heirs died in the plague. "By law the rule could not pass to the High Lady Saylana, as no woman ever rules, nor could it go to that son of hers"—his mouth twisted as if he could have added a few scathing words to describe Barbric—"as I lived. But though fortune favored me in one way, it scanted me in another. Your mother bore me only a daughter." He made that sound, Mahart thought, as if in some way her only faintly remembered mother had deliberately arranged such a mishap. "Now listen closely, girl, to what our good Chancellor has found in his lengthy search of the laws—for there are sometimes twists and turns in old decrees which can bring proper solutions." Vazul moved into the full light of the window as if he needed to capture her attention and hold it. One of his shoulders seemed higher, and then she made out the inky black of that creature he was never seen without and which was held in dislike by all the court. "In the reign of Duke Kathbric the Second"—his voice had a certain hypnotic quality and she was strangely eager for him to continue—"a similar situation arose. He had only a daughter, the High Lady Rothanna. The next heir, a distant 28 cousin, was one who had betrayed his royal blood over and over by dastardly actions. Duke Kathbric appealed to the House of the Star. Those Chosen Ones prayed and petitioned in his behalf, and at last she who was abbess at that time was given a vision at the very altar. Others witnessed the silver beam, but only she saw who stood within. "Thus the Star Dweller made answer: if the Lady Rothanna wed with one of equal blood who would enter into Kronen not as a visitor but as native to spend his life here, then the Duke, after that marriage or when his last days arrived, could proclaim this son-in-law now a son by blood. They sought for such a man and discovered him in Arsena across the sea. He was in exile, expelled from his land by the great conqueror Lantee, his former kingdom completely swallowed up by that Emperors act. "He had been first son to the king of his own land, but now was the only survivor of his line. His descent was proven by those from Kronen who searched. And he was brought here, married to Rothanna, and subsequently proclaimed son by descent." Vazul's hand, raised to stroke the creature, seemed to move in rhythm with his words. Now he paused. That strange feeling of another self opening within her moved Mahart daringly to speak. "If this happened once—why not again? The High Lady Saylana—" "The High Lady Saylana"—her fathers grating voice almost made that a threat—"has, unfortunately for her, a strong will. She refused to follow the proper orders of her father and married Lord Aliken—entranced by his looks and the fact he was a public hero after putting down the outlaws at their stronghold at Volon. At the plague time she discovered to her cost what she had done. Her father and her lord were both swept away, and the latter had only been a noble for five generations and so was well outside any royal line. "Such folly"—her father was continuing—"will not 29 occur again. You have heard Vazul, praise the Star, he found this divine precedent—now you will do your duty." Mahart suddenly shivered. Marriage was always, she understood among those of the blood a gamble like the tossing of Fate Stones. Few girls ever even saw their intended before the wedding day. But to face this fate suddenly was frightening. "Who—" she began when her father cut her short. "All things will come in order at the proper time." "Your Highness." Vazul's voice was soft but had in it the force of a reminder. "Yes, yes." Uttobric slapped his hand down on the paper-strewn desk. "You are not fitted yet for court; there will be lessons. And then there will come a visitor whom you will meet with all goodwill. Now, go—I have much to do." He waved his hand in dismissal. Vazul in two swift strides was at the door bowing as he opened it. As she passed she caught a faint whisper: "You will have more freedom High Lady—take care how you use it." 30 3 7 . a sceNt wic Mae Wi- ladenes flesh prickle was strong. But for a moment she had to blink to adjust her sight to the very dim light within the shop. The lamp which always burned all night at the other end of the room was the only glimmer here now, except for the sliver of daylight stretching out from the half-open door. Willadene's sandaled foot nearly nudged a huddled shape on the floor—Halwice? Her hands flew to her lips, but she did not utter that scream which filled her throat. Why, she could not tell, but that it was necessary to be quiet now was like an order laid upon her. Her eyes were drawn beyond that huddled body to a chair which did not belong in the shop at all but had been pulled from the inner room. In that sat the Herbmistress, unmoving and silent. Dead—? Willadene's hands were shaking, but somehow she pulled herself around that other body on the floor toward where one of the strong lamps, used when one was mixing powders, sat. Luckily the strike light was also there, and after two attempts she managed to set spark to the wick. With the lamp still in hands which quivered, the girl swung around to face that silent presence in the chair. Eyes stared back at her, demanding eyes. No, Halwice lived but something held her in thrall and helpless. There were herbs which could do that in forbidden mixture, but Halwice never dealt with such. 31 Those eyes— Willadene somehow found a voice which was only a whisper. "What—?" she began. The eyes were urgent as if sight could write a message on the very air between them. They moved—from the girl to the half-open door and then back with an urgency Willadene knew she must answer. But how— Did Halwice want her to summon help? "Can you"—she was reaching now for the only solution she could think of—"answer? Close your eyes once—" Instantly the lids dropped and then rose again. Willadene drew a deep breath, almost of relief. By so much then, she knew they could still communicate. "Do I go for Doctor Reymonda?" He was the nearest of the medical practitioners who depended upon Halwice for their drugs. The eyelids snapped down, arose, and fell again. "No?" Willadene tried to hold the lamp steady. She had near forgotten the body on the floor. She stared so intensely as if she could force the answer she needed out of the Herbmistress. Now she noted that the other's gaze had swept beyond her and was on the floor. Once more the silent woman blinked twice with almost the authority of an order. Willadene made a guess. "Close the door?" That quick, single affirmative blink was her answer. She carefully edged about the body to do just that. Halwice did not want help from outside—but what evil had happened here? And was the silent form on the floor responsible for the Herbmistress's present plight? With the door shut some instinct made the girl also, onehandedly as she held the lamp high, slide the bolt bar across it, turning again to find Halwice's gaze fierce and intent on her. The Herbmistress blinked. Yes, she had been right— Halwice wanted no one else here. Then that gaze turned floorward, as far as nature would 32 let the eyes move, to fasten on the body. Willadene carefully set the lamp down beside the inert stranger and then knelt. It was a man lying facedown. His clothing was traveler's leather and wool as if he were just in from some traders' caravan. Halwice dealt often with traders, spices, and strange roots; even crushed clays of one sort or another arrived regularly here. But what had happened—? Willadene's years of shifting iron pots and pans and dealing with Jacoba's oversize aids to cooking had made her stronger than her small, thin body looked. She was able to roll the stranger over. Under her hand his flesh was cool, and she could see no wound or hurt. It was as if he had been struck down instantly by one of those weird powers which were a part of stories told to children. He was young with dark hair which curled thickly over his head as she gingerly touched, seeking an injury which might be hid by the thick locks. His face was well featured but gaunt with the shadow of beard beginning to show. Altogether, there was nothing to differ him from any minor merchant she might serve in the inn. Willadene drew back her hand and wiped it on her ragged apron. That he was dead she was almost certain, but she was no healer. Questioningly she looked up at Halwice. Again those wide eyes held hers. And, as if the Herbmistress so made sure that she had the girl's full attention, the eyes turned downward to the body on the floor. Once more the gaze was raised to Willadene and this time, very slowly, as if the Herbmistress was using every bit of the will she could summon, the eyes shifted away from Willadene and the body to that curtain which cloaked the entrance to the back room. Three times Halwice went through that sequence. Again Willadene had to guess. "Him—back there—that's what you want?" She pointed toward the inner room. 33 The blink which answered her was like a snap. Yes, that was what the woman wanted. He was to be hidden from anyone coming to the shop unwittingly as she had done. She set the lamp back on the counter and then worked her way between the body and the angle of Halwice's chair. Stooping, she hooked hands in the armpits of that inert corpse—though every nerve in her shrank from what she was doing. It was hard, but she managed to drag him into the second room, pausing now and then but always beginning doggedly again. The back room was large, for one end of it was a bedchamber and the other a cooking place, far cleaner and better smelling than that Jacoba ruled. Willadene stood staring down at the body. The thought grew in her that it was foolish to leave him so, in plain sight. The bed was a cupboard one and so no hiding place there. She stared about until she noted the settle at one side of the fireplace. It was a massive piece of furniture and the seat was deep. If the area below was as wide— Luckily the back windows had been thrown open; scents from the wide herb garden hidden behind the shop mingled and she felt refreshed, almost as if her mind had so been cleared and she could again think purposefully. The settle it would be. However, getting her burden in place there was no easy task, and once it was done and she had made sure he could not be sighted by anyone casually glancing into the room, the girl was breathing as heavily as if she had been racing like a nobles trained mare. She had to keep one hand against the side of the doorway as she looped up the curtain in order to steady herself as she returned to Halwice. Coming to stand directly before the Herbmistress she made her report. "He is under the settle—there was no better hiding place." 34 Again she was answered by a single blink, but she continued: "Is there that I can do to aid,yo, mistress?" The eyes blinked their yes. And Willadene studied the moving gaze with care. There was a drawer in the tall cupboard which, it seemed to her, Halwice had centered on. Her hand moved down those drawers, until an effective blink stopped her search. This contained rarities, she knew, many from lands so far few had heard of them. The girl drew open that drawer. There were three small packets within, each wrapped in preservative oiled skin. She held up each until the blink signified the proper one. Now the eyes were moving again—this time to the array of bottled oils and fragrance flasks on the shelf. Once more she went through the process of touching each until a signal came. She waited for her next search but then became aware that Halwice was staring at a brazier on a lower shelf. Willadene lifted that up and placed it on the counter. No, the eyes went from where it stood to mark another spot directly before the motionless woman. Willadene moved it. Once more she reached for the small bottle and that packet. Blink—yes! She undid the packet. The scent which arose from it— She was startled. This was something like that whiff of fragrance which that morning she had met as she walked with the Begging Sisters. The very opposite of the evil stench, fading now (or else she was more used to it) which she had met in this room earlier. That all such must be used with discretion she well knew. She set a spark to the waiting fire tablets at the bottorn of the brazier, and then she held up the opened paper in full sight of the Herbmistress. One pinch of the rough powder within she took up. The blink answered yes, and to a second also, but the eyes refused a third. Willadene tossed what she held in the palm of her hand from her and quickly caught up the flask. 35 It was one of those Halwice had made particularly for her uses from which only one drop at a time would issue. Now the eyes ordered three drops over what had already begun to smoke in the brazier. The smoke thickened. It seemed to take the form of a cord which grew ever denser. When it had reached near Willadene's own height it began to spiral, and that spiral moved—to surround Halwice, hiding her totally from sight. Willadene stumbled back against the counter. The scent was full fragrance of the richest kind, almost enough to smother one. And she was not even within its hold. For a moment, which seemed to last past an hour, it curtained Halwice from sight. Then, as one might snap fingers, it was gone. Halwice was moving, raising her hands from her lap, turning her head from side to side, as if she was testing the disappearance of her bondage. Then she spoke, "Star sent you here this day. But this coil is not yet untwined." She tried to stand but collapsed once more onto the chair. "Time, I need time, and I think there is very little of that left. Child, clear away all this—" she nodded at the brazier, the flask, and the packet "—to their proper places. We can at least hope that the one who set the dark spell does not learn—or at least soon—that there is the means of breaking it under this roof. "You came for spices." Her voice grew ever brisker as she spoke. "Will you be missed?" Willadenes flight seemed very long ago, wiped out by her labors here. "I was not sent, mistress, I—I ran," she confessed. "From what?" "Jacoba. She would sell me for a good bride price to Wyche— I think that is why she has kept me." Willadene twisted her hands in the rags of her apron. "And, mistress, she has such a right, the Reeve will say so." "So. Wyche—" Halwice repeated the name as if it stood for some offal. "Jacoba is no member of the council to say 36 that the Reeve will allow her to dispose of you so. It is not quite as easy as she believes. I have jiot gone against her for these past few years—for reasons which are quite removed—but now, now I will take a hand!" She said that with the authority of one well used to giving orders and having them straightway obeyed. "However—first there will be a game we must play." She made another effort to rise from the chair; however, it was very apparent that some weakness defeated her and her usually emotionless face showed an increasing frown. "What about him—the dead man?" Willadene pointed to the curtain of the inner room. Halwice, with great determination, had managed to get on her feet and Willadene hurried to offer her support, her question unanswered. It was not until Halwice, leaning heavily on her, reached the counter to which she swiftly transferred her hold that the Herbmistress spoke. "He is not dead—and can be dealt with later. But for now— Can you manage the shutters?" She nodded toward the still-closed front of the shop. "Try to attract as little attention as possible. It must seem to any watcher to be as always—ready for business." However, there was a look of strain on her face now, and the girl could see that her hold on the edge of the counter was tight. That tenseness was shared by Willadene. She could make no possible guess at what had happened, or was going to happen, but she was very willing to follow any orders in order to please the gaunt-faced woman struggling in her own battle. Outside in the street she tried not to fumble too much in the unfamiliar task set her. There were three other nearby shops, but luckily their proprietors were out of sight within and there seemed to be only a few passersby—none of them, she assured herself by a quick glance now and then, paying any attention to her. When the last of those night barriers swung back, ready 37 to be secured within, she slipped around the narrow crack she had left for her return and speedily snapped the shutter bolts into place. Before her, making her stretch some distance to finish her task, was the display shelf to show off the most enticing wares, and those were in place—small bottles, boxes with gem-set lids, pomanders ready to swing from neck or girdle—all treasures to be filled with Halwices products, eye-catching enough to attract customers to the shop. There was light enough here now, and Halwice had blown out the lamp, pushing it back to its stand. She was frowning at the chair which had been her prison. "Push that into the far corner," she ordered. "It must be seen as part of what is rightfully here when they come." Willadene, struggling with the heavy chair, wanted to ask who "they" might be, but she had a feeling that Halwice was in full command now and she was best off doing as the Herbmistress bade with no more questions. When she had maneuvered the chair into the shadowed back corner Halwice had suggested, her attention was caught by a spark of color on the floor near where she had struggled with the inert body to be hidden within. Stooping, she picked up what at first she thought was a coin, for it was round and about the size of a one noble piece. However, when she turned it over she could see the small hook on the edge; clearly it had been meant to hang from a chain as an ornament. Nor was it the coin she thought it; rather, on both surfaces front and back, it bore a symbol—widespread wings centered by a shield on which was engraved a sword and a staff crossed. That was a badge she had seen several times—it belonged to the Chancellor. "Give that here!" Halwice's voice did not rise any louder, but it was clear that she was even more disturbed. As Willadene quickly handed over her find she saw Halwice loose one of her handholds on the counter to tuck it quickly between the lacings of her bodice into hiding. 38 "This is not to be spoken of—" Willadene nodded. Perhaps it was the property of that body (she still found it hard to believe Halwice's assurance he was not dead) loosened when she had dragged him behind the curtain. "Now, listen with care, girl, and prove you have that within you which is needed. The watch will come—they should be here very soon now. What you found here was a trap—for me—for that one inside. So I can well believe that the district Reeve's own guard will visit us. You have come to get spices for Jacoba as always. Measure out the proper ones in the usual amounts—" The woman gripped the counter with both hands again as the girl drew a small square of discarded paper from a shelf under that counter, smoothed it out on the surface above, and took down a box close at hand. Carefully she used the small scoop within and shook what looked like the usual amount of condiments onto the paper. She had just time enough to slide that box back into place when she heard, from the street outside, the tramp of heavy boots drilled into unison of step. Halwice had been right! That was surely the Reeves guard. Willadene rounded the counter to face the Herbmistress. She felt a growing need to hold on to the polished wood for support even as Halwice was doing. If Jacoba had reported her already as a runaway she would speedily be taken. Her only hope was that the inn lay in another section of the town and that the Reeve who had jurisdiction in that quarter would not have been able to already pass the news to his peers. There was a man in the doorway but Halwice did not look to him; instead she was scowling at Willadene. "Tell Jacoba that there is no herb on earth which will make her slop worth the eating. Her account is already high—when does she plan to pay?" 39 Willadene, so conscious of the man who was now nearly at her shoulder fought to control her voice. "Mistress, I be but the cook maid. The inn mistress does not tell me anything save go and get spice for the meat. Please, mistress"—she hunched herself together as if she already feared the smack of Jacoba's cane across her bony shoulders—"let me have what she has asked for—she is al- ready angered." "Who are you!" The voice in her ear was harsh, the hand which fell on her shoulder to pull her around was heavy enough to bruise. Willadene did not have to call on any power of acting; she was already frightened enough. The man who jammed her back against the counter was of the guard right enough. His mail shirt, his helm shadowing the upper part of his broad face on which a mustache bristled fiercely, were more than warning—rather perhaps dire disaster. "She is the cook maid for the Wanderers Inn"—Hal- wice's voice was as calm as if they were exchanging some pleasantries concerning a fine day—"she was sent here for spices—" Willadene dared not stir. The man glanced only briefly at the Herbmistress; his eyes were sweeping swiftly about the shop, while two of his fellows crowded in behind him. Again Halwice spoke. "I am known well to the Reeve; also I have a seat on the Guild Council. Why do you come into my shop in this fashion? Do I not supply His Highness himself and all others of noted families—?" Her voice was growing heated, as might that of any honest shopkeeper so used. "My taxes are paid—given into the hands of the Reeve himself. I have offended no one and abide by the guild laws—" The leader of the guard looked to her again. He indicated with a thumb the curtained doorway to the inner room. 40 "What lies there, mistress?" His voice was not quite as aggressive as it had been. "My living quarters and beyond that the garden where I grow some of my stock. Look for yourself. But what do you hunt? I am indeed an honest woman and as such am not to be used in this manner. Be sure I shall report to the Reeve—" The leader continued to stare at her. "There has been information laid against this shop— against you," he repeated stolidly. "It was given to us on good authority that a rogue we seek would be found here dead—killed, mistress"—now his mustache seemed to rise straight out from the roots like the bristles of a boar—"by an evil potion." Halwice drew herself up her features set. "What kind of a talemonger's fashion is this? Do you see a dead man? Look you—look well!" Willadene's heart was beating so she was sure it would soon shake her body, for Halwice was actually pointing to the curtain of the second room. "But listen well, Sergeant. Do you, or any of these clumsy followers of yours, do any damage to my wares I shall not take it only in complaint to the Reeve but to His Highness himself. Look you there—" She pointed to where a glass bottle fashioned only large enough to fit perhaps into the palm of Willadene's hand and in the form of a rose, rested under a glass dome. "That is Breath of Roses for the High Lady Mahart. Know you the cost of that? It is worth more than half your year's pay with the lady's displeasure into the bargain?" "Our information"—but the girl noted he was eyeing that bottle warily and had moved several steps away from its vicinity—"came from a source which does not rumor monger. Since you yourself bid us do so—we look." He brushed by and swept the curtain roughly aside. Willadene stared down at the top of the counter, at that packet 41 of spice she was supposed to be buying, and waited for the sergeant to make his find. Only, he did not but came tramping back to the shop room in just a moment or two. Perhaps Halwice's warning had had its effect. "Well," the Hermistress demanded, "where is your dead man? Look in the garden if you must—there is no recent delving to be seen there. Make very sure I shall enter on the Reeve's record my answer to this charge and the disturbance of my trade. Why should a dead man be found in my shop? I have taken oath before the altar of the Star and been examined by the High Priestess, who can detect any evil through her powers. She has proclaimed me free of all dealing which can cause ill to anyone. Do you dare to dispute that judgment? "If there came one by night to seize my wares—where then could he sell them? And do I not have an alarm bell justified by the city laws to ring if any attempts to do this? Who heard my bell—where is there any intruder—have I made complaint?" Her voice became harder and harder as she bombarded him with this string of questions. The man's full cheeks were blazing red and his two followers had retreated to the front door, keeping an eye to either side as if fearful of unwittingly causing some damage. That the sergeant was angry was plain. Willadene could almost feel the heat of his wrath. However, his own eyes told him there was nothing out of the ordinary to see in the shop. And certainly Halwice's free expression of influence both with the Reeve of this section and even the Duke himself sank home. She would not give such warnings unless she could back them up. "I shall make my report, mistress." He was obviously trying to save face by putting a tone of warning into that. "Do—and be about your rightful business and let me get about mine," she replied sharply. He did go—several steps behind the members of his squad, who were now in the street. When they could no 42 longer be seen through the small panes of the window Halwice turned to the girl. She had already drawn another square of paper from a pile under the counter and was folding it together. "Good, they have gone west. Now listen well. Take this as if you were indeed on the errand you were supposed to go on. Once you are outside the door, go the opposite way— east. You know where Doctor Dobblier's house is?" Willadene nodded. "Follow the alley at its back and come down to the fence about my garden. Count to five the boards as you pass them and then press on the next two; they will open for you. Knock three times on the back door." Willadene drew a deep breath. "Then I am to come back?" she half whispered. Halwice looked at her measuringly. "Have you not wanted to?" "Yes oh, yes!" "Then be quick about it. We have much which is to be done." And Willadene sped through the street door as if she expected to meet some sharp punishment for being late about her errand. 43 4 M aats ife wlic se YIQ once likened to that of a state prisoner, altered in a hurry. Though she noted that she was still kept from any close contact with the High Lady Saylana's courtiers, she began to be visited more and more by Vazul, who brought a number of ladies of an earlier generation to be presented and spend some hours of stilted conversation and very formal manners in her private sitting room. She knew that she was an object of curiosity to most of them and, though she squirmed inside, she made herself become outwardly unperturbed by the stares from behind the shadows of fans—measuring stares. Zuta was always present and, at the end of such trials of public life, was only too ready to discuss each visitor—sometimes exceeding the boundaries of what was supposed to be suitable for a young girl to hear. Such revelations were to Mahart like the stories she had read in books but had never before really associated with living persons. Her wardrobe doubled and the sewing maids were daily ' busied. She had to spend tedious hours standing as one or ,1 another of them encircled the hem of a shirt, marking it for stitching. ; Though Zuta continued to urge brighter colors and . richer materials on her, Mahart kept to those shades in | which she felt the most comfortable—paler colors in ranges 45 of greens, rose, and creams. And she discouraged much embroidery or heavy trimmings of fur and metallic thread. She was early made aware of the reason for all this glory, being rained unasked upon her, by Vazul, who, upon one early morning visit, was followed by one in the uniform of a bodyguard, who carried a good-sized chest. With the air of a showman about to astound his audience, the Chancellor unlocked it and threw back its lid, to disclose a treasury of jewelry. It seemed to blaze almost as brightly as a lamp, and Mahart stared at it, queerly repelled. There was too much of it—surely it could not be real. However, Vazul quickly assured her that these were the ducal jewels of state not belonging to any one member of the family but kept as legacies to be worn on occasions of high state. One such occasion was about to be proclaimed. For years—since the plague, in fact—there had never been a ducal court held, one in which the daughters and heirs of the noble houses first made their meeting with their overlord. Uttobric considered such affairs a waste of valuable time, since the preparation for such occupied most of the castle inhabitants for several weeks; in addition, he was never sure of such meetings with nobility he did not altogether trust. However, it was not Uttobric this time who was to be the center of pomp. He had announced that, since the High Lady Mahart was of suitable age, her initiation into her duties would begin with such an event. Between Vazul and Zuta, Mahart had to submit to being coached for such an affair. This would be worse than entertaining all the elder women at her teas. The audience watching her for any misstep would be avidly intent. Thus she set herself to learn a role she had no desire to play but which appeared to be part of her uncertain heritage. "The High Lady Saylana will be present," Zuta announced. "She will occupy the lower seat. It is Your Grace who enters first, and she must curtsey—though not as low, 46 of course, before she seats herself. She will have at least three of her favorite ladies with her, and they will stand on the lowest step of the dais to the far right. "I shall be your chief lady—with your favor—" She paused and Mahart nodded quickly. And it is best that you invite the Lady Famina of the House of Ranavice, which so far has not openly committed itself to sponsorship of either side of our old inheritance dispute. Then there is the Lady Geuverir of Krutz—her father is one who is very loyal to His Highness. "With Your Grace's permission, these two have been summoned this very day to be presented to you. You remember that Lady Honora." Zuta smiled mischievously. Mahart surely did and with a prick of irritation. The pompous dame had sailed into her presence several weeks ago, giving off very clearly that she was only doing her duty and the obect of that duty was not to be highly considered. "The Lady Honora is Lady Geuverir's mother. And Lady Geuverir is said to have inherited certain traits of the maternal character." Mahart grinned. "Thank you kindly, Zuta, for your warning." She duly met her new attendants. To Mahart's taste they were overdressed and she noted that the Lady Geuverir gave a sidewise look, which was not complimentary, at what she herself was wearing. On her the Lady Honora's imperious features were certainly repeated. The Lady Famina was round cheeked and pearls of sweat on her forehead wet down her fringe of hair. When she spoke—only in answer to some direct question—she had a slight stammer. Mahart's own short experience of contact with the court had quickened her ability to sense some things, and she was very much aware that High Lady Saylana's attendants would far outshine these two. But she could count upon 47 Zuta at least to catch eyes—unless they would all be centered on Mahart herself! The court was indeed a trial. It was held, as had been usual, before the last bell in the late afternoon so that the great throne room was lighted not only by forests of candles in high, standing holders but also all by the westering sky through the windows at the meeting of wall and ceiling. Mahart had refused nearly a third of the jeweled pieces urged upon her, but even so, a look into her mirror made her think of some little town girl tricked out far too much. Her cream satin gown was draped with a netting of pale gold in which was caught a heavy sprinkling of diamonds. A wide necklace of the same stones covered most of the skin displayed by the low-cut neckline, and a flashing tiara weighed on her head, making her uneasy about its safety. She continued to hold her head stiffly upward to assure that it would not slip. The only part of what the maids and Zuta had done to her that she really enjoyed was the fragrance which had come from the most beautiful jeweled bottle she had in her collection—a recent gift from the Duke, fashioned like an open rose. Somehow the fragrance stiffened her determination to make this indeed a court to be remembered as she led the way, with Zuta two steps behind, dressed in a shade of her favorite rose, and the other two ladies tricked out with flounces, ribbons, and gems enough to avert Maharts attention from them quickly. She made her entrance at the stately pace she had practiced for so many hours in her room, acknowledging the deep bow of the Chancellor with a raise of her hand, which she then laid on his arm as he led her up the five steps to the ducal throne. For this hour she was the chosen representative of their ruler, and the deference of those assembled in the room was rightly centered upon her. The other chair, one step below her throne, was empty, 48 but High Lady Saylana was already advancing with what seemed a lengthy train of followers / Most of them melted into the crowd of waiting courtiers, but she was escorted by a trio of mature and perfectly gowned beauties. Saylana herself had chosen satin and netting also, but hers was moonlight gray and the stones caught in the overdress, rubies—like the bright-red eyes of forest animals. A choker of the same stones was clasped around her throat. Lapping a little over that were hints of flesh rolls. And there were wrinkles no cosmetic magic could hide about her mouth and at the corners of her eyes. Those eyes were as bright and seemingly as fiery as the rubies. And she did not lower the head on which her hair was confined with jeweled bands. Her gaze holding steady and with the faintest of mocking smiles about her reddened lips she sank into the deep court curtsey which Mahart readily recognized as being subtly insulting, her three ladies also sinking in a whirl of wide skirts behind her. The whole affair was a wearying ordeal. At least twenty maidens of high blood were handed to the foot of the dais by one of the heralds, her name and house announced clearly. Mahart tried to manufacture smiles which were as close to welcoming and pleasant as possible and murmur correctly the name over the young lady who was bent in the awkward position of the lowest point of obedience. She had to listen and remember those names, be sure that none was offended and slighted. Then that portion was finished, and the herald by the far door announced the heirs to be recognized. Mahart had been able to ignore Saylana during this press of duties, but she was well aware now that the other stirred in her chair and was leaning forward a little. No wonder—the first bedecked popinjay issued into place before Mahart was Barbric, Saylana's son. He was tall, but he carried himself awkwardly and had a slack mouth— certainly no prince to ride in a maid's dreams. Nor did she 49 like the way he eyed her as he straightened from his bow— as if she were some sort of prize for the winning. There were many tales circulating in the castle about Barbric, and none of them carried to Mahart by Zuta had been edifying. She was glad now to see him move on. As for the rest, they were just faces—one or two comely, the rest Mahart, used only to her father and Vazul, found childishly young. The affair came to an end at last, and she must make her own exit, a little dubious about her long, wide skirt as she descended the steps. She had only to stumble to make Saylana's attendance a pleasure instead of a duty. Once she was back in her chamber Mahart spoke more sharply than she ever had to Julta. "Rid me of this!" She was already tugging at the tiara which she was sure was what was making her head ache so. Then she had to stand patiently as they unwrapped her from jewels and dress. Here in her room where there were not so many other odors to conceal it—for it seemed to her the entire court had been doused in warring perfumes—she could smell again that refreshing rose scent. All right: she had performed as her father and Vazul had wished—dared she ask a favor in return? Zuta had said the Herbmistress could be summoned to the castle. But, by the Star, she herself was deadly tired of these walls and the bindings her birth had put upon her! By the Star. On her bench while they rebraided her hair into its usual fashion a thought struck her. "Zuta," she said eagerly, "have you ever been to the Abbey of the Star Sisters? I know that they welcome ones who seek answers—" "Never, Your Grace. But—" she favored Mahart with a keen gaze "—several Duchesses and High Ladies in the past have sought them out." "So it is a permitted thing!" Mahart exclaimed. Why had this idea never come to her before? "I think that I shall 50 petition my father to allow me to do this. It would be well, since he seems to wish to shift some of his formal burdens onto me/ that I make the acquaintance of one who is supposed to know all which passes—the Abbess of the Star." Vazul, his attendant creature wreathed around his neck like a second chain of office bowed himself into the Duke's presence. Somehow at this hour, since tasting the splendor of the full court display, the Chancellor secretly found his master even more meager and without presence. "Well?" the Duke snapped even as his Chancellor straightened again. "How did it go? Did she make a fool of herself and are half the court now laughing behind their hands?" Vazul allowed himself a small smile, one suggesting satisfaction. "Her Grace, Highness, was all you could wish her to be. It passed as if she had done this duty many times before." The Duke stared at him under his eyebrows. "So—did those various eyes and ears you keep about pick up any comments later?" "Only the most favorable ones Highness. And in her court dress the High Lady looked truly at ease on the throne." The Duke shuffled some of those papers which always seemed to gather about him. "And that she-wolf—did she show?" "The High Lady Saylana made her proper appearance, Highness. She acknowledged your daughter in the most correct fashion. However, among the scions of high birth presented Barbric was the first." "She would parade him like a new war horse would she? I take it he has little resemblance to his sire?" "None that could be ascertained during such presentation, Highness." Vazul stroked his pet. "He certainly does not present the appearance of a leader of valiant men." 51 The Duke snorted. "If he can stick on a horse and wave a sword, she will have it he is his heroic father's true son. Now—" he scrabbled among the papers until he found one which he held close to his weak eyes "—I see the Bat was helpful as usual. But what happened to him that delayed this report? Oh, sit down, man, you must have a story to offer for that." He waved the Chancellor into another chair. Vazul's slight smile was gone. "I think Highness," he said slowly, "we have a Bat wearing other colors somewhere among us." The paper crunched between the Dukes hands. "He was taken, then?" he demanded, his voice rising. "There was an attempt which near succeeded. He has those who will give him cover when necessary. One such is a woman you know well—Halwice the Herbmistress. She herself has a network of informers who have served us very well in the past, for her products are not all of Kronengred, but much comes from abroad. "The Bat was given a packet to deliver to her, and he knew, or believed that he did, the seal set on it. It gave him a reason for going undercover in her house until he could contact me. But that packet was tampered with. "When she opened it he was struck as if dead and she made prisoner within a helpless body. Had it not been for chance, that an inn brat she had befriended came to her aid, she and the Bat would have been taken up by the Reeve's guard." "He set the trap?" The Duke's thin face flushed. "By the Star." His fist thudded on the table. "City law or no city law I'll have the fellow to rigorous question!" Vazul was shaking his head. "The Reeve was but a tool himself. A message was sent him under a seal that he had reason to believe made a visit to the shop imperative—my seal—or a rough copy of it. "However, from this we have learned something which is"—he paused—"unsettling. Somewhere there is one with 52 herb knowledge someone operating outside the sworn rules of the guild. Halwice has warned f such. Twice, if you remember, she detected foreign material among deliveries made to her. But this attack was stronger, she says, than anything she believed might be done. As one who works always among potions she has made herself immune to the known noxious materials which she might chance upon. Yet this struck her down as if she had no defense at all. And her wakening of the Bat was a lengthy and arduous task. One she says frankly, she doubts she could have accomplished had it not been for the inn girl." The Duke frowned. "Who might also have been planted." "She has been vouched for Highness. Her record is very clear from any contact with those we have reason to believe wish to deal ill with us. Before the plague struck, she lived with her parents. Her father was a member of the frontier guard and so away for lengths of time. Her mother was a midwife whom to this day is greatly missed by those survivors who knew her. "Being alone she was gathered up with the other orphans in her ward and arbitrarily apprenticed to the cookowner of the Wanderers Inn, an unsavory place but one with which the Reeve's guard can find no overt fault especially since they are blood kin. This cook is one of those bullies who welcome a victim, and the girl has been hers ever since. Now she threatens to wed the girl to a suspicious character we have been watching carefully, as she wants the bride price. The girl fled for aid to Halwice, who has tested her and discovered she has a natural talent for her own work. Halwice has appealed to the Reeve's court to reassign the girl to her care and a suggestion"—he smiled again— "from a high quarter has made this now a fact. No, set your fears to rest, my lord, she is not one of the spiders' netting." "If you say so." The Duke shrugged. "Now as to this 53 news from abroad—so Prince Lorien is at odds with his father King Hawkner?" "So much so," Vazul said, "that he and his followers— all well trained, some of them former border guards—have withdrawn to the hold of Keesal." The Duke dropped the paper he was holding, swept it aside with a number of others to uncover a map. He picked up a round glass from the desk and held it over the northwest corner of the map. "Near the border," he commented. "Near something else also Highness," Vazul remarked. "Look to the left of Mount Nastor—" "A red dot," the Duke replied, and then lifted his head swiftly to meet his Chancellor eye to eye. "That is the Red Wolfs den!" Vazul nodded approvingly. "Just so. Of late, the Red Wolf's pickings have been lean. Since you withdrew the garrison at Krantz—" "Which I had to do!" snapped the Duke. "If we do not keep the main highways free of despoilers the merchants will begin to ask awkward questions again." "The Wolf is beginning to hunger, yes. And the Prince's party is small. This outlaw is bold-thoughted enough to plan a quick raid across the border, maybe believing that he will not be pursued and that it would take time to send our troops thither." "Lorien's men are veterans, you say?" The Duke leaned back in his chair and rubbed his chin with one hand. "The Prince is not a berserker out for war on all fronts. However, he is well-known to admire feats of arms and has voluntarily served two terms with the Borderers. In fact, his present quarrel with the King began from the fact that he absents himself from court too much and there are questions raised contrasting his abilities with the heir who is of a rather indolent nature." "Can it be done?" The Duke leaned forward in his chair. 54 "It is far from impossible," Vazul was replying when there came a diffident tap at the door. "In with you!" the Duke cried out, loud enough to be heard. The door swung open only far enough to admit a page, looking as wide-eyed as a cornered puppy surrounded by evil-tempered hunting hounds. The small silver tray he bore shook as the Chancellor plucked off the folded paper there before it fluttered to the floor. "For Your Highness." He bowed as he held out the message. "All right, all right. Away with you, boy, this is no morning for interruptions." Thankfully the page bowed himself hastily out, shutting the door behind him with a sound which was close to a slam. Already the Duke had unfolded the paper. His flush grew a little deeper as he tossed it to the table. "It is always so with women—they can never be satisfied." Vazul picked the paper up, read the few lines with more ease than the Duke had done, and then, to his master's complete surprise, said: "Well done. She has learned her part well. It has been true that all High Ladies of the family, Highness, meet with the Abbess of the Star. They, in fact, provide some funds for the poor. Yes, the Abbey lies without these walls, but the High Lady will go in a measure of state, giving the commoners a chance to see her. There can be no more tales that she is crippled or a monster of ugliness—" "What!" The Duke's flush had now deepened alarmingly, and he half arose from his chair, both fists planted on the desktop as he leaned forward to face the Chancellor. "Who has said such of my daughter He will choke on those lies when he swings from the north wall!" "Rumor has said it—and doubtless that rumor was helped along by some we can name. You have kept her so pent that few have ever seen her. Now you have displayed 55 her to the court and those of noble birth, let her also be known and seen by the people." Mahart sat, the all-important paper stretched between her two hands. She could hardly yet believe that her daring to address her father with a request had served her so well. Now she rubbed her thumb over his seal at the bottom of that short page and passed to the second part of her plan. She had never been taught to ride and the second way to reach her goal was to be hidden from sight by the curtains of a horse litter. But her reading in the library had provided her with an argument against that. Pilgrimage—that was it! Not one in which one made many days travel into the mountains in the west where the Star first was manifest. No, but she could cite that her first visit to the all-important Abbey here could be counted a pilgrimage. Other Duchesses and High Ladies had certainly gone on foot from castle to Abbey in the days past, and it was taken as only fit and proper that they should approach the greatest shrine in Kronen in a mock-humble manner. Mahart was well aware that she would never be allowed to make such a journey alone—actually walking through the streets of the city she had only seen during all these years from balconies as a spread of roofs below. She would have guards. However, such, being armed men, could not enter the inner courts of the Abbey—that she knew. She would take Zuta—luckily those two who had been added to her retinue at the court had not been pressed upon her as daily companions—but, yes, she would accept even their company also if necessary. She somehow doubted that either of them was well-known behind the Abbey walls. "1 shall go as a pilgrim—" She spoke her decision aloud. "But, Your Grace, His Highness—he will not allow you to walk so the streets!" Zuta was quick to answer. "Even my father cannot stand against well-rooted custom. My mother herself went so to meet the Abbess Gofrera 56 before the plague. No, let Julta lay out my gray overrobe and the plainest of my cloaks. I think 1 shall make this pilgrimage today." Before, she said to herself, my father may change his mind. There was certainly a stir among those who had been added to make up a miniature court of her own since she had taken a part in public affairs. However, precedent had its way. She was able to recite quellingly the names of those near the ducal throne who had done likewise in times past. But she was forced to delay her venture for another day, since the guard captain himself came to tell her that such streets as she would traverse must be readied for her procession. "It is only fit Your Grace. Those who live under the ducal protection will want to view Your Grace, and we must be ready to counter any surge of crowds. His Highness would not allow it otherwise." So she had to wait two tedious days, fearing each hour would bring a denial from her father. Zuta with her subtle ability to collect information, reported that there were conferences being held in the Dukes study. Messengers had gone out and there was even a hint that the senior officers had been brought into at least one conference. However, none of this appeared to have any connection with Mahart and she blessed the business which perhaps had even once more made the Duke forget he had a daughter. Thus on the fourth day, dressed in the plainest gown of her wardrobe, she, herself, bearing a casket in which lay her personal gift to the Abbey's charity, for the first time she could really remember, set foot on the cobbles—discreetly covered, of course, by procession carpets—of Kornengred. There were crowds—even as the guard captain had promised—and they raised a hail which for a moment or two she could not believe was meant to honor her. Children squirmed and ran along the edges of the carpet just beyond 57 the reaches of the guards, and Mahart found herself laughing freely at their antics, daring to smile at the townspeople. This was a far different world from the somber castle, and she reveled in what she could see even as she heard such cries as "The Star bless Your Grace." The procession wound through several streets, so she caught glimpses of shops behind the crowds and wished she could explore those on her own. But the Abbey loomed above them all too soon. Here was another crowd gathered, not the well-clad, prosperous-looking people who had crowded to cheer. No, here was an old man bent nearly double, his wrapped body supported by two sticks; a woman whose dress was fashioned by patch cobbled upon patch; a blind man led by a small girl with yellow eyes and the look of one who had too great a burden laid upon her young—and others like them. They cowered back at the sight of the guardsmen as Mahart approached the wide door of the Abbey being thrown open for her to enter. "Beggars." Zuta had moved up until she was hardly a step behind Mahart. "They have come for the daily bread." Mahart had no time to answer, to even sort out her thoughts about the unfortunates before the gate. For there was a tall, thronelike chair set up only a few steps farther on, where a woman in a dull gray robe and cloak, with only a glittering star-shaped crystal, sat with the same—or more— authority than her father sat on the ducal throne. Remembering what she had read of such meetings Mahart sank into a curtsey as deep as that she would make to the Duke himself on some formal occasion. The woman on the seat extended a silver rod which seemed to emit a gleam of its own, and Mahart kissed the second crystal star at its tip. The face, within the muffled swathing which covered all the hair, was wrinkled and worn by years, but the lips curved in a smile which was open and welcoming. 58 "In the Star's sight Your Grace is welcome." That voice was surprisingly hearty. "It is well, my daughter, that you have chosen to come." Mahart turned a little to hand the casket she had carried to another caped and robed figure whose hood was pulled so far forward that she could not see any face. "For the poor—" Mahart began, and then added almost before she thought, "Lady Abbess, they wait now at the gate. Let them not be cheated by my coming but let me also serve those who ill fortune has crushed." The Abbess nodded. Mahart jerked her sleeve free from the grasp Zuta had caught and turned around, her other ladies retreating. There were Sisters by the gate now, each with a basket in her hand. Mahart, brushing by those who had followed her, waved to the guards. "Back—let the Sisters do as is set upon us by the Star." The men withdrew, visibly reluctant, but at last some of the beggars dared to approach. Mahart dipped her own hand into the basket of the nearest Sister her fingers closing on a round of greasy bread which she held out to the small girl clinging to the patched dress of the woman. The child seized upon it as if she feared that it would be taken away from her again. The mother dipped in an awkward curtsey. "Star's shine upon you Your Grace." She was staring at Mahart now in open awe. "And upon you also, goodwife," answered Mahart. Thus before the eyes of many in Kronengred was seen that day that the Dukes daughter, about whom foul rumors had spread, was fair of face, straight of body, and kind of heart. Vazul's advice had accomplished even more than he had thought. 59 :.. -'.-..5, ,-:.,: At e ton of e FIRS Ben Willadene awoke in the nest of covers in the trundle bed, covers which were clean and smelled of lavender and sweet clover. She loved the way they seemed to smooth her skin and somehow trap her in dreams in which no shadows crouched. So much had changed in the last twenty days—it was as if she had passed through a door to enter a new and glorious world. She rubbed her hands together. The creams Halwice brewed were fast taking away the small scars and roughness the years of kitchen service had engraved into her skin. And it had all started when she had obeyed Halwice's orders and had left the shop on the morning which seemed so far away now, made her trembling way down the alley, found those swinging boards in what looked like a forbidding fence, and so had come into this Star-blessed place. She had crept into the house that day and had been instantly aware of voices in the outer room, though that dark-shadowed form under the settle had not moved. But more than mere curiosity had led her to peer around the edge of the door curtain. Halwice had stood behind her counter, but Willadene had noted that she still kept a hold on its edge. Her voice, however, had been as strong and vibrant as usual. "Not so, steward," she had been saying. "Yes, we get such fragrances now and then from overseas. But as you 61 well know the merchant caravans are not as plentiful as they were—and much of what I await is fragile and easily broken. "What you ask for at the request of your mistress is no longer mine to sell." She had tapped a finger lightly on the top of hat rose bottle. "His Highness had already ordered it for his daughter's name day." The man had shrugged. His livery overerkin had been dark blue, bearing on both breast and back entwined silver symbols Willadene could not distinguish. "Her Grace pays well—also she had heard that you yourself, mistress, can distill scents fully equal to those from overseas. "To each his or her trade, steward. The blending of a new oil or fragrance often takes years of labor Unfortunately Kronen is not blessed with wide gardens. Most of my herbs grown here are for healing or cooking." She had smiled not altogether a friendly smile, Willadene had shrewdly judged. "Of course, should I ever be Star-blessed enough to find the Heart-Hold—then indeed I would have a treasure to offer." "The Heart-Hold," he had repeated. "Pray tell what that may be." Halwice had shrugged. "The tale is very old, perhaps mostly forgotten by now. But it was said that once a Starblessed healer in Kronen chanced upon a flower so perfect in form, so soothing in scent, that she kept it immersed in oil, sealed well against the air. And she discovered that those who looked upon it must come again and again, so her business prospered. But, at last, at years turn she was sent a dream that not for any gain in this world was Heart-Hold intended. And with the morrow she took it as an offering to Hasker—" Hasker! But that—" "The Abbey was assaulted by night, by wolf heads, men said. Its treasures were taken the Star-servers put to the 62 sword. And that was well over three hundred years ago. Never since has Heart-Hold been fund. But there are tales—one lady who dipped but the tip of her finger within the oil which preserved it was so sought after that she wed far above her station and her lord was firmly faithful for all his life. But that is all legend now. And—to return to your desire, steward, if I get another such Breath of Roses I shall send a message to the High Lady Saylana. You may take my word for that." It was plain that he had to be satisfied, though he had been scowling as he had taken silver pieces from his belt pouch and rung them down on the counter. However, Willadene had noted that the wrapped package hed taken up in return he had handled with care. It had been some long moments after he had left before Halwice had moved. Her head had been turned toward the open door, as if by some means of her own she could see beyond walls to watch him out of sight. Then she had slowly gone to that door shut it firmly, having hung a small signboard on its outer side. Only when she had dropped the bar latch had she turned toward the inner room. She had pushed aside the curtain and nodded to Willadene without comment as if she had fully expected to find the girl right there. "Light the lamps— she had ordered. "We must have full sight." The girl had hastened to obey, and with five lamps ablaze every shadow had been banished and she could easily see the curve of body beneath the settle. Halwice had said he lived, but he had certainly not moved since her labor had stuffed him there. "Bring him out." The Herbmistress had subsided onto a stool, leaving an open space on the floor. That had been more easily ordered than done, but at length Walladene had the limp man stretched out faceup. 63 In this very bright light she had been able to make out more of his features. He was, she had decided, much younger than she had first supposed, nor was he uncomely. His features were sharp and fine, and there was none of the lumpishness and blotched skin which had plagued Figis at the inn. Halwice had surveyed him intently—he might have been some subtle problem in the combining of two of her treasured substances. She had sighed. "Well, let us to it. Go to the bed cupboard, press twice with the palm of your hand just beyond where the sliding door now stands—toward the rear wall of the room." Willadene had hesitated, and Halwice's glance at her had become a stare. "What keeps you, girl? Time is our enemy now." "Mistress, you make me very free of your secrets," the girl had said slowly. "I am not even signed to your service." Halwice had smiled. "But that is what you want in your heart—have wanted—is it not?" At Willadene's vigorous nod she had continued. "That can well be arranged. Yes, I am making you free of secrets, but I do that because—by the Star—I know of what material you are wrought. Some of us are favored from birth with gifts. If we would truly serve as we were meant to do, then we use those—" "The nose—" ventured Willadene. "Yes, the nose—but yours is not only for scenting what lies about you in flask and jar, pot and pan, but also within. What did you smell when you pushed in the door at your mornings coming?" "Evil!" The word had been out of her lips before she had truly thought it. As one who was satisfied with her own opinion, Halwice had nodded. "Do you smell such now?" Willadene had tested the air about, which to her was soaked with such a wealth of scents it would have taken 64 her a goodly time to list. But that which the Herbmistress had brought to her mind was gone. - You see? Halwice had not waited for her answer. "Even as you—I, also, possess by Star's Grace, that gift. You can be trusted; and you will be, for you have been swept into matters which are both great and dire. Now, bring me what you find within the niche there." Willadene had placed her hands as she had been ordered, and the seemingly solid board had given, sliding away even as the outer doors to the bed. Inside had been a box, and from it had issued a scent Willadene had never encountered before—it had been sharp and clear, almost like fresh, prickling brine. She had brought it to the Herbmistress, who had balanced it on her knees before she had opened it. Like the shelves in the shop cupboards without, the interior of the box had been divided into many compartments, each with its own lid, while fastened within the coffer of the chest itself had been a flat dishlike platter no larger than two hands pressed together. "This"—Halwice had wrestled it loose from its hold— "must be placed on him heart-high." Willadene had taken it quickly and had done just that, seeing that it rested steadily. Halwice had already been opening the compartments. One or two she hesitated over and reclosed, but from the chatelaine clipped to her girdle she had already freed another small but deeper measure, and into this, with the spoon chained to its edge she had shifted first this and that— The tingling sharp scent had grown ever stronger. Yet it had not been unpleasant. Instead, it had appeared to clear the head, made Willadene, in an unprecedented way, much more aware of all about her. The spoon had then been used to stir the powders together. Halwice, her hands so busied, had pointed with her chin. 65 "Beneath the bed pillow—a bag. Bring it!" It had not been as large as a purse and Willadene had found it was full of what felt like pebbles. "Open"—Halwice had been still stirring—"but take care." Willadene had untied the knot of the drawstring, and open it she did—to shake into hand that which caught and reflected the light as if they glowed with inner fire. Jewels— but none had been cut to use. They were like fragments of larger pieces which had been deliberately shattered. "Now"—Halwice had edged her stool a fraction forward—"you must set a pattern, and it must be even as I tell you, for this can only be done once—and without fault. Search what you hold for two white crystals and place them above the crown of Nicolas's head." Willadene had obeyed; at least the stranger had at last been given a name. "Now choose blue, each one to be put halfway between those already set," continued the Herbmistress. Last of all, Halwice had held out the bowl whose contents she had been energetically stirring all the while. "Shake what lies within this on the heart plate, gently— it must not spread too far." Diligently the girl had done just that. It had not puffed out as she had expected such ashy material to do, but formed a small mound. "Look you now for the starred crystal," came the next order, and that she had done. There had been such, not so uniformed as the others, and smoother-edged but centered with an unmistakable starshaped heart. "Thrust that into the powder!" Willadene had obeyed. It had been as if she had applied a snap light, for smoke had begun to rise. About a hand's space above its source it had split into six equal trails, and each one of those had set out to touch a jewel. 66 The sharp clean scent had made Willadene feel that she herself, if she wished it, could have risen from the floor where she crouched, taken on wings, and soared beyond the world she had always known. Halwice had been speaking again, but not to give her an order. Instead, the Herbmistress's voice had risen and fallen in a chant which had been like a song, needing no harp to keep in mastering tune. The words had been strange, and the crooning had seemed to slur them together at times. Now the smoke had woven a cloud above nearly half of the quiet body. The girl could no longer see his face. Halwice's body had rocked back and forth slightly as she'd continued to chant. Willadene had caught a glimpse of the Herbmistresss features across the inert body. The woman had plainly been under great strain yet she herself dared not move to give her any aid. The smoke forming that sight-repelling mask had moved again. Willadene had been sure she could detect tendrils drawing back into their source. And she had been right. But there had been nothing on the plate, not even scorch marks of any burning. And the brilliance of the gems had dimmed. Halwices head had fallen on her breast as if she could no longer hold it upright. Without orders Willadene had leaned over to gather up the gems and restore them to the bag. Then that dark-haired head had moved, and eyes of a gray of a steel blade and with the same grim threat in them had stared up at her. Who by the Horns of ratch are you?" His voice had been low, hardly clearer than a whisper and it had come like a cat's challenging hiss. Willadene had hurriedly hunched back as he'd used his elbows to lever himself to a near-sitting position. He had looked around, caught sight of Halwice, and frozen in that awkward pose. Then his head had swung again so he could see Willadene, and in that moment she had realized just 67 what he was viewing—the grimy, tatter-clad drudge of the inn. Then he had moved swiftly, with far more speed than she could have thought possible for that supine body of moments earlier. Before she'd been able to draw herself farther back his fingers had twisted in her hair, bringing pain as he jerked her upward until they were both standing. Still keeping his tight grip on her he had begun a careful survey of the whole room, which ended by centering on the Herbmistress. "What have you wrought here!" He had jerked the girl's head back and forth by that hold in her hair, and those steel eyes had been sword points to strike her. "Let be!" Halwice had straightened on her stool. "You are always too ready to leap for answers—I thought you had learned the folly of that, Nicolas. Loose Willadene! Had it not been for her aid— How long does a man last in the Deep Sleep?" "What does she here7" he had demanded, but he had loosened his grip and she was able to pull her head back and away from so close a vicinity so that he could not so seize upon her again. "The Will of the Star." Halwice had the sharp tone of an adult dealing with a child. "Had it not been for her provident coming to the shop, we would both be deep in that she-serpent's net." Swiftly she had outlined what Willadene had discovered, and her efforts on their behalf thereafter. The girl had longed to interrupt that it was Halwice's welfare she had been concerned with and not that of this boor. "I brought the packet from Arwa—as usual. He met me at the Fork's Border Inn and showed me the seal upon it, knowing I was coming to Kronengred. It was no different—" Then he had paused and scowled. "So they used me, did they— Arwan—" His hand had gone to the belt where rode a sheathed knife longer than any ever intended for an eatins tool. 68 "Arwans part in this we shall learn in due time. Halwice still had a note of impatience in her voice. The important thing is here and now. You came over border with a message. You have already been delayed since well beyond First Bell in the delivery of it. I suggest that first things be met in the proper order. And this, I believe—// her hands had groped among her bodice lacings to bring out the coinshaped seal Willadene had found on the floor //—is yours. Best be on your way." But it had seemed that he had not been ready to yield to the authority Halwice used. "The girl—" Now he had looked once more at Willadene. "She is my affair, Nicolas. I warn you, one does not meddle with the moves of fate. Now go." And go he had, not through the shop but out back to traverse the herb garden, clearly in search of the same entrance which had brought Willadene there earlier. "Nicolas serves his master well," the Herbmistress had begun when he was gone. "Now—you will forget him!" Willadene had blinked and then nodded. Curiosity might be alive in her, but she had had good reason to sense that this was no time for questions. Halwice had surveyed her up and down and once more the girl had been aware of the grubby appearance she must have presented at that moment. "Get the kettle the largest one"— Halwice had gestured toward the hearth—"and set a fire for it. So Jacoba would take bride price for you from Wyche? That can be speedily taken care of. For your own sake girl, you must be under my hand. There is this much true—good gold would be paid for noting what had passed here when repeated to the right person." Willadene had stiffened. Nicolas might well have been a spy—perhaps even so Halwice—but she was no talebearer and never had been. She knew—knew by the aid of her gift— 69 that there was no evil in the woman facing her, and whatever she had done earlier she might truly confess to the Star and go unchided. "Yes. We know—for, girl we are of the same breed, only I have been forged like a fine smith's weapon, and you are but raw material. I know you have long wanted to come to me, but there was a reason that I should not arouse Jacoba's malice fully against the two of us. Today has changed all that. "Bring me now one of the small measures and the third bottle from the left on the second shelf near the window of the shop." When Willadene had returned Halwice had tried to take both objects from her, but the woman's hands had been shaking so hard she had not been able to manage to hold either safely. "Age comes to all of us," she had said bleakly as if she spoke the thought aloud. "Take this, pour you from the bottle into the measure until it reaches this line graven in the glass—do it!" The girl had nodded emphatically, and with the care she had always seen the Herbmistress use in putting together any mixture, she had allowed a green liquid to fall hardly more than a couple of drops at a time into the measure. Around her had wafted a fresh, clean scent she could not have put name to but which she wished would wash every smirch, every bruise, every scar from her body, for she had a strong feeling it might well be able to do just that. Halwice had taken the measure in both shaking hands and held it to her lips. She had drunk steadily until the last green drop was gone. For another moment she had sat quietly and then she was on her feet moving as briskly as Willadene had always seen her do. "Well enough." She reached out to take the bottle from the girl's hand. "Now the immediate affairs are our own." Setting the bottle carefully on the table, she had moved 70 to a chest so old that time had scrubbed away nearly all the painted patterns from its wood. When she had lifted the lid there had been another rush of scent which Willadene recognized came from herbs laid up to preserve clothing from moth and mildew. Halwice had brought out a bundle tied together with a length of narrow cloth. She had set this on the table and then pointed toward a very large basin, nearly as tall as Willadene herself, where it leaned against the back wall. "\ have no scullery maid," Halwice had announced. Those who serve me from time to time go in better guise. Take the kettle water to warm that from the bucket and let us see what lies under all that which plasters you now. Then dress yourself in these." She had thumped the bundle. "In that box is soap. See that you use it well on both body and hair. No one with the nose can wish to remain as you are now. I shall be in the shop. It has been closed too long. We are very near the time of the noon bell, and when I go out on errands I am seldom gone past that." She had looped aside the curtain and Willadene had set about obeying orders. Though the basin was no bath such as a noblewoman could soak herself in, the girl had found she could crouch in its water warmed by the supply from the kettle, and she had set about such a scrubbing with the soft soap scooped from the box as she had not been able to do for years. Though as shed bathed, washed her hair, and washed it yet a second time, she had begun to remember times when she had been as free with water and soap as she was now. There had been a rough towel; and she had moved closer to the small fire as she'd rubbed herself dry, ashamed of her hands where the skin seemed still cracked with gray lines in spite of all her efforts. The bundle had yielded a chemise which had not been too large that she could not pull it snugly about her. Then there had been a shirt with short sleeves, made for a worker who needed full use of her 7i hands. It had had a line of green braid, which Willadene had caressed with a loving finger. Last had been a skirt, full and a little too wide for her waist, but she had been able to belt it in with the same piece of material which had held the bundle together. And theyd all been clean, fragrant from dried flowers which had fluttered in the air as she'd pulled free each garment. So had begun her life in Halwice's shop and home. And Willadene found that to be equal to that life in brightness and beauty which the Star promised the faithful. Of course, the Reeve's messenger appeared and with Halwice she had been summoned to face all the majesty of the law which had been indifferently placed on Jacoba's side. But to the girl's astonishment the innkeeper was subdued, her roaring anger hidden—if it still existed. She had tried to bring up the point that Willadene was a bespoken bride, but two or three skillful questions had dismissed that, since it had been apparent the girl had had no say in the matter. That was the last of Jacoba, Willadene had thought, with a great feeling of being free of a smothering burden, as she had left with Halwice, her apprenticeship duly countersigned by two Reeves now—that of Jacoba's quarter and that who kept the Duke's peace in Halwice's. It certainly had been plain at this meeting that the Herbmistress was of consequence in Kronengred and that her word was accepted without question. However, during the days which followed, questions she hardly spelled out even for herself troubled Willadene from time to time. The trade in the shop was brisk, and, yes, strange merchants or their assistants came from time to time to deliver products from far beyond Kronen. Among these were what Willadene came to consider special ones. Two had been delivered once after nightfall by the back alleyway and those who brought them had been given a number of coins which they promptly hid about 72 their persons. Most of these visitors hardly ever seemed to even realize that the girl was there, and she kept mouse still busying herself with some task of sorting, labeling, or generally setting the shop in order. However, as much as she tried to efface herself, their quarters were cramped and there was little chance for any true privacy, so she listened. What passed between Halwice and many of these visitors was cryptic, making no sense to Willadene, but about none of them ever clung the cloying, rotten smell of evil. Twice Nicolas had turned up—once openly in the shop, wearing a fine dark-red jerkin bearing the Chancellor's arms on both shoulder and breast, with an ordinary request for a product which calmed nerves and allowed sleep. He scowled when Halwice directed Willadene to make up the dosage. It was plain that he had no trust even yet in the girl. "\ hear, Halwice said, that Her Grace did well for herself at the court. She is comely enough and appears to carry her position well." Nicolas made a sound which was not far from a snort. "Yes, it made a fine show. Even the High Lady Saylana could find little fault, I understand. But this is true, mistress: the Duke may have come to his rule cross-sidely but he will make every effort to hold it. And what is in a father may also lie in a child." "The Lady Zuta still stands at her right hand?" He was frowning now. "How else can it be? His Highness kept all others from Her Grace. But it is with that Lady Zuta as it is with my Lord Chancellor—only if His Highness remains in position to grant favors will she herself prosper." "There are some strange tales from over the border—" Halwice continued placidly. "It would seem that the royal family there also has its problems." "That is none of the business of Kronen." Nicolas shrugged. Then suddenly he changed the subject. "Is it indeed true, mistress, that there be scents which can ensnarl 73 a man—not blast him, mind you, as was attepted here— but weave him to the purpose of another without his knowledge of what is happening?" "There are said to be such—woman's weapons—" Halwice replied. His teeth showed in a very unpleasant smile. She regarded him steadily until that smile faded. "Well you should know what it means to fall even to the lightest of such traps. I would consider such a subject with care if I were you." He grinned again, this time like the youth he seemed to be. "Well enough—there are rumors aplenty always flying about to mystify a man— Who needs to believe such? My lord's thanks for your services—" Willadene had carefully stuffed the small pillow she had been busied with, now sealing it with a paste which would unite that opening past all forcing. She slid it across the counter to him. His next visit was three days later and this time after nightfall, heralded by a soft knocking at the back door. Willadene looked to the Herbmistress, and at her nod slipped out the bar latch. This time Nicolas wore no well-cut and fitted clothing, certainly no identifying tabard of the Lord Chancellor. Instead, a long black cloak muffled him from chin, with rolls of a thrown-back cowl, to his booted ankles. Halwice, without a word, went to a cupboard and brought out a pouch too rounded certainly to carry much wealth and giving forth no clink as she handled it. Nicolas caught it and it vanished beneath his cloak. "The border?" That was no statement, rather a question. "Mistress, no one can track well a night flyer." He laughed, almost the joyous laugh of one about to engage in mischief. "If this one succeeds you will soon hear strange news—" With no more farewell he was gone. Halwice sat down slowly on the chair they had dragged back from the shop 74 the former seat of her imprisonment. She was shaking her head, not at Willadene but at something perhaps only she could see. "May the Star light him through! One can take such risks against fate but not forever." She sighed and then spoke directly to Willadene. "Bring me the book which stands at the far end of the knowledge shelf and take care; it is so old that someday it may turn to dust in ones hands. Willadene obeyed quickly. There was an odd smell to what she held—the decay of ancient leather and parchment, and beyond that a medley of scents she did not have time to identify before Halwice had it from her laid on the table between two lighted lamps so that the full glow was turned on the pages she so carefully turned. "One can only try," she muttered as she searched. "Oh, get you to bed Willadene. I may be half the night about this business." And again, though questions nearly choked her, the girl obeyed. 75 «\77 Wee e ouNR I wou have my cane across her back." Duke Uttobric snarled. "Making a show of herself before the whole of Kronengred, and I can well believe that most of the city was there to gape at her doing it!" Vazul pursed his lips as he faced his master, and his black-furred companion made the faintest of chittering sounds from where she hung in one of her favorite positions around the mans neck. Sometimes—mentally Vazul hoped for patience and firmly banked down his impatience—Uttobric tried a man near to the far limits. "Highness"—he picked his words now with care as he answered—"instead of Her Grace proving a barrier to your wishes, she has, on the contrary, played her part as well as if she had been trained to it from youth. With her own hands she has fed the hungry, standing with those pious Sisters of the Star. Not a task, I will grant you, that many of her blood have ever done in the past, but one which made all who watched it believe that she has the good of Kronen in her heart." The Duke scowled, that dark twitch of skin and eyebrows fading slowly. "What say the court?" he then demanded. "Do they mutter behind their hands that one of the Old Blood so forgets her place as to mingle with beggers?" Within himself Vazul sighed, but his tone was conciliating as he replied. "Highness, have we not been gathering 77 rumors for more than a year now that those who oppose you are secretly building their own net to bring you down? And where is any army they can summon? Who can raise enough coin to import even one company of mercenaries? And, as all know, those are apt to turn upon their employers if their pay is not forthcoming as promised. Therefore any support your enemies could hope to gather would be from the dissatisfied, the unruly the night flitters, of Kronengred itself. In every city there are those who will rise at the thought of loot. "So far we have sifted very carefully all strangers coming into the city. The majority are honest merchants. Those, we wish to encourage, for our very life depends upon trade. But—" he leaned forward a little and drew from his belt a roll of paper he proceeded to pull taut enough to be read "—we also know that there are others who find their way through and out again our gates, that there are ties rooted within this city itself which lead to the outlaws. In the past year five small caravans have disappeared entirely as if the earth swallowed them, and attacks on two well-guarded larger ones were beaten off only with loss of life, and, what is more, of merchants confidence that we are strong enough to protect them. "We must hold the city. Just as you have graciously made concessions to the most powerful among the merchants, accepted—at least outwardly—suggestions from the Reeves, so must the people themselves believe that their welfare is a matter of heart interest for you. Thus—Her Grace's act at the Abbey—news of which, I assure you, has already spread through the city and even grown in the telling—is such which will serve you now as well as a full corps marching down from the castle. I repeat, Highness, Her Grace Mahart is one of your best weapons at present and must be well used. Twenty days hence is her birthday— to make such a holiday this year Her Grace appearing per- 78 haps to give thanks for the generous recognition of your pleasure in it—" The Duke's gaze had gone from the narrow face of his Chancellor to the wall where a particularly drab stretch of tapestry celebrated a victory won long before his own birth. "Very well—a feasting—alms—all the usual, I suppose," he said grudgingly. "Her Grace and I will proceed to the Abbey to give thanks— Do you realize what a hole this will leave in my purse?" he ended snappishly. "But it shall be done with all propriety—" promised Vazul. If he was going to add to that promise he was stopped by his furred companion, whose chittering now reached the point it could be well heard by the Duke also. The animal had slewed around on Vazul's shoulder and her whiskered snout was now pointing to the wall. With a speed which was out of place in him usually, the Chancellor was on his feet and at that wall, his hand outstretched so that the fingers pressed there in a certain pattern. With no sound—the latch was too well oiled for that— a panel slid back and presented an opening through which a full-sized man could come only if he were bent double as the newcomer was. He straightened to his full height, which was more than the Duke's and a little less than Vazul's. His cloak swept back a little as his hand came free to sketch what might be a salute of sorts, but he showed no other formal deference to the company in which he now found himself. "Prince Lorien," he reported, has reached the lodge. Two nights ago a shepherd was slain just within the borders there. His flock was all killed, an act which will arouse the country people—on both sides of the border It seemed that the Red Wolf held high feast for a comrade." "That comrade being?" the Duke demanded. "Noble or baseborn?" "He did not appear openly but kept to the Wolf's own 79 quarters, and none ventures there except under orders. The Wolf rules with the lash and the stake." Yet he rules," Vazul said quietly. "With such as he commands, it takes a man of unusual personality to hold so close rein. There was no way of finding out the identity of the visitor?" He spoke now to the newcomer. "Chancellor, for that I ride—tonight. The network is well in place as usual." For the first time the Duke's lips formed one of his sour smiles. "Good speed" was his farewell. When the panel had closed behind their visitor, the Duke looked to Vazul. "You put great trust in this Bat of yours—has it not always been your plaint to me that to trust entirely weakens one?" Vazul was smoothing the fur of his creature. "Your Highness the Bat has good reason to hate as we hate—and is there not truth in the saying he who has the same enemy is in some manner a comrade? Yes, I trust this night journeyer of mine because he not only carries a burning hate within him, but one he has learned to control, that he may accomplish best what is asked of him." The Duke was now eyeing him thoughtfully. "I have you, Vazul, because we both well know whatever fate the future holds will serve us equally. However—now that you have made clear the worth of my daughter to our plans— does she have any confidante who might be seduced into betrayal if such a moment of need arose?" "Highness, the principal lady—in fact the only lady for the past four years—who serves Her Grace, is Zuta of Lakley." "Lakley? But that— She is kin to Darmond?" "She is a victim of Lord Darmond's greed," Vazul returned calmly. "By rights she should be lady there—with the coming of the plague he moved upon his grandfather's hold with force enough to hold it. It was given out that all those of the true bloodline died from the sickness. Sickness— 80 and steel—as has been whispered. She could not have inherited the title and ruled there—being, female. But she was entitled to daughter's share, and that was worth a little bloodletting—her father having been very lucky in several ventures overseas. It was her nurse who saw her safely into the hands of Lady Janis of Ille. When the plague brought down that guardian my sources appraised me—" He continued to stroke his pet, and the Duke uttered one of his snickering laughs. "Always you see the future worth of any deal, Vazul. You administer her birth funds, of course." But the Chancellor shook his head. "Unluckily no—Darmond being what he is and having false witnesses to say she is not the true heir. However as all of us she can hope for a less burdensome future. She has funds to draw upon, from her mother's line though they may not be her own, and she is very clever. Her Grace has been safe these past few years because they were so closely united." "Another of your eyes and ears, Vazul? If so, she is acceptable—you will nourish a traitor no more quickly than I would." "No. She knows nothing of our shadow servants Highness. But she is my source of information concerning Her Grace and all which pertains to her. Concerning Her Grace Highness, there is another matter—" "That being?" "When she made her pilgrimage to the Abbey she walked it. To have ventured into the heart of the city in a horse litter would not have served the purpose. Now—Her Grace must learn to ride Highness." "Ride! The Duke blinked rapidly several times. "But there is no need for her to make any journey." "Except through the city Highness. Think now, when the feast day you have planned comes and you ride forth— will it not seem strange to all that your daughter is carried 81 in a litter? The people now know she is no invalid and will wonder why she journeys half hidden from them." "Ride!" repeated the Duke with a snort. "How, pray you, can she learn such a feat within less than twenty days? The girl has never been near a horse!" "Highness, your Master of Horse is counted the best in all Kronen. There is that large court where the guards drill— it can be made private for periods of Her Graces instruction." "All right. If it must be done to humor the baseborn in the streets, let it be so. You always have such good reasons for your suggestions, Vazul." "That is why I am of service to you Highness," returned the Chancellor. So now Mahart, whether she wished or no, became introduced to what might give her in the future another form of freedom. Her lessons were well supervised by an elderly man, who plainly considered these hours of instruction in a way a reflection upon his status. But he knew his job well, and she was eager for any new knowledge. There always remained in the back of her mind that dream she had now dreamed three times over—of being free in flowered meadows under the open sky. Learning to govern this animal, which was presented to her each morning at the same hour, might well be another key to the outer world. Luckily she proved to be a very apt pupil, graduating from boring rounds on a very placid old mare to at last a younger and less sluggish mount. Though the Master of Horse never expressed any satisfaction at her progress she could guess by the slight changes in his attitude that she was in some ways measuring up to what he considered a credible performance. If she came to enjoy this new learning she could not say the same for Zuta. The practice place was seldom in full sun and since the year now advanced to harvest it was chill for 82 anyone who merely stood enshawled, watching the action but not taking part in it. Mahart, catching sight of a coldpinched nose and not missing the accompanying shivers, finally suggested that her companion withdraw into the tack room beyond. Then she became so absorbed in what she must remember to do properly that she completely forgot Zuta. Nor did anyone know that the lady-in-waiting was joined there by one dressed in simple garb but of noble materials—carrying no house shield adornment. Mahart continued to make her solemn rounds. Apparently the fact that she could stay in the saddle, arranging her wide, divided skirt in proper falls; keep a straight back; and have her rein signals obeyed was all that was going to be required of her. The lessoning had become such a routine that she found herself able to occupy at least a fraction of her mind with other things. Her eighteenth birthday was looming ahead. She could only remember very faintly when that had been a date of note. These past years, the full of a celebration had consisted of the good year wishes of Julta at her rising, similar ones with a small gift from Zuta, and the appearance of a footman sometime during the morning bearing a salver on which rested her fathers remembrance, formal good wishes delivered in a monotone by memory from the bearer. Now she was going to be, she gathered, the center of festivities of some extent. She would appear in the heaviest of formal court dress with her father on the west balcony, to be shown off properly to any of those in Kronengred who were interested. Then, later, she would practice this new art of hers in public, riding behind her father to the Abbey, to present a birthday gift to the Abbess. She already knew that she was going to be walled by half the guard, protected carefully from any contact such as she had rebelliously indulged in before. But at least her father could not forbid her meeting with the Abbess, and so 83 perhaps with some others of those who supported the shrine. Mahart had already discovered that the scented candles of the inner shrine and the incense alight there were the product of the Herbmistress she had heard so much of. And, if protocol would not allow her to visit Halwice's own shop, there could be a good chance of such an encounter at the shrine—though she knew better now than to try personally to bring that about. Her hour's exercise done, she allowed the Master to help her dismount, thanked him civilly as she always did for his efforts on her behalf, and headed for the tack room. There were other entrances to this exercise court, of course, but one could not clear out barracks and interrupt military matters so that no guardsman could get good sight of Her Grace—and the Duke's decree in this matter had been strictly followed. She looked for Zuta, but the room was empty and it was a full moment before the lady-in-waiting appeared. She still had a shawl bundled closely around her chin above which her face was a little flushed. "It is done for the day," Mahart said. "Now what have we before us?" "The Mistress of the Robes, Your Grace. As you remember, at last fitting your train would not lie flat." Mahart sniffed. "Might as well clothe me in armor— these state robes are near as heavy. Very well—let us go." She was always glad to get away from this guard section. There was a grimness about it which made her uneasy, and twice she raised the pomander which swung on its girdle chain to sniff at the fragrance it held. "Your Grace?" Mahart looked inquiringly at her companion. At least Zuta had dropped that fold of shawl so she could see her plainly. "Yes?" she prompted when the girl did not continue. 84 It is nothing—only just talk as usual. Concerning the ball. The High Lady Saylana—she is sometimes in despair of her son—" Mahart grinned. "As well she might be, lumbering fool!" To her surprise Zuta glanced swiftly around. "Your Grace"—now her voice was hardly above a whisper. "It is said—and has been proven—that castle walls have ears— and tongues." Mahart grasped the pomander more tightly. That was really a bald hint as far as Zuta was concerned. Mahart hesitated before she asked in as low a voice as the other had used: "It is that perhaps the High Lady has some plan?" Marriage—her father had spoken of marriage! Could it be that he would strive to brace up what he considered to be a shaky ducal throne by uniting her with Barbric? Her jaw set a little. She had been her father's tool, but there were some things— "It is to favor the Lord Barbric." Zuta's now-whispered words came in a rush. "When you open the ball, all know the Duke will not lead you out—as is usual. It has always been known that he disdains such niceties." "And I certainly cannot dance alone." Mahart tried to think of pacing through the stately steps allowed the ducal family and almost laughed at the picture her imagination painted of her father indulging in such a show. No, he would remain firmly on his throne, as uncomfortable there as ever, enduring that he must be present. "His Highness must signify that you choose your partner" Zuta was continuing. "And Barbric will be well ahead of the line," Mahart snapped. "He will be the only one protocol will permit you to select," Zuta said. "Your Grace knows well that His Highness has enemies in plenty. Should you choose without due thought, you might well alienate some family he wishes to bring into his party." 85 That was true enough, Mahart had to conclude. So be it—Barbric must be her choice. Luckily in the stately paces of the opening dance one did not have to approach one's partner past the touching of hands at the end of outstretched arms. It was deadly dull, as she knew from the hours she had been drilled in its turns—deep curtsey to answer deeper bows, and the final delivery of her to her proper dais seat. She shrugged now. "I shall remember, Zuta. But what will be my father's answer to this bit of diplomacy?" "His Highness cannot deny your choice Your Grace. It will be the only proper one." It seemed in the days which passed all too swiftly that there were a great many proper choices to be remembered. She hated the heavy robes which weighed so on her slender body. They had a session in which her hair had to be tamed into a coiffure which would allow a wide tiara to be anchored to it. At least the Master of Horse had at last released her, doubtless having reported to her father that she would not disgrace their name by sliding out of the saddle. Twice she ordered Zuta to see that she was supplied with that night-burning incense which produced in her soothing and restful dreams, and the last supply sent was one large enough that she could have it burnt for three nights running. The feeling she had every time she was loosed into that place was comforting, but also it became more and more one of anticipation. She was never in the dream inclined to walk, if walk she could, away from where she entered. Yet she became surer and surer that she was the goal of another's journeying—though no shadow ever broke the stretches of field. She was never afraid, only ready to welcome, and now she awoke disappointed when that other promised traveler did not appear. Sometimes it seemed that time flew, and others that it dragged sluggishly. Vazul began to ask for audiences, and 86 at first she wanted to refuse. There was that about the Chancellor which always made her feel tense and wary when she was in his presence. Then, as the subjects he advanced in those meetings delved deeper and deeper into matters of which she had been unaware but which now aroused her curiosity to a pitch she looked forward to his coming. To her father she had always seemed a non-person— something to be forgotten as soon as she was out of his sight. But Vazul was treating her from the first as someone with thoughts and not just a mirror image of a proper simple child who happened by fate to have been the daughter of the Duke. This new and exciting interest had come on his first visit to her, and looking back she was sure that the key to it was the actions of his strange pet. For when she had waved him to a seat, uncertain as to what rebuke he must carry from her father, the sinuous black-furred thing had appeared from within his sleeve, ran across his knee, and leaped lightly to the floor over which it went like a flicker of shadow to come to her own feet. Beneath the billows of her skirt her toes had tried to curl within her slippers, and she did not know what she could do if the creature sprang at her. She dared not raise her eyes from it lest it catch her so unawares, and she longed for the Chancellor to recall it. But the longer she studied it—the thing had raised the forepart of its body, its paws crossed over its upper belly, its head held at a sharp angle as the rippling of its long whiskers suggested that it was testing the air—Mahart found that its strangeness no longer seemed to hold any menace. Impulsively she detached the chain of her pomander from her girdle and dangled it down toward that questing nose. There was a chittering sound, very faint. One of those forepaws came forward and claws hooked in the filigreed side of the ball, drawing it closer to the nose. She believed 87 she could actually see the small form swell as if it drew in as deep a breath as its small lungs would allow. "From the Herbmistress Halwice, Your Grace?" Mahart had been so engrossed by the actions of the creature that Vazul's question gave her a start. "Yes, Chancellor. It is of her making. She is well-known for such things." "As for healing also," he commented. But he made no attempt to recall his pet. The creature at last made the leap Mahart had been fearing, landing on her lap, the pomander held between teeth which looked extremely sharp and menacing, small as they were. Then its head pushed against one of her hands, and she felt the silken softness of fur she could not help but smooth. There was a vibration through the long body in return which she was certain signified pleasure. Still petting the creature, she looked to the Chancellor. "What is its name?" All within the castle knew of it, but never had any name been mentioned. Vazul was leaning forward, his usually half-lidded eyes very wide, his gaze seeming to search within her as if he would count her very bones. For the first time, she saw him startled out of that usual armor he ever presented to any of the court. "Ssssaaa." The sound coming from him was more a hiss than any true word. But she took it for what it must be— his answer to her question. "She would be a friend worth greeting." "Ssssaaa." Mahart attempted as best she could to give the sound the same quality as he had done. And felt warmth as the creature seemed to slide in some way up her arm to her shoulder and there chitter into her very ear. It appeared to her that Vazul was still startled out of his carefully preserved outer shell. 88 "You have no fear—" It was not a question but a statement. "Your Grace you have won such a supporter as you will not be able to understand until a dire time comes—" "A dire time?" "Yes, time—for time itself works against us. Listen, Your Grace, and listen well, for there is much you must understand before you are totally engulfed by this court as necessity orders you must be." He began to talk, keeping his voice very low, as Mahart listened and caressed the creature which had come to her. Her hours spent in the library had laid the foundation for much he now spoke of—but not all, for the accounts there were not of the immediate past but stretched much further back. That her father's ascension to the ducal throne was questioned she had always been aware, just as she had been early warned against the High Lady Saylana. But now she heard other names, Vazul pausing at some as if allowing her time to memorize each. His steady voice, pitched even as it would be if he talked to someone his equal in years and knowledge, was in its way like those dreams of the meadow—opening out her world. It was a dark world and there was little in it over which one could rejoice—thus being far from the meadow of her dreams—but her intelligence, already awakened, was sharpened by all she heard now. "But, my lord, if Kronen is so ridden by this rot what can be done? If merchants cannot trust our roadways they will cease to come. The trade will fail—" She hesitated, thinking of the beggars at the Abbey gate—she had done what she could since her confrontation there to give aid. "It will be again as the plague—" Ssssaaa hissed in her ear, uncoiled, and was down her knee making a leap across to Vazul. "Except death will come more slowly," the Chancellor said. "But—for this moment—we must play another's game—or seem to—" "Her Grace Saylana," she guessed, but he gave her no yes or no. Three more such meetings she held with Vazul. On the second and again on the fourth he brought with him packets of herbs, and it was on the last such meeting he agreed that on her birthday visit to the Abbey she might well meet the Herbmistress, since Halwice was one of the guild masters who would gather there in honor of the occasion. Finally the day came—it would be a long one, Mahart knew. First the appearance in state with her father on the foresteps of the castle. Then the procession to the Abbey— the tedium afterward of a formal dinner and then the ball. Her dress for each occasion waited, hung along the wall on a heavy cord so no crease or wrinkle would mar its splendor. There was her father's usual gift awaiting on the dressing table—more elaborate this year—a flagon like a halfopened rose which, in spite of its stopper gave forth perfume. But in her mind Mahart desired more of that which had been in those packets Vazul had delivered—those which took her—elsewhere. She knew that Zuta wished to question how such reached her, and she had put her off with an explanation that such were delivered by her father's orders so she might be mind-clear and prepared for all that lay before her. Only—she had never yet seen the stranger who was meant to meet her in that place—in fact, now to her unease, he seemed far too long delayed. There were flags and banners, loopings of flowers and branches all along the way, as she rode later, a pace or so behind her father, through the streets. And the cheers of the people brought a flush to her face. Vazul's information had sunk deep; she knew just on what a perilous foundation this gala in Kronengred rested. But the serenity which lay within the Abbey gates hed none of that feverish excitement. She made her curtsey to the Abbess even as she had before. But this time the elderly 90 Sister, leaning a fraction on her staff, brought her on into the aisle of the Star House. There was the rustle of a crowd there too, but subdued. She knew that the guild masters were in place. Mahart knelt at the Star altar, and the offering she set there might be bringing a frown to her father's face—she did not try to see. For she set the perfect rose bottle within the pure light which played along all points of the Star. Once more there were presentations and each of the guild masters had an offering—some fine example of the work his people did—to display. It was the fifth one who approached her who awoke Mahart from the haze of formality which had encompassed her. This was a woman, her dress of rich green cloth but without any overlay of lace or metallic thread. She made dignified bow to the Duke and then to Mahart. The girl could not have set any age to her. Though the woman's fine skin showed no wrinkling, those eyes which she boldly raised to meet the girl's gaze were strange indeed. Were they actually—yellow? Or only brown like autumn-touched forest leaves? Mahart did not need the herald's introduction. She could not remember now what she had expected heretofore—perhaps some cronelike figure more suited to grubbing in a garden than appearing in courtly guise. But this woman had an ease of presence which even Saylana lacked for all her posturing. And she was one toward whom some inner deep-buried part of Mahart reached in a half-awed need for friendship. 91 . ;,. WinaeNe ws weiT}iNQ out tiny spoonsful of a powder which made her eyes water. This was surely more potent than any pepper she had ever dealt with in Jacoba's kitchen. She counted very carefully and then stoppered the bottle into which she had spooned the mixture. The street outside was unnaturally still. Half the shops were still closed, their keepers gone to view the grand procession. She certainly had no desire to join the cheering, ribbonwaving crowd. In fact it was difficult for her to force herself to go beyond the front door, or that swing-gate in the garden behind. Though it had been a goodly number of days since she, trembling in spite of all her efforts at hiding her fears, had stood before the Reeve's court and thankfully heard herself assigned from Jacoba—who stood in a grimy, dingy show of secondhand finery, scowling blackly at her—to Halwice, as neatly gowned and imperturbable as ever. She had watched the coins turned out on the Reeves clerk table— enough to cover by law her remaining worth to the cook. But Jacoba's whole attitude cried aloud, at least to Willadene, her complete dissatisfaction with the transaction. Sometimes Willadene could almost imagine herself, out on some peaceful errand for the Herbmistress, feeling that heavy hand fall upon her shoulder, to drag her back to the inn, even though good sense assured her that this would never happen. 93 It remained that here alone she felt safe. Though she had one small wish—that she could see Halwice in her fine gown plain as it was, before Her Grace, a respected member of the guilds. Willadene had heard a number of descriptions of the High Lady Mahart—that she was so fair of face even flowers seemed to lose their color in her presence, that she was so kind of heart she had fed the hungry with her own hands. They said, too, that she was learned—a very paragon of her line. And now there was gossip that certainly some great marriage was not too far away. It was easy enough to talk, but often rumor belied the truth. Willadene found herself wondering more and more what the ducal daughter was really like. It was against the law for Mahart to ever take her father's high seat, but that she might be won by a prince of some other land and even live to wear a crown was not now considered impossible. The only tie between the girl whose birthday had sent Kronengred into holiday was the fact that from time to time a page or serving man would appear at the shop for a packet, carefully wrapped flagon, or bag smelling like the whole herb garden behind the shop, to be delivered to Her Grace. These transactions had become even more frequent from week to week, and although Willadene was always carefully instructed as she watched potions for others combined even allowed to finish the lesser ones herself, only Halwice ever melded those for the castle and she did it more or less alone—dispatching Willadene to some chore of grinding or the like while she worked at the table, two lamps, even on the brightest of days, giving her light. Willadene finished her set task and most carefully cleaned the small spoon and set aside the other tools she had had to use. She could hear, even across the maze of streets between the shouting of the crowds. But she did not venture closer to the door, rather took from a small cup- 94 board a book which she spread open with greatest care so timeworn were its covers. She had not been totally ignorant when fate had turned her over to the hell of Jacobas kitchen In fact, discovering that her scullery maid could not only read and write but also was able to figure had served the cook, in spite of her air of great disdain for such gentry knowledge when she had Willadene make any use of it. Halwice learning that Willadene had such abilities limited though they might be, had set her regular lessons, and Willadene, as someone long hungry, had absorbed all she could. She could close her eyes and recite whole pages of the simpler herbals, but these older records presented puzzles which would often use lamp hours for solving. What she sought now was a legend though she was sure the Herbmistress considered it a historical truth—the story of Heart-Hold, that miraculous flower which gave forth a perfume no lover could withstand. No lover—she shook her head—it certainly was not for herself she sought this ancient recipe. She was content to spend the rest of her life even as she had the hours of this day. But—suppose that such a fragrance could be distilled again—presented to Her Grace. Then Halwice would be in high favor and Willadene would have repaid in part her debt of gratitude. She found the tale—for it was written in a crabbed writing using words long out of fashion, some of which she had to guess at—as a tale and not one of the carefully set formulas of the herbals she knew and used. The single flower found by chance where no other blossoms had ever bloomed, taken up with care and protected in an urn of oil of a kind which Willadene did recognize as being the most costly product of the shop. It was sold only by the drop and only those deep of purse could afford it. Only—how was one to find any flower? To her clear memory Willadene had never been beyond the walls of Kro- 95 nengred. Halwice dealt with foreign merchants, but they came to her. She never ventured forth herself to find what they finally delivered. There were a few flowering herbs, but it was still away from the time of year when their buds would appear. And Willadene knew just what those were and their proper use. She was certain of one thing—such a marvel as HeartHold must root well beyond land held by man's labor. And how might one wander into those wilds, where the outlaws now held almost complete rule, on such a searching? Willadene was reading the scant account for the third time when noise from the street disturbed her. Those who had gone to watch the procession were beginning to drift back. She watched through the open door the Reeve of this quarter and his escort ride back, people scattering before the horses. Willadene put away the book quickly. In order to reach her proper seat in the Abbey Halwice had had to leave before First Bell with no more than a twist of bread and a small glass of ale to break her fast. The food Willadene had since prepared must be reheated and quickly. She was gingerly tasting soup from a long-handled spoon when the Herbmistress arrived. There was a knot of neighbors who ringed her round, mainly merchants wives of the street. Willadene could hear their continuous excited questioning even from where she stood. Yes, Her Grace was all which was most gracious. And those who called her fair had not been dealing only in flattery. Indeed, the Duke was Star-blessed with such a daughter— But finally Halwice threw up her hands. "Goodwives all, my tongue is as dry as a cut of salt beef. I have told you all that I can. She is indeed fit to be a queen, and let us hope that if she is, she will also be a happy one." Some of the women grumbled a little, but at last they let her go and, though the Herbmaster left the door latch 96 out, she came on through into the inner quarters without stopping. She did not speak to the waiting girl, nor did she make any attempt to take off her fine gown. Instead, she went to the big cupboard where she slept, saying, as her head and shoulders disappeared within its cavern: "Clear the table!" Hastily Willadene put aside the bowls and food dishes she had set there. She had no more than taken the last piece from the table than Halwice was back, never looking to the girl but putting in place on the well-scrubbed board the object she had held close to her body as she came, as if she would so hide it from sight. There was a white bowl, perhaps the size of Willadene's two hands set interlapping together, and with that the bag she had seen in this very room once before—that which held the bits of polished but broken crystal. Halwice next took up two candles Willadene recognized as the kind which gave off perfumed smoke as they burned. On either side of the bowl she set one of these and used a snap light quickly to set them burning. Into the bowl itself she poured a scant amount of the minted water which they used in their work and which Willadene knew to be thrice boiled for purity. Having done all this to her satisfaction Halwice crooked a finger to the girl. "Take up those which lie within." She pushed the bag of crystals forward. "Hold them all tightly together for the space of three breaths—long-held ones." Willadene let the sharp-edged pieces fill one hand and then lapped it with the other, lest some spill from between her fingers. She drew three breaths, holding each, as if she feared that by releasing it she might cause some ill. "Throw—" Willadene tossed what she held onto the tabletop. None of them rolled to the floor as she had feared. Halwice leaned forward, her tight-fitting cap of ceremony having no rolled 97 edge to hide her features, and, for what seemed to Willadene a number of long breaths more, she simply stared at the bits of color where they lay. Then, with a straight forefinger, she worked among them, shoving first this and then that until there lay a single stone of sleek green not unlike a length of water-worn reed. "Take and hold," she bade Willadene for the second time, and this time the girl silently counted to seven breaths before the next order came. "Drop it into the bowl—then look therein, girl, with all which lies within you, look within!" There was no room. She might have been standing on the shore of a very silent lake, watching without even a rippling of the water as shadows passed swiftly or with languid rolling, so vague in outline she could not have said what any of them might be. But something within her made her try to hold those shadows as they slipped by. The effort she brought to that was like taking a full load of wood across her shoulders but she held to it, tried and tried to see more clearly. There was something which dipped and rose—she was no longer aware that this was even water in which it was fighting away. For fighting it was and against odds she could only guess at. It deepened, sharpened. Even as she had watched such on a summer evening winging out for their hunting, so did she see a bat. But that it was injured in some way—though she could not sight its wound—she was also sure. She had to swallow twice before she could speak, for speaking somehow broke the effort of seeing, and even as she said the words aloud the creature melted into nothingness. "A bat—hurt." She was not fully aware of the gasp of breath which came from outside this place, yet something she felt—a twinge of what was both pain and fear intermingled—and she was sure it had not come from the animal she had seen. "Look on—look!" The order was so demanding that Willadene forced herself to plunge faster and deeper. This time the picture came clearer, snapping out of nowhere as if a door had burst open. There were certainly rocks, patterned with lichen, wreathed in part with small fern fringes—yet not rocks of any building in Kronengred that she had ever seen. And in a pocket between the two largest of these, their sides forming an arch over it as if to protect the fragile-stemmed star-shaped bloom, stood what she had imagined Heart-Hold to be when she had read or heard the tale of its gifting to man. She must have spoken the name aloud, for suddenly her feeling of being otherwhere was broken. Hands were on her shoulders steadying her, but not until from that flower had spread to her such a fragrance as she knew that in all her lifetime she would never forget. "So—that is the way of it!" Halwice's voice sounded from far off and then close. "Let it be— But the path may be long and the way dark." There was only the table and on it the bowl of water at the bottom of which lay the stone the girl had tossed within. But she had to steady herself with both hands on the edge of the table, for it seemed that she could still catch that scent/ as overpowering as the strongest of the autumn ale. Well above that house and room the Duke sat huddled in his chair, his robes which always looked, when worn by him, as if they had been tailored for another man, creased about him. He had doffed his ducal coronet and held his aching head in both his hands. Uttobric had never been a social creature, and the older he grew the more he hated these parades of pomp which were expected. But the power itself—if one has been insig- 99 nificant and overlooked for most of one's life, the butt of a scoffing court—power was a heady wine and he was not about to surrender it. For years he had been a nobody, the least of his clan. Now he need only affix his seal to a scrap of paper and one of those who had sneered so openly would be naught. Still that was not so—not yet. And he knew it, tasted it like a sour bile rising in his throat. "Well," he said now, "was Kronengred suitably impressed?" He had no desire to see the expression on Vazul's face. "The move was the strongest you could have made" the Chancellor returned promptly. "Fortune favored you, Your Highness, with a daughter who can be a mighty weapon—if she is properly honed." Uttobric threw himself back in his chair now, his long robe crushing against his spine. "And you will see to that," he commented, watching the other with half-hooded eyes. "Only keep this in mind, my Chancellor, it is with me you rise—or fall—" What he might have added to that was lost as the black creature on Vazul's shoulder suddenly leaped with a speed and agility which carried her near across the room. The Chancellor wheeled to watch her, and his hand was already on the hilt of the dagger in his belt sheath. Ssssaaa made straight for the darkly paneled wall and reared against that, digging claws into the age-old wood, the usual hissing cry she uttered rising to a high note. It took but three strides for Vazul to reach that panel, for the Duke to get to his feet, tearing at the fastening of his state cloak to free himself from its hampering folds. The Chancellor's hands sought hidden releases. For a moment they faced only a dark hole, but into that darted Ssssaaa and Vazul, blade bared now in his hand, followed. Then, as the Duke approached the same opening, he heard an exclamation of pain only a little louder than a moan. 100 Vazul's back was now once more in the doorway as he retreated into the room, his hands no longer holding steel but rather drawing after him a body which struggled a little as if it would throw off that clutch. Stretching his catch on the floor the Chancellor hastened to reclose the door, while Uttobric stooped over the man who was struggling to sit up but subsided with a gritting of teeth. "You were followed?" the Duke demanded, glancing at that strip of paneling and then back again. "I lay there—" The other's voice was a thread of sound. "There was no one following." "Nor would there be." Vazul near elbowed the Duke out of the way as he knelt in turn, one hand sending the wounded man flat on his back before he busied himself with loosening a greasy, latched jerkin and was able to pull it back and away from the other's left shoulder. Ssssaaa had crouched by the man's head and with forepaws was patting sweat-stiffened hair. He they worked on closed his eyes and suddenly his head fell to one side. The Duke started back. "Dead?' he demanded. "Not yet." The Chancellor raised the rolling head a little and bent closer. "There is the stench—" "Poison!" Now the Duke backed away even farther. "It is often a trick of the night prowlers. But caught in time— We must not only save the Bat if we can but learn quickly what he struggled against death to bring us." "He can be saved?" Uttobric continued to stare down at the body as if he expected to see it crumble into nothingness before his eyes. "You have the knowledge?" Vazul shook his head. "Not I, Your Highness. But there is certainly one within Kronengred who can return him to life if any mortal can." The Duke was nodding. "The Herbmistress, yes." "However" the Chancellor said hastily a moment later, "we cannot leave him here—and tonight is the ball—before 101 that the feasting—at which we must both appear or there will be those who are overinterested as to why we are not. "The ball will draw the majority of the servants into the west wing." Vazul had now gotten the blood-stiffened shirt free and was loosening a swathing wad which had been stuffed in over the source of the blood flow. "There re- mains—Black Tower." The Duke plucked at his lower lip. "Yes there has not been one held there for half a century or more—not since Duke Rotonbric went raving mad. But how do we get him there?" "Only by the inner ways Your Highness. And I must have help to take him, since he is more weight than I can bear that far. Danerx—" The Duke stared at the man on the floor as if he wished him well away. "Danerx," he said slowly. "At least the man is loyal to me—or I would be dead long since." One side of his thin lip quirked upward. His robe tumbling after him, he went to the bell pull hanging on the far wall and gave two vigorous tugs. He need have no fear that Danerx, his valet, would not be just where he was supposed to be—two doors away, laying out the garments for both the feasting and the ball. What a deal of time one wasted in this dressing up for such occasions. Uttobric thought fleetingly that unfortunately there were going to be more of them until their plans bore fruit. The summons for Halwice came after dusk and secretly. Willadene heard only swift whispers at the back door as if the visitor must be gone as quickly as possible. Then the Herbmistress turned to the assembling of certain small boxes, flasks, and jars which she stowed away in a shoulder bag without a word of explanation. It was not until she was done and had reached for her cloak that she spoke at last. "There is dire need and no one must guess the reason. I am expecting a shipment from overseas tomorrow. You 102 will open the shop as usual and accept the packet—it is already paid for. If I am asked for, you may say that there is a difficult birthing and I was summoned in the night, you do not know where, nor when I shall return." She added nothing more, but Willadene was able to uess that it was not a birthing her mistress went to attend— she had noted only too well the choice of remedies, and most of them her recent learning equated with wounds. Go under the Star—" The girl did not think the woman even heard her, she slipped out of the back door so quickly. Willadene turned back to eat her bread and cheese. The city was not quiet tonight. Even shut within these walls she could hear the sounds of the crowds. There would be many in the wide square below the castle where there would be free ale and cakes—giving the citizens of Kronengred at least a taste of the feast and the grand ball in the fortress above. Also there would be much to see in the splendor of the arriving coaches bringing noble families to the gathering. Willadene looked around the room in which she sat. Let Her Grace Mahart have all the delicacies, the prancing to stately music, and the rest of the celebrations for her special day; she, Willadene, was entirely content with what she did have here and now. Halwice had not said when her precious packet was to arrive but when there had been no visit to the shop by First Night Bell, Willadene ceased to expect it. Any emergency which would take the Herbmistress away from her home must indeed be serious. Guesses were useless—if she were meant to know she would learn in time. She went to bed at the usual hour, leaving only the night lamp burning in case of Halwice's return, burrowing deep into the worn but lavender-scented coverlets of the trundle bed. It was not until her eyes grew heavy that her memory turned to Halwice's earlier play with the bowl and the candles. And, once she thought of that cleft in the rock and 103 what had raised proud head there, she tried to hold on to every detail memory supplied. Only, sleep came quickly. Halwice had not returned when Willadene awoke in the morning and now uneasiness awoke also. Yet she made herself carry out her duties in the same order she would have done had the Herbmistress been there. She had just taken down the shop shutters and made ready to open for business when a familiar voice hailed her. "Ha, Willa, how goes it?" Figis no longer wore the drab rags which had been his at the inn—but rather better clothing such as an apprentice in a small shop might have. He walked with something of a swagger. Though, Willadene noted, neither his bony hands nor his gaunt face was really clean. Well enough," the girl answered shortly. She had never considered any beneath Jacoba's roof ones to be trusted, and her earlier uneasiness was growing. "And the inn—" "Paugh!" He actually spat on the paving stones. "There have been changes there—the old sow does not oink very loudly anymore." Taking that coarse expression to refer to Jacoba, Willadene was interested enough to ask: "Jacoba no longer keeps the inn?" She had heard no such rumor, but sometimes facts outran even gossip. "It keeps her," he returned somewhat cryptically. "But where's the mistress? Here—I have a packet for her." He reached within the loosened lacing of his jerkin and pulled out one of those familiar squares so well fastened up in oiled silk. "She was called to a birthing," Willadene answered promptly, "but she told me that a shipment was expected and to take it in." He eyed her narrowly, turning what he held around in his hand as if he were in two minds about relinquishing it. "Don't know 'bout that. Wyche—" He stopped short as if that name had been a warning. "He who sent me said 104 nothin' about givin' this to anyone save the mistress. But then he also said he'd have me ears offen my head did I not do as he told me. Wyche— Jacoba is afeared of him and there are others that come—maybe for orders." Figis grinned. "Seems like he's taken a shine to me. Don't have to go luggin' in greasy pans no more I don't!" He moved closer to Willadene. "I've learned a lot jus' listenin' around. The Duke, he ain't as safe as he thinks he is—parading 'round like a cock an' showin' off his daughter. There's them as may bring him to heel jus' like that!" He shifted the packet to one hand and snapped his fingers. "You know what they're sayin' now—that young Lord Barbric has caught Her Grace's eye. She led off with him at the ball last night and then never danced no more. She marries him and we'd see a might lot of changes hereabouts. And me, I'm gonna be ready for the pickin's—that I promise you. Oh, well, take this— I got me other important busi- ness- He thrust the packet at her and strode off, his thin legs trying to hold the important thud of a district guard but falling far short of that. Willadene missed that exit, for she was staring down at the packet. This was—evil—veiled but there. She certainly had not forgotten the trap in which she had found the Herbmistress and the Chancellor's man many days ago. Was this another such—something wrong to be planted among Halwice's supplies and then discovered to the hurt of her mistress? The oiled covering felt slimy to her fingers, and she wanted to rid herself of it speedily. But she had no intention of storing it anywhere within the shop. Who knows—it might even be a source of contamination. She swiftly sought the herb garden, stopping only to snatch up some garlic. Weaving broken bits of that about the packet she placed it on the ground on the barren spot 105 where they spread the ashes each morning and snapped over it a flowerpot, pressing that down well into the ground. This proved to be a busier day than was usual and she had a steady stream of customers—some housewives seeking cooking herbs, the up-nosed maids and waiting women from the castle in search of cosmetic supplies as if the rigors of the forenight's ball had depleted such to an alarming degree. There were a number of inquiries for Halwice, but Willadene could detect that no one seemed dissatisfied with the reason she gave for the Herbmistress's absence. At the back of her mind was always that potted menace behind the shop, but no guard came marching for a search and gradually she relaxed. Halwice would know how to deal with it—she only wished that her mistress would return. It was not until dusk gathered in that she did come. Her bag was no longer slung over her shoulder and her face was white and strained. Nor was she alone. By his stride and stance he was a guardsman, perhaps even an underofficer, but he was soberly dressed like any merchant. Willadene hurried to reheat the kettle, prepared the herb tea she knew that Halwice found sustaining. While she worked she could feel her mistress watching her. The guard remained by the door as unmoving as if he were on duty in the castle. "That which was to come—" Halwice spoke slowly as if she found even the formation of words an effort. Willadene paused, teapot in hand. Certainly she must not speak in front of this stranger. She made her choice quickly. 'Tt has come and is planted" she said deliberately looking straight into Halwice's tired eyes, "as you wished in the special ashed ground." It seemed to the girl that there was a spark deep in the Herbmistress's eyes. But Halwice nodded as if she perfectly 06 understood. She took up her filled cup with both hands as if too weak to risk a single hold. "Now—there is little time. Take fresh underclothing and your other dress. Also the book third from the right on the shelf. I cannot any longer be away from here, but there will be a heavy trust placed on you. Remember well your gift and use it at all times. The one you must nurse is sore hurt—but he is still with us. He must remain so if we can at all will it, by the aid of the Star. You will go with this guard—" She nodded toward the man who had not spoken. "Obey him, for it is his duty to get you safely to your goal. I have left instructions for you with the one now there. erhaps— by tomorrow—enough will be resolved that I can see you again. This is true duty, child, and perhaps you are over young to assume it—but there is no other choice." Completely bewildered Willadene hurried to bundle up her scanty possessions, and the last she saw of Halwice, the Herbmistress was standing by the door watching them cross the garden. 107 8 , Maat a ack ON te pillows of the wide bed and stretched her toes. She was well aware that sunlight was laying stripes across her from an opening in the heavy curtains, but she felt no desire to pull herself out of this slothful ease right now, though she had been well aware for some time of purposefully soft comings and goings beyond the privacy of the curtained bed itself. Looking back it seemed to her now that several twenty days of living had been thickly packed between first ball and the promised events, and whenever she tried to sort out a clear memory it slid inexorably into another. If yesterday was an example of what was going to be demanded of her as to continued patience in the future, she was dubious she could measure up. Then two faces loomed out of her muddled recall— Vazul—what did he really want of her? She was well aware that his private meetings with her in the immediate past had been in the nature of schooling. Though he had not skimmed far below the surface in any of his accounts of this or that to do with the ducal court, he gave one the impression—perhaps deliberately, Mahart thought now, pursing her lips—that there were darkish depths and traps to be avoided. He need give her no warnings concerning the High Lady Saylana (and had not, except a dry comment or so). Since Mahart had been a small child she had been well aware of 109 the chasm between that one and her father. She made a face now. Yes, she had led the first dance at the ball with Barbric. He did not quite have two left feet but sometimes in one of the stately figures they had walked through so pompously, he had given the impression that that misfortune was his. And his hand—she now wiped hers swiftly back and forth across a fold of the sheet—its disgusting warmth and softness was not what one would accept joyfully. She did recall seeing Vazul once watching her as she turned and minced the small trotting steps of the figure. She wished at first that the Chancellor would be more open with her—and then decided it was better that he kept his own counsel. At least now. But the second figure which she remembered so clearly—the woman among the town council as stately as any noble lady of the court—the Herbmistress. Mahart had not quite summoned up the courage to invite her to the castle to learn more of her and her wares—though she believed that it might indeed be practical to do so. Yet— Mahart sat up, pushed away the covering, and set her hand to that crack between the bed curtains through which the sun was coming. She had no idea as yet just how much power she might hold—whom she could send on an errand or demand service from. But that she would meet Halwice sooner or later she was sure. The sight of her fingers on the edge of the curtain must have been a signal, as it was pulled quickly back and she looked out upon what seemed to her an unwonted crowd of people, all facing her, as if it was now her will to set them in motion for the day. Julta still stood holding the curtain she had drawn back but at the same time managing a curtsey of sorts. And there was Zuta, a bright note in this time-dark room in her favorite yellow. Beyond her were those two noble misfits who had attended her on that first court appearance. She was completely bored by their company and only Vazuls suggestion that their presence among her retinue might have no some purpose led her to continue to greet them each morning with the smiling mask she assumed at the drawing of the bed curtains. "A fair day and may the Star favor you." She repeated the formal greeting, thus giving permission to all of them to be about their assigned duties, such as they were. The Ladies Pamina and Geuverir made a bustling business of escorting her to the screens about the bath accepting the night robe she tossed to them. Julta, however gave no play of any new awesome service as she stood ready with the big towel and waited for Mahart to draw on drawers and underchemise. There was a war of scents in the room now: that remaining incense which had burned out during the night, the herbs steeped in the bath, and those less strident odors from the clean linen in which she clothed herself. She could hear the whispering of Famina and Geuverir, but noted that, as always, Zuta kept apart from those two. What they were whispering about she could guess. Though they had not been friends when first assigned to her service they had bonded quickly, mainly because of a common interest—men. And she knew that both, having been betrothed properly from childhood, were eager to become mistresses of their own establishments, peevishly eager at times. Mahart had asked Zuta why these bridal festivities had not rid her of the two. Zuta had shrugged and declared that in the case of the Lady Famina, it was a matter of dowry—that the father of her lord-to-be was avid for a certain strip of territory to add to his own holdings with the bride's arrival. And there were still negotiations for the Lady Geuverir in progress. However, this morning it was not men that the ladies were discussing. It was ghosts! Catching a word or two, Mahart was intrigued enough to summon them closer as Julta brushed and braided her hair. Of course there were parts of the castle, as Mahart herself well knew/ wihin which the air seemed to enfold one in an 111 ominous, smothering way. And there were innumerable tales of this or that past dignitary (usually one who had lost his or her head through crossing ducal authority) who had been seen pacing some corridor during the hours of darkness. However, the new manifestations apparently had to do with lights, and, though she was hearing the tale about thirdhand, there were two separate tales, yet similarities in both. The ball had lasted until dawn, and she herself had been so sleepy by its ending that she wanted no more than to find her bed and tumble into it. However, others had more nighthawk blood than she—or else were engaged in such dalliance as they must seek less open ways. And so the reports— " Tis the Black Tower, Your Grace." There was a quiver in Lady Geuverir's voice. "They have always said that it has been cursed ever since the mad Duke Rotonbric hung himself there with a curtain rope." "Yes," chimed in Lady Famina. "The Lady Horsetha— with her own eyes she saw this thing all in white moving along. Guardsman Kylow, he challenged, and the thing disappeared straight into the wall." Mahart raised a small smile. "The Lady Horsetha, she is, I believe, married—but not to a guardsman." Lady Famina flushed, and she was not one on whom any form of a blush was an attraction. "They were heated Your Grace—and went into the open passage for a breath of air. But it is true— Lady Horestha came back shaking so Guardsman Kylow had to support her on her feet. And she swooned again later when Lord Margrave told what he had seen." "Which was?" Mahart accepted the mirror Julta held ready so that she could inspect her back hair before the maid pinned on the shoulder-length veil which was now another hampering bit of her life. "Well—" Lady Famina tittered, and it was Lady Geuverir's turn to redden as her more talkative companion continued. "There was much drinking, you understand Your Grace—" 112 "And he sought a garderobe," returned Mahart impatiently. "But why in that direction—? And it was her turn to blush. Gentlemen—men—were not always so particular in such matters. "Well and what did he see?" "Two huge black figures Your Grace. They came out of the night as if they were pulled from some other world, and then went up the passage. There was a greenish light—a death light—" Lady Famina was now enjoying her own fears. "And they went into the wall also!" "I suppose His Highness's guard finally arrived?" Mahart commented. "And what did they find?" "Nothing." Lady Famina paused as if summoning breath to enhance the force of her report. "Nothing—only that door as was barred and sealed after they brought out the mad Duke's body." Mahart fingered a frosted bottle. She did not believe in specters, she told herself sternly. However, she was sure that she would find good reason not to visit the Black Tower was she ever invited to do so—and had any choice in the matter. No—Breath of Lilies was too exquisite to be wasted on any but a state occasion. She opened a cream-filled jar instead, sniffed at the invigorating scent she had so released, and delicately swept fingertips behind her ears and down the line of her throat. Ghosts in the castle? she wondered. What would Vazul have to say to that now? Willadene had always been so close quartered in the inn and Halwice had kept her so busy in the shop that she did not know this part of Kronengred. Halwice did not deliver her products—her customers came to her. And although those visitors formed a goodly cross section of the old city the girl had heard names of streets, noble houses, and the like with no idea where such might be. She kept close to her silent guard, even more so when they ran into merrymakers on their way home, steady or unsteady, the last of the revelers of the day before. Willa- 113 dene found herself elbowed close to the wall, the guard taking his position between her and any body of townsmen who passed. She had pulled the hood of her cloak down so far she could barely catch glimpses of the outside world from under its edging. The streets and alleys through which they went their way seemed to go on forever. As the night closed in only the decreed lamps lit above each doorway spread small pools of light between dwelling and dwelling. At least the guard matched his swinging stride to her own best pace, and twice his arm with a quick grasp saved her from a stumble— almost as if he had the talent for seeing through the dark. Above them loomed the castle, and they were drawing ever closer to that. The number of lighted windows in the upper walls marked out most of the outline of the building, and at the foot of the rise on which it stood there was much more light and comings and goings. However, her guide turned away abruptly from that and brought her into an alley so narrow she wondered if his wide shoulders did not brush the walls on either side. This was worse going, for here and there were refuse bins, primly kept out of sight from the passersby on the main streets. And it was before a large one of these, near the far end of the way, that he came to a stop so sudden she nearly ran into him. A snap light, shielded by hand, gave her a glimpse of a great tun, so large a one she wondered that any one man might move it. Yet it rolled easily aside when her companion laid a single hand on it. Willadene could see nothing but stone wall, but he did not look to that at all, rather stamped on the pavement where the tun had rested. Three times his heavy boot rose and fell. Then he crowded back, pushing her with him. There came no warning sound, but a square of the set stones dipped and was gone, leaving a black hole. For the first time he spoke. "There is a ladder, girl. Get you down quickly." However, it would seem that she was not about to 114 chance descent into total darkness, for there was now a faint low and she saw the ladder. Hampered by the full folds of her cloak and the bag she had slung over her shoulder by its carry cord, she did as he had bidden her. There was more light below, illuminating a very small section of a passage which assaulted her nose with a musty, earthy odor. Once they were both down the inner stair, the guard picked up the waiting lantern and started briskly on. She heard a soft thud behind her and guessed that that doorway had fallen shut to seal off this way. There came stairs, long steep series of them. She kept tight hold on a groove in the wall to her right, which must have been intended as a safety measure, though she did not think it really so. There were three such flights—each ending in a broad landing before the next began. At two such lanterns had been set, but the third staircase was something of a puzzle. In the first place, it was much narrower, ragged of edges with chips of stone lying on the floor as if it had been only recently cut. The stair leading upward was far narrower and her shoes stirred dust which arose to make her cough, even as her companion did. They came to a fourth landing, this very small, so that their bodies touched as they both reached it. The guard raised a fist, and the wan lantern light brought a gleam of answering metal shine—he was using the hilt of a belt knife to rap on the wall. Willadene smelled fresh oil and guessed that some longshut way must have been so coaxed to open. Then there was a fair burst of light. The guard's hand on her shoulder propelled her forward into the space beyond while he remained where he was. Before she could glance around she heard a snap of latch. But her head was up now, for her nose was busy reporting. Above the mustiness and dust of a long-unused room she could smell balms and remedies she was only too "5 familiar with and other odors also, not so pleasant but found in any close-kept chamber where there was illness. The man who arose from a chair to face her caught her attention first. He gave her no greeting, merely surveyed her from head to foot and back again. And all this time he played and petted with one hand a black-furred creature which curled about his lean throat above the splendid embroidery of his robe as might an extra fur collar. By the sight of that alone Willadene knew him and somehow forced her legs, trembling a little from that long climb, into a curtsey. "MTord Chancellor—" "Halwice stands hostage for our trust in you." He spoke abruptly. "She also says that you have talent to obey her orders and to keep a shut mouth." Willadene could not think of any answer to that, but she knew a spark of pleasure that the Herbmistress rated her so. "You have one to tend, and the tending must be of the best." He turned away, crooking a finger as he did so. Now she could see the bed, like a huge cavern, draped with curtains resembling the thickest clouds of night. But it was not about that that a row of lamps had been stationed. Rather, resting much closer to the floor and easier to reach, was a trundle bed such as she herself now used. On it was stretched a body. Now and then a hand arose to push impatiently at the covering. But in the face turned toward hers the eyes were closed as if he slept. Nicolas! What trap had caught him this time? she wondered. He seemed a singularly ill-fated young man. "There." The Chancellor again summoned her full attention, pointing to a small side table on which lay several sheets of much finer paper than Halwice usually used. However they were covered by the even lines of her mistress's script. "Those are your orders. There remains only this—" He paused and was eye-measuring her again. "Should he regain consciousness and is able to speak"—now he went 116 beyond her to the wall and twitched a bell pull into full sight—"you will use this at once. Do you understand?" Willadene nodded. For the past few moments there had been an interruption to her full attention. She had become aware of a new scent, thin, hardly to be picked up among the many others here, yet somehow, she knew, of importance. Her eyes dropped from the Chancellor's to that animated fur collar and another set of eyes met hers— Here was no evil—the tales in the city about Vazul's companion creature were belied. But the creature was far more than any pet. And having once picked up that scent she knew it was one that she would never forget. "Do you understand?!" There was impatience in the man's voice, she realized, that she had not replied quickly enough. "Yes, m'lord. If he—" she nodded toward the uneasy sleeper "—wakes, and if he speaks—then I pull that loop." She sounded as dim-witted as a real scullery maid, but that did not matter. Let him think she was like any servant, and he would consider her no threat to him. "Here—" Now he moved on to a door. Raising his foot he cracked his boot toe against its lowest panel, and it swung outward under that force. "Water, food, aught else needed, can be delivered so. Leave a note on the tray if there is such need. There is oil for the lamps in the far corner—enough for a goodly time. Now—turn your back— draw your hood down!" So forceful was that order Willadene followed it at once. Nor was she surprised when she turned around to find herself alone in the chamber with the wounded man, though there was no means of exit she could account for, as she was standing between where he had been and that flapfurnished door. She shed her cloak and draped it with her bundle on a chair carved like a throne but with the velvet of its seat cushion faded to a dull gray. Her first task was Nicolas, of 117 course, though she was sure that Halwice would have never left him if he were still in danger. Under her hand his flesh felt overwarm, but with a wound some fever was to be expected. There were three bottes their dosage spoons fastened to them by wires, standing on the floor. She examined each in turn, recognizing it at once for what it was and how it must be used. Carefully she turned back the top bed cover to inspect the rolls of bandage which pillowed over his shoulder and well down his chest on the right side. There was no need as yet to interfere with those carefully wound bands. Willadene could smell the soporific Halwice had administered. Which left her two things to do. First, she would read the instructions her mistress had left. They were indeed familiar, having only one or two points of which Willadene had not already aided Halwice in using. There was an hour lamp burning, and when the marking reached the proper point she was to rouse her charge far enough to get another spoonful from one of the bottles into him. Having made sure she understood what she was to do, the girl now was determined to explore this prison. For that she was a prisoner kept here for the duties her mistress had set upon her she well knew. Taking up one of the smaller lamps Willadene began a circuit of the room, first keeping the four walls as her guide. Two of those walls were curved, and she judged that this chamber was part of a tower. There were long narrow windows, but they had beeii bricked up and generations of spiders had built webs across them. The furniture must once have been very fine, equal, she believed, to that which might be found in the Duke's own chamber. But it was dulled with dust and showed signs of woodworm visitation. She had made her circuit and returned certain that any entrance to this room must be fully secret, even as the way she had been brought here. 18 Still unsatisfied, for the second time she made this circuit, this time feverishly calling upon what Halwice declared to be her special gift, trying to find some scent of evil as had filled the shop at her first meeting with Nicolas or had always hung about Wyche and his close companions. But nothing save the scent of healing herbs answered her. She was certain that the Herbmistress would never have lent her knowledge to the use of evil, and she also knew from watching Nicolas and Halwice together on the few occasions the young man had appeared at the shop, that there was friendship or at least a bond of some sort between them. A tapping brought her to that closed door in time to see the flap at the bottom being pulled back and a tray pushed through. However before she could stoop to take it up and perhaps catch some glimpse of who had delivered it, the flap fell again, striking the edge of the tray and jarring it farther into the room. There were several covered dishes—silver dishes such as might have been lifted from any nobles table—and a pile of folded linen, yellowed by age but clean. Willadene removed this to a footstool not too far from her charge and seated herself cross-legged beside it. Perhaps it was the rich aroma wafted into the varied smells of the room which aroused Nicolas. For his head turned and she saw his eyes, hard as usual fixed upon her. There were no signs of the confusion of fever about that stare and she believed that he was fully aware of who she was. Soup—" She balanced the bowl she had uncovered on one hand and with the other reached for an ornately handled spoon. He frowned and again turned his head slowly, apparently taking in all he could see of what was about him. "Where?" His one-word question came faint and hoarse. Willadene shook her head. Somewhere in the castle. 119 But I was brought here by hidden ways and cannot tell you more. It was by my mistress's bidding!" she finished defiantly as his frown seemed to grow the blacker. She was remembering the Chancellor's instructions— were Nicolas to regain his senses she must summon aid. Well enough, but it was also plain that the man stretched before her was fighting to keep those same senses and he needed strength to do so. She could give him one of the potions Halwice had left, but the effect of that would be only temporary and the food she now held might do him more good at present. She hitched herself closer and dipped the spoon into the fragrant broth. "Eat!" She tried to make her voice as commanding as Halwices could be. Even so, she was secretly surprised when he opened his mouth and allowed her to spoon the stuff into it. Five spoonfuls later he shut his lips firmly in refusal. "Vazul—" He opened them again only to utter that name. Willadene crossed to the length of bell cord and gave a vigorous jerk before she returned, this time to indeed take up one of the waiting bottles and measure out a half spoonful. "It gives strength." She pushed it at that obstinately closed mouth. His eyes offered her neither welcome nor thanks, but he allowed her to carefully spoon the potion into him. "Ssssaaa—" Luckily he had taken the last drop of that mixture before that hiss startled the girl. Padding across the floor into the fuller light which rimmed the trundle bed came Vazuls creature, the first time she had seen it apart from the Chancellor. It haunched itself into a part ball, so that its fore body was well above the time-webbed carpets on the floor its head high as if it sniffed in search of some warning scent. So plain was that action to Willadene that she found herself doing likewise. 120 There were odors in plenty but most of them innocuous and familiar ones. Her attention had been so fastened on the creature that she was again startled when Vazul loomed out of nowhere into the light. The heavily ornamented and bedizened robe he generally wore was gone and he had instead a plain, much less impressive garment of a dark gray—not unlike that of a working merchant. "Nicolas?" He paid no attention to Willadene, and she had to scramble out of his way as he came forward to kneel beside the trundle bed. There was a weak smile on that drawn face, and the eyes looking up no longer pierced like sword points. "The same, lord Chancellor," Nicolas's answer was clear but hardly more than a whisper. "They did not get me this time either—" Vazul's hands moved and, with a gentle skill Willadene would not have thought possible in the stiff, reserved man, the Chancellor lifted the other a little and held him supported on one arm while he patted bed linen into a support. "Ssssaaa—" His creature leaped upward on the bed, darting forward to insert its narrow head under Nicolas's limp hand. "No," Vazul said with some of his customary dryness of speech, "you will still live to play games, boy. But no luck holds forever. You were found in the passage—" "At least not in an alley." Perhaps it was a laugh the younger man attempted, but it came forth as a croak. "It was city slinkers who brought me down—and waiting ones." "Soooo—" The sound the Chancellor made was not far from his creature's hiss. "But what news do you bring?" It was as if for the moment he pushed aside one subject to concentrate on another. "The best—for our purposes. Prince Lorien chaffs for a fight—he was never one interested in the hunting ... of animals. He was provided with a guide and certain informa- 121 tion. By your look, m'lord, no news has come yet, but I would swear it is on its way. I do not think that the Prince, having his tail tweaked after a fashion, will be bound by any boundaries. That is wild country and easy to cross from the kingdom where no highway posts stand." Vazul smiled now, stiffly as if such a change of feature did not come easily. His Highness will be well pleased," he commented. "And this Prince, what can you tell of him?" "Young, hot of blood, needing occupation." But Nicolas's voice was dwindling, and Willadene gave a quick glance to the time lamp on the table and dared to interrupt. "My lord, it is time for a potion. See, he exhausts himself—" There were beads of sweat now soaking the fringe of dark curls across the wounded mans forehead. "Well done"—as if he had not heard Willadene, though she was very certain that he had. Vazul's hand smoothed the cover lightly over that bandaged body. His creature seemed to take that as a signal and darted to that arm, curling up to the Chancellor's shoulder. "I think"—now Vazul did face the girl—"that I leave you in good hands. Halwice has gone hostage for this one." "I would—" Nicolas tried to move, to raise himself a little. It was Vazul who pushed him back. "Heal, Bat. Your flights are certainly not yet ended. Give him the potion, girl, and see that he sleeps." She was already at the table for that and was aware only of a slight passage of air through the room but turned to find the Chancellor gone. Nicolas eyed what she brought balefully. "How long do I lie here—" His voice quivered as if he was having some difficulty in speaking at all. Willadene held the very small cup to his lips. "As long as my mistress thinks it well and proper." She was having the last word after all, for his eyes were already closing. 122 LONQ tefoe Vn fist MON- ing bell, while the night still held grasp on the four portals to Kronengred, there were travelers heading toward the northern gate—and certainly no ordinary march of a merchant caravan or the pounding of some messenger. There was one horse between the two of them, and yet neither rode. The horse itself moved with hanging head and there was a rime of dried sweat on its thin flanks. To the right of the clearly near-spent animal trudged a man in border mail and helm, a blood-darkened badge on the sleeve covering the arm he used to hold reins looped once about the saddle horn by which he urged the mount forward. His companion was in much worse case, head hanging so that his chin near touched his breast, his lower face a mask of dried blood as he snorted for breath through a smashed nose. Instead of mail he wore a jacket of brinehardened leather, and he certainly lacked both the sword slapping now and then against the other's thigh or any other sign of weapon. His matted hair was gray-white with dust, and twice only the support of the horse to which his hands had been lashed kept him on his feet when he stumbled. "Holla—the gate!" The voice was husky but the border guard managed to gain the attention he wanted. A lantern swung down from a beam overhead to more fully reveal the wayfarers. "Who goes?" 123 "Vacher of the Hawk Liners—with a prisoner." There was some mumbling from aloft and a wait during which the prisoner would have gone to his knees save for the support of the horse. Then words reached them. " Tis Vacher right enough, served with him on the Burges route, I did. Let the man in, dolt—can't you see he is fair done?" They did not throw open the great gate but from the postern to the side there emerged light of a kind. A knife sawed through the cords which held the prisoner and he fell, lumpish face downward, while a flask was pushed into his captor's hand. Two more lantern bearers pushed their way to the scene, one of them wearing the slant bar of an underofficer on his helm. "Wot you got here!" He came to the point at once, giving the body on the ground a prod with boot toe. The border guard finished his drink. "That there's maybe something as the Cap'n will be glad to set eye on. Raider—" Two of the men in that small group snarled, and one went as far as to half draw his sword. "A raider," Vacher continued, "as may know something as should be shared with honest men—such as why me an' Samnnel an' Jas' was ambushed like they knew we was comin'. The Hawker, he couldn't spare no more men and me, he knew I was woodsranger for Lord Gerorigius a'fore he took and died, so I had the best chance maybe to get through. What I did—an' wi' him along, too." But suddenly he tottered and would have fallen in turn had he not been caught by the man now beside him. "Get 'im in," commanded the underofficer, "and have the set bones to 'im. See this other is all properly tight also." Once more he indicated the subject of this order with a kick to the inert body. "I'm for the Cap'n—trust he's back from 24 patrol. Big doin's in the city las night and we was called out special. They obeyed orders with th snap of well-drilled men. But so intent were they on thos very orders that they did not note a shadow lying belly fl on ground arm over face to better conceal its pale curse. When one of the guards caught hand in the prisoers irop of hair and pulled up his head and one of his fellows swung a lantern closer to the blood-soaked face, the shadc tensed. But it continued to lie where it had stationed itslf at the first sound of the newcomers until the whole of th« party passed back through the postern gate—and tor a ner of counted breaths afterward. When the skulker moved a last, it was to squirm on belly back along the wal for vhat was equal to several strides and then, on hands and