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Authors: Katherine Kurtz

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BOOK: Deryni Checkmate
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At the north of the city, the archbishop’s palace was likewise under siege from the storm. In the shadow of palace walls, the massive nave of Saint George’s Cathedral loomed dark against the blackening sky, stubby bell tower thrust brazenly heavenward, bronze doors sealed tightly against the onslaught. Leather-cloaked household guards patrolled the ramparts of the palace proper, collars and hoods muffled close against the cold and wet. Torches hissed and flared under sheltered eaves along the battlements as the storm raged and howled and chilled to the bone.
Inside, the Lord Archbishop of Rhemuth, the Most Reverend Patrick Corrigan, was snug and warm. Standing before a roaring fireplace, pudgy hands extended toward the flames, he rubbed his hands together briskly to further warm them, then pulled his fur-lined robes more closely around him and padded on slippered feet to a writing desk on the opposite side of the room. There, another man also wearing episcopal purple was poring over a document close-penned on a curling sheet of velum, squinting in the light of two yellow candles on the desk before him. Half a dozen candle sconces spaced around the rest of the room made a feeble attempt to further banish the gloom encroaching from the darkness outside. A youngish-looking priest-secretary hovered attentively over the man’s left shoulder with another light, ready to apply red sealing wax when he was told to do so.
Corrigan peered over the reader’s right shoulder and watched as the man nodded, picked up a quill, and scrawled a bold signature at the foot of the document. The secretary dripped molten wax beside the name, and the man calmly imprinted the wax with his amethyst seal of office. He breathed on the stone and polished it against his velvet sleeve, then looked up at Corrigan and replaced the ring on his finger.
“That should take care of Morgan,” he said.
Edmund Loris, Archbishop of Valoret and Primate of All Gwynedd, was an impressive-looking man. His body was lean and fit beneath the rich violet cassock he wore, and the fine silvery hair formed a wispy halo effect around the magenta skullcap covering his clerical tonsure.
The bright blue eyes were hard and cold, however. And the gaunt hawk face was anything but beneficent at the moment. For Loris had just affixed his seal to a document that would shortly cause Interdict to fall upon a large portion of Royal Gwynedd: Interdict that would cut off the rich Duchy of Corwyn to the east from all sacraments and solace of the Church in the Eleven Kingdoms.
It was a grave decision, and one to which both Loris and his colleague had given considerable thought in the past four months. For in all fairness, the people of Corwyn had done nothing to warrant so extreme a measure as Interdict. But nor, on the other hand, could the true cause of the measure be ignored or tolerated any longer. An abhorrent situation had existed and continued to exist within the archbishops’ jurisdiction, and it must be stamped out.
Hence, the prelates salved their consciences with the rationalization that the threat of Interdict was not, after all, directed against the people of Corwyn, but against one man who was impossible to reach in any other way. It was Corwyn’s master, the Deryni Duke Alaric Morgan, who was the object of sacerdotal vengeance tonight. Morgan, who had repeatedly dared to use his blasphemous and heretical Deryni powers to meddle in human affairs and corrupt the innocent, in defiance of Church and State. Morgan, who had initiated the boy-king Kelson into the forbidden practice of that ancient magic and loosed a duel of necromancy in the cathedral itself at Kelson’s coronation last fall. Morgan, whose half-Deryni ancestry doomed him to eternal torment and damnation in the Hereafter unless he could be persuaded to recant, to give up his powers and renounce his evil heritage. Morgan, around whom the entire Deryni question now seemed to hinge.
Archbishop Corrigan frowned and picked up the parchment, his bushy, grizzled brows knitting together in a single line as he scanned the text once more. He pursed his lips and scowled as he finished reading, but then he folded the document with a decisive crackle and held it flat on the desk while his secretary applied wax to the overlap. Corrigan sealed it with his ring, but his hand toyed uneasily with the jeweled pectoral cross on his chest as he eased himself into a chair beside Loris.
“Edmund, are you sure we—” He halted at Loris’s sharp glance, then remembered that his secretary was still awaiting further instructions.
“That will be all for the moment, Father Hugh. Please ask Monsignor Gorony to step in, if you would.”
The priest bowed and left the room, and Corrigan leaned back in his chair with a sigh.
“You know that Morgan will never permit Tolliver to excommunicate him,” Corrigan said wearily. “Besides, do you really think the threat of Interdict will stop him?” Technically, Duke Alaric Morgan did not fall within the jurisdiction of either archbishop, but both were hopeful that the letter on the table would shortly circumvent that small technicality.
Loris made a steeple of his fingers and gazed across at Corrigan evenly. “Probably not,” he admitted. “But his people may. Rumor has it that dissidents in northern Corwyn even now are preaching the overthrow of their Deryni duke.”
“Humph!” Corrigan snorted derisively, picking up a quill pen and dipping it into a crystal inkwell. “What good can a handful of rebels hope to do against Deryni magic? Besides, you know that Morgan’s people love him.”
“Yes, they do—for now,” Loris agreed. He watched as Corrigan began carefully inscribing a name on the outside of the letter they had written, watched with a hidden smile as the tip of his colleague’s tongue followed each stroke of the rounded uncials. “But will they love him as well, once the Interdict falls?”
Corrigan looked up sharply from his finished handiwork, then vigorously sanded the wet ink with pounce from a silver shaker and blew away the excess.
“And what of the rebel band then?” Loris continued insistently, eyeing his companion through narrowed lids. “They say that Warin, the rebel leader, believes himself to be a new messiah, divinely appointed to rid the land of the Deryni scourge. Can you not see how such zealousness could be made to work to our advantage?”
Corrigan pulled at his lower lip in concentration, then frowned. “Are we to permit self-appointed messiahs to go gallivanting around the countryside without proper supervision, Edmund? This rebel movement smacks of heresy to me.”
“I’ve given no official sanction yet,” Loris said. “I’ve not even met this Warin fellow. But you must admit that such a movement could be highly effective, were it given proper guidance. Besides”—Loris smiled—“perhaps this Warin
is
divinely inspired.”
“I doubt it.” Corrigan scowled. “How far do you propose to pursue the matter?”
Loris leaned back in his chair and folded his hands across his waist. “The rebel headquarters is reputed to be in the hills near Dhassa, where the Curia meets later this week. Gorony, whom we send to Corwyn’s bishop, has been in touch with the rebels and will return to Dhassa when he finishes his current assignment. I hope to arrange a meeting with the rebel leader then.”
“And until then, we do nothing?”
Loris nodded. “We do nothing. I do not want the king to know what we are planning, and—”
A discreet knock at the door heralded the arrival of Corrigan’s secretary and an older, nondescript-looking man in the traveling garb of a simple priest. Father Hugh lowered his eyes and bowed slightly as he announced the newcomer.
“Monsignor Gorony, Your Excellency.”
Gorony strode to Corrigan’s chair and dropped to one knee to kiss the archbishop’s ring, then rose at Corrigan’s signal, to wait attentively.
“Thank you, Father Hugh. I believe that will be all for tonight,” Corrigan said, starting to wave dismissal.
Loris cleared his throat, and Corrigan glanced in his direction.
“The suspension we spoke of earlier, Patrick? We had agreed that the man must be disciplined, had we not?”
“Oh, yes, of course,” Corrigan murmured. He rummaged briefly among the papers piled at one corner of the desk, then extracted one and pushed it across the desk to Hugh.
“This is the draft of a writ of summons I need as soon as possible, Father. When the official document is drawn up, please return it for my signature.”
“Yes, Excellency.”
As Hugh took the paper and headed for the door, Corrigan took up the sealed document and returned his attention to Gorony.
“Now, this is the letter you’re to deliver to Bishop Tolliver. I’ve a barge waiting to take you to the Free Port of Concaradine, and from there you can take ship with one of the merchant fleets. You should be in Corwyn within three days.”
Father Hugh de Berry frowned as he closed the door to the archbishop’s study and started down the long, torch-lined corridor toward his chancery office. It was cold and damp, and the corridor was drafty. Hugh shivered and clasped his arms across his chest as he walked, debating what he should do.
Hugh was Patrick Corrigan’s personal secretary, and as such was privy to information not normally accessible to one of his comparative youth. He was an intelligent man, if not brilliant. And he had always been honest, discreet, and utterly loyal to the Church he served through the person of the archbishop.
Lately, though, his faith had been sorely shaken—at least his faith in the man he served. The letter he had copied for Corrigan this afternoon had helped to do that. And as he remembered, Hugh shivered again—this time, not from the cold.
Gwynedd was in danger. This had been apparent since King Brion fell at Candor Rhea last fall. It had been evident when Brion’s heir, the boy Kelson, had been forced to battle the evil Charissa for his throne but a few weeks later. And it had been painfully obvious whenever Morgan, the boy’s Deryni protector, had had to use his awesome powers to slow down the inevitable conflagration that all knew must follow on the heels of such events. And it
would
follow.
It was no secret, for example, that the Deryni tyrant Wencit of Torenth would plunge the kingdom into war by midsummer at latest. And the young king must certainly be aware of the unrest being generated in his kingdom by rising anti-Deryni sentiment. Kelson had begun to feel the brunt of that reaction ever since the disclosure of his own half-Deryni ancestry at the coronation last fall.
But now, with Interdict threatened for all of Corwyn . . .
Hugh pressed one hand against his chest where the original draft of Corrigan’s document now rested next to his skin. He knew that the archbishop would not approve of what he was about to do—in fact, would be furious if he found out—but the matter was too important for the king not to be made aware of it. Kelson must be warned.
If Interdict fell on Corwyn, Morgan’s loyalties would be divided at a time when all his energies were needed at the king’s side. It could fatally affect the king and also Morgan’s plans for the war effort. And while Hugh, as a priest, could hardly condone Morgan’s fearsome powers, they were nonetheless real and needed, if Gwynedd was to survive the onslaught.
Hugh paused beneath the torch outside the chancery office door and began to scan the letter in his hand, hoping the copy could be entrusted to one of his subordinates. Skipping over the archbishop’s standard salutation for such documents, he gasped as he read the name of the addressee, then forced himself to reread it: Monsignor Duncan Howard McLain.
Duncan!
Hugh thought to himself.
My God, what has he done?
Duncan McLain was the king’s confessor, and Hugh’s own boyhood friend. They had grown up together, gone to school together. What could Duncan possibly have done to incur such action?
Knitting his brows together in consternation, Hugh cast his gaze over the text, his apprehension increasing as he read.
“. . . summarily suspended and ordered to present yourself before our ecclesiastical court . . . give answer as to why you should not be censured . . . your part in the scandals surrounding the king’s coronation November last . . . questionable activities . . . consorting with heretics . . .”
My God,
Hugh thought, unwilling to go on,
he’s been tainted by Morgan, too. I wonder if he knows anything about this.
Lowering the paper, Hugh made his decision. Obviously, he must go to the king first. That had been his original intention, and the matter was of kingdom-wide importance.
But then he must find Duncan and warn him. If Duncan submitted himself to the archbishop’s court under the present circumstances, there was no telling what might happen. He could even be excommunicated.
Hugh shuddered at that and crossed himself, for the threat of excommunication was, on a personal level, as terrible as Interdict was for a geographical area. Both cut off the transgressor from all sacraments of the Church and all contact with God-fearing men. It must not come to that for Duncan.
Composing himself, Hugh pushed open the chancery door and walked calmly to a desk where a monk was sharpening a quill pen.
“His Excellency needs this as soon as possible, Brother James,” he said, casually placing the document on the desk. “Will you take care of it, please? I have a few errands to do.”
“Certainly, Father,” the monk replied.
CHAPTER TWO
“I am the son of the wise, the son of ancient kings.”
ISAIAH 19:11
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
“MORE venison, Sire?”
The red-liveried squire kneeling beside Kelson of Gwynedd offered him a steaming platter of venison in gravy, but the young king shook his head and pushed his silver trencher aside with a smile. His crimson tunic was open at the neck, his raven head bare of any royal ornament, and he had hours ago discarded his wet boots in favor of soft scarlet slippers. He sighed and stretched his legs closer to the fire, wiggling his toes contentedly as the squire removed the venison and began to clear the table.
BOOK: Deryni Checkmate
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