Authors: E.C. Ambrose
Another festival. Dear God, what could Brigit mean by it? She summoned them all to witnessâwhat? Something more dangerous and divisive than a French invasion. An event so devastating the mancers would accept her leadership to make it happen.
Something flickered in his vision, then more, and Elisha glanced up to find a flock of crows wheeling overhead. Thomas followed his gaze and crossed himself. They entered a cluster of houses and emerged again, reining in abruptly. Crows swirled before them, rank upon rank, a flurry surrounding the dark figure of a woman. Thomas swept his sword from its sheath, but Elisha stayed his hand.
“So, Barber, my brother Farus is dead.” She stalked out, head lowered, eyes flicking from one rider to the other.
“He betrayed Chanterelle to the necromancers, lady,” Elisha told her, his horse dancing as his fists tightened.
The crow-mistress bobbed her head, black garments ruffling. “We would've taken him ourselves.” She gave a sharp cry and clicked her mouth shut, the crows settling around them. “Despite his bitter flesh.” Her dark eyes focused on Thomas, and returned to Elisha. “They gather today, and we hope to be well-fed.” A crow on her shoulder bounced up and down.
Elisha took a deep breath, dodging the shimmering eyes of the thousand birds. “Will you help me, lady, and help your king?”
“No king of mine! Last we helped him, it was we who fell.” The crows screeched around her, and Elisha fought the urge to clamp his hands over his ears.
“She lent me the lives of her friends, to draw upon for healing you the night your brother died,” he told the king. “I was careless, and some of them died.”
Thomas nudged his mount a little nearer, inclining his head. “Mistress, please, thank your friends for their sacrifice. I would not wear the crown without your service.”
She swiveled her head, staring at him, and a thousand crows stared with her, sharp, black beaks and shining black eyes. Then, she gave herself a ruffling shake and stalked to Elisha's horse. “The evil ones, you've seen them? Show me.” She put out a hand knobbed with age and scarred by the grip of talons.
Elisha took her hand in his and remembered the mancers, each and every one that he had seen. Her eyes flicked this way and that, as if she looked upon a gallery of paintings, then she drew away, and gave that bob of her head. Another cry, and the crows took flight, spiraling up in the sky and flying in a black cloud toward London.
“What will they do?” Thomas asked softly as the crow-mistress let them pass.
“I've no ideaâbut I'll take any army at our back today.”
They came from the shadow of a church, its cross cast long and dark up the road before them. A party of soldiers blocked the way. Elisha nudged his horse into a gallop. “Stand aside, in the name of the king!”
“Halt!” one of them shouted, then fell back as they saw who followed.
“Be firm,” cried someone else in the ranks. “The king's bewitched!”
“Bewitched?” Thomas sharply reined up his horse. “Who dares suggest it?”
A thickly bearded man pushed through and lifted his chin. “His Grace, the Duke of Dunbury gave us orders, Your Majesty. Said you'd be under the devil's influence.” He tipped his head toward Elisha.
The man's presence felt at first, like nothing at all, an absence carved from the flow of life around him. But then the cold seeped through. A shade hung about him, echoing his movements, and Elisha stared, almost recognizing the ruined face.
“Your Majesty, this man is no ally,” Elisha said.
Thomas's gaze sharpened, but he made no reply, instead facing down the man before him. “My wife has planned this festival, and you would bar my way?” Despite his borrowed clothing, he sat tall and regal, glaring down with all the arrogance of his throne. Elisha's blood warmed at the sight of him.
“And him?” The cold wind blew, and the edges of a dead soul rippled around the mancer, flickering terror barely tamped down. “You want me to allow in your last wife's killer? Your Majesty, 'tis plain you're not thinking clear.”
The crowd of soldiers tightened, their eyes glinting white as their hands gripped spears and sword hilts. The mancer walked purposefully toward Elisha's horse, his hand already outstretched. He let the tattered edge of fear fly at his back, shaping the winds. The men stopped murmuring, their separate glows merged, carefully woven, their fear and anger directed at Elisha himself.
Elisha's horse danced a few paces back, eluding the hand set out to catch its head. “Do not touch the king,” Elisha whispered, sending the words upon an icy breeze of his own.
The mancer's eyes crinkled, just a little, into a smile only Elisha could feel. “Come, sir, we don't want any bloodshed upon this sacred day.”
“Well,” Thomas cut in, “if it's Randall who would prevent us, then take us to him. Let him explain himself to his liege-lord.”
“His Grace is on the way,” called out a breathless man at the back, and Elisha straightened in his saddle. Beyond the bulk of Saint Bartholomew's, the squat shape of Brigit's chapel stood in a sea of people, soldiers, barons and peasants alike. A party of men hurried up the road, swords at the ready.
Cold crackled against Elisha's awareness, and he dodged his horse back again, narrowly avoiding the mancer's grasp. A hand caught his leg on the other side.
“Hold him! Keep him!”
A smaller group of soldiers in the duke's livery surged forward, separating the horses, surrounding Elisha.
“Release him, I say!” Thomas shouted. “He's an innocent man!”
They unhorsed him instead, Elisha gathering his power as he fell. Kicking away the hands that tried to snatch him, Elisha scrambled to his feet, projecting the awful menace of his fury. He spun a circle and spotted the mancer backing away into the crowd. Elisha lunged after him, reaching through the deathly power that suffused them both.
Pressing his hat to his head, the mancer whirled back, sword in hand, its edge dull with old blood.
“Do you dare?”
Elisha spoke without words, sending the shock of his strength into the air and the earth.
A few of the soldiers drew back. “Captainâ” one of them ventured, but the mancer ignored him.
“Have at me, then. Show them the truth about you!” the mancer urged him even as he backed away, fetching up against the twitching leg of Thomas's mount.
“Your Majesty, the hat!” Elisha called.
Thomas reached out and snatched it from the mancer's head, eliciting a cry, first from the man, then from those around him as scraps of flesh still bloody tumbled from the woolen cap. Growling, the mancer snatched at it as the bewildered soldiers withdrew. Elisha felt a grim satisfaction, until his left eye saw the cold shards of Death penetrate the heat of Thomas's presence, and he realized his mistake. Thomas flung the thing away, but the talisman had already marked him.
The mancer turned, hand atop his head, still streaked with blood.
Thomas stared at his own hand, his face pale, and moved as if to wipe off the stain.
“Make way for his Grace, the Duke of Dunbury!” someone shouted.
Elisha shot forward, leaping onto the mancer even as the wind howled into his ears, the mancer reaching for Thomas through the blood that marked him. He set his fingers against the man's skin and summoned death. The mancer screamed.
His hands grappled with Elisha, tearing his borrowed tunic. A black shadow wrapped Elisha's arm, like a ferret up a lady's sleeve, and he sucked it inside, his lungs swelling with borrowed strength. The screaming stopped, or perhaps Elisha could no longer hear it for the mad snapping in his skull, his faithful hounds baying for more. Elisha rose from the body, and none now lay a hand upon him.
From his horse, Thomas gave a slight bow and said, “Your Grace. We've been expecting you.” He swallowed. His presence shivered with doubt and remembrance.
“How could you help him?” The duke's sword jutted up toward the king, as steady as his voice was not. “You know, you were there,” he gulped for breath. “How could you, after all of that?”
“Because Elisha is innocent of the crime you would kill him for.”
“Rosalynn's murder! Can't you even say the words?”
Elisha stood calm, watching the pink-faced duke confront his latest betrayer. Thomas slid down from his horse at last, his travel-worn boots hitting the dirt not far from the dead man's open eyes, rimed with frost, the same color as the clouds which moved in to obscure the sun. Thomas proclaimed Elisha's innocence while overlooking the body at his feet. To all those around him, Thomas looked like a fool, like the very worst kind of hypocrite, or, after all, a man bewitched, for how else could he defend such a murderer?
“Randall,” the king began softly, “you think that I've forgotten, but I have not. There is other evidence we have been blind to, evidence that it was the archbishop at the heart of this madness, and now Brigit has claimed his place. They've been trying to break our allegiances, to trap us each in our own grief and pain so that we did not see this day as it overtook us.”
“She fears him so greatly, and yourself, Your Majesty”âanother twist of the duke's lipsâ“that she set us here to guard against your arrival. Good God, man, what's he done to you?”
The stillness at Elisha's back, where a hundred soldiers shifted and stared, broke into muffled groans and curses. Before him, the duke's scowl wrenched briefly into a wince then returned again. His off-hand absently rested against his stomach and his sword-arm twitched.
“I do not wish to hurt you, Your Majesty,” he said through clenched teeth. “After the ceremony is over, then Father Osbert can set about to exorcise this devil from you.”
At another groan behind him, Elisha looked back. Several of the men held their stomachs, a few rubbed at their hands, blinking fiercely. “What's the matter, man?” demanded one of the few unaffected, a lad of perhaps seventeen years.
“I don't know. Too much drink. God, but it stings.” The soldier's brow furrowed.
“Can't you smell it?” said another, an older man, rubbing at his eyes. “Wind must've shifted. Somebody's fire's blowing in my face.” He coughed sharply. “Damn that smoke.”
Through the clear air, Elisha stared. Many of the soldiersâmost of the older onesâfidgeted with their hands, as the coughing spread, their eyes reddened, and their faces looked glossy.
His awareness flashed red-hot and Elisha whirled as the Duke slashed toward him. The blade arced toward his chest. Elisha's breath caught.
With a clang that shook his very teeth, a second sword struck away the first. Thomas's arm rigid, his blade stopped the point inches from Elisha's heart.
“If it's a fight you're after,” said the king, “then I am for you.”
The duke smothered a cough and gave his head a quick shake, tears glinting away from his face. “Don't make me kill you to see justice. I still believe you might be saved.”
“Then let patience master your grief, Randall, and listen to reason.” Thomas forced back the duke's blade, stepping between them, his body warming Elisha's. “You know all he's been through, all he's done in our behalf. If you can shake the horror of what happened to her, Randall, you'll know he would never have done it.”
Elisha studied the afflicted men around him, the duke included. “Thomas, it's beginning.”
His sharp blue eyes cut briefly to the side, meeting Elisha's gaze with the slightest nod.
Over Thomas's shoulder, beyond the duke, the low form of Brigit's temple glowed faintly gold in the sunshine. Yet a shadow loomed over it, a flickering, shifting thing, hard to make out. Even as Elisha watched, it grew stronger. It was a thing of memory, a projectionâbrought about by what? A contact forged across time in the place her mother had died. But a projection alone couldn't hurt, couldn't make a soldier imagine smoke where there was none. The
desolati
wouldn't even see it.
The duke retreated a step, scratching at his throat, then forcing his hand away. “Have at you, then, Your Majesty, I have God and justice on my side.” His face crumpled with pain, and he shook his head, lurching another step back.
“Were you here, Your Grace?” Elisha asked, dodging Thomas's protective stance as the duke's young magus and Lord Robert emerged from among the duke's defenders. “Were you here? When they burned Rowena at the stake?”
“Of course I wasâKing Hugh was yet my friend! We were all here,” the duke sputtered. He swayed and tugged at the straps of his breastplate.
Robert put out a hand to support him, despite the rising redness in his own face. Wiping his arm over his sweaty brow, he muttered, “God, but it burns.”
A stab of inquiry flared out from the young magus, confusion darkening his face. Elisha pointed toward the temple and the staggering crowd that surrounded it, coughs and curses echoing among the church buildings. Towering over the little building, taller by far than ever it had been, loomed a vision of the stake, wreathed in dancing flames.
E
lisha wrapped himself
in the knowledge of death as a few of the soldiers began slapping at their clothes. The screaming began in earnest, spreading out in waves from the crowd around the temple. Priests thrust out their crosses, shouting prayers and exhortations only to be cramped by the phantom pains that swept the gathering.
“What's he doing to me?” Randall choked. Then he pushed away his supporters and staggered forward, his sword outstretched. Beads of sweat ran down his cheeks. He kept blinking, shaking his head to cast off whatever illusion possessed him.
The magus shot out his hand and caught hold of Elisha's arm, probing with his magical senses. “It isn't him,” he reported, his touch bewildered. “There's a projection. It must be a strong one, to reach so many at such a distance, but I can barely feel it. How does the magus casting the spell have contact?”
“It's history,” Elisha said, “turned wrong side out.”
“Speak not in riddles!” the magus shouted. “What's happening to them?”
Soldiers dropped to the ground, rolling desperately and beating at themselves. Splashing from the riverbank told of other attempts to escape. But they could not flee the past, nor what they had seen, for Brigit reached into the heart of memory and conjured the flames.
“Brigit said she would give them the past, and they would give her the future. She said she would bring down the nobility of England,” Elisha told him. “She's forged an affinity with her mother's death, and she's using it to make contact with everyone who was there, to reflect her mother's suffering onto them. I can't imagine how she's drawing the power to do it.”
“Holy Christ,” the magus breathed.
Stretching himself to the utmost, Elisha felt spasms of pain emanating from the hollow. Madness intensified around him. Men tore at their clothes. Their screams and curses rebounded from the churchyard walls. Elisha and Thomas stood forgotten by all but the duke's nearest intimates, and even these struggled to control the reactions of their own bodies. Thomas's presence echoed with fear, but he remained at Elisha's side, his face and figure revealing nothing.
A short, sharp draft touched Elisha's face, with the briefest howl of loss. The Valley of the Shadow tore open in the air and shrieked closed. A woman stood behind Robert where only soldiers stood before. The earth beneath their feet had been seeded with scraps of flesh, a net of blood to forge contact with any who touched it, and provide the means for the mancers to travel anywhere within the marked earth. Again and again, in dread staccato, the air tore open and mancers appeared: the stranger he'd seen on his long crossing of England, the two women, more of the people who hunted him in the marketplace. These unearthly wails pierced the agony of the crowd, a jagged cacophony. At the back of his throat, Elisha began to hum.
Trembling, the magus released Elisha's arm. Chaos howled from right, then left, then behind. Five, ten, fourteen mancers swathed in shreds of death and smiling.
“Stay back,” the magus shouted, holding aloft his sword. “Duke's men to me! All who yet stand, to me!”
Drawing up the reins of death, Elisha invoked the power that gripped him and let it seep through the tainted ground and leap out through his awarenessâthreatening, but not yet deadly. The mancers stirred and shifted, the first two sharing a glance, but they did not approach. For a moment, they stood in balance, weighing the risks.
The duke screamed and dropped to his knees, tearing at his armor, his sword forgotten. Sweat drenched his face. “Oh, God, it burns! It burns!”
“Elisha,” Thomas started, his voice low and beginning to tremble.
Pain and fear contorted the duke's face. For a moment, Elisha wondered if he himself had looked like that on the night that Randall's blade had cut him down. The scar on his belly pinched and his stomach constricted. Randall struck out the candle and called for his death on the bridge, the night before. Months before that, Randall slapped him, then offered him Rosie's hand, and knew he would not accept. Elisha's first and, until his daughter's death, most staunch of allies, Randall arched his back and clawed at his bracers as he cried out. His men, too, staggered, helpless in the throes of sorcery.
Kneeling beside the duke, Elisha called upon his skill, and the buckles slid free, the breastplate dropping away with a clang.
“Don'tâyou're scaring him,” Robert managed, his sword waffling in the air. “He fears you.” Then his face crumpled. He dropped the sword and sank to his knees.
Chuckling reverberated among the screams, nasty shivers of laughter that fell against Elisha's skin like freezing rain. The duke's body jerked and flailed. Elisha gathered him close, projecting what comfort he could from the cold that suffused him.
“Why don't they attack?” hissed Thomas at his ear.
“They will,” Elisha muttered back, dividing his effort, maintaining the contact with all those too sensitive to death.
“You're holding them off,” Thomas whispered.
“They fear me,” Elisha answered. “Like everyone else. It won't last.” He cupped the duke's fevered head in his hands and let his senses travel inward.
Heat seared along his skin. His flesh throbbed with the cutting ropes that bound him to the stake. Betrayed to his very core, he looked for hope, for help from anyone and found none. Thousands of faces all arrayed against him, church and king, lord, merchant, peasant; faces alive with hatred and excitement. Elisha shuddered, remembering his own trip to the grave, the humiliation of his shaved scalp, the taunting of the crowds, even those he once loved abandoning him to this fate. Rowena's bitterness, summoned to life, burned at his throat. His lungs filled with smoke and the bile turned to hate.
A hand touched his shoulder, and Elisha jerked back to himself, still cradling the duke. Pushing away the agony, Elisha stared up into Thomas's face, the keen blue eyes searching his. “Why not you?”
“I did not watch.” Thomas's voice was as hoarse as if he, too, breathed the smoke of memory. “I couldn't. Another example of my cowardice.” Then he nearly smiled. “And you. You were the only one among us who moved to help her.”
Elisha reeled, the sharp clean air suddenly free of death as he recognized the truth. He gave a hollow laugh. “So that's why Rowena chose me. She even gave out a prophecy, a way for the magi to keep a watch and draw her daughter to me. The medical man with death in his hands. Brigit wanted me to be present today; another point of contact with the past.” He kept his palm cool upon the duke's forehead, staring out through the waiting mancers, over the writhing forms of those Brigit held in thrall. Even if he chilled the flames of those around him, those he cared for, thousands would die. Even if Thomas survived this, he would be king of a beaten people, terrified of the will of their queen. The mancers had intended a war with France to divide the nobility, forcing them to take sides against each other. Brigit's plan would simply crush them.
He lowered his voice and Thomas leaned in close, their breath mingling over the duke's vacant stare and shuddering chest. “She cannot consummate this without blood. She can't maintain contact with so many for so long without that power. Right now she can'tâ” He caught his breath and felt the mancers edge closer. “She can't quite kill them.”
“But what can you do? What can any man?”
“I am not any man,” said Elisha. “Neither are you.”
Thomas clutched his arm. “If you go there, she'll kill you.”
Drawing back his awareness, deliberately cutting off his knowledge of Thomas, Elisha continued, “Some will follow me, some will stay to pin you down. Be careful.”
“Elisha, don't.” His fingers dug in. “If you're what she's afterâ”
“Watch over them,” Elisha said. “You're their king.”
“I can't do it without you.”
“If I don't go, the kingdom will fall, and they will rise over it.” For a moment, their eyes locked. Elisha let himself grow cold, pushing Thomas away, even as nausea swelled within him. Leave Thomas to face the mancers, or bring him through death itself to faceâwhat, God only knew. Save Thomas's life and sacrifice a thousand others. Elisha let the screaming fill his skull and remembered what it was to hate. Thomas's face softened, and he took back his hand. Elisha lifted his palm from the duke's hot skin, and the duke whimpered, rolling to the side. Getting his feet under him, Elisha prepared to rise as Thomas readied his sword.
Randall heaved himself up, sword in hand, shrieking fit to deafen the angels. If there had been any angels.
The edge of the duke's madness stabbed Elisha's awareness. He held up his hand and caught the blade. His cold fist closed around it. Cutting his palm and fingers, the blade shattered. A piece nicked Thomas's cheek, and he winced.
Elisha clenched his jaw. He could not afford to weigh Thomas's life so highly that so many must die. That was what it meant to lead, to place the nation over all else.
“Elishaâ” Thomas's voice broke.
“I know,” Elisha answered, less a voice than a rumble of the earth and air.
The mancers stirred. One of them reached out to nudge a sobbing soldier with his toe. The soldier's scream curled on his lips, forever stilled. The mancer's silhouette shimmered with glee, a power Elisha knew all too well.
“What can we do?” moaned a pike man, clutching his weapon with whitened knuckles.
“Don't let them near you,” the young magus warned. “Anyone who's not afflicted: Don't let them touch you.”
Again, laughter blew around them, ruffling Elisha's hair. He reached out and set his hand on the young magus's shoulder. The young man jumped and swung, stopping his blade just short, his breath coming quick. Dark eyes met Elisha's.
“Courage,”
Elisha sent.
“Look to the king.”
Elisha dipped briefly to the grass, gathering a handful of blades, his palm still stinging from the duke's sword. Spinning, he flung out his hand, scattering a hundred tiny knives shot through with his own cold power.
The woman screamed and fell. A few others vanished. The first man raised his cloak and ducked behind it, the garment shredding as if it were woven from the wind.
Elisha feinted right.
The mancer lunged, and Elisha knocked him aside with a well-placed boot.
With a cry, the young magus sheathed his sword and snatched at the ground. The grassy blades he forged of magic were only blades without the power of Death, but they still carried a sting.
The remaining mancers drew swords or axes of their own, weapons that hummed through Elisha's presence with edges honed in murder. His throat and eyes burned as if he, too, felt the threat of Brigit's vengeance.
Somewhere to the side, steel rang and Thomas shouted, “Go!” and his cry echoed in the air as the crows plunged in. Hundreds of them dove upon the mancers, and Elisha's heart leapt to see them.
Elisha dodged a spear thrust. He sprang upon the blood-seeded earth, the ground these monsters marked with evil, and reached out. The air cracked around him, the way that ice shatters on a river as the tide pushes it onward. He stepped out of the light and breathed deep of the Valley, its dancing shades and flickering horrors so familiar now as to be ordinary. Spreading his awareness thin, Elisha felt the answering echoes of blood nearby, specks of it scattered on the roads, a perimeter of death where a skilled mancer could summon himself at will. Slivers of flesh, too, answered on every mancer, carried in hats or sleeves, carried close to the skin, a network as sure as Roman roads, with Brigit at its center, their combined strength set to defend any man of them against incursion.
Elisha gasped, his resolve shaken as he knew that touch: Walter, the king's man-servant, Pernel's lover, staying behind to fend off their enemies while the king took Elisha to safety. But Walter had not known how awful an enemy he faced, one who caught and shredded him, his riven flesh doled out as favors to the few, his tainted blood spattered to keep Elisha at a distance where they thought they could control him. Fury and protest swept through him. If he reached out now, through the blood that linked themâbut the blood showed more than that. Not just the mancers touched upon the trail of gore, but a thousand soldiers, children, women. The web of contact carried Brigit's power out to every one of them. Contact was indeed a two-edged blade: how was he to separate the innocent from the damned?
The air around him shuddered, if air there was in such a place.
With a silence as of an indrawn breath, the howls around him stilled, and he was not alone.
When the sound began again, bursting against his ears, the howling wove into a concert wild as the song of wolves and just as full of purpose, even to those who did not understand.
“Well met, Elisha Barber,”
sang the dead, and those who passed among them.