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Heryn he bound to the hallway of this little nook, finding no pity for the man who had sought Cefwyn's life and betrayed so many. A shriek followed; and that was Orien; and silence came after that.

He gazed at Uwen's shocked face, at the guards who had defied sorcery carrying out his orders—scared men, troubled men. He reached out a hand and touched Uwen's arm, and then touched one after the other of the rest of them, wishing them well.

A muffled thump attested Orien's rage at his small magic. Rather than desist he made it a greater one, wishing good to all the soldiers, good to all the house. It was a war of curses and well-wishes, and so it went on for a moment until with a final hammering at the door, Orien desisted.

"Come upstairs," he said then quietly.

"There ain't much comfort in that cell," Uwen said. " 'Cept we left a light an' a pail of water. Shall we fetch a blanket an' a bench?"

The gate-guards had left the same for him once: a candle in an iron cage, that cast great squares of light about ceiling and walls, and straw to ease the cold of the stones. It seemed too cruel, even for Orien; but she had sped wishes for the baby… she owned it, in her thinking, and it was too hazardous to open that door and engage with her until the dawn. A banished spirit had found its way into the royal house of Althalen: Hasufin Heltain had made his bid for life in a stillborn babe. He had no wish to see it happen here, to Cefwyn's child.

"Not until dawn," he said. By then it would be
his day
, and
his
evening, and the sun would shine and the darker forces would find fortress of dragons.html

less strength. Shadows—and Hasufin was such a Shadow—found the dark far friendlier.

He did not know how long it might be, the watch they had to keep, but Orien had not given up the struggle for the babe's life, Hasufin's threat was not yet abated.

And by his will, they would not open that cell door until both things were so.

CHAPTER 3

Tarien slept fitfully, into the middle of a night that saw the snow washed off the roofs and torrents pouring from the gutters. She lay abed, curls of russet hair clinging to a damp brow, in the light of many candles.

The clepsydra's arm rose to the uppermost, and at that precise instrument's movement, Emuin poured in a carefully measured cup of water, ready for the purpose, instrument and cup alike on the water-circled dining table of the Aswydds' apartment.

"Glass," Emuin said sharply, and Paisi inverted the hourglass that backed their measurements. "Pour the cup."

"Mark on the paper, master, afore ye forget."

"I won't forget! Pour the damned cup! Time's passing!"

Tristen watched askance, wondering would master Emuin indeed remember to make the mark, which accounted of the finer measures of the night, and watching until he did. The drip of water from the water clock was far more accurate a measure than marked candles and more reliable even than the costly glass… but only if one poured the water back in quickly. Master Emuin had brought it down from his tower, and set it up on the table, and still fussed over what exact moment it had begun.

A spate of rain hit the windows, and lightning flashed.

Cook and the midwife Gran Sedlyn sat watch; and the nuns, who had fortress of dragons.html

served the Aswydds before, ran errands for herbals from Gran Sedlyn's small shop in the lower town. Guards watched. Uwen waited.

So, too, did Orien wait and watch and pace her cell, exhausting herself against unyielding walls and an iron door… most of all hurling her anger against the wards that defended the door. So the guards reported, men unnerved by the strength and persistence of the rages and the virulence of the curses. To the guards stationed there, Paisi had brought blessed charms, from master Emuin, and more from the abbot.

"For what good they'll do," Emuin said, "but luck attend them while they stand by that cursed door.—Where's the damned owl?"

"I don't know," Tristen said.

"The bird could make himself of some use," Emuin said peevishly.

But of Owl, for the last hour and more, there was no sign.

Now they watched by candlelight, a cluster of men banished from the vicinity of the bedchamber as too noisy and too much disturbance to Lady Tarien's pain, but neither Tristen nor Emuin wished to leave Cook and Gran Sedlyn to watch alone, considering the lady's abilities and ties to her sister. Tarien seemed intent on the child's good health, seemed not to share her sister's insistence on a birth tonight, but had seemed rather to be struggling to keep the babe's own time… until she slept, which they all took for a hopeful sign.

But even the iron latch and the iron door below were not utterly trustworthy barriers against her sister, particularly as ordinary men watched it. There were wishes and wards and barriers… but that link had had years to work, and it was strong. Orien's will stretched toward her sister, and urged the babe to restlessness.

Yet the hours slipped away, measured by arcane instruments and the patience of Orien's warders. At the very mid of the night Emuin reasoned she would cease to trouble Tarien, for that marked the start of another day, as some reckoned.

But they were not out of the darkness, nor out of Orien's hopes. The efforts kept up, as the arm rose and Paisi turned the glass for midnight.

More moments passed.

fortress of dragons.html

"Before dawn would seem to be close enough," Emuin said glumly,

"she hasn't given up."

"Perhaps she doesn't know it's midnight."

"One congratulates a man on his birth. We are now, by the stars, at yours."

He had wondered would his life continue past the anniversary of his Summoning. And indeed it had, now, and he sat, substantial, beside another fireside, knowing so much more, and in circumstances he could never have imagined a year ago.

Orien continued her assault.

"Bid the lady in the guardroom know it's midnight," Emuin said sharply, and Paisi sped down to the soldiers.

Paisi was gone a time. There was no point at which the efforts ceased—but there was one at which they grew more fierce, furiously, wildly angry.

"Unreasonable woman," Emuin said. "Disagreeable, unreasonable woman."

Paisi returned at a run, out of breath, wide-eyed with fright and concerned with what seemed at his very heels. But he had been safe, as the guards were safe, below: Tristen had not been unaware the while of anything that went on in the fortress, and he directed Paisi to a warm spot by the fire until the boy could warm the chill from his bones.

So they sat, their small group of men: Uwen, who knew something of births, and master Emuin, who knew little, and the guards, who had heard much and knew only slightly more, Tristen thought, than he did. Paisi, the youngest, seemed to know most of all of them.

Once more the cup spilled and the glass turned. Twice.

But the third time the sand began to run, something happened in the gray place, and it was no longer stable as it had been. Tarien woke, and the babe woke with her, and a moment later a muted scream came from inside the bedroom.

They all glanced that way, as alarm filled the unseen space, then vanished in Orien's sudden leap of satisfaction, her assault on the wards. But the assault failed and she fell back again.

fortress of dragons.html

"Two hours till dawn," Emuin said with a heavy breath. "Two hours."

Another hour approached. Paisi hurried back to the bedroom, not the first such errand, and was gone a space, and came back tight-lipped.

"Gran says as the babby's comin' now an' 'e ain't waitin'."

Tristen drew in a breath and paid attention such as he could spare.

The gray place had become slate gray cloud, shot through with red like fire—Orien's doing, her wishing grown greater with her fear of failure and loss.

Emuin reversed the glass the third time.

And now the gray space began to show a more and less of pain, as it had been at the beginning. When the pain was more, conversation would become difficult and distracted. Tristen left the table and wandered the border by the windows, with an occasional glance to Emuin's glass and the water clock.

A cry rent the peace, and he could bear no more of it: he left their vigil for that in the bedchamber, where Tarien lay propped on pillows—not the beautiful creature now, but an unhappy and desperate one, caught between their will and her sister's, back and forth, back and forth, until now she looked at him in the gray space, with eyes dark as the cloud that boiled about them. She began to drift away—pulled, not her own doing—and reached out her hand as if she were sinking, drowning and taking another presence with her.

He seized the outstretched hand, and held it, and wished the pain away, and the life within her safe, while the winds howled and the life in her ebbed. She had strayed right to the Edge, and that darkness half-swallowed her, at times less, at times more. He held on.


Come this way, he begged her. Come with me
.


My sister, she said repeatedly, my sister
.

For another voice called her, and another self was there, within the
darkness… at least one more was there, and perhaps others. It
seemed to Tristen he heard Heryn's voice, full of anger and demands,
and he felt Tarien cower. Her hold on his hand slipped and slipped
again.

And then the Wind came, sweeping the others away, and whispered,
most gently, mostly kindly:

fortress of dragons.html


Let me be born. Woman, let me be
.

And the cramping pains struck, fierce and strong, carried on Orien's wish, driven by the Wind.


Here, my lord, he is yours… Or ten's voice rang strong and clear.

Orien's will drove Tarien's body, and Orien's presence, stronger than
ever she had been in the gray place, swallowed Tarien's will like the
Edge itself
.

"No!" Tarien cried out as she slipped, and in the World, her nails bit deeply into Tristen's hand. He knelt by her bed and wished the pain away, seeking her presence in the gray world, feeling her sever that connection to Orien strand by strand as it pulled her toward the edge.

Rejecting her sister, preserving the life within her… she slipped and he felt her nails pierce his hand.

"It's coming!" the midwife said. "It's comin', ain't no question now, m'lady. It must come."

Emuin leaned into the doorway. "A handful of sand, a handful of sand, woman—
wait that long
! It's too early!"


My lord, here's your vessel
!

Tarien screamed, vehement as Orien at her worst, beside herself with pain and lashing out at her sister. —
You'll not have him
!

Orien vanished. Still the child came.

"Wizardry, woman!" Emuin shouted, and wished with a force that might stop a river in its course. "You wanted wizardry! Use it now!

Orien wants your son. Your sister wants him for a vessel for her master! Is that your wish?
Is it? Save his life, woman, bold back
!"

"It's comin', it's coming," Gran Sedlyn said.

"I can't!" Tarien screamed, and the baby's drive for the world of Men would not be denied again.

The Edge was all the gray space now, and Tristen held fast, unwilling
to relinquish his grip. On Tarien his hold was firm… but the presence
within her flowed out, whirled away into the dark, and flew out of
reach.

"Stillbirth," the midwife said.

"Damn!" he heard Emuin say.

fortress of dragons.html

And again in the gray space, and with telling force: Damn!


Hold to her, Tristen said. Master Emuin, help me hold her. She'll
die
.


It's the baby he wants, Emuin said to him. His hair and beard and
garments alike streamed in the gale that the Edge swallowed up.

Tarien was half in it, the babe all the way gone

But something was in the dark: the Wind that gathered itself for a
first breath in the World.


Not yours, Tristen said to the Wind, with all the force that was in
him, and of a sudden he felt the rush of Owl's wings past his hair.

Owl soared ahead of him into that gulf and he found himself rushing
into it, a familiar place after all, a place of blue light, beating with
wings
.

A boy stood there, preoccupied among the hawks, a well-dressed, fair-haired boy who began to look toward him, head turning, until the
Wind called him by a name Tristen, hearing, could not hear
— would
not hear, for it was not the name he knew for the child
.


Elfwyn, Tristen said, commanding attention, and now the boy cast
him a dark-eyed glance. With the very next blink the boy was a well-grown youth, straight and tall, with Cefwyn's very look
.

—Sir?
said the boy, but the dark within the dark was in his eyes
.

Tristen reached out his hand, wishing the boy to come to him,
wishing him safe and his mother and his father safe.

Fire leapt up, spectral red amid the cool blue light as the Wind called
to the boy again. Out of that fire a black figure advanced, outlined in
Wind-driven flame, and the boy faltered as that Shape held out a
commanding, open hand. The wind roared, and the boy stood
transfixed, fair hair torn by that Wind, hand all but touching the hand
that reached for his.


Elfwyn! The second time Tristen called, commanding now, and
the boy's bead turned, the hand dropped. The name that was not the
boy's Name echoed again in the nameless light and the dark hand
seized on the youth's shoulder.

And in the very teeth of the gale Tristen called a third time, the
magical time: Elfwyn!

fortress of dragons.html

The boy looked at him in startlement and the dark eyes turned
cornflower blue, pale and with a hint of gray, until there was nothing
of the darkness in them. The boy's hand touched his.

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