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Authors: Marion Zimmer Bradley

BOOK: Heritage and Exile
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The long refreshment tables were laden with every kind of delicacy one could imagine. I dipped her up a cup of some sweet red fruit drink; tasting it, discovered it had been heavily laced with some strong and colorless spirit, for a single glass made me dizzy. Dio, watching as I drank, set hers down untasted and said, “I don't want to get drunk here tonight. There's something—I don't know what it is. I'm frightened.”
I took that seriously. Dio's instincts were good; and she was one of the hypersensitive Ridenows. Nevertheless, I said, “What's wrong? Is it only that there are Terrans and off-worlders here tonight?” Lawton was there, with several functionaries from the Terran HQ, and it suddenly occurred to me to wonder if Kathie would see the Terran uniforms, appeal to them for protection, accuse us of kidnapping or worse. Most Terrans knew nothing of matrix technology, and some of them were ready to believe anything about it. And I was quite sure that what Callina and I had done was now against some law or other.
Dio was lightly in rapport with me, and she turned to say with asperity, “Can't you get Callina out of your mind for a minute, even when you are talking with me?”
I could hardly believe this; Dio was jealous? “Do you care,
preciosa?

“I shouldn't, but I do,” she said, raising her face to me, suddenly serious. “I think I wouldn't mind . . . if she wanted you . . . but I don't want to see you hurt. I don't think you know everything about Callina.”
“And of course, you do?”
She said, “It was I who should have gone to the Comyn Tower, to be trained as—as Ashara's surrogate. I did not want to be nothing more than—than a pawn for Ashara. I had known one of the—one of her other under-Keepers. And so I made certain that I was—” she hesitated, colored a little—“disqualified.”
I understood that. There is now no reason why a Keeper must be a sworn virgin, set apart, consecrated, near-worshipped. For good reasons, they remain celibate while they are functioning as Keeper in a circle; but not in the old, superstitious, ritualistic way. There had been a time when a woman chosen as Keeper entered upon a lifelong sentence of alienation, chastity, separation; not now. Yet, for some reason or another, Ashara chose her under-Keepers from those who were trained as virgins; and Dio's way was as good as any to avoid that sentence.
I understood, suddenly, why Callina had rebuffed me. The marriage with Beltran was to be empty ceremonial, politically arranged; Callina had no intention of giving up her role as Keeper in Ashara's place. I should have been complimented—she was well aware that I would not accept that kind of separation. She was
not
indifferent to me; and she had let me know it. And for that reason she dared not let me come near.
Folly, folly twice over, then, to love the forbidden. Yet the thought that she might fall into Beltran's keeping frightened me. Would he really be content with a formal arrangement, where he had the name of consort, and no other privileges? Callina was a beautiful woman, and Beltran was not indifferent. . . .
“Lew, you are as far away from me as if you were on Vainwal again,” Dio said irritably, and took the glass of fruit juice I had dipped up for her. I watched her, wondering what would come next. I was a fool for thinking, even for a moment, of Callina, who was forbidden to me, who had put herself beyond my reach . . . Keeper or no, Beltran's wife would be forbidden; I was sworn Comyn and they had conferred Comyn immunity upon him. That was a fact, one I could neither climb over nor go round. And this business with Dio loomed between me and any life I might make for myself. I recognized, with a surge of humiliation, it was not for me to say, I will have this woman or that; it was, rather, which of them would have me. I seemed to have no choice in the matter, and in any case I was no prize for a woman.
Mutilated, damned, haunted . . .
I forced down the sickening surge of self-pity, and looked up at Dio.
“I must pay my respects to my foster-sister; will you join me?”
She shrugged, saying, “Why not?” and followed me. A nagging unease, half telepathic, beat at me. I saw Callina, dancing with Beltran, and stubbornly looked away. If that was her choice, so be it. Viciously, I hoped he'd try to kiss her. Lerrys, Dyan? If they were here, they were in costume and unrecognizable. Half the Terran colony could be here tonight, and I would not know.
But Linnell was dancing with someone I did not recognize, and I turned to where Merryl Aillard and Derik were chatting idly in a corner. Derik looked flushed, and his voice was thick and unsteady. “Ev'n, Lew.”
“Derik, have you seen Regis Hastur? What's his costume?”
“D'know,” Derik said thickly, “I'm Derik, tha's all I know. Have 'nough trouble 'memberin' that. You try it sometime.”
“A fine spectacle,” I muttered, “Derik, I wish you would remember who you are! Merryl, can't you get him out of here and sober him up a little? Derik, do you realize what a show you are giving the Terrans and our kinfolk?”
“I think—forget y'self,” he mumbled, “Not your affair wha' I do—ain't drunk anyhow . . .”
“Linnell should be very proud of you,” I snapped. “Merryl, go and drag him under a cold shower or something, can't you?”
“L'nell's mad at me,” Derik spoke in tones of intimate self-pity. “Won' even dansh . . .”
“Who would?” I muttered, standing on both feet so I would not kick him. It was bad enough to need a Regency in times like these, but when the heir-presumptive to the crown makes a drunken spectacle of himself before half of Thendara, that was worse. I resolved to hunt up Hastur, who had authority I didn't, and influence with Derik—at least I hoped so. Merryl did, but he was no help. I scanned the riot of costumes, looking for Danvan Hastur, or even Regis. Or perhaps I could find Linnell, who might be able to persuade or shame him into leaving the room and sobering up.
One costume suddenly caught my eye. I had seen such harlequins in old books on Terra; parti-colored, a lean beaked cap over a masked face, lean and somehow horrible. Not in itself, for the costume was no worse than grotesque, but a sort of atmosphere—I told myself not to imagine things.
“No, I don't like him either,” said Regis quietly at my side. “And I don't like the atmosphere of this room—or this night.”
I said, “I keep thinking I have seen him before.” I did not know what I was going to say until I heard myself saying it. “I feel—I feel as if all hell was going to break loose!”
Regis nodded gravely. He said, “You have some of the Aldaran Gift, don't you? Foresight . . .” he saw Dio was still at my elbow and bowed to her. “Greetings,
vai domna.
You are Lerrys's sister, are you not?”
I looked again at the harlequin-masked man. I felt I should know him, that somehow his name was on the very tip of my tongue. At the same time I felt a curious twisting fear; why could I not remember, not recognize him?
But before I could force myself further, the dome lights were switched off. Immediately the room was flooded with streaming moonlight. There was a soft “A-ahh—” from the thronged guests as through the clearing transparency of the dome, the four moons floated high, in full conjunction, one above the other; the pale violet face of Liriel, sea-green Idriel, the peacock shimmer of Kyrrdis, and the pale pearl of Mormallor. I felt a faint touch on my arm and looked down at Dio.
This is not how I had imagined we would return home together
. . . for a moment I was not sure whether it was her thought or mine. Couples were moving onto the floor for the moonlight dance which was traditionally a dance for pledged couples; I saw Linnell approaching Derik—drunk or no, she would consider herself bound and obligated for this. I was unable, suddenly, to resist the old tie, the old attraction; I drew Dio into my arms and we moved onto the floor. Over her shoulder I saw that Regis was standing alone at the edge of the dance floor, his face cold and detached, in spite of the women who made a point of standing conveniently near in case he should choose one of them. Dio felt warm and familiar in my arms. Was this what I had wanted all along? I found that I resented that smile which took so much for granted. Yet the rhythm of the music pounded in my blood. I had forgotten this—the sense of being altogether in key with one another, resonating to the same music, like a single body moving to the sound, and as she had done once before, she reached out, almost without volition, and the mind-touch came between us, a locking closer than any physical intimacy . . . closeness, home, fulfillment. As the final chord of music rang in the night, I caught her close and kissed her, hard.
The silence was anticlimax. Dio slid from my arms, and I felt cold and alone again. The lights, coming on again under the dome, caught her looking up at me with a strange smile.
“So, I have had that much of you,” she said softly. “Was it never any more than that, Lew—that I was a woman, and you were alone and—in need? Was it never more than that?”
“I don't know, Dio. I swear I don't know,” I said wearily. “Can't we leave it for now, and settle it sometime when—when half of Thendara isn't watching us?”
She said, unexpected, her face very grave, “I don't think we will be given that much time. I'm frightened, Lew. Something is very wrong. On the surface, everything's as it's always been, but there's something—something that shouldn't be here, and I don't know what—”
Dio had the sensitive Ridenow gift; I trusted her instincts. But what could I do? Certainly nothing could be done here, no one would dare strike at any of us before the City and the assembled guests. Still, Regis had said very much the same thing, and I was myself uneasy.
As I threaded my way through the crowd, in search of Linnell or Callina, I saw again the stranger in the harlequin costume. Whom did I know who was tall and rangy, like that, why did he strike me as strange, over-familiar? He was too tall to be Lerrys, yet it seemed the hostility which beat out toward me from him was very much like what I had sensed in Lerrys when he warned me to stay away from Dio.
(And Dio was at my side. Would Lerrys make good his threats, here and now?)
Again I moved through the crowd. I had spoken to Regis and forgotten to speak to him about Derik—there was too much on my mind, it seemed I had been moving aimlessly back and forth through this wretched yammering crowd all night, and my barriers were beginning to loosen; I would not be able to endure the mental jangle of it much longer. A few cadets were crowding near the long banquet tables, greedily attacking the heaped delicacies there, delighted at the change from barracks food. Among them I recognized both of Javanne's sons, Rafael and the older Gabriel. I supposed one of them would still consider himself my Heir. . . .
I have no son, I shall never have a son; but I have a daughter and I shall fight for her right to hold Armida after me . . .
and then I was seized with a sickening sense of futility. Would there be anything to hold, after Beltran took his place in Comyn Council and destroyed us all? Would it not be better to take Marja—and Dio if she would come—and go back to Terra, or Vainwal, or out to one of the worlds at the far edge of the Empire where we could build a new life for ourselves?
I'm not a fighter. I can fight if I must, and my father tried his best, from the day I was big enough to clasp my hands around the hilt of a sword, to make certain that I would be good at it, and I had learned because I had had no choice. But I have never enjoyed it, despite his efforts to make me excel in arms-play, in unarmed combat, as a soldier.
Damn him, even his last words had been of battle . . . I could hear them now, surging inside me as if they were being spoken now, not in memory: Return to Darkover, fight for your brother's rights and your own . . . and he had thrust me into this seething hell . . .
“How you are scowling, Lew,” Linnell said in pretty reproof. “This is supposed to be a celebration!”
I tried to move my face into something like a sociable smile. Sometimes I would rather be in the ninth and coldest of Zandru's hells than in a crowd where I have to be sociable, and this was one of those times, but I was not going to spoil Linnell's enjoyment. I said, “Sorry, this ugly mug of mine is bad enough, I suppose, without making it worse.”
“You're not ugly to me, foster-brother,” she said, in the intimate mode that made it an endearment. “If I wish your face were unmarred it is only a way of wishing you hadn't suffered so much. The flowers you sent me were beautiful,” she added. “See, I am wearing some of them on my gown.”
I smiled a little ruefully and said, “You must thank Andres; he selected them. They suit you, though.” I thought Linnell herself was rather like a flower, rosy and bright, smiling up at me. “I saw you dancing with Derik; I hope you told that wretch Merryl to take him away and sober him up!”
“Oh, but he isn't drunk, Lew,” she said seriously, laying a hand on my wrist. “It's only his bad luck that he should have one of these spells on Festival Night. . . . He gets like this sometimes, and when he was younger, they used to keep him in bed and out of sight—he doesn't drink at all, because it makes him so much worse, he never even touches wine with dinner. I was angry with him because he took one drink—some fruit drink which had been doctored with strong
firi
, and he wouldn't offend Merryl by refusing it. . . .”
“That was a mean trick; I had some of it myself,” I said. “Now I wonder just who did that, in such a way that Derik would get some?” I had a few suspicions. Lerrys, for instance, would be glad to see our presumptive king, poor thing that he was, making more of a fool of himself than usual.
“Oh, surely, it was an accident, Lew,” Linnell said, shocked. “No one would do a thing like that on purpose, would they? It does taste very good, I hardly knew there was anything in it; I might easily have drunk more than one glass, and of course, poor Derik, he's not familiar enough with drink to know that something which tasted only of fruits would make him so much worse—”

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