Authors: Tanith Lee
Tirthen knew what had been said. He knew much of what he did not witness, all languages. Presumably he was now a true god. How else did they form save from the demanding worship, terror and pleading of mortals, sacrifice, circumstance, and their own sheer egomaniacal bloody-mindedness?
âThe sky is full of murder.'
âNo,' said Tirthen, âmurder is here.'
Godly eyes absorbed the Jafn hall. Hunting birds on rafters, a dog or two, a quartet of old lions, both genders ruffed, lying growling under a bench. Human components consisted of such ordinary models as already met with. A woman with some little authority or other, men of the expected castes, fighters or decrepit or too young. But thenâ
Winter Tirthen picked up the glow of something that came down a ladder-stair and entered the room at its other end.
Did he recall? He had not been then as now he was, yet in an obscure if definite way this and he had met, face to face, hand to hand, fury to fury, once or twice before.
On those occasions he had had no face or hand,
only
the fury. She had changed a little, but nothing to his changes. Would
she
recollect
him
?
Across a crowded room two strangers who have met and hated and striven but incredibly mislaid both the name and the appearance of the other stand briefly at a loss: Tirthen and Saphay.
Whatever else the disguise she had till now mostly worn here fell off her like a carelessly pinned cloak. The looks of an elderly hag-witch curled round her feet and faded.
Tensed like near-snapping bowstrings, the Holas in and out of the hall took in this pale girl adorned with saffron tresses and a royal gown.
Tirthen spoke.
Such a beautiful voice. Among so many gods his was among the best, or
the
best. He must have been training it away from its original coarse accent of screaming winds and grating glaciers.
âI see you have arrived ahead of me.'
Yyrot
? she asked herself. Was this Yyrot, Winter's Lover, in his most gorgeous guise, with some fresh charisma never before put on?
Yyrot
â¦
Saphay glared. Flame moved in her yellow hair. She raised one hand and it was the paw of a golden lioness.
â
Ah
.' Tirthen had identified her. He inclined his head.
And she in turn knew him, even to his adopted name, and put out her fire. For she had fought with this one previously and bested him â or at least beaten him off. She thought of ice pyramids, and the icy waste she had struggled through lashed by winds. She thought of the fleet of icebergs sent against her people of the Vormland, and how she had smashed them â but through that the Vormland fleet too was wrecked, and her people lamented and abhorred her and cast her out, and now as she vaguely guessed her name among them was a dirty word; several dirty words.
Tirthen was the cold heart of this continent and, she perceived, of the whole earth. Tirthen
was
Winter.
The joyhall and garth were full of vulnerable humans. And above, Athluan her husband, whom she had searched for so long, lay sleeping in her flame, not yet ready to be woken.
âGreetings, sir,' said Saphay to Tirthen. âWill you not sit down â¦' and with the court irony of Ru Karismi she added, âby the fire?'
Winter of the World sat by the fire. And the fire now and then cowered. Saphay sat across from Tirthen, and when she glanced into the fire it bloomed up in showers of sparks and heat. Sitting there and seeing that she had come also to an unheralded knowledge of herself and her present vocation. She became â
happy
. But this distracted and she put it aside like a small appealing animal she loved. In a while, my darling, soon. When I have dealt with
him
.
âWhat is it you desire?' she asked him.
âI have no desires. I need none.'
âThen you're content.'
âThat concept can mean nothing to me.'
âYour visit to us therefore is because â¦?'
He met her dark eyes with his dark eyes. In this one aspect they did share something. Each seemed to notice it. They were both astonishingly callow as yet at their own business; he, such a terrible entity as he was, more than she.
âPatently I am here for a purpose,' said Tirthen.
âWhich is â if I may again inquire?' She thought how she had spoken like this to kings in her city, even her own father. Especially him. One learned to be wary.
âDo forgive me,' said he, robotically perhaps mimicking her courtier-speak, âbut I must put you away in a cupboard.'
Aghast, Saphay lost her sense of self and her knack of fawning.
â
Cupboard
?'
âA figure of speech.'
Insane. They did not really
speak
anyway, they uttered some language of gods.
In the shadows at the hall's perimeter, outside in the snow, confronted by what they assumed to be this super-gler, the Holas waited.
Tirthen stood up again. The hearth fire went ashen. The fire
froze
.
Saphay did not attempt to rescue it. She rose too. A glimmer of her power went visibly fluttering through her, like birds that flew inside her bones.
âSaphay,' said Tirthen. âSuch a pretty name.'
That was all he said.
Even all those who could not talk the tongue of gods picked this up. Yet none of them fathomed it and nor did she, the goddess by the iced fire.
She did feel something like a delicate frost on every inch of her body. She felt that, and then it melted from her. And Winter stepped aside out of some non-existent door which shut after him. He left only everything else behind him.
None of them moved. None spoke. No dog barked or whimpered, not a hawk stirred a feather. Long ago the lions had ceased to growl.
Conversely there came a deep soft sound. It reminded a few of the noise of heavy fur or velvet drawn over a smooth surface. That was all.
Every person and creature in the garth heard it, and at the same level, and the tiniest child or infant, the littlest rodent foraging in the stores, the hard-of-hearing,
did
hear. Outside, they stared upward. Inside the hall they stared inward at a mental picture telepathically conveyed.
Next day they left the cave-tunnel. No trace of the uncanny snowstorm lingered. The Simese went about looking for it, checking each height and inch of sky in case a bit of it still lurked there. Even Fenzi did this. Ruxendra sat in the cave, playing with the blue dog's ears. Curjai had been rather keenly aware of this. The night before he had introduced her to the party as Ruxen-Ushayis. This was a Simese adaptation but emphasized that he thought she must still stay incognito. Fenzi had bowed low to her. Ruxen-Ushayis accepted that as her due. Obviously she was neither impressed nor startled by Fenzi's appearance. In Hell there had been all types of man. Curjai she glanced at only rarely.
That Curjai had aged another year or two rather suddenly was not lost on him either.
He rehearsed their time in the Otherland. Had she come after him here because she loved him? Or, more disturbing thought, had his attraction to her, forgotten by him though it might have been, summoned her?
Now anyhow there were other matters to concern him.
Arok had lain all night on his back in the tunnel. He spoke to no one and never moved. But he was not asleep. Curjai, who no longer needed sleep unless he wanted it as a luxury, sat by and often looked across at Arok. They â Curjai would not blame the girl for all of it â had returned Arok into his body. Whether he had been slain before some Fatefully ordained hour Curjai was uncertain. Nor was he certain either that was really a good enough reason for dragging the life-essence back over the threshold. Untimely death must often happen. Hell had been full of plenty who seemed bewildered and regretful out of all proportion to their method of dying or loss of earthly friends and possessions. Probably you got over it, adjusted and if necessary rejoined the world hurriedly to tidy up anything left undone. Arok for sure did not seem relieved let alone glad to be here again, while his initial muffled urgency over home and family seemed done.
Near sunrise the distant lightnings also disappeared. Only the ripple of the low fire lit the cave. The remainder of the people, even the goddess Ruxen and the dog, were slumbering. Curjai had approached and crouched down near to Arok.
âYou can't sleep, Chaiord.'
âAll Jafn spurn sleep.'
Curjai took in Jafn Fenzi, who did seem to be asleep.
âYes, Chaiord, forgive me, I remember now. You equate sleep with death, don't you?' That was blunt enough. Any response? None Curjai could either see or detect. He murmured quietly, âI apologize that we woke you, sir.'
Arok failed to say, But I told you I was not asleep. He grasped the point and answered dully, âYes, you woke me. She did.'
âWhatâ' How absurd. Curjai, who recollected all and everything of the outer life, was attempting to question this survivor. Refusing to hold off he continued, âDo you have a memory of where you went, where you came back from?'
âNone.' Arok's eyes gazed only up into the roof of the cave. The firelight ran over them in wavelets. He had not blinked, Curjai noted, not once in many minutes. Perhaps not since he had come to out there in the snow.
âWhen you â recovered, what did you think had happened to you?'
âI know what happened. One of your local gler ungods struck me, turned me to ice. Death. I didn't want to go. It was wrong.'
âAnd so, you're not displeased to have woken up?'
âWhat's pleased?' said the dead-live man. âWhat's not pleased?'
âDawn's coming. Then we'll move. Get to the garth, and you'll see your wife and son. Do you remember you said that? That you must do that?'
âThen I'll do that, I'll see them.'
Curjai leaned near to Arok's face and blew very lightly on him, a sparkling, clean and warming breath of healing, the sort only gods might give. Arok did not bat an eyelid or lash. He lay there.
âPardon us, if we did you a disservice.'
âWhat is a disservice?' asked Arok. âWhat is a service?'
In the name of Attajos
, Curjai thought with crucial dismay,
he's left most of himself behind
.
Curjai had never reckoned gods might be embarrassed or depressed. He was both. He recaptured uncomfortably his own distress at his own childhood death. But that end had led to all beginnings. Maybe gods actively disliked rubbing their own noses in human horrors. That could explain a lot.
âWould you prefer â¦' Curjai hesitated. The sentiment felt blasphemous, but blasphemy against humanity not deity. âWould you prefer to be dead?'
Idly said Arok, âWhat's dead? What's not dead? Prefer ⦠What's prefer?'
Once the day fully started, and since the weather was average enough to travel, Fenzi took the Chaiord up on his dromaz. Arok moved stiffly yet not ungainly. He made no protest, no comment, offered neither thanks nor any token of authority. Fenzi's face was unreadable. Sombrec, Fenzi's lover, was giving the pair a wide berth.
Then Ruxen refused to mount Curjai's dromaz. She poised on the snow combing her silky locks with a scented comb evolved from thin air, while the Hell-dog galumphed about after nonexistent snow hares. âI shall journey in my own way.'
Curjai could have done the same, but seldom did when in the company of ordinary men. An oblique modesty. Only his mother Riadis, or the shamans, had seen him regularly de- or re-materialize. He knew in himself his time with Lionwolf had made him less Simese. He found a Rukarian mode in speech, in manner, perhaps even Jafn. It seemed to Curjai he was quite unlike himself by now, even as he had been in Hell. The least he could do therefore was ally himself to humans when with them.
The group rode off, the dromazi loping in their ground-devouring strides, while the confounded girl and the hound popped out like dawn stars.
They reached the Holasan-garth inside the day, about an hour before sunfall. The weather had been elaborately helpful, not a wisp of wind or flake of snow, sky like a well-scrubbed plate.
Presently there was a height and the line of riders drew up there, looking over to the south-east.
âWell,' said one of the men, âwhy are we waiting?'
Curjai, alerted, saw Fenzi's mask of face had reformed to blank astonishment.
âWhat is it, Fenzi?'
âGod knows, I do not.'
âA Jafn riddle?' Sombrec joked with unwise sarcasm.
â
No riddle
.' Fenzi swung from the saddle leaving the resouled and soulless Arok sitting,
his
eyes unblinking, face unchanging. âIt was there,' said Fenzi. â
There
.'
They stared where he pointed.
Snow-plain soared and sank. Far away uplands hung ghostly in the last milky sunlight. Closer to hand were hills large and small, some very round, like upturned bowls made of chalk.
Nowhere was there any signature of mankind.
âIt's gone,' said Fenzi.
âStorms can confuse a landscape. Could you have mistaken theâ'
âNo,' said Fenzi. âChaiord,' he said, not looking round, âyou know I speak a fact. The Holasan-garth was over there.'
Arok remarked, âYes. Just there. Where there is.'
Curjai stared with the rest. It seemed to him irregular furrows and runnels showed in the plain that might be the leftovers of short fields of dormant crops, and across from them a low mound that might have been an orchard of some sort. But mostly Jafn kept their agriculture within the garth walls. It was not much of a clue. One of the smaller of the bowl hills did rise just beyond. It shone with the colourless sinking sun. But also ⦠how curious ⦠from some kind of light trapped deep inside.
FOUR
Guri grew up two years in every one. This was just like his adopted nephew Lionwolf, on the first excursion to earth.
At ten Guri was a man of about twenty. Leopard-skin yellow of complexion, blue-black of hair, tall and mathematically flawless in build, he was a peerless exemplar of his race. Needless to say his strength and stamina too were matchless. He could run in enormous leaps mile on mile â rather as he had when in his previous earthly âspirit' form. He could also inevitably fly. He could raise colossal weights, accurately fire ten or more arrows from a specially made male bow, to bring down ten deer together, and stroll up the sides of rocks, trees, and buildings.