Authors: James Moloney
âIt can't be true,' I whispered. âYou are too beautiful, too perfect. How can a baby like you become a monster?'
When he drifted off to sleep like his mother, I left them both and went out to join Tamlyn. Arnou Dessar
was sitting with him. Ryall had gone off to collect firewood, with a promise that he would bring back something to cook on it as well, apparently. Food was the last thing on my mind at that time.
The men stopped talking when I sat on a felled tree trunk opposite them. Tamlyn gazed at me, waiting for me to speak. I couldn't, not with his eyes on me so expectantly. Since we'd emerged from the darkness, I'd focused every thought on the mother and her child in the cabin behind me. Now the panic I'd kept at bay came rushing towards me like a pack of hungry wolves. I hid my face in my hands and did my best not to cry.
âThere's no doubt what the mosaic predicts,' said Arnou. âNerigold's baby is destined to grow into an evil fiend who destroys all he encounters.'
âI don't believe in destiny, in a fate that can't be changed,' I said bitterly. âThose pictures might be a thousand years old. You said so yourself. I don't care what magic put them there; Lucien couldn't possibly do any of those things.'
Even as I spoke, a different kind of fiend tormented me, a treacherous voice inside my head.
Why, then, is he growing so quickly?
it asked.
And what happened to that squirrel?
âSilvermay's right,' said Tamlyn. âLucien's future wasn't worked out by some madmen a thousand years ago. He'll make his own life.'
I wondered how much he was speaking for himself. It was enough to make me weep, hearing him talk that way; tears of hope, not misery, this time.
âLucien is flesh and blood, he's here and now,' I said, not really knowing what I meant.
âPerhaps he'll defy his fate,' said Master Dessar. âHe has a strong mother â in spirit, anyway, if not in body â and he has you to help him, Tamlyn.'
Our eyes shot towards him and he held up his hand calmly. âOh yes, I know who you are and a Wyrdborn, too. You live amid despair, like all of your kind, but there is hope here if you care to grasp it. I've found a lot of magic in these diggings, or the evidence of it, anyway, and much of that magic was good. Great sorcerers built this city, I'm sure of it; not the Wyrdborn but another race altogether, with different powers. If one of them possessed a particular gift that glimpsed the future, then that would explain the nightmare of the chamber. It doesn't have to be the boy's fate, but a warning of what
might
happen. Those pictures are no more than stones fixed to a wall, and what Silvermay says is the greatest hope you have: the child is living flesh. The two don't have to become one.'
âNo, you don't understand, Master Dessar. It's not him.' My voice was more a shout than a plea. âThose old magicians must have been driven mad by their own
powers and their visions are crazy, too. I don't care if the mother's face looks so much like Nerigold; whoever those pictures show inside that room, it isn't Lucien. He will never harm anyone.'
âForgive me, Silvermay,' he said with a little bow. âI should have included you among the baby's allies.'
Despite the compliment, it was clear he didn't agree with me. To him, that entire chamber was about Lucien and the only hope he saw lay in keeping him from his fate. Arnou Dessar was a scholar; the king called on him for advice. Who was Silvermay Hawker, a farmer's daughter from Haywode, to claim she knew better?
âIf you know who I am, Master Dessar,' said Tamlyn, âthen you know who my father is. That's what worries me more than anything. Those pictures show an older man nurturing the boy, then commanding his victories over other Wyrdborn. To rule over his own kind has been my father's dream for as long as I've known his voice. No wonder he wants Lucien so much. He wants to command the boy's power.'
âBut no one knows all of what I've found in that chamber, not even the king,' he said.
âThe miners recognised Nerigold,' Tamlyn pointed out. âYes, but they have no idea what the rest of the pictures mean. No one knows what terrible powers they predict.'
Terrible powers! Those words stuck in my ears like stone. When Arnou Dessar had seen Lucien in Nerigold's arms he'd frowned deeply in fear, but his assistant, Gabbet, had witnessed the same scene in the flesh and there had been no fear in his eyes, only the thrill of someone who'd found something precious.
âYour assistants. Do they know what those mosaics mean?' I asked.
âNorling and Gabbet. Yes, I've discussed it with them.'
âGabbet wears a blue shirt, doesn't he?' When Master Dessar nodded cautiously, I said, âCall him. I want to ask him something.'
He threw up his arms. âI would if I could, Silvermay, but he's got himself lost by the look of things. I've sent Norling to find him.'
My mind was racing now, making wild connections. âHas he ever been gone from the diggings like this before?'
âNo, he's most reliable; so much so I sent him to Vonne only last month to give my report to the king.'
âThis Gabbet was the man who hurried past us on the track this morning. Is that right?' Tamlyn asked me.
When I nodded, he swept the hair from his eyes in an action I knew signalled unease.
âYour assistant delivered his report to more than King Chatiny, I'd say,' he said.
âWhy would he go to Coyle?' Arnou's question was quickly swamped by something else he'd thought of. âThe drawings. I made sketches of the woman's face and some of the other scenes as well, for my fellow scholars to examine.'
âMy father has seen them, too, Master Dessar,' said Tamlyn. âYou can be sure of it. And right now your assistant is on his way to Vonne once more, this time to tell him that Nerigold and her son have turned up at the diggings.'
Â
That night, I lay beside Nerigold and her precious Lucien in the scholar's cabin. Her tears of the afternoon had given way to a dogged anger that drained the last of her strength â what little the baby had left her after his evening feed. She was asleep before the sun had disappeared, but Lucien wanted to play and for an hour I let him grasp my fingers and grab for my hair. Unlike his mother, I wasn't done with tears and occasionally one would splash across his face. He thought this a great game and smiled up at me gleefully. How could anyone match the gentle innocence of that smile with the fiend who hacked and rampaged his way through the desolate dreams of long-dead sorcerers?
When there was no more light inside the cabin, Lucien closed his eyes and I lowered my head to the
pillow beside him. My eyes closed as well but the sleep I managed was fitful.
Â
In the morning, Tamlyn and Ryall went hunting so we'd have something to contribute to the cauldron that fed the entire camp. Ryall had returned empty-handed the night before and this time was determined to show his skill. I didn't tell him that hunting with Tamlyn was like nothing he'd have ever experienced.
Everyone else had long since started work at the diggings, leaving the camp to Nerigold and me. I'd helped her out of the cabin into the morning air made fresh by last night's rain, but Lucien was grumpy. I could guess why. Poor Nerigold was now so thin, she had little to feed him. The only thing to do was to fatten her up.
âWill you be all right for a minute while I get some soup from the cook?' I asked.
I was gone for no more than a minute or two, but it was enough for Nerigold to drift off to sleep again. Who could blame her? And Lucien was safe enough, only an arm's length from her side. As I returned to them, I saw something else. Movement at the edge of the camp. I stopped behind a tree, my heart suddenly in my mouth. Had we been found so quickly? And Tamlyn was miles away with Ryall.
But I quickly began to breathe again because the intruder was a little fawn, searching for its own mother, no doubt. It was strange to see such a timid creature enter a camp like this; the strong scent of humans should have made it bolt into the trees. While I watched, fascinated, the fawn came closer. It was slowly inching its way towards Nerigold's sleeping figure, its nose twitching, ears flicking back and forth.
I'll chase it away before it gets too close,
I decided. But then, what harm could a fawn do? It was just curious; curious enough to overcome its fear. And, after yesterday's horror, I felt my spirits lift as I watched it.
The fawn was close enough to sniff at Nerigold's feet now. Another tentative step and it was staring down at Lucien. He was watching it and, now that it was so close, he held up his tiny hand towards it. The fawn came closer still, until its little black nose touched Lucien's outstretched fingers.
It will surely jump away now,
I thought.
I was wrong. Lucien's hand rested gently on the creature's snout. Slowly, the fawn lowered itself to the ground, first its front legs, then the hind. It rested its head on its folded forelegs and, to my amazement, closed its eyes to sleep.
Lucien must have enjoyed the soft warmth of its body because he kept his hand on the fawn's snout for
some minutes while I watched, unseen. At last he grew tired of the game and removed his hand. He'd begin to wail with hunger any moment, I knew, there was nothing surer, and that would send the little fawn off to its mother. But I was wrong again. He waved his arms about playfully and kicked his feet, as content as a baby full up to the neck with his mother's milk.
One arm smacked the fawn a light blow on the side of its face. That was surely the end of the game. I moved quickly in case the fawn woke in a panic and didn't know which way to run.
It remained still. The first dread seeped into my stomach.
I walked closer, clapping my hands. Was it deaf? But deer are attuned to vibrations in the earth. It must have detected my footsteps by now yet still its eyes stayed closed. A few more cautious paces and I was standing over it and bending low to poke it gently with the tip of my finger, just as I'd done days earlier to a different creature.
I knew then, even though I couldn't quite give up hope that it would suddenly spring into life. Its sides were perfectly still; that was the final clue. No air stirred in and out of its young lungs. The fawn was dead and Lucien had killed it. He had simply drawn the life out of it, just as he must have done to the poor squirrel, unaware that this time I was watching.
All signs of his fractious hunger were gone. When I sank to my knees beside him, his eyes brightened and his busy feet doubled their kicking. His entire face broke into the most gorgeous grin he'd ever granted me, but instead of filling me with delight, it chilled my blood and froze the bones of my body to stone.
Only an arm's length away, Nerigold slept on, too exhausted to remain awake for long. I knew for certain now why she was so weak and why there was no flesh on her bones; I knew why my mother's brews and broths hadn't made her any stronger in the weeks she'd lived under our roof. It wasn't the difficult birth that kept her this way, nor the journey she'd made since then; it was the son she loved so much. Each time she fed him, Lucien drew the life from her just as I'd seen him do to the fawn. She was a larger animal, a human being with the love and the will of a mother, but in the end he would take all the life she had to offer until there was nothing left to take.
I
could hear Tamlyn and Ryall coming back before I could see them through the trees; they were in high spirits, it seemed, and I couldn't blame them for that. Hunting must have been a welcome relief from the story told on the walls of that chamber.
Ryall appeared first, a pole over his arm with a pair of rabbits hanging by their ears from each end. âI've never seen anything like it,' he called to me gleefully while still a good way off. âHe can hit a rabbit on the run. No one's even tried that before.'
Tamlyn came behind with the bow, the hint of a smile curling the edges of his perfect lips. Why couldn't I be standing in Haywode, watching my love come in from the woods after the hunt? Even in the middle of
this latest despair, I sensed the happiness of such a scene and the warmth it would flush across my skin.
The moment was broken as Nerigold stirred on the litter at my feet. She looked first for the noise that had woken her, then almost as quickly searched for Lucien. âOh,' she gasped, flinching from the body of the fawn. She must have thought the hunters had already dumped it at my feet as a kind of trophy.
Ryall bounded across the campsite, unhooking the rabbits from the pole as he came. He was a dog again, tail wagging, eager to show me what he'd caught and receive his reward. Poor Ryall. If he had been a dog, he might have been better at detecting my mood. I ignored his rabbits and gave him no smile.
He saw the young deer. âWhere did that come from?'
âYou weren't the only ones hunting this morning,' I said.
âBut you didn't have a bow.'
He'd missed the wry tone in my voice and I couldn't give a better explanation, not yet.
âOh well,' he said when it was clear I wasn't going to tell him any more. âAn extra bit of luck, I suppose. It's too good for the soup. We'll roast it over the fire.'
âNo. Bury it in the woods,' I told him.
âWhy. Looks all right to me.'
âBury it! Now!' I snapped.
Ryall took a step backwards, as if I'd slapped his face, but he recovered quickly and picked up the fawn, glaring at me unhappily. It was still warm and its gangly limbs hung loosely as he tossed it over his shoulder. Its face was so peaceful, as though it was simply asleep the way I'd first thought.
When Ryall had gone, Tamlyn took his place. âWhat's the matter? Why did you shout at the boy?'
I looked down at Nerigold before answering. What shocks she'd had to endure yesterday. The pain of a mother I could guess at, maybe, but I couldn't share the way she felt it. It didn't seem fair to heap more onto her. I should take Tamlyn aside and tell him about the fawn.
I was about to do this when my eyes fell on Nerigold again. I cared for her as much as I cared for Lucien. I was a kind of mother to her, too, wasn't I, just as I was to Lucien. What kind of mother doesn't save the ones she loves. If Nerigold was going to survive, she had to know what was happening to her.
âLucien killed the fawn,' I told them.
Silence followed for a moment or two, then together they gave a little explosion of laughter.
âYou've made a little bow and arrow for him, have you, Silvermay?' Tamlyn joked.
I held his eyes with mine, aware of how heavy my features must appear. I felt as old as the mosaics deep inside the mountainside.
âBut that's ridiculous,' said Tamlyn when I didn't flinch. âHe's a tiny baby. He can't walk yet. Look at him lying there, he doesn't even know those are his own hands.'
I told them what I'd seen and this time the silence persisted.
âHe's done it before,' I added, and at last Tamlyn responded.
âThe squirrel?'
âYes, but it's worse than that, much worse. He's doing the same to Nerigold. That's how he's growing so quickly. Every time he feeds from her, he's taking more than her milk; he's draining the life out of her and taking it into himself, just as he did to the squirrel and the little deer.'
âNo, Silvermay,' Nerigold gasped. âAbout the deer, you were being silly, but this is â¦' She searched around for the word. âOutrageous. How can you say such a thing?'
Nerigold was a loving mother. Of course she wouldn't believe me. But Tamlyn ⦠he'd stayed quiet and the longer I searched his eyes, which were turned my way from beneath the dark overhang of his brow, I knew he agreed. His wordless stare gave me the strength I needed to convince Nerigold.
I dropped to my knees, with the quietly playing Lucien between us. âI've seen my mother tend the sick. Some had illnesses that she couldn't remedy and grew weaker and weaker, a little each day until there was no strength left in them at all, not even to take the next breath. The same is happening to you, Nerigold. Each time you feed Lucien, you are weaker than before. You know it as well as I do. If you go on feeding him, you'll die.'
I didn't tell her what I'd come to fear. That it was already too late.
âGet away from me,' she hissed and, when I didn't move, she pushed out suddenly, across Lucien, her bony hand stabbing into my shoulder, making me fall back. She picked up her son with a strength I hadn't thought she had left and held him to her, turning away from me, and from Tamlyn, too, because she could see he sided with me.
I'd never felt so low in my life. Nerigold was as close to me as either of my sisters and to see her shielding Lucien from me made me wonder if I was the true fiend in all of this. I wanted to hold her, I wanted to reach across and wrap my arms around them both, but there was no hope of that unless I took back all I'd said. What a halfway world I'd made for myself. I could go on letting her hate me or I could watch her die.
It wasn't until Tamlyn took me by the arm that I knew how drenched my cheeks had become with tears. He lifted me effortlessly to my feet and drew me away to where Nerigold couldn't hear us. There I found the embrace I'd hoped for; not with Nerigold and Lucien but with Tamlyn, who hugged me until I stopped crying. It was the first time he'd held me for so long, in real life, anyway. He'd done it often enough in my dreams.
âListen to me,' he whispered when he judged I was ready. âWhat you saw this morning changes so much. Yesterday we told Arnou Dessar that those pictures weren't about Lucien at all. We argued so hard we convinced ourselves, and I for one couldn't have slept if we hadn't.'
I broke a little from his grasp and nodded. âI don't think I slept anyway.'
âFor good reason. Lucien is certainly a Wyrdborn. We'd guessed that much already, but he is like no Wyrdborn before him. I've heard of many who have killed a parent, even both, but never one who's done such a thing before he's two months old. Those scenes from the chamber won't leave my head, Silvermay. Think of what horror will come to the world if he turns into that monster. Lucien will be the greatest instrument of evil this land has ever known. How many will die because of him? Starting with his own mother.'
His mother. I was the one who'd discovered as much, but that was as far as my imagination would let me go. It needed Tamlyn's cooler heart to see the worst of it. The dread that had been stalking me raced in to take hold with its foul jaws. Tamlyn spoke of the misery Lucien would bring to others, but Lucien would always be first in my mind and what I feared the most was what the evil would do to him. An instrument, Tamlyn had called him.
âMy poor Lucien. It
is
him in those pictures,' I said aloud.
âBetter that he'd never been born,' said Tamlyn.
âOr that he dies before it can begin.'
Those last words were mine. It was love that made me say them, born from the desire to save him suffering through what he would become rather than the thought of protecting others from the suffering he'd cause.
When I looked up at Tamlyn's face, he was staring at me, aghast. Only then did I realise what I'd said. âForgive me. You know I don't mean it.'
âYou might not mean it, Silvermay, but that doesn't mean you're wrong.'
âWhat are you talking about?' I asked uncomfortably.
âHow many will die because of him? A squirrel, a fawn â those are nothing. Soon it will be Nerigold. And what will happen when Coyle gets hold of him? That
fool Gabbet will tell him where Lucien is. His men will find us and, when they do, you and I will die quickly. We won't see what comes after, even though we know better than anyone what's in store. For us, it will be the easy way out. The harder way is to face what you just said.'
Â
It was mid-morning when Tamlyn used my own words to sting me worse than any bee. I protested loudly, of course I did. Whatever evil glowered on those walls, it was a greater evil to kill a child. How could he even suggest it? I stormed away in a fury.
After that, the day limped on like a wounded beast, until finally the sun dipped to the tops of the trees. I spoke to Tamlyn only once through those long hours, and Nerigold wouldn't speak to me at all. When she fell asleep with Lucien still in her arms, I gently slipped him free and entertained him as I'd done every day since the three of them had turned up in Haywode.
Tamlyn had spent the day gathering what he could for the journey ahead of us, and when Lucien finally lay sleeping beside his mother, that was the reason he spoke to me.
âDo you think Nerigold will be able to travel soon?' he asked. âThat creature, Gabbet, will reach Vonne tomorrow. We cannot delay too long.'
That was what he said, but the words that hung
heavy and unspoken between us were:
Better he dies before it begins.
Nerigold woke an hour later, and Lucien soon after, crying loudly to be fed. She picked him up before I could reach him. âHe's hungry,' she said and immediately began to adjust her dress.
âNo,' I gasped before I could stop myself. The word was out there, inviting Nerigold to defy me, and she made a special point of glaring silently into my face as she began to feed her son. I felt as if the air around my arms and shoulders had suddenly turned to ice. The cold stare was because of my story about the fawn and what it meant for her, but I couldn't throw off the sense that she had heard what I'd said to Tamlyn and the way he had turned the words back upon me.
Just as she finished feeding Lucien, Nerigold collapsed. Even though I'd been watching for it, her slump sideways caught me by surprise. I rushed forward, expecting feeble demands to get away from her, but she was unconscious. If I hadn't seen her lungs working air in and out, I would have feared she was dead.
âTamlyn!' I called.
With Nerigold in his arms and Lucien in mine, we took them into the scholar's cabin. It wasn't until she was stretched out on the bed that I dared touch her. My hand pulled away in shock. âShe's so cold.'
Tamlyn tucked the blankets clumsily beneath her body but she didn't stir. He stood back, looking at the pair of them on the bed. âYou'll have to stay with them for the night in case Lucien cries.'
âIf he cries, she'll want to feed him. We can't let it happen, Tamlyn. Look at her â she's a skeleton. I swear, he's stripped more flesh from her bones since this morning. Any more and she'll die.' I picked up the burbling baby and faced Tamlyn. âWe have to decide what to do before she wakes up.'
When we returned to the tents, we found the area crowded with miners who'd finished their day's work. Arnou Dessar was there, too.
âWe can't let them overhear us. Where will we go?' I asked.
I was surprised when Tamlyn said, âThe chamber inside the diggings.'
âNo,' I snapped instantly. âI don't want to see those pictures ever again. I don't want to think about what they mean!'
âThat's exactly why you have to see them again.'
He walked off to beg a torch from the miners. As soon as he returned with it spluttering into life, he marched straight past me. What could I do but follow, with Lucien in my arms?
The chamber was bigger than I remembered,
perhaps because there were only three of us to fill the space, and Lucien hardly took up any room. He was content to gaze up at me, snatching at my hair with a fist of pink fingers.
âSilvermay, come here,' Tamlyn called from where he'd begun to examine the mosaics again.
I spread Lucien's blanket over the soft dust and laid him gently in the middle. The scallywag rolled over and tried to push himself up onto hands and knees, another milestone he was far too young to reach. He flopped down again, not quite able to crawl.
âLook at him,' I said. âIs there anything more innocent than a baby lying on his blanket? He doesn't belong in this terrible place, Tamlyn. It was a mistake to come.'
I was on the verge of snatching him up and heading for the door when Tamlyn spoke firmly from across the chamber. âForget what he is now and look at what he'll become.'
It was horrible. These images shocked me even more a second time. The glittering red stones were so dense in some places they seemed to flow like a river. Skilled hands had pressed the chips and flakes into the mosaic. From a distance, some of the faces were so real I expected them to cry out in agony.
âWe can stop this before it begins,' said Tamlyn.
âHe's an innocent child.'
âBetter one than thousands,' he persisted.
âNo!'
Tamlyn led me along the wall, daring me to look, but my heart wouldn't give way. What I saw instead were Nerigold's eyes fixed on mine as she'd pushed me away. I wanted her love and friendship again and the only way was to abandon this shameful scheme. I grabbed the torch from Tamlyn's hand, which put me in charge. I would scoop Lucien up with my free arm and take him back out into the fading light and Tamlyn would have to follow.
But I didn't. My body turned to stone like the room around me and for a few moments I was a statue, rigid and immobile. The torch had thrown its light onto a patch of wall I hadn't inspected closely before. It picked out a face, or at least my eye picked out a face from among the rest. It belonged to one among many dead lying in a hideous pile.