Authors: Mercedes Lackey
It had been late afternoon when he went down; it was after dark when Florian found him, looming up out of the thick gloom as silently as a ghost. Karal saw Florian out of the corner of his eye, but he was so sunk in misery at that point that it didn’t seem worthwhile to do anything about the Companion’s presence.
:Karal?:
the Companion said hesitantly when Karal didn’t even move to greet him.
:Karal, you’re in trouble.:
“Tell me something I don’t already know,” Karal replied bitterly without raising his head, speaking down at the ground between his feet.
:No, I mean real, serious trouble,:
the Companion said, unhappily.
:Jarim has been going around the Court telling everyone—:
“That I’m an Imperial agent. I know.” Bile rose in the back of his throat, and he wondered if he was going to be sick right then and there.
:Worse than that, people believed him. Even Heralds. There were a great many people who couldn’t believe that a foolish artist was the real agent at Court.:
Florian shifted his weight, and a few pebbles rolled out from under his hooves as he scuffed them against the gravel.
:It is worse that Heralds believe him. Nothing I have said will convince them that you are not what Jarim says you are.:
That surprised him in a dull way. “But—you’re a Companion—”
:And you are
not
my Chosen. They won’t believe even me since you aren’t my Chosen. They believe that you have deceived me.:
Florian sounded depressed, which certainly didn’t help Karal’s mood at all.
:I don’t know what to do, Karal.:
“Neither do I, except to saddle my horse and go home.”
Or fling myself into the river, but that wouldn’t accomplish very much either, although it would probably make Jarim very pleased with himself. Well, riding off would make him very pleased, too. I’ve certainly made a mess of this entire situation. I don’t know how anyone could salvage it now.
Florian couldn’t seem to stop talking, although Karal would rather have been left alone with his own thoughts.
:I don’t know who is on his side, precisely, nor how many there are. I only know for certain about the Heralds ….:
“I suppose I might as well go back into the Palace and see how many people believe him,” Karal said finally. “We might be pleasantly surprised, I suppose.”
:You don’t sound very optimistic.:
“Neither do you,” Karal replied. “But before I saddle up and go home in utter disgrace, I might as well find out just how bad things are. I’d have to report just how much of a disaster I’ve created, no matter what.”
He rose slowly and stiffly and wrapped his cloak closely about him, walking back to the beckoning lights of the Palace on leaden feet.
As he discovered the moment he entered the Palace, things were very bad indeed.
Conversations stopped the moment he entered the hallway; as he passed through one of the reception chambers, he was surrounded by an aura of silence. People would turn to stare at him, then deliberately turn their backs on him. Once he passed, though, conversations resumed, loud enough to make certain that he heard them.
“It’s bad enough being a traitor, but being a coward as well….”
“He must be some sort of mage, disguising himself. No one could be that vile and look that young.”
“I’m surprised his own god hasn’t struck him down dead before this.”
Those were the personal comments; he was fairly certain he wasn’t hearing the others—the speculations on how everything vile that was ever said about Karse must be true. How Solaris must have
known
he was a traitor—and had set that poor fellow Ulrich up as a sacrificial lamb to eliminate suspicion against Karse.
Servants pointedly ignored him as he passed, and once he reached his suite, he found it precisely as he had left it. Which meant, of course, that no servant had set foot in here to clean it, and quite probably no servant would from this moment on. They would “forget,” or leave the rooms until last, then “fall ill” just as they reached his door. If he had thought things were uncomfortable when he and Ulrich had arrived, well … the hostility now was more than double. All the old prejudices were springing back to life, with redoubled vigor for having been suppressed for so long.
He stood in the doorway for a moment, trying to make up his mind about what he should do. Should he start packing and leave this very moment? He thought he had just about enough money to get to the border, if he stayed in very modest inns. He would have to be circumspect when he talked, but his Valdemaran was fairly good now; he might be able to pass for a foreign priest from anywhere but Karse.
Maybe I could talk Florian into coming with me? I might be able to purloin some Herald’s Whites from the Palace laundry and pass as a Herald until I got
home—or better yet, it would be a lot easier to get hold of one of the gray uniforms the trainees wear. For once it wouldn’t be so bad to look young.
Would Florian be willing to go along with the scheme?
He heard footsteps down the hall, and moved inside, quickly, closing the door behind him. Maybe he couldn’t get Florian to help, but the idea of purloining a uniform gave him another notion.
I can get Natoli to find someone to loan me one of the unaffiliated students’ blue uniforms. Then no one will bother me. I can just say I’m going home if anyone asks, and it won’t be a lie
.
He started to turn toward his bedroom, planning to start packing immediately, but a knock on his door startled him into immobility.
Who could it be? He could think of any number of possibilities, and few of them made him
want
to answer the door.
The knock came again. “Karal?” said a soft female voice. “I know you’re in there; I can sense you, and I know you aren’t more than two steps from the door. It’s Herald Talia, and you might as well open up.”
Talia?
She was one of the few people he had
not
thought of. He had to obey her, actually; in the hierarchy of Vkandis she was senior to him. He reversed his turn and let her in. She blinked at the darkness, for he had not had time to light more than the single candle beside the door.
“I see the shunning has begun already,” she said dryly, and moved past him so he could close the door again. He nodded; both the Karsites and the Holderkin used the ritual of “shunning,” where someone who had been cast out of the community was ignored and avoided from that moment on by all the faithful. It had driven sensitive people in Karse to suicide before this; presumably it had the same effect on Holderkin.
“I’m dealing with the Heralds on your behalf,” she told him, taking the candle from the holder beside the door and moving with it to the other side of the room
to light the lamps for him. “I am sorry that idiot Jarim started all this; it’s going to take some time to untangle it and more time to undo all the damage from his foolish fanaticism.”
Karal sagged down into a chair, depression overcoming him. “It’s never going to be untangled,” he said bluntly. “And I’m not sure it’s worth the effort to try. Even if you manage to convince the Heralds, even if by some miracle you manage to convince everyone else, you’ll
never
convince Jarim. It would be better for everyone if I just go home and let Solaris send another envoy in my place.”
“Jarim would win,” Talia replied. “Why should you let him?”
“Why shouldn’t I?” he countered. “I wasn’t particularly effective
before
he started all this, and you know that’s true. Even if you convinced everyone that I’m the innocent victim of Jarim’s prejudice, you’ll never persuade them that I have a copper’s worth of sense. I’m too young; I’m young enough to be the child of anyone sitting at that table, except maybe Elspeth, and I wouldn’t bet on that. No one there trusts me. I’m too young to have any experience, too young to let my emotions take second place to my reason.”
She didn’t immediately reply as she went about the room lighting lamps and candles, and he closed his eyes for a moment. “Herald Talia—
Sun-priest
—we might as well both admit it. I am doing neither Karse nor the Alliance any good here. I might as well go home and let someone who is competent, experienced, and new take over.”
She turned then, and looked at him with a solemn expression on her face, a single curl of reddish-brown hair falling over one eye. “Have you been recalled?” she asked, the candle clasped in both hands.
“Well, no,” he admitted. “But—”
“Does Solaris speak for Vkandis, or not?” she persisted.
“Well, yes—but—”
“And don’t you think after all this that if Vkandis
perceived your presence here as detrimental to Karse you would have been recalled by now?” she continued mercilessly. “It’s not as if Altra couldn’t convey your recall papers from Solaris
immediately
if that was called for. Given the situation here, there is every reason to bring you back—unless there is a more compelling reason that Solaris and Vkandis are not ready to reveal to leave you here.”
When he didn’t reply, she fixed him with a sharp glare. “Well?” she prompted.
He gulped, and shrugged. “I suppose so, but—”
“No ‘buts,’ “ she said, sternly, with more authority concentrated in her tiny figure than in a hundred generals he had seen. “As a Sun-priest, I can vouch for all of that, and so can you. There is a reason why Vkandis wants you here and no one else. We may not know what it is, but there is certainly a reason.”
Then I wish He’d tell
me
what it is
. “That’s fine in theory,” he replied, “but just at the moment it doesn’t seem to me that anyone in Haven wants me here. How am I supposed to get anything done when most of the Grand Council thinks I’m working for the Imperials, and at least one envoy wants to murder me?”
She made a grimace of distaste and walked over to the door to replace the candle in its holder. “That, I must admit, I have no answer for,” she said, with her back to him. “But I think you should at least absent yourself from the Palace for a few days, and stay away from meetings. Say that you’re sick—or
I
will. I’ll tell Selenay that you’ve been so overcome with shock at Jarim’s accusations that you’ve collapsed.” She turned back, and surveyed him with a critical eye. “From the look of you, I won’t be telling that big of a lie. Much more stress and you’re going to be the youngest man I know with a bleeding stomach. You’re well on the way to it; you haven’t been eating or sleeping well, have you?”
He stared at her. “No!” he blurted, “but how did you—”
“I
am
the one with the Gift of Empathy,” she reminded him, “And I’ve been associating with Healers
for most of my life. I think you ought to see if An’desha and Firesong can take you in again. I’ll have the Healers send you over some medicines. Better yet, I’ll send one of the Healers there in person.”
He scowled, and she laughed.
“Oh, don’t look at me like that,” she said. “The teas and potions for stress and a rebelling stomach are probably some of the best things you’ll have ever tasted in your life. They have to be; otherwise people who are under stress wouldn’t drink them, and people with bad stomachs wouldn’t be able to keep them down. Go pack,” she concluded. “Pack enough for about a week, and I’ll go find An’desha and see if there’s room in that
ekele
for a third person.”
She turned and started toward the door when another knock stopped her dead in her tracks.
“Karal?” came the quiet voice from the other side of the wooden door. “It’s An’desha and Natoli. We’re here to help you, if you want.”
Talia opened the door so quickly that she left An’desha standing there with his hand still raised for another knock, Natoli fidgeting beside him.
“In,” she ordered; both of them obeyed instantly, and she shut the door behind them.
Natoli spoke before either Talia or Karal could say anything, her words pouring out in a rush. “You didn’t come to the Rose and we were both worried about you because you’ve been looking like death and we came back here to find out if you were all right and have you
heard
what they’re saying about you? They’re—”
“Saying that I’m an Imperial spy and that I’m responsible for just about everything bad that’s happened since I arrived, yes, I know,” he interrupted, and sagged down in his chair again, one hand rubbing his stinging eyes. “Some people have probably even decided that I brought the mage-storms with me by now. Or that I was somehow to blame for Ancar being born.”
“You’re not far wrong. There’re even some Heralds prating a lot of nonsense, and not even Father can talk any sense into them,” Natoli said grimly, looking at
Talia with a challenging expression, as if daring
her
to do something.
Karal was a little amazed at her audacity—a simple
student
, challenging the Queen’s Own Herald? And not even a Heraldic student at that?
“I’m doing what I can, but it’s going to take some time,” Talia replied, and smiled thinly. “I’m beginning to understand what Herald Savil was supposed to have gone through over Vanyel when he was first Chosen. Like Vanyel after Tylendel died, Karal seems to be getting the blame for things that happened before he was born. It’s going to be interesting.”
Natoli gave an unladylike snort, while An’desha just looked bewildered.
“Meanwhile,” Talia continued, turning to An’desha, “I’d like to get him out of the Palace for a while so that people can calm down, and I would like to see that he gets some rest before his stomach begins to bleed from all the strain he’s going through. Can you and Firesong take him in again?”
“I was going to offer just that,” An’desha replied. “Firesong’s been off on some project of his own anyway, so he’ll get lots of peace and quiet at our
ekele
. Are you going to claim he’s collapsed with shock and stress?”
“That was the general idea,” Talia told him. “And if I can get a Healer to confirm that, it will simply add to the story.”
“Will you please stop talking about me as if I’m not here?” Karal asked plaintively, looking from one to the other.