A short time later, the emissary headed back to the gates. This time, Tsorreh got a better look at him, his cloak thrown back to reveal pale arms, his muscles flexing as he handled rein and whip. She saw nothing of his features, only the discipline of his upright posture.
“
Te-ravah
.” A boy, one of Maharrad’s aides, bowed to Tsorreh. He could not have been more than nine or ten, but his face, smeared with greasy smoke, looked haggard. His eyes were glassy. “The
te-ravot
has requested your presence in council.”
“I thank you for bringing this message to me,” she replied
formally. Then, “Child, what is your name?” There were so many names she would never know. She wanted to be able to thank this one boy.
“Benerod.”
Named for one of the brothers of Khored of Blessed Memory.
“Yours is an ancient and honorable name.” When she smiled, her face felt stiff with dried tears. “You bear it well.”
The boy’s cheeks turned dusky. He ducked his head. “I almost forgot. I am to tell you that
ravot
Zevaron is unhurt.”
Thank you
, she prayed in relief.
Oh, thank you.
“Come,” she said to the boy, “walk with me now, and tell me of your part in the great battle, that it may be written down and remembered.”
Together they made their way through the sloping streets of the market city. People filled the broad central avenue, hurrying to make use of the last light of the day. Scattered lanterns marked inns or shops, although many of the smaller streets lay dark.
They reached the King’s Stairs, which led to the terraced upper city, called the
meklat
in the old parlance, and the citadel. At the bottom, the steps were wide enough for ten men to walk abreast, but they narrowed as they rose.
Set at the top of the stairs beneath a soaring arch, the wooden gates were weathered to the gray of the surrounding stone. The arch came to a tapered point, so that Tsorreh often felt as if she were passing beneath a pair of praying hands. In times of peace, the entrance always stood open and lit, even at night. Now only a scattering of torches illuminated the gates.
Tsorreh climbed into the shadows, the boy at her heels.
* * *
True night had fallen by the time Tsorreh hurried into the chamber that had once served as feasting hall and throne room, but now was used by the war council. It lay within the citadel, the tall, multi-storied edifice that dominated the upper city. During the day, air and light reached all the principal
chambers through a series of mirrored vents. The art of making such things had been lost, yet their splendor endured, the seamless, fine-grained stone walls, the exquisitely carved furnishings, and above it all, the window of leaded glass depicting Khored’s Shield. From noon to dusk, a shaft of brilliance transformed the colored glass into a luminous tapestry. Each petal glowed with its own symbolic color, six in all, around a heart of shimmering gold. Now night quenched the Shield and ordinary oil lamps provided a diffuse, flickering light for the meeting.
Maharrad bent to the map spread over the table that had been drawn up before his age-blackened cedar throne. His robe, snowy wool stitched with gold and black, the colors of his house, seemed to weigh heavily on him. There was more silver than ebony in his beard.
Shorrenon, elder son and heir, child of Maharrad’s first wife, sat at his father’s right hand. He was tall and well-built, with broad shoulders and dark, intelligent eyes. He still wore his armored breastplate.
Maharrad’s general and his most trusted advisors ringed the table, as well as members of four of the six great houses founded by Khored’s brothers. It was from the lands of these nobles that the Meklavaran army had been drawn. The most senior patriarchs occupied the few chairs, and the rest stood.
The lines of the remaining two brothers of Khored were broken, and other families had come to power in their place. Some said that the current struggle with Cinath, the Ar-King of Gelon, had begun with the disappearance of one of the heirs, which weakened Meklavar’s magical defenses. Others insisted there was nothing supernatural, only Cinath’s human ambition. Unlike his forefathers, Cinath did not content himself with harassing his neighbors and the occasional unsuccessful foray into the northern steppes. He seemed determined to conquer the entire known world.
Tsorreh knew some of her husband’s advisors: the white-bearded scholar who had been her own tutor, the head of the city masons and representative of the craft houses, and
the cleric who was her paternal grandfather’s chosen successor as chief priest of the temple. She had less acquaintance with the officers. As she drew near, she saw the ash on their faces and smelled the dust and the sour miasma of despair.
Zevaron stood a pace behind the general, a somber man named Isarod. Her son’s gaze flickered to Tsorreh. In her belly, a knot loosened.
He looked unhurt but weary. He’d tied back his hair like a soldier’s and braided it with leather strips dyed in the colors of his house. Since the beginning of the siege, such tokens had become the custom, so that a man could be identified and returned to his family, even if his body was unrecognizable.
Maharrad looked up from the scroll. The vellum curled tightly, as if unwilling to yield to the weight of his hand. The casing lay beside it, tied with blue and purple cords.
At his gesture, Tsorreh took her usual place behind him. She sank down on her straight, narrow chair, wishing she could draw its unyielding strength into her own flesh.
“The Gelon have consolidated their position outside the walls,” General Isarod said. He was a wiry man, as tough as the bones of the mountains. “Even now, they throw up new earthworks.”
Zevaron stirred, bowing first to his father and then to Shorrenon. “If I may suggest a way to increase the defense of our walls?” he said with a trace of diffidence. “We have taken in many herdsmen who fled here as the Gelon drew near. They are not fighters but are skilled with the sling. It is their principal defense of their flocks against wolves and scavenger birds.”
“The young
ravot
speaks wisely,” the scholar Eavonen said, using the traditional word for
prince
. His reedy voice hesitated between each phrase as if he were turning it around on his tongue. “In the annals of Hosarion, we read,
And it came to pass, when the stone-drake drew nigh, that Hosarian went out to meet it. And fear smote the bones of Hosarion and he trembled. But Xianna his betrothed said to
him, Let not thy courage fail thee, for when a lion came nigh to thy flock and seized a kid-goat, didst thou not smite the lion, and deliver the kid-goat from the mouth of the lion? Even so shall thou now prevail.”
Shorrenon suppressed a scowl, but Maharrad listened with an expression of slightly distracted patience. Tsorreh found herself smiling to hear scripture recited in the middle of a war council. This was, after all, the traditional Meklavaran form of scholarly discussion, beginning with an exhaustive survey of historical references and commentary by learned sages.
“And Hosarion gathered up seven stones,”
Eavenon went on,
“and when he had come to the place the stone-drake had laid waste, he took out the first stone and he slung it and the stone-drake crushed the stone—”
“Yes, yes, we know the verse!” interrupted one of the nobles. “We know how the stone-drake turned aside six stones, but the seventh could not be turned aside, and that one slew it. But the old story cannot help us now! We have no Hosarion in our midst.”
Eavonen, looking affronted at the interruption, folded his hands into his sleeves.
“Yet it is a good point,” Maharrad said. “We have stones in abundance and walls from which to throw them. Even a pebble, aimed well and hurled from a height, can fell a grown man.”
“As I was saying earlier,” the general continued after a pause, “they have brought up engineers and miners. If we push them back from the outer walls, they will move the entrance to their tunnels beyond our reach.”
“How long will it take them to dig from their present position?” Maharrad asked.
The chief mason answered him. “Perhaps five or six days,
te-ravot
. They are clever and skilled at such things. That is,” he added, “if they are left undisturbed.”
“Be assured,” General Isarod said, “they will be well-defended. The Gelonian prince, Thessar, is no fool. He has studied his military strategy well.”
“The more men they commit to the defenses of these tunnels, the fewer they will have to attack our walls.” Shorrenon bent over the map. His voice, normally melodious, sounded as if he had screamed himself hoarse in battle. “We can harry them and whittle away at their numbers. If they breach the walls, we will be waiting for them.”
“We cannot win such a battle,” the general said, “not after today’s losses. If they break through, they will take the lower city.”
“Is there no way to keep them out?” Maharrad asked, his brow furrowed.
Murmurs rippled around the table. They were all reeling with the shock of the day, the flood of wounded men, and the implacable advance of their enemy. The general described their likely fate, once the outer walls were breached. The fighting, house to house, street to street, would be bitter.
So many had died already.
“There is an alternative.” Anthelon, eldest of Maharrad’s councillors, pointed to the scroll on the table. “Let us take what Prince Thessar has offered: an honorable surrender. Let us begin discussions now. The longer we resist, the more lives will be lost and the less favorable the terms we can negotiate.”
“Treason!” Shorrenon leapt to his feet.
Maharrad restrained his son with a gesture. “It is never treason for a man who has served long and honorably to speak his mind. Shall we do the work of the Gelon for them and turn on one another?”
“Forgive me,
ravot
Shorrenon,” Anthelon said. Tears glinted in his eyes, and grief and shame and things Tsorreh had no words for. She remembered he had served Maharrad’s father as well.
“I sought only to ask,” Anthelon continued, “whether it is not better to save our people, who would surely perish from starvation during a long siege, or to live on as a Gelonian province. Others have done so and prospered.”
“Are you mad?” Shorrenon snatched the scroll from the
table and brandished it aloft. “No matter what soft words they offer, the Gelon will exile or slay every man of a noble house—”
The patriarchs reacted with cries of dismay. “May the Shield protect us!”
“They are not such savages.” Anthelon raised his hands in a calming gesture, but Shorrenon would not be dissuaded.
“—and when there are none left to oppose them,” Shorrenon continued relentlessly, “they will enslave the rest and carry away our holy things as booty! When they are done, we will no longer be Meklavar of the ancient heritage of Khored and Hosarion, but merely another vanquished outpost of Ar-Cinath-Gelon’s empire!”
Tsorreh shivered, as if the blood-washed sunset once more cast its shadows across her soul. Was this the fate the heavens forewarned? She would not believe it. She dared not.
“What would you have us do?” Viridon of the ancient house of Cassarod asked in a quavering voice. “Sit here while the Gelon tunnel beneath our walls?”
“Go out to fight them!” Shorrenon cried. “Line the walls with archers, pelt them with rocks! Then create a diversion and attack their mining crews.”
“We lost too many men in today’s battle,” General Isarod said grimly. “We do not have enough strength to defend the walls
and
create a diversion,
and
send a party to their diggings.”
“Even if your plan succeeds,” another of the elders began, “and the Gelon do not overrun the outer walls, I fear they can still hold us penned here.”
Shorrenon’s face tightened in the stubborn expression Tsorreh knew well. “The Gelon have no will for a long siege. They are far from their nearest port, alone in enemy territory. I say, let us hold fast. After a season of heat and empty bellies, they will give up and go home.”
“I greatly fear they will not,” Anthelon said, shaking his head. “We may have stores of food and water, but even those will be exhausted in time.”
“We can bring in more, along the Shadow Road through the mountains. I say we sit tight behind our gates and let the Gelon starve outside.”
“The way is narrow and perilous,” the priest spoke up. The temple priests were said to know the hidden paths through the Var Mountains. “Only the most surefooted can travel the steepest parts, and we could not bring in enough supplies for the entire city.”
“Aye, and the more frequently we use the road, the greater the risk of its discovery by the Gelon,” the general pointed out. “Once they find out, they can use it themselves to advance a second attack upon us, one against which we have no fortification.”
“All the more reason to begin negotiations now,” Anthelon persisted, “while we can bargain for the best terms. Let us use their offer as a starting point to gain concessions—”
“Never!” Shorrenon moved as if he would strike the old man.
“Enough!” Maharrad rose to his feet and the entire room fell silent. “The
Gelon
are our enemy, not one another! I did not summon you here to see who can argue the loudest but to reason together, to find a way to save our city.”
After a long moment, Shorrenon lowered himself back into his chair.
“In times past,” Maharrad went on, “we have retreated behind our walls and let the invaders pass.” He took the scroll from Shorrenon’s clenched fist. “This Ar-King does not want merely more favorable terms, better stables for his caravan animals, or preferred access to the trade routes to the spice lands of Denariya. He means to rule here, to claim the Var Pass for Gelon. We must not permit that to happen. If we cannot defeat them or outlast a siege, then we must send for help. Shorrenon, for this we depend upon you.”
“Father, do not send me away! My place is by your side, at the gates of our city. Let me stay and fight!”
Tsorreh glanced from father to son. Clearly, Maharrad and Shorrenon had discussed a plan earlier. Yet Shorrenon
had not the temperament to let others battle in his stead. No wonder he argued for a strenuous defense of the walls.