“Sire?”
Quentin stirred himself. The warder was looking at him strangely.
“I asked if that would be all, Sire.”
“Go now. Leave me.” He heard the man's steps diminish as Hagin left the hall. A door closed, and the boom rang in the silence like a pronouncement of doom.
There in the dim interior of his throne room, the king gave him-self over to the hopelessness that assailed him, sinking deeper and still deeper beneath the crushing weight of despair.
With a round wooden bowl tucked between his knees, Toli sat on a woven grass mat outside the summer hut of Hoet. The Jher went about their daily business around him, but he was aware of their constant side-long glances that told him that he was still very much in their minds. No one would ask him about what had happened last night as he stood before the fire, unable to speakâthat would be too impolite. Still, they would wonder, and the gentle Jher would watch him when they thought he was not looking. So Toli, aware of their scrutiny, pretended not to notice and slowly dipped his hand into the bowl of sweet mulberries that were his breakfast.
A shadow fell over him as he squatted in the sunlight listening to the chirp and twitter of the early-morning forest and the soft soughing of the upper branches in the breeze, drinking in the musty fragrance of earth and bark and growing things. Toli glanced up at the figure who had come to stand before him.
“You are leaving again,” Hoet observed.
Toli nodded. “I must.”
“I knew that you had not returned to stay. You are needed, for there is trouble in the land.”
Toli cocked an eye to the old chieftain. “You know about the white men's trouble?”
“It is not only the trouble of the white race; when darkness falls, it covers all. Yes, we know there is trouble in the land. Wind is a swift messenger, and the forest holds no secrets from the Jher.”
“Then you know the king I serve needs your help. His son has been taken from him by force.”
Hoet nodded and leaned long on his staff before he spoke again. When at last he did, he replied, “And you carry the blame for this deed.”
Toli looked away. “How did you know?”
“How else can it be that you are not with your friend in his time of need? He blames you, or you blame yourself, and that is why you ride alone.”
“Yes,” replied Toli softly. “Your wits are as sharp as your eyes,Wise One.”
“When you did not speak last night before the fire, I knewâthough I guessed even when you came riding alone to our camp.”
“Then you knew why I could not speak.”
“Come with me,” said Hoet, and started away.
Toli rose, set the bowl aside, and followed the aged Jher leader through the village among the trees. The glances of his kinsmen fol-lowed him as they walked the length of the camp to where Toli's horse waited, already saddled, grazing in a clump of sweet clover at his feet.
“You do not belong here, Toli. Go now.”
Toli felt the color rise to his face; his shame burned within him. “You are right to send me away. I have dishonored my people.”
“It is not from dishonor that I send you, my son,” said Hoet gently. Toli's eyes darted to his elder. “Why does it surprise you? You have not turned away from your friendâ
that
would be dishonor. No, I send you for yourself. Go, my son, and find the white leader's son. Your life will not be your own until you have found the boy.”
Toli smiled and gripped the old man's arm. “Thank you, my father. The knife in my heart does not hurt so much now.”
“Yes, go. But come again one day, and we will sit together and share meat.”
Toli took up the tether peg and gripped the reins, swinging himself easily into the saddle. Riv snorted, eager to be off. “I will ride more swiftly with your blessing.”
“I have no blessing to give you that Whinoek has not already given.” Hoet paused, regarding the slim man before him. “It is said the king raises a temple to the One Most High.”
“Yes,” replied Toli. “The Father of Life is not widely known among the white race. Quentin seeks to make the name of the God Most High known to every man alive under the great heavens so that they may worship the only true God.”
“That is most worthy,” replied Hoet. “But it seems to this old one that where one temple stands, another may not also stand. Is this not true?”
Toli stared at his tribesman for a moment before the implication of what Hoet had said broke in on him. “Yes, your words are true, Wise One, and I would hear more.”
Hoet shrugged and lifted his antlered staff. “It has been reported to me that there has been much night traveling in the forest by men from the east, who also returned that way. I did not see them, so I cannot say how it is, but the white men's great temple of Ariel lies to the east, does it not?”
“You know well that it does,” said Toli with a grin. “Thank you, my father. You have given your son a great blessing.” He turned Riv into the forest and stopped before entering the shaded trail to raise his hand in farewell.
Hoet raised his staff and said, “Go in peace.” He remained gazing into the forest long after Toli had disappeared, then turned and shuffled back into the Jher village.
N
imrood cackled with malicious glee at his good fortune as he flitted through the shadowy passageways of the High Temple like an over-grown bat, his black cloak billowing out behind him like wings. Such a stroke of luck! The gods had sent the meddlesome Jher to the very steps of the temple.
That ridiculous high priest wanted to turn him away,
thought Nimrood.
Would have turned him away! But I was there to stop it, and before the dog could run
away I had him bound and beaten and thrown into the cell with that mewling prince.
Ah ha! Ha, ha!
At first the sorcerer had to fight down the impulse to finish the deed begun in Pelgrin Forest on the day of the huntâto strike down the Jher at once. Even now the old hatred fired his thin blood, but he was compelled by a greater prize to turn away from his long-nursed wrath at the one who had shorn him of his power, his precious magic, and had very nearly stripped him also of his life.
The image of that day still burned in Nimrood's evil brain: Durwin, a far inferior wizard, stood before him and would not even protect himself, would not lift a finger to summon the power at his callânot that it could have saved him. No, thought Nimrood, nothing could have saved him.
And then, as Nimrood lifted his rod to deliver the lethal bolt and so blast that cursed hermit's bones to powder . . . that arrow! From out of nowhere it had come, striking deep into his flesh, sending the rod from his hand. Then, there was the Jher, notching another arrow onto his bowstring. The sorcerer had pleaded for his lifeâthose miserable pleas still echoed in his skull. “Don't kill me!” he had screamed, and the words had mocked him every moment since that day. He had been hum-bled before the bow of the Jher, but the young warrior had withheld his pity, had sent another arrow into his enemy's heart.
It had exhausted every last living spark of Nimrood's power to trans-form himself into a raven and wing to safety. It was a long time before he could once again take mortal shape, for he had not even the magic left to change, but was forced to wait until the spell wore off of its own accord.
And a bitter exile it was, trapped in that feathered body, prey to the elements and living on scraps of dead, rotting meat. But though he regained but a thread of his former powerâthe rudiments of mere child's dabbling still clung to him, the ability to make noise and lightâyet he had returned to seek his revenge equipped with an older and more pernicious art: treachery.
The name of Nimrood the necromancer had perhaps died from men's memory; so be it. His lies would do what enchantment could notâof that he was certain. Yes, at long last he would have his revenge.
Oh, the gods were fickle and full of mischief! It took all one's cunning to outsmart them. Nimrood had done it all his life. And now they had finally delivered the victory into his hand. Yes, oh, yes. Soon the upstart whelp of an acolyte king would suffer as he, Nimrood, had been made to suffer all these years.
Nimrood allowed himself one whoop of demented joy at the impending consummation of all his dreams. Yes, the Dragon King would fall; and that barbarous god of his, that brutish Most High, would fall with him.
The wizened old sorcerer clenched his fists and laughed out loud, throwing his head back and letting the sound pour forth from his wicked throat. It was a sound to chill the marrow of anyone passing by. But no one heard it; he was alone and savored the moment to the full, his evil heart lifted in exultation.
Pymâa strolling heap of scrap metal and tools, bags and bundles and barter enough for any two tinkersâstood before the sign of the Gray Goose. The handpainted, long-legged, long-necked, plump gray goose wobbled on its chain. The windows of the inn were dark now; the door was open, but there was silence within.
“Tinker!” he cried. “Tinker, ma'am!”
He waited, winking at Tip. The dog winked back with both eyes.
In a moment he heard footsteps coming toward him across the planked floor. Then appeared a round, flushed face and the plump form of Emm, the innkeeper's wife. She waved her apron when she saw him, exclaiming, “Pym! You are a sight, you are! Come around again, have you? Give me a hug.”
She threw her arms around him, and he around her. They were old friends and good ones. “It's good t'see ye, Emm. You know meâI been afancy for one of yer meat pasties and a noggin o'yer best. We'uns jest had t'come back soon's we'uns finished away south.”
“You missed Emm's cooking, eh? Well, come in, come in with you. We'll set a fork and trencher at the board and put you to it.”
Pym followed the matron inside, rattling like a calf in a cupboard with every step. “Milcher!” she called. “Otho! We got us a guest. Look lively, now!”
Milcher poked his round bald head out from behind a cask he was rolling across the room. “Oh ho! Pym it is! Oh ho! Pym, good to see you, old friend. Come to visit, eh? Glad to have you. Glad to have you!” He called over his shoulder, “Otho! Hurry up now! We have a guest!”
A tall boyish-faced man came into the room carrying two small kegs under each arm. He grinned at the tinker and put the kegs down, then went to the cask his father was straining at. With ease the overgrown Otho hefted the cask into place. “Pym and Tipper is it?” He grinned boyishly.
Milcher wiped his sweating face on his sleeve. “Whew! I've been at it since dawn this morn.” He shook his friend's hand. “Come and sit down with me. We'll drink a sip and fill our bellies.”
“Don't you'uns trouble yerselfs fer we,” said Pym. Tip wagged her tail amiably, knowing that this was the place where she received those juicy tidbits and gristly beef bones. She barked once in anticipation of such a morsel.
“Yes, Tip,” laughed Otho, stooping to pat the dog. “We won't for-get you. Good old girl.”
Pym threw off his implements and wares and trundled them into a corner. He sat down with the innkeeper, and Emm served them up a little stew and bread. Otho fetched frothy ale in crockery jars and joined them.
They talked of all that had happened since Pym's last visit, and all the customers who would need Pym's services. Before long, however, their conversation turned to the one subject on everyone's minds and on the tips of everyone's tongues in every gathering place in Askelon.
“Shocking!” said Emm, clucking her tongue. “Simply shocking. I can't imagine who would want to harm that beautiful boy, poor Prince Gerin!”
“Nor who'd be fool enough to go agin' the Dragon King. There's the mystery,” nodded Milcher knowingly. “Him and that sword of his, enchanted and all.”
They all shook their heads in bewilderment at the affairs that had befallen their king. “
You
were on the road,” continued Milcher. “Did you see anything?”