Eiah didn't speak, and the andat went still again. Anger flashed in its
eyes and Maati's hand went out, touching Eiah's. She patted him away
absently, as if he were no more than a well-intentioned dog. The andat
hissed under its breath and turned away. Maati noticed for the first
time that its teeth were pointed. Eiah relaxed. Maati sat up; his breath
had almost returned. The andat shifted to look at him. The whites of his
eyes had gone as black as a shark's; he had never seen an andat shift
its appearance before, and it filled him with sudden dread. Eiah made a
scolding sound, and the andat took an apologetic pose.
Maati tried to imagine what it would be like, a thought that changeable,
that flexible, that filled with violence and rage. How did we everthink
we could do good with these as our tools? For as long as she held the
andat, Eiah was condemned to the struggle. And Maati was responsible for
that sacrifice too.
Eiah, it seemed, had other intentions.
"That should do," she said. "You can go."
The andat vanished, its robe collapsing to the floor in a pool of blue
and gold. The scent of overheated stone came and went, a breath of hell
on the night air. The others were silent. Maati came to himself first.
"What have you done?" he whispered.
"I'm a physician," Eiah said, her tone dismissive. "Holding that
abomination the rest of my life would have gotten in the way of my work,
and who told you that you were allowed to sit up? On your back or I'll
call in armsmen to hold you down. No, don't say anything. I don't care
if you're feeling a thousand times better. Down. Now."
He lay back, staring up at the ceiling. His mind felt blasted and blank.
The enameled brick was blurred in the torchlight, or perhaps it was only
that his eyes were only what they had been. The cold air that breathed
in through the window too gently to even be a breeze felt better than he
would have expected, the stone floor beneath him more comfortable. The
voices around him were quiet with respect for his poor health or else
with awe. The world had never seen a night like this one. It likely
never would again.
She had freed it. Gods, all that they'd done, all that they'd suffered,
and she'd just freed the thing.
When Danat returned, Eiah forced half a handful of herbs more bitter
than the last into his mouth and told him to leave them under his tongue
until she told him otherwise. Idaan and one of the armsmen hauled
Vanjit's body away. They would burn it, Maati thought, in the morning.
Vanjit had been a broken, sad, dangerous woman, but she deserved better
than to have her corpse left out. He remembered Idaan saying something
similar of the slaughtered buck.
He didn't notice falling asleep, but Eiah gently shook him awake and
helped him to sit. While she compared his pulses and pressed his
fingertips, he spat out the black leaves. His mouth was numb.
"We're going to take you back down in a litter," she said, and before he
could object, she lifted her hand to his lips. He took a pose that
acquiesced. Eiah rose to her feet and walked back toward the great
bronze doors.
The footsteps behind him were as familiar as an old song.
"Otah-kvo," Maati said.
The Emperor sat on the dais, his hands between his knees. He looked pale
and exhausted.
"Nothing ever goes the way I plan," Otah said, his tone peevish. "Not ever."
"You're tired," Maati said.
"I am. Gods, that I am."
The captain of the armsmen pulled open the doors. Four men followed, a
low weaving of branches and rope between them. Eiah walked at their
side. One of the men at the rear called out, and the whole parade
stopped while the captain, cursing, retied a series of knots. Maati
watched them as if they were dancers and gymnasts performing before a
banquet.
"I'm sorry," Maati said. "This wasn't what I intended."
"Isn't it? I thought the hope was to undo the damage we did with
Sterile, no matter what the price."
Maati started to object, then stopped himself. Outside the great window,
a star fell. The smear of light vanished as quickly as it had come.
"I didn't know how far it would go."
"Would it have mattered? If you had known everything it would take,
would you have been able to abandon the project?" Otah asked. He didn't
sound angry or accusing. Only like a man who didn't know the answer to a
question. Maati found he didn't either.
"If I asked your forgiveness ..."
Otah was silent, then sighed deeply, his head hanging low.
"Maati-kya, we've been a hundred different people to each other, and
tonight I'm too old and too tired. Everything in the world has changed
at least twice since I woke up this morning. I think about forgiving
you, and I don't know what the word means."
"I understand."
"Do you? Well, then you've outpaced me."
The litter came forward. Eiah helped him onto the makeshift seat, rope
and wood creaking under his weight, but solid. The gait of the armsmen
swayed him like a branch in the breeze. The Emperor, they left behind to
follow in the darkness.
31
The formal joining of Ana Dasin and Danat Machi took place on Candles
Night in the high temple of Utani. The assembled nobility of Galt along
with the utkhaiem from the highest of families to the lowest firekeeper
filled every cushion on the floor, every level of balcony. The air
itself was hot as a barn, and the smell of perfume and incense and
bodies was overwhelming. Otah sat on his chair, looking out over the
vast sea of faces. Many of the Galts wore mourning veils, and, to his
surprise, the fashion had not been lost on the utkhaiem. He worried that
the mourning was not entirely for fallen Galt, but also a subterranean
protest of the marriage itself. It was only a small concern, though. He
had thousands more like it.
The Galtic ceremony-a thing of dirgelike song and carefully measured
wine spilled over rice, all to a symbolic end that escaped him-was over.
The traditional joining of his own culture was already under way. Otah
shifted, trying to be unobtrusive in his discomfort despite every eye in
Utani being fixed on the dais.
Fatter Dasin wore a robe of black and a red ocher that suited his
complexion better than Otah would have expected. Issandra sat at his
side in a Galtic gown of yellow lace over a profoundly celebratory red.
Danat knelt before them both.
"Farrer Dasin of House Dasin, I place myself before you as a man before
my elder," Danat said. "I place myself before you and ask your
permission. I would take Ana, your blood issue, to be my wife. If it
does not please you, please only say so, and accept my apology."
The whisperers carried his words out through the hall like wind over
wheat. Ana Dasin herself knelt on a cushion off to her parents' right
and Danat had been sitting to Otah's left. The girl's gown had been an
issue of long and impassioned debate, for the swell of her belly was
unmistakable. With only a few minor modifications, the tailors could
have done much to hide it. Instead, she had chosen Galtic dress with its
tight fittings and waist-slung ribbons, which would make it clear to the
farthest spectator in the temple that summer would come well after the
child. Etiquette masters from both courts had gone at the issue like pit
dogs for the better part of a week. Otah thought she looked beautiful
with her garland of ribbons. Her father apparently thought so as well.
Instead of the traditional reply, I am not displeased, Fatter looked
Danat square in the eyes, then turned to Ana.
"Bit late for asking, isn't it?" Fatter said.
Otah laughed, giving his implicit permission for all the court to laugh
with him. Danat grinned as well and took a pose of gratitude somewhat
more profound than strictly required. Danat rose, came to Otah, and
knelt again.
"Most High?" he said, his mouth quirked in an odd smile. Otah pretended
to consider the question. The court laughed again, and he rose to his
feet. It felt good to stand up, though before it was all finished, he'd
be longing to sit down again.
"Let it be known that I have authorized this match. Let the blood of the
House Dasin enter for the first time into the imperial lineage. And let
all who honor the Khaiem respect this transfer and join in our
celebration. The ceremony shall be held at once."
The whisperers carried it all, and moments later a priest came out,
intoning old words whose meanings were more than half forgotten. The man
was older than Otah, and his expression was as serene and joyous as that
of a man too drunk to stagger. Otah took a welcoming pose, accepted one
in return, and stepped back to let the ceremony proper begin.
Danat accepted a long, looped cord and hung it over his arm. The priest
intoned the ritual questions, and Danat made his answers. Otah's back
began to spasm, but he kept still. The end of the cord, cut and knotted,
passed from Danat to the priest and then to Ana's hand. The roar that
rose up drowned out the whisperers, the priest, the world. The courts of
two nations stood cheering, all decorum forgotten. Ana and Danat stood
together with a length of woven cotton between them, grinning and
waving. Otah imagined their child stirring in its dark sleep, aware of
the sound if not its meaning.
Balasar Gice, wearing the robe of a high councilman, was at the front of
the crowd, clapping his small hands together with tears running down his
cheeks. Otah felt a momentary pang of sorrow. Sinja hadn't seen it.
Kiyan hadn't. He took a deep breath and reminded himself that the moment
wasn't his. The celebration was not of his life or his love or the
binding of his house to a wayhouse keeper from Udun. It was Danat's and
Ana's, and they at least were transcendent.
The rest of the ceremony took twice as long as it should have, and by
the time the procession was ready to carry them out and through the
streets of Utani, the sunset was no more than a memory.
Otah allowed himself to be ushered to a high balcony that looked down
upon the city. The air was bitterly cold, but a cast-iron brazier was
hauled out, coals already bright red so that Otah could feel the searing
heat to his left while his right side froze. He huddled in a thick wool
blanket, following the wedding procession with his eyes. Each street
they turned down lit itself, banners and streamers of cloth arcing
through the air.
Here is where it begins, he thought. And then, Thank all the gods it
isn't me down there.
A servant girl stepped onto the balcony and took a pose that announced a
guest. Otah wasn't about to stick his hands out of the blanket.
"Who?"
"Farrer Dasin-cha," the girl said.
"Bring him here," Otah said. "And some wine. Hot wine."
The girl took a pose that accepted the charge and turned to go.
"Wait," Otah said. "What's your name?"
"Toyani Vauatan, Most High," she said.
"How old are you?"
"Twenty summers."
Otah nodded. In truth, she looked almost too young to be out of the
nursery. And yet at her age, he had been on a ship halfway to the
eastern islands, two different lives already behind him. He pointed out
at the city.
"It's a different world now, Toyani-cha. Nothing's going to stay as it was.
The girl smiled and took a pose that offered congratulations. Of course
she didn't understand. It was unfair to expect her to. Otah smiled and
turned back to the city, the celebration. He didn't see when she left.
The wedding procession had just turned down the long, wide road that led
to the riverfront when Farrer stepped out, the girl Toyani behind them
bearing two bowls of wine that plumed with steam and a chair for the
newcomer without seeming awkward or out of place. It was, Otah supposed,
an art.
"We've done it," Fatter said when the girl had gone.
"We have," Otah agreed. "Not that I've stopped waiting for the next
catastrophe."
"I think the last one will do."
Otah sipped his wine. The spirit hadn't quite been cooked out of it, and
the spices tasted rich and strange. He had been dreading this
conversation, but now that it had come, it wasn't as awful as he'd feared.
"The report's come," Otah said.
"The first one, yes. Everyone on the High Council had a copy this
morning. Just in time for the festivities. I thought it was rude at the
time, but I suppose it gives us all more reason to get sloppy drunk and
weep into our cups."
Otah took a pose of query simple enough for the Galt to follow.
"Every city is in ruins except for Kirinton. They did something clever
there with street callers and string. I don't fully understand it. The
outlying areas suffered, though not quite as badly. The first guesses
are that it will take two generations just to put us back where we were."