Authors: Janny Wurts
And there, in stunned shock, the unlooked-for reprieve broke into awestruck epiphany: Dakar realized the marauding whirlwind of
iyats
had vanished. Nothing stirred in the hold. Only the lap of the bilge, and the white rush of spray cleaved by no more than the power of sail and the surge of seagoing timbers.
âDharkaron's Five Horses and Chariot!' The mate coughed inhaled grit from his sanded throat. âBy glory, sorcerer! We're snatched from the brink. Have you any clue what you've done?'
The reply returned through the glassine black air came equally mangled by wonder. âShadowed the fiend storm, apparently'
Steel chimed against wood. Frozen cloth crackled as Arithon stirred. The ice and the darkness relented, a fraction. With the lamp doused, and the sword's spells quiescent, the closed hold should have been lightless as pitch.
Yet everywhere, scattered across the shocked dark, pale flecks of marsh-light were drifting.
They hung like small stars, a sequin glimmer in fine shades of blue, tinsel silver, and even a glimmering, delicate violet that strained the far boundary of vision.
Dakar lifted a trembling hand. He touched one. A prickling snap snicked his palm, not unlike a brisk discharge of static. In fact, he could rake the quiescent wisps up, like so many dry autumn leaves.
Eyesight adjusted to the pallid light: showed the mate on his knees, blistered hands pressed against his streaked face. Fionn Areth cradled seared knuckles. Next to the enamel gleam of the sword, a limp wrack of flesh lay curled in on itself beneath the bulked loom of the water-casks.
Left stunned to awe that the brig had been salvaged, Dakar clambered over the ice-coated tarps. He ploughed away oil-soaked blankets. Clumsy with chill and overstrained nerves, he rescued the Paravian sword and laid it aside, somehow without slicing his fingers. On his knees, choking back strong emotion, he laid his bruised hands upon Arithon's shoulders.
âHow long?' croaked the mate from the darkness behind. âYour Grace, if the fiend storm is bound, will you be able to hold them?'
When the desperate query dangled, unanswered, Dakar shoved back his hysterical tears. âWe are saved, and indefinitely. Arithon's gift is an inborn force, a direct access link to the elements. I've seen him sustain glamours wrought from shadow for days. At need, the act becomes reflex.'
Erect now, a scarecrow swathed in singed clothes, the mate recovered his dignity. âYour liege is asleep?'
âI think so.' At least, the breaths rose and fell in a regular pattern under the Mad Prophet's explorative touch. âWe should make him more comfortable.'
Yet that cursory assessment proved premature. A jarring tremor combed through Arithon's stilled frame. His fingers plucked at Dakar's sleeve-cuff.
âBe still,' soothed the spellbinder. âMercy on you, be still. I'll divine what you want without speaking.'
The instructions were scarcely a trial to fulfill. Arithon wished the Paravian sword left unsheathed and set near to hand. The drifting
iyats
were to be netted up, then contained and placed at his side.
âYou'll have help.' The mate crunched over debris toward the ladder, where his deck-watch relayed swift orders.
Using silk, and the labour of three steady men, the tight, pin-prick flakes of raw light were recaptured, and clapped into the cook's last available pot.
When the lidded vessel was laid at his feet, Arithon roused back to awareness. He sealed the trapped fiends inside with his gift. Then he adjusted his conjury and bound the brig from stem-post to stern under an unnatural twilight.
Dakar rose to ascertain the strength of his handiwork. âRest,' he urged. âYour ward's stable and sound. No sprite should cross your spun shadow. The blanketing filter of force you've laid down ought to keep us in shielded protection.'
At last, replete, the Master of Shadow accepted the pillow that Feylind tucked under his head.
Vhandon and Talvish arrived in hushed quiet. They stripped Arithon's soaked clothes, then strung up the hammock the sailhands sent down to ease him. Swathed in dry blankets, Rathain's prince had no choice but recuperate where he lay.
Topside, for the first time, the deck-lanterns burned. Compass restored,
Evenstar
plied her warded course to the east. Until the sigil could be stripped from her hull, she could not sail undefended. A man at the hatch guarded Arithon's peace, with Fionn Areth set on his obdurate choice to remain in the hold through the aftermath.
âYou'll do him no good here,' Dakar said, unstrung by impatient exhaustion. âLet go. Leave him be.'
The Araethurian stayed planted, even as Alestron's gruff liegeman prepared to drag him away. âIs the Master of Shadow injured, or sick?'
âMay Daelion's Wheel turn quick for a fool!' Dakar snapped in exasperation. âHe's stood down a frontal assault through a sigil, and reduced a storm of
iyats three hundred strong.
His Grace is blessed worn-out!' As reason failed, Dakar warned Vhandon off, and tossed up his hands in disgust. âWhat earthly use do you hope to serve, Fionn?'
A faint voice emerged from the shrouded form in the hammock. âHe's burning to ask me a question.'
Arithon Teir's'Ffalenn had opened his eyes, their febrile gleam far too bright in the flood of the lamp slung under the deck-beam. He surveyed his recalcitrant double. âI cheated you out of your fair match, with swords. Therefore, by forfeit, you have the right. Ask.'
Before any-one moved, or forced him to silence, Fionn Areth let fly. âWhy did you let children die in your name when Etarra marched on Tal Quorin?'
The Mad Prophet sucked a shocked breath and blocked Talvish's incensed rejection. âWait. Can't you see? As a crown prince,
he has to answer.'
And the wearied words came. But not with the self-poisoned, tearing remorse that close friends had braced themselves to deflect.
âBecause all I was then, every wise skill I knew, could not keep them safe and living.' A taut moment passed. Then, since his answer did not seem profound, or satisfy his inquisitor, Arithon delivered his compassionate promise. âThere are survivors. Stay, and I will provide you the chance to question them in your own right.'
Early Winter 5671
On a mild spring night seventeen years ago, a brash, young captain at arms had pounded from Hanshire's gates at the head of a column of riders, his assignment to escort three Koriani Seniors on urgent business to Korias. His hand had been a white fist on the rein, and his face, flushed with fury from a savage fight with the Lord Mayor, his father.
Youth and hot rage had claimed their bitter toll. For the sake of political rank, and his safety, his light horsemen had delivered their Koriani charges, then followed his impulsive orders. Their elite skills had been offered to Riverton's town-guard to spear-head an urgent search for the Master of Shadow.
The chase had led them through the bounds of a grimward, and not a fighting man had returned.
Since that day, the surviving prodigal son had viewed the tall towers of Hanshire just once, from the deck of a sea-going galley. His momentary stop on the wharf had spurned every overture toward a contrite reconciliation. His uncle Raiett had boarded the ship with the intent to cozen him home. Instead, the family's most powerful statesman found himself bedazzled in turn, swept into foreign service, and granted the post of the Light's High Chancellor at Etarra. The estranged heir kept his officer's post at Lysaer s'Ilessid's right hand; and Lord Mayor Garde was deprived at a stroke of the brother whose shrewd brilliance guided his council.
Now, under the stars of a fierce winter's freeze, the commander of the Alliance armed force reined his lathered horse from the covering scrub. Its lagging stride rang down the cobble-stone thoroughfare that led to the torch-lit main gate. He rode alone. At the vigorous height of maturity, under challenge by dangers beyond precedent, Sulfin Evend returned: to face his aged
parents and the final destruction of his family's expectations. To a reunion that must scour the scars of old pain, he bore the knife-cut sting of an oath sworn in blood to a Fellowship Sorcerer: a vow of life service that no mortal power under Athera's wide sky might revoke.
Sulfin Evend shoved back his rough hood. A useless ploy now, to keep his face hidden. Even mounted on a nondescript post-horse, and wearing no sunwheel blazon, his covert approach from the northern wilds was bound to be marked in advance. The Koriani scryer employed by Hanshire's council watched over the town's interests like a vigilant hawk.
The Sorcerer's parting words had not promised immunity from the family's store of pent rage. Nor might a steadfast resolve to fight necromancy forgive the unresolved impact of past scores.
âSethvir has given his sage reassurance. You will reach Hanshire on the hour when you are most sorely needed. Once there, your oath to the land must come first.
Caith'd'ein,
you are bound before ties of heritage. You stand outside of sovereign allegiances. By choice, you must tread the razor's edge. Lose your focus, or waver one step, and you will reap the hideous consequence.'
Sulfin Evend drew rein before the stone gate keeps that flanked the land entry to Hanshire. Deep shadow layered its cut arch of black basalt, shadowed under the streaming torches that illuminated the gaudy panoply of draped banners. Yet no sunwheel standard hung from the wall. Dazzled after hours of star-studded darkness, Sulfin Evend resisted the need to wheel his mount and retreat. At his back, the harrowing cross-country ride through the wilds, plagued by Second Age haunts and the unquiet sorrows left imprinted by bloodshed; before him, a living trial by fire: never in his bleakest hour of doubt had he thought to reach journey's end and not find the Alliance army encamped at full strength by the gate.
Yet no tents were in evidence; no pavilions. No party of loyal officers awaited to give updated reports or provide him with the impervious shield of Avenor's state backing. Alone in soiled clothes, Sulfin Evend dismounted. If the guard at the sallyport did not know his face, he was going to suffer no end of snide ridicule.
Yet challenge did not arise from the sentries. The main gate was unbarred by a captain in formal parade arms. He strode forth, no less than the officer who had once commanded the misfortunate company lost in Korias. Two mounted lancers rode at his heels, trailed by a liveried groom who led a fresh horse, saddled with a cloth bearing Lord Mayor Garde's gold ribbons and family blazon.
Chin up, eyes like ice, Sulfin Evend voiced no greeting. He foisted the reins of his hack on the groom, then held out his gloved hand for the remount.
âYou have the nerve in you!' The guard captain spat with revilement. âSeventeen years! Thirty-nine dead who were my finest, and now you. Alive, thrice-entitled, and still with no word!'
Sulfin Evend knew how to mask gouging grief; one learned, under Lysaer
s'Ilessid. He mounted the horse. Under the merciless flood of the torches, he stared downward until his accuser flushed red.
More worn, looking suddenly old in his gleaming appointments, the captain struggled not to be first to break under his own round of punishment.
His discomfort bought pain, before triumph. âYou sent your finest,' Sulfin Evend allowed, finally. âThey faced horrors your troops here could never imagine. Nor can you measure the cost I have paid to be crossing this gate, still alive.' He wheeled the horse. As the waiting escort scrambled to respond, he spurned them without a glance back. âI know the way to my father's palace.'
The captain cracked. âDamn you to Sithaer! You
ungrateful
craven!' Hard-clenched to stay his hand from his sword, he signalled his bewildered outriders. âOrders. See him through!'
âSir.' The men spurred ahead, angry. Their charge did not rein in, which forced the spokesman to shout like a yokel to make himself heard. âLord Mayor Garde is in council. He demands your presence for audience straightaway!'
Hanshire's hall of state lay between the town's central guard keeps, overlooking the steep fall of the bluffs. The stone terrace, with its slate-capped battlements, still bore the weathered triaxial knots carved by the ancient Paravians. In Third Age Year Ten, rule had been passed to a clan family appointed by Tysan's High King, Halduin s'Ilessid. Times changed, since the mists. The descendants now skulked as drifters on the wind-raked downlands, tolerated for the bloodstock they raised and sold at the West End fair every autumn.
Blood-tainted by an outbred clan lineage he rigidly wished to disown, the current Lord Mayor enforced the ascendancy of town law with an iron fist. The Divine Prince of the Light was his ally in name, but no friend; not with Avenor's crown might tied to interests aligned for a unified conquest.
Coldly received for his title alone, the Alliance Lord Commander left his mount with the sentries who guarded the arch. He strode ahead, still unspeaking. His step echoed off slate flagstones and battle-scarred revetments, glistening with the odd patch of slag left seared by the bale-fires of dragons. Where the veteran captain who trained him had aged, centuries-old stonework endured without change.
Seventeen years could have passed in a day. Sweating despite winter's chill on the air, Sulfin Evend disregarded the expectancy that would have rushed him through the hall doors. He took pause instead and gazed over the battlements.
From that eyrie vantage, the lower town spread in a jumble of roofs, rammed tight to the flank of the coast. The damp wore the taint of wet thatch, peat-smoke, and kelp from the apothecary's shacks. Below, the cove harbour lapped the darkened headland, fringed by torch-light where the water-front wharves met the teeming balconies of the brothels.
The distant lamps of the anchored ships rode like spangles across silken
water, except one: ablaze in state trappings, the vessel that flew Lysaer's sunwheel banners stood out like a beacon.
Sulfin Evend could have shouted aloud with relief.
âMy Lord Commander, if you would?' The liveried lackey sent out to collect him bowed with unsettled urgency. âLord Mayor Garde and the council are already seated in session.'
âYou may send word ahead.' Since a state delegation could not wait on raw nerves, Sulfin Evend turned back and entered the doubled doors. As the lackey's rushed footsteps cast their whispered echoes ahead, the absentee son revisited his privileged origins: a melange of patchouli, citrus polish, and ink, and smart servants receiving his mantle and gloves. The one who brushed down his plain, mud-stained leathers met his duty with lofty disdain.
Only the white-headed fellow who knelt to wipe his grimed spurs slapped his calf with familiar affection. âYoung master, you are returned none too soon. Off you go. Your people expect you.'
âFreyard,' murmured Sulfin Evend, surprised. He had not expected a welcome.
The old lackey grinned, ancient now, missing teeth. âYour gear looks to be overdue for a polish. I'll do that myself. Here's your escort.'
The steward's officious reserve suggested that no travel-worn swordsman should receive state admittance, far less any officer bearing authority bestowed by crown rank at Avenor.
Piqued by a flare of perverse enjoyment, Sulfin Evend strode on, while the council-hall doors of Vhalzein lacquer were whisked open with dispatch before him.
Beyond, the vaulted chamber lay deserted. The vast silence from the galleries was crushing. The dais of carven, serpentine jade left by the ancient Paravians gleamed under the crystal chandeliers. In place of Mayor Garde and his rapacious advisors, Sulfin Evend confronted no worse than a grandiose row of tasselled covers on the state chairs.
âThey're gathered in the privy chamber,' the steward said, tart. âThis way, if you please.'
Sulfin Evend side-stepped the mores of officious ceremony. âI'll go on my own, without fanfare.' Pushed past, he cut through the warren of clerks' desks and ducked through the alcove door.
Inside, the air was a stifling blanket, overburdened with perfume and fraught tension. The floor seats were crammed full, and the high dais as well, installed with the full complement of Hanshire's advisory council and greybeard heads of state.
First sweep, Sulfin Evend surveyed his estranged father: the meaty strength of the face now sagged with pinched discontent. Grizzled as a bony, aged wolf, Lord Mayor Garde leaned back in stiff clothes, in command with laced hands and crossed ankles. Behind his chair stood four Koriathain wearing floor-length
purple robes. All wore the red-banded sleeves of ranked seniors. One showed five stripes, an authoritative presence that plucked Sulfin Evend to resharpened wariness.
At right hand, also standing, the weathered Champion of the Guard wore his ceremonial breast-plate; seated left, the hawkish High Minister of Trade lounged in boredom and crusted jewellery. Beside him, the corpulent town justiciar was speaking with stinging disparagement. âYou can't imagine you'll accomplish that feat without forging a Koriani alliance!'
The voice that replied wore frost like white diamond. âI will do all I say, with or without any ties to the order's practice of obligation.'
Lysaer;
past the jammed ranks of the dignitaries, the gold-etched figure was on his feet, reduced to the station of common petitioner in front of the mayor's dais. That shaming slight smashed the last pretence of protocol, and prompted Sulfin Evend to intervene.
âJust what bargain would the Prime Matriarch demand? Access to the gifts that lie latent in Dari s'Ahelas's old lineage, perhaps?'
Met by the sharp turn of Lysaer's head, Sulfin Evend shoved toward the front of the chamber.
âOh, yes,' he assured, as he pressed his way through, disarranging rare furs and trimmed velvets. He made no apology for his disgruntled wake. His concern only measured the whipped start of surprise from the Blessed Prince who, at Erdane, would have discovered
just what
such a line of descent might entail. Sulfin Evend locked eyes with his liege. Then, barefaced before his disowned family, he savaged the tissue of long-standing scars. âKoriathain do occasionally breed children. In the cloistered, dim corners of their sisterhouses where outsiders aren't invited to look.'
Mayor Garde's incensed shout burst decorum. âThat's enough! Are you mad? Your impertinent remarks serve no purpose but mayhem!'
âTruth!' cracked Sulfin Evend, arrived front and center before the candle-lit dais. âI notice your fifth-rank senior dares to say nothing at all.'
Purple silk rustled through the cooler voice of denouncement. âWhat should be said of a son who forsakes his family obligation? Your return, you'll insist, was arranged for a loyalty you claim to have made in free choice.' The enchantress bearing the red bands of accolade gave a small shrug, then attacked. âBy all means, let's hear honesty. Have the man you name master ask what you were doing in conference with Sorcerers at Althain Tower.'
The jerked flash of gold exposed Lysaer's swift breath. Though the blue eyes remained steady, their depths had now darkened with clouding distrust. âWere you in fact?'
Sulfin Evend stared back, level. So soon, his fresh oath must be put to the test: a trial exposed before bitterest censure. He withstood his father's towering rage, and, more cutting, his coquettish mother, whose agonized frailty stripped his skin like sandpaper and glass; then the Koriani Seniors, smug and still in
their silence. Most of the packed ministers present recalled his rebellious childhood. Worst of all these was his prince, recovered and wearing the terrible mantle of his inborn self-command.
âI will answer your Blessed Grace, and in full. But the matter ought to be private.' Though his life might ride on the issue laid bare, Sulfin Evend placed duty foremost. âI am ever your man, sworn to serve the Alliance. For the sisterhood's proposed offer of service to you, I ask leave to know: what is the order demanding?'
âPartnership,' said Lysaer, âin exchange for defences. They want the Spinner of Darkness cut down, and I need a trained shield against practising necromancers. Too much has gone sour at Avenor, out of sight behind someone's closed doors. I won't have secrets.' Brows raised in inquiry, not overtly distressed, he added, âI presume you went to the Fellowship to dispose of an unclean sacrificial knife?'