spear party. Like whalesong, the notes travelled far underwater. She heard one away to her left,
and another nearer, another to her right, and a fourth yet further off, too widely spaced for a
game drive. And no hunt was planned for today ... but of course it was for her they were hunting.
Carn had come home, spent and still in harness—someone must have seen the direction—She
headed for the nearest conch.
It turned out to be Scyto, a dour-seeming but kindly old merman who had helped break and train
Cam. The moment he saw her, he blew a short call and drove his blue-fin towards her.
“My lady!” he said. “Where have you ... what are these?”
Before she could speak, he blew the call again.
“Did Cam come home?” she said. “Is he all right?”
“He came, and maybe he’ll do. But these?”
“We must take them to my father,” she said, refusing to explain.
“If you say so, my lady,” he said, but clearly didn’t like it.
A conch sounded nearby. Scyto answered, and Aspar came surging up, saying the same things
and asking the same questions.
“We are taking them to my father,” said Ailsa.
“Airfolk! Dead!” said Aspar.
“Do what you’re told, lad,” said Scyto. “Steady, there. Steady!”
This last to his blue-fin, which had shied as he was looping the lead rope onto the load hook. A
moment later Aspar’s blue-fin shied violently and might have bolted if Aspar hadn’t forced its
head round.
“What’s into the blue-fin?” he muttered.
“Dunno,” said Scyto. “You take the princess. Let’s go.”
Ailsa gripped the load hook and laid herself along the flank of the big blue-fin. Aspar flicked his
tail and they pulsed away. Two more huntsmen curved in to join them, blowing their conches,
and then others, so that they schooled along together, calling continuously that the hunt was over.
It was a sound Ailsa could remember from her earliest years. She had always liked the huntsmen,
and they had seemed to like her. Things seemed almost normal once more, so that for a while she
lost the nightmare sense of being tracked from below by something huge and cold and dark, and
began to worry again about how she could face her father. Then she noticed the huntsman to her
left lean out and peer down, and another beyond him doing the same. The calls faltered and the
Huntmaster, Desmar, riding lead, raised a hand to signal a halt
“Anyone notice?” he said.
“Way down?” asked several voices.
“Blue-fin are twitchy as hell,” said someone.
They hovered, craning to see what lay below, but there was only shapeless dark.
“Airfolk,” grumbled someone. None of them would look towards the drowned lovers dangling at
the rope’s ends. Huntsmen were always superstitious. Their task depended so much on the luck
of the ocean. Left to themselves they would have untied the rope and let the airfolk fall.
“We must take them to my father,” said Ailsa.
“Right then,” said Desmar. “Let’s get on with it.”
The king rode out to meet them above the slopes of the mountain. Relays of conch-calls had told
him that his daughter was found. His green skin was flushed dark with anger, but he remained, as
always, firmly calm. In silence he accepted Ailsa’s formal salute, palms together, head bowed,
tail curled under. In silence he glanced at the airfolk, turned his head and gestured. Master
Nostocal, the court physician, bowed and drifted across to inspect them. Ailsa guessed that old
Nosy must have come out with her father in case something had happened to her.
The king drifted aside with Desmar and spoke with him, staring down the mountain. He
beckoned to two of the huntsmen. They saluted, listened to their orders and rode their blue-fin
downward. At last he beckoned to Ailsa.
“You cut school,” he said. “I had thought you were past that, but we will talk about it later. What
then?”
She told her story as clearly as she could. He listened without interruption to her account of the
fight and her dive to reach the airfolk. At that point he stopped her.
“You crossed the limit? You were not afraid?”
“There wasn’t time. I had to reach them. But then, as soon as I turned back ... It was worse than
nightmares ....”
“Something specific had made you afraid?”
“Yes. I don’t know what. When it happened, I just panicked, I didn’t know why. But I got away,
above the limit, and it was better there. But then whatever it was started to follow us up. That’s
why Carn bolted. I had to let him go. It wasn’t his ...”
“Yes. This thing. You didn’t see it? Feel something in the water?”
“Not like that. I can’t explain. But it’s been following me ... us ... them ... And the huntsmen felt
it too. And all the blue-fin.”
He floated silent, withdrawn. The dark green of his anger was gone, but that did not mean that
her delinquency was forgotten. He would return to it in due time.
“You could have let them fall,” he said.
“No. I mean, not once I’d followed them down and brought them back up ... it wouldn’t have
been right. You can see she’s a king’s daughter ... I think ...”
Even that certainty, so obvious while she had watched the lovers at the rail, was now blurred.
What did she know of the kings of the airfolk?
Her father nodded and glanced enquiringly beyond her. Ailsa turned and saw Master Nostocal
hovering there with an excited expression on his lined old face. He saluted and, barely waiting
for permission to speak, blurted out, “The airfolk are still alive, my lord!”
“Alive? Airfolk die in water. Is this not known?”
“Hitherto, my lord, but these .... I have felt their pulses, firm, but slow beyond belief—eighteen
of mine to one of theirs. They live, my lord.”
“No doubt at all?”
“None, my lord.”
“Then I cannot decide their fate alone. We must take them home and hold council. Ailsa, you
will go straight to your rooms and stay there, not speaking to anyone of any of this, until I send
for you.”
Ailsa made the salutation and backed away. She could see Aspar waiting by his blue-fin, but
chose a course that took her past the lovers. She slowed and gazed down at them. Even the
unbelievable knowledge that they were still alive seemed vague to her as she saw once more in
her mind the poised instant before they had leapt from the ship. The memory seemed still as
vivid as the event itself, when she had watched it from the wave-top. But now it faded and
something seemed to form where it had been, a cold, dark, numbing question.
“The king is mounted, my lady,” said Aspar’s voice. From his tone Ailsa could hear that he had
said it more than once. Dazedly she let him clip her into his harness and then he free-rode the
blue-fin home.
They dreamed slow dreams of dark and cold.
Home was an immense undersea mountain, an extinct volcano riddled with tunnels and caves
and underground chambers which the merfolk over many generations had shaped and enlarged to
their uses. The palace was only a small part of the complex, running a hundred lengths or so
along the southern slope of the mountain, above the solid, un-chambered spur along which Ailsa
had slipped out that morning to find Cam. Now she waited at her window, looking out over this
view, and thus it was that she saw the return of the two huntsmen who had ridden down the slope
at her father’s command. They rode a single blue-fin, which the one who held the reins struggled
to control as it surged towards the main gate and out of sight.
Food was brought, not the punishment fare that used to follow her old escapades, but clam strips
on a bed of sweet-weed, ripe sea-pears and manatee cheese. She ate and tried to read, but mostly
she watched from the—window as the Councillors gathered. Time passed. Twice more,
unwilled, the scene she had witnessed that morning formed in her mind, and each time it was
followed by the same chill question. The light on the wave-roof changed from gold to pink to
purple, and when it was almost dark, a chamberlain came with a phosphor lamp and said it was
the king’s wish that the Princess Ailsa should attend him. This seemed strangely formal, and
when she moved, expecting him to lead the way, he coughed and said, “His Majesty is in
Council, my lady.”
Startled, she fetched her diadem from its case and threaded its horns into her hair. Checking in
the mirror, she decided that she looked silly wearing only the single large sapphire and an
everyday necklace, so she added the white-gold carcanet with the rubies that had been her
naming present from her grandmother, and the pearl and sapphire pendant and tail-bracelet that
had been her mother’s favourite jewels. The chamberlain nodded approval and led her first along
the familiar passageways of the domestic quarters, and on down through grander windings to the
Council Chamber.
Attendants waited. Doors were flung wide. Conches sounded. A voice cried, “Her Royal
Highness the Princess Ailsa attends His Majesty in Council.”
The chamber blazed with phosphor. Ailsa paused at the entrance to salute the king, finned herself
gently down the aisle between the Councillors, and saluted again. Merfolk are weightless in
water, so have no need for chairs. Instead of a throne, the king’s office and authority were
marked by a crystal pillar on which he rested the hand that held his sceptre. There was a smaller
pillar to his left. At his feet lay the bodies of the airfolk. Somebody had combed the man’s hair
and beard and fastened his sword belt round him. The woman’s white covering had been
straightened and her marvellous long dark hair, which otherwise would have floated all around
her, had been tidied into smooth waves and fastened with oyster-shell combs.
The king beckoned Ailsa forward and gestured to the smaller pillar. Nobody, she knew, had used
it since her mother died. She turned, rested her right hand on it and waited while the Councillors
murmured their greetings.
“My daughter will tell you what she did and saw,” said the king.
Ailsa began with her ride out over the Grand Gulf, saying nothing about why she had chosen to
go there. That was for her father alone. Otherwise she described all that had happened, including
her own sensations, the detailed intensity of the moment when the lovers had made their choice
to die, and the sudden mastering panic that had overwhelmed her when she had turned back from
beyond the limit. She told the story collectedly, without any of the confusion and doubt she had
felt when she had told it to her father. It did not take long.
“Thank you,” said the king. “Are there further questions for the princess? No? Well, that is most
of what we know. There was a fight between two ships of the airfolk. This pair leapt into the sea
to escape their attackers. The princess dived, hoping to rescue them, and crossed the limit. She
did that, she tells me, with no special fear in the urgency of action—no more, at least, than any of
us might feel—but on turning back with the airfolk, she was overcome by inexplicable terror, a
sense that something very large and cold and strange ...”
He paused. Perhaps Ailsa alone in the Council Chamber knew why. She too had felt the crystal
pillar tremble beneath her hand. Cushioned by the water in which they floated, the others might
well not have sensed the shock. The pillars were based on solid rock, so it was the mountain
itself that must have trembled.
“... large and cold and strange lay below her. This is not a young woman’s fancy. She recovered
herself and hitched the airfolk to her blue-fin to tow them home, but before long the blue-fin, a
steady, reliable animal, bolted. The princess let him go and continued to tow the airfolk unaided.
As she did so, she became convinced that whatever she had sensed beyond the limit was now
following her. Again this is not mere fancy. The huntsmen who met her reported the same
impression. Their own blue-fin, too, were barely controllable. When this was reported to me, I
asked two of them to scout down the mountain but not to cross the limit. As they approached the
limit, one of their blue-fin threw its rider and bolted, and but for good ridership the other would
have done the same. As you are aware, the limit rises and falls a little with the seasons, but one
of the men, who has often been down the mountain, reports that it is now many lengths higher
than he has ever known it. Finally Master Nostocal, who has long had an interest in the anatomy
of airfolk and has studied many bodies, found when he came to inspect these two that they still
live, though in some kind of suspended animation. This is without precedent both in his own
experience and in the books he has consulted since his return. Has anyone anything further to
add? Councillor Hormos?”
Nobody knows how the merfolk came into being, though there are legends that say that at some
point far in the past the strains of airfolk and fish came somehow to be mingled, and thus the first
merfolk were born. Because of this hybrid inheritance they vary greatly in appearance, though
most, like Ailsa, have a single tail, internal gills, and an upper body much like that of the airfolk.
Ailsa’s fingers were half-webbed, and she had a pair of silky waving fins running from her
elbows to her shoulders, and another running almost the whole length of her spine. But double
tails are not uncommon, especially in the northern oceans, and in one almost landlocked sea