Part 42 (1/2)
A larger war was being debated within Miyon's orange tent. He lounged on a padded couch, listening as Kiele and Masul discussed troop strengths as if they knew what they were talking about. Amus.e.m.e.nt played around his eyes and lips. Whoever fought this war, it would not be his own soldiers. He would get the others to do it. And when everyone was exhausted with battle, even the victors, his own fresh and ready army would seize great chunks of Firon and Princemarch and the Desert itself.
Lyell stood nervously by his wife's chair, ignored by all until he said to Masul, ”Your pardon, my lord. It simply occurs to me that all this would bring a great deal of destruction which would be very bad for us all.”
”Merchant,” the pretender spat scornfully. ”We speak of thrones, and you babble about trade.”
Miyon hid a grin. Masul thought that being a prince was riding fine horses and wearing fine clothes, and enjoying the sight of heads and knees bent to him. He had never been strangled and starved by Desert armies, never seen the produce of his lands rot and rust for lack of transport to rich markets. Neither had he dealt with greedy, grim Merida, always clamoring for a war against the Desert that Miyon knew could only end one way. Perhaps he would send the Merida against the remains of Rohan's armies, once the latter had exhausted themselves in Princemarch. Yes, that was a good thought; they might just annihilate each other, and at the very least would so decimate themselves that it would be a generation before either had the strength to fight again.
”The princedoms function on trade,” Miyon said softly. ”But we are indeed speaking of thrones here, and not only that of Princemarch.”
”How so, your grace?” Kiele asked suspiciously.
”Consider, dear lady.” He snuggled back into the embrace of soft pillows. ”Aligned with us are Gilad and Grib, Fessenden-and of course Isel.” He chuckled. ”What a merry time of it they'll have on their island, once they start the real war they've been flirting with for the hundred years since the last one! Grib and Gilad lie on either side of Ossetia, ready to pinch it between them like a dragon's jaws. Fessenden rides atop Princemarch-and will rein it into our hands. How many fronts do you think Rohan has armies enough to fight on? What use would Dorval be to him? Syr is a powerful ally-but once Clutha understands that his beloved Meadowlord will yet again become a battlefield, he'll save his troops for protecting his own, not for a fight he cares nothing about.” Miyon sighed happily. ”Rohan is mistaken if he looks for substantial help from any of his allies.”
”I don't see that all this gets me into Castle Crag any the sooner,” Masul said, glowering.
”Patience.” Miyon smiled. ”Watch them wear themselves out for a spring and summer. By then, not only will you walk into Castle Crag without opposition, but the others will be so exhausted by their wars that they'll have no strength to counter your more interesting proposals at the special gathering of princes you'll call to end the wars.”
”And you, your grace?” Masul asked in silken tones. ”I take it you won't be exhausted.”
”Not in the slightest. I'll own the Desert from Tiglath to Feruche. You may have the rest. I'm not greedy.”
”Of course not,” Kiele murmured.
”Tomorrow should make a lovely little beginning for our wars,” Miyon finished. ”Remember that, and don't lose sight of the whole world for dreaming yourself at Castle Crag.”
Pandsala slept, dreaming of just that place. She was a young girl again, strolling the gardens dug into the cliffs, and the sun was soft on her face and hair. Her sister Ianthe handed her a violet-wrapped bundle that squirmed in her arms. The child had golden hair and blue-green eyes.
”You're not the guardian I would have chosen for him, but you've done very well,” Ianthe taunted. ”You even love him! My My son, and you love him! It's the best joke I ever played on anyone, the crowning scheme of my life!” son, and you love him! It's the best joke I ever played on anyone, the crowning scheme of my life!”
Pandsala stared in horror at Ianthe's child. Part of her wanted to thrust it away from her, hurl it over the walls to the deep gorge of the Faolain below.
Ianthe laughed. ”But I'll take him back now. He's mine. More important, he belongs to our mother's people. I always thought it grossly unfair that she pa.s.sed the gifts to you, not me. Think what I could have done with them!” She held out her hands. ”Give him back to me now, Pandsala. Your work is done.”
”No!”
”He doesn't belong to you,” Ianthe explained as if to a dull witted student. ”Give him to us.”
A shadow fell on the lawn beside her. She turned and saw her father, tall and green-eyed and adamant. He said, ”Give him to us. It's time.”
She clutched the infant to her breast. Calling on everything she had ever learned of power, she flung a bolt of Sunrunner's Fire at Ianthe, at Roelstra. Their flesh blackened and crisped before her eyes, but they were laughing as she killed them.
She began to run, tripped on the steps, fell, dropped her precious burden. She screamed again, terrified. But the blanket was empty.
Sioned appeared on the walkway above her, the emerald ring blazing as bright as her emerald eyes. She knelt and gathered the violet blanket, never taking her gaze from Pandsala's.
”What have you done?” she demanded, unfurling the cloth. ”Look at the blood!”
Pandsala cringed away from the velvet that dripped fat spheres of thick red blood. They hit the sun-heated stones and burned to blackened circles. She touched one and her fingertip came away scorched, but there was no pain.
She looked up suddenly, relief sobbing through her as Pol came out of the castle to stand beside Sioned. But this was not the boy Pandsala knew; this was a man fully grown, tall and proud, the great topaz-and-amethyst ring on his finger. He looked down on her with remote curiosity and no recognition. Sioned took his hand. Claimed him.
Pandsala opened her mouth to reveal the truth. She could destroy Sioned by speaking of Ianthe.
Bud she did not. If she had killed Ianthe and Roelstra to keep Pol free of them, she could not reclaim him for them by telling him who his real mother had been. She could not do that to him.
Another shadow appeared, and for a panicked instant she thought Roelstra had escaped the flames. But it was Masul who strode forward, green eyes br.i.m.m.i.n.g with vicious glee as he swung his new Cunaxan sword at Pol's head.
”No!” she screamed again. Behind him were three more shadows, dark and menacing, more fatal even than Masul. Rohan must change his mind, he must allow her to remain regent of Princemarch-how else could she continue to protect Pol from the dangers that threatened him again and again and- Masul laughed down at her and the sword continued on its slow, deadly, sunlit arc toward Pol's neck.
”NO!”
”My lady!”
She sat up in bed, shuddering, and stared without comprehension at the boy standing beside her. He held a candle. The flame danced light over his dark hair, into his eyes-green like Roelstra's, like the pretender's-like Sioned's. Their faces layered over his, joined by Ianthe's atop them all, and Pandsala shrank back from him. ”Wh-who are you?” she breathed.
”My name is Sejast, my lady,” he said, and the other faces vanished at the sound of his voice. Not more of the dream, then. Only a boy wearing a single faradhi faradhi ring on the middle finger of his right hand. ring on the middle finger of his right hand.
”Forgive me for violating your privacy, but-but I was sent to find out if you were in any distress after what happened tonight.”
”I'm quite all right,” she said, her voice infuriatingly thin and weak.
”I'm glad to hear it, my lady,” he said with a shy little smile. ”Some of the others aren't doing so well. But you're much stronger than they, I think.”
”You don't seem much bothered.” She swung her feet over to the floor, smoothed back her hair. ”Are you so very strong?” don't seem much bothered.” She swung her feet over to the floor, smoothed back her hair. ”Are you so very strong?”
He blushed. ”I'm not that gifted, my lady. If you're well, then I'll go and let you rest.”
”Wait.” She grasped his arm and he helped her to her feet, all respectful solicitude. ”Get me something to drink.”
He obeyed as she made her way to a nearby chair. She drank thirstily, needing the wine to wash away the last shadows of her dream.
”Do you want me to call a physician, my lady?”
”No.” Feeling better, she straightened her shoulders and regarded him closely, searching for the elusive memory. She had seen him before, she was sure of it. All at once she had it. ”Aren't you the boy who attends Lady Hollis?”
”I have that honor, my lady.”
”I see.” Having placed him now, she relaxed. This was no shadow, only a nice and helpful boy who had been kind-and who had better not say anything about what he might have heard. ”I was dreaming,” she said, ”when you came in and woke me. I must have startled you.”
”Not half as much as I did you, my lady.” He smiled again. ”I heard you call out and I thought it best to wake you if I could.”
”My thanks. It was not a pleasant dream,” she added wryly, relieved that she had said nothing to reveal herself. ”And thank you for your attention, Sejast. You may go now. I'm recovered.”
”Very good, my lady. But please try to rest. You look very tired.”
”I will. Goodnight.”
Segev grinned to himself as he left the tent. So much for family instinct, he thought; Pandsala had not recognized a hint of her sister Ianthe in him. It had been a daring thing to do, but the night and Mireva's use of him and especially Andrade's death had intoxicated him. He had felt power rip through him like a blizzard of cold, stinging snow that burned with his own body heat and turned to fiery rivers of strength. His mind itched for the Star Scroll and the spells that would show him even more power. But he still had to wait.