Part 23 (1/2)
”You recall that before the princesses came, I had been up near the river, carrying messages to Talgan.”
”Yes.”
”I've been keeping up with the dispatches coming in-I know you have as well-and I'm concerned about those troops.”
”So am I,” Kieri said. ”I may ask Aliam to send me another cohort.”
”I can't understand why they'd send their princess to you and then prepare an attack.”
Kieri had not told any of the Squires about Elis being instructed to kill him. ”They wanted me dead,” he said, and went on to tell Arian everything Elis had told him. He pitched his voice so all could hear if they wished. Arian's face expressed the horror he had felt. Then it softened.
”A hard trial for such a young girl,” she said. ”No wonder she was so difficult to understand.”
Now that the princesses were gone, the Siers in Chaya began making comments about marriage again. Was he looking? Could he use some advice? Kieri wondered when they thought he had time to look; every day had some crisis he must deal with, and that on top of his regular work. He understood their concern, but it had not even been a half-year yet.
”The thing is, my lord,” old Joriam said, soaping his king's back, ”you may be young, as half-elves go, and you may be strong as oak and lithe as willow, but if some rock drops on your head, you're dead. Or a fever: even kings get fevers. It's your duty, same as wearing a crown or visiting your father's bones.”
”I know that,” Kieri said, feeling smothered by the constant attention to his single state.
”She doesn't have to be royal, my lord. Or even n.o.ble. Just...you know...” He left it there, and poured the clean water over Kieri's soapy body. ”Fertile,” was what he meant.
Kieri tried looking at all the women around him with marriage in mind, but he hated thinking of them that way, as breeding animals. They were people, people he had come to know and care for. And they were, mostly, too old to have children or too young for a man his age. He wanted companions.h.i.+p; he wanted someone he could talk to.
That thought sent him to the ossuary, one hot afternoon. This time he lit no candle, just sat and listened...to nothing...for a long time. Then once again he felt presences gathering around him. One conveyed the combination of wistfulness and stubborn anger that he now a.s.sociated with his sister.
I'm here, he thought.
Once again: Betrayal. Danger Betrayal. Danger. He sat quietly, trying to open his mind as he did to the taig. They lie They lie. She had conveyed that before, but who lied? She trusted She trusted. Who trusted? A fuzzy image of a face leaning down, a sense of warmth and safety. Kieri finally realized this was an adult's face as a very small child might see it...a face he almost knew...did know, as he noticed the elven bone structure, subtly different from human.
Our mother trusted? Trusted whom?
This time the image was clear as if incised in crystal: the Lady. Their grandmother. A wave of distrust and anger came with it. Kieri tried to think it through: their mother had trusted their grandmother, and his sister thought their grandmother had...had what? Neglected her in some way? Betrayed that trust? But how? The obvious was behaving as she had with him, staying away, not helping in some way.
You trusted. All wistfulness with that, a palpable stroke along his left cheek. You left. You never came again You left. You never came again. Followed by a burst of anger.
The hair stood up on Kieri's body; he could feel it p.r.i.c.kling in his clothes. Betrayal...could she mean his mother's death death? His captivity captivity? Nausea roiled his gut; he stood up, gulping, struggling not to pollute the ossuary, and staggered into the anteroom.
”Sir King!” The Seneschal stared at him. ”What's wrong-what can I-?”
Kieri could not speak; he lurched up the stairs barefoot with the Seneschal behind him, still talking. His Squires, at the entrance, turned to him; he saw the shock on their faces. It didn't matter. It could not be true, she must be mistaken, it could not be-he made it to a corner of the courtyard, leaned over, and spewed, choking, tears suddenly burning his eyes and overflowing.
Moments later someone handed him a cloth; he wiped his mouth. Another cloth, this one wet; he wiped his face and tried to stand, but his stomach betrayed him, and he had to bend and gag, bile burning his mouth. Hands steadied him; he began to know where he was, that the Squires were screening him from view, that they had brought water, towels, his cloak, that his feet burned from the hot pave stones.
Finally, aching as if he had a fever, he was able to stand, clean his face again, turn away from the mess on the stones.
”Come, sit here,” the Seneschal said. He had brought a chair and set it in the shade of a wall. Kieri leaned on a Squire's arm without noticing whose it was, made his way to the chair, and sat. The Seneschal washed and dried his feet, put on his socks, helped him into his boots. His breathing steadied. He accepted the mug of cold water someone brought, sipped. It stayed down.
”I'm...sorry,” Kieri said.
”Sir King...Something happened-the bones.” The Seneschal's wise gaze held his.
”I...believe I misunderstood,” Kieri said. ”It must be that I misunderstood.” Out here, under the bright sky, what he had been shown and events he had surmised from it were impossible to imagine, let alone believe real. His sister had been a tiny child, barely walking, when their mother died; how could she know what their mother thought-whom their mother trusted-who had betrayed their mother and him, if indeed it was not a random attack by brigands? Whatever his sister believed, he could not-he would not-believe that his grandmother had connived at his mother's death. ”And,” he said, trying to straighten more in the chair, ”I may have a touch of summer fever. I drank from a spring yesterday-” A spring the taig had a.s.sured him was safe, but tainted water could cause summer fever.
”Sir King,” the Seneschal said. ”Bones do not lie.”
Kieri looked up at that old, wise face. ”Bones can be mistaken,” he said.
”Yes,” the Seneschal agreed. ”But if it comes to the living tongue or the bones: bones do not lie, and tongues do. Whatever you learned from bones will have truth in it. I pray you, come again to the ossuary and listen.”
”Not today,” Kieri said. He felt cold sweat break out at the thought.
”No, my lord, not today. But such reactions-if it is not summer fever-suggest the bones have urgent messages.”
He went back to his rooms, feeling hot and cold by turns. Summer fever. It must be summer fever, with the ache, with the nausea, with the loss of appet.i.te-he refused supper and went early to bed, waving off the palace physician. Despite the open windows, not a breath of air stirred; sound carried from the courtyard below, the stables, the streets of Chaya. A child cried out suddenly; he flinched, squeezing his eyes shut and then forcing them open to see...nothing but the vague outline of the window.
Toward morning, thunder rumbled in the distance, then nearer. A chill damp gust of air blew in, and then the storm broke overhead. He fell asleep then, waking sticky-eyed, with a foul taste in his mouth, much later than usual. Rain fell steadily outside. He lay, listening to it, and turning over in his mind what he had experienced. Hints. Suggestions. His own mind had made a connection out of his own experience, something his sister could not know. He had created his own nightmare out of such fragile materials.
By breakfast, when his appet.i.te returned, he had himself firmly in hand. It made no sense that his grandmother had betrayed his mother and him...if she had, why would she have accepted his coronation? Tried to find him an elven bride? A vast gulf yawned between her not coming when he asked for her and deliberate malice, an attempt to kill. Perhaps she and his mother had been, like many mothers and daughters he'd known in his life, annoyed with each other-perhaps they had even quarreled-but that didn't mean anything worse. A young child, his sister, could misunderstand- He welcomed the interruptions to his musings-messages brought in by couriers, appointments, meetings-but he hoped Orlith would not come until he felt calmer.
”Sir King, there's a message from Tsaia-” Arian, with a letter from King Mikeli in Tsaia. He took the letter from her and tried to focus on King Mikeli's concerns about the theft of the mysterious necklace from Fin Panir. Some, Mikeli reported, were saying that Dorrin Verrakai had arranged the theft.
”Ridiculous!” Kieri said aloud.
”Sir King?”
”This-” Kieri read her the letter. ”Dorrin gave the regalia to the king; why would she steal the necklace?”
”That fellow you told us about in Aarenis might have sent thieves,” Arian said.
”Yes-that's what Mikeli suspects,” Kieri said. ”Alured's dangerous. Though why he thinks the necklace alone will do him any good...”
”Perhaps he thinks he can use it to call the rest of it to him?”
Kieri shook his head. ”I don't think it works that way. The crown or the ring should be the most powerful, a.s.suming that the items are innately magical. They might be drawing the necklace to themselves-in which case it should show up in Verella.”
Night after night Kieri's sleep was troubled, though he could not remember specific dreams, only an undefined menace. He would have to do something, he realized, about the bones and their hints. He wasn't ready for another trip to the ossuary, and didn't want to ask the elves. Instead, he began asking who in the palace had known his sister or even his parents.
He started with Joriam, who was polis.h.i.+ng the big bra.s.s ewers in his bathing room. The old man's eyes lit up.
”Yes, my lord, I do remember. Your mother now, my lord, she was a beauty, she was. Fresh as a snowdrop, but strong, the way elves are. She didn't ride just the air and water horses, but any color-she liked to match with your father when they rode out together. The two of them, on matched horses...it brought tears to the eyes.”
”Did the Lady come to visit often then?”
”No...I wouldn't say that. At your birth, yes: said the elven needed some elven magic and upset the midwives no end. Out with you all Out with you all, she said, and there was words spoken, I heard from one of the maids. And at Midsummer, of course, and usually Midwinter, bringing snow sprites.”