Part 3 (2/2)

King Casmir considered himself a master of intrigue and sought incessantly for some trifling advantage which he might exploit. On one ”occasion a heavily laden Troice cog, inching along the coast of Dascinet in a dense fog ran aground on a sand bank. Yvar Excelsus, the irascible King of Dascinet, instantly claimed the vessel and its cargo, citing maritime law, and sent lighters to unload the cargo. A pair of Troice wars.h.i.+ps appeared, repelled what was now a swarming flotilla of half-piratical Dasce, and at high tide pulled the cog into deep water.

In a fury King Yvar Excelsus sent an abusive message to King Granice at Alceinor demanding reparations, upon pain of punitive action.

King Granice, who well knew the temperament of Yvar Excelsus, ignored the message, exasperating the Dasce king almost to a state of incandescence.

King Casmir now dispatched a secret emissary to Dascinet, urging attack upon Troicinet, and promising full a.s.sistance. Troice spies intercepted the envoy and took him with his doc.u.ments to Alceinor.

A week later a cask was delivered to King Casmir at Haidion, in which he discovered the body of his envoy with the doc.u.ments crammed into his mouth.

Meanwhile King Yvar Excelsus became distracted by another matter, and his threats against Troicinet came to nothing.

King Granice made no further remonstrance to King Casmir, but began seriously to consider the possibility of an unwelcome war. Troicinet, with a population half that of Lyonesse, could never expect to win such a war and hence had nothing to gain and everything to lose.

From the town Pargetta, close by Cape Farewell, came ill reports of pillage and slaughter by the Ska. Two black s.h.i.+ps, arriving at dawn, discharged troops who looted the town with a dispa.s.sionate precision more terrifying than savagery. All who interfered were killed. The Ska took crocks of olive oil, saffron, wine, gold from the Mithraic temple, tin and silver ingots, flasks of quicksilver. They took away no captives, put torches to no buildings, committed no rape or torture, and killed only those folk who impeded their robbery.

Two weeks later a Troice cog, putting into Lyonesse Town with a cargo of Irish flax, reported a disabled Ska s.h.i.+p in the Sea of Tethra, west of Cape Farewell. The Troice cog had put in close to discover forty Ska sitting at their benches too weak to row. The Troice had offered a tow, but the Ska refused to take a line, and the cog sailed away.

King Casmir instantly despatched three war-galleys to the area, where they found the long black s.h.i.+p wallowing dismasted in the swells.

The galleys drew up alongside, to discover disaster, anguish and death. A storm had broken the vessel's back-stay; the mast had collapsed upon the forepeak, crus.h.i.+ng the water casks, and half the s.h.i.+p's complement already had succ.u.mbed to thirst.

Nineteen men survived; too weak to offer resistance, they were taken aboard the Lyonesse s.h.i.+ps and given water. A line was made fast to the long-s.h.i.+p; the corpses were thrown overboard and all returned to Lyonesse Town, and the Ska were jailed in an old fort at the west end of the harbor. King Casmir, riding his horse Sheuvan, went down to the harbor to inspect the long-s.h.i.+p. The contents of the forward and after cargo holds had been conveyed to the dock: a case of gold and silver temple adornments, gla.s.s jars of saffron gathered from the sheltered valleys behind Cape Farewell, pottery urns stamped with the symbol of the Bulmer Skeme press.

King Casmir inspected the loot and the long-s.h.i.+p, then rode Sheuvan around the Chale to the fortress. At his command the prisoners were brought out and ranked before him, to stand blinking into the sunlight: tall dark-haired men, pale of complexion, thin and sinewy rather than ma.s.sive. They looked about them with the easy curiosity of honored guests, and spoke to each other in soft measured voices.

King Casmir addressed the group. ”Which among you is captain of the vessel?”

The Ska turned to look at him, politely enough, but no one answered.

King Casmir pointed to a man in the front rank. ”Which man among you is in authority? Point him out.”

”The captain is dead. We are all 'dead.' Authority is gone, and everything else of life.”

”To me you appear quite alive,” said Casmir, smiling coldly.

”We reckon ourselves dead.”

”Because you expect to be killed? Suppose I allowed you ransom?”

”Who would ransom a dead man?”

King Casmir made an impatient gesture. ”I want information, not garble and cant.” He looked through the group and in one man, somewhat older than the others, thought to recognize the

quality of authority. ”You will remain here.” He signaled the guards. ”Take the others back to confinement.”

King Casmir took the man he had selected aside. ”Are you also 'dead'?”

”I am no longer among the living Ska. To my family, my comrades and myself, I am dead.”

”Tell me this: Suppose I wished to confer with your king would he come to Lyonesse under guarantees of protection?

”Naturally not.” The Ska seemed amused.

”Suppose I wished to explore the possibility of an alliance: ”To what end?”

”The Ska navy and the seven Lyonesse armies, acting in concert, might be invincible.”

”'Invincible'? Against whom?”

King Casmir disliked anyone who pretended to more acuity than himself. ”Against all others of the Elder Isles! Whom else?”

”You imagine the Ska a.s.sisting you against your enemies? The idea is preposterous. If I were alive I would laugh. The Ska are at war with all the world, including Lyonesse.”

”That is no vindication. I am about to adjudge you a pirate.” The Ska looked up at the sun, around the sky and out over the sea. ”Do as you like. We are dead.”

King Casmir showed a grim smile. ”Dead or not, your fate shall serve to daunt other murderers, and the time shall be noon tomorrow.”

Along the breakwater nineteen frames were erected. The night pa.s.sed; the day dawned bright and clear. By mid-morning crowds had a.s.sembled along the Chale, including folk from coastal villages, peasants in clean smocks and bell-hats, vendors of sages and dried fish. On the rocks west of the Chale crawled cripples, lepers and the weak-minded, in accordance with the statutes of Lyonesse.

The sun reached the zenith. The Ska were led from the fortress. Each was spread-eagled naked to a frame and hung upside down, facing out to sea. Down from the Peinhador came Zerling, the Chief Executioner. He walked along the row, stopped by each man, slit the abdomen, drew out the intestines with a double-p.r.o.nged hook, so that they fell over the chest and head, then moved on to the next. A black and yellow flag was hoisted at the entrance to the harbor, and the dying men were left to themselves.

Dame Maugelin pulled an embroidered bonnet over her head and went down to the Chale. Suldrun thought that she might be left to herself, but Dame Boudetta took her to the balcony outside the Queen's bedchamber, where ladies of the court gathered to watch the execution. At noon the conversations halted and all pressed to the bal.u.s.trade to view the proceedings. As Zerling went about his duties, the ladies sighed and made murmuring sounds. Suldrun was lifted to the bal.u.s.trade the better that she might learn the fate accorded to outlaws. In fascinated revulsion she watched Zerling saunter from man to man, but distance concealed the details of his work.

Few of the ladies present spoke favorably of the occasion. For Lady Duisane and Lady Ermoly who suffered poor vision, the distances were too great. Lady Spaneis p.r.o.nounced the affair simply dull. ”It was like butcher's work upon dead animals; the Ska showed neither fear nor penitence; what kind of execution is that?” Queen Sollace grumbled: ”Worst of all, the wind blows directly across the harbor and into our windows. In three days the stink will drive us off to Sarris.”

Suldrun listened in hope and excitement; Sarris was the summer palace, some forty miles to the east beside the river Glame.

But there was no instant removal to Sarris, despite the inclinations of Queen Sollace. The corpses were quickly scavenged by carrion birds. King Casmir became bored with the frames and the fragments of bone and gristle hanging at odd angles, and ordered the display dismantled.

Haidion was quiet. Dame Maugelin, suffering from swollen legs, lay moaning in her chamber, high in the Tower of Owls. Suldrun, alone in her room, became restless, but a bl.u.s.tering wind, raw and cold, dissuaded her from the secret garden.

Suldrun stood looking from the window, troubled by a sweet sad malaise. Oh! for a magic steed to carry her away througl the air! How far she would fly, across the white clouds, over the Land of the Silver River, to the mountains at the edge of the world.

For a breathless moment she thought how it would be to don her cloak, slip from the palace and be away: up the Sfer Arct to Old Street, with all the wide land before her! She sighed and smiled a wan smile for the folly of her fancies. The vagabond; she had seen from the parapets were by and large a disreputable lot, hungry and dirty and sometimes rather cra.s.s in their habits. Such a life lacked appeal, and now, as she considered the matter, Suldrun decided that she very much enjoyed shelter from the wind and rain and nice clean clothes and the dignity of her person.

If only she had a magic carriage which at night became a little cottage where she could dine on the things she liked and sleep in a snug bed!

She sighed once more. An idea came into her mfnd. She licked her lips at the audacity. Dared she? What harm could be done, if she were extremely careful? She thought a moment, lips pursed and head tilted sideways: the definitive image of a girl planning mischief.

At the hearth Suldrun put flame to the candle in her night-lamp and drew down the hood. Carrying the candle she descended the stairs.

The Hall of Honors was dim and dreary, and quiet as the grave. Suldrun entered the chamber with exaggerated stealth. Today the great chairs gave her small attention. The unfriendly chairs maintained a stony reserve; the kind chairs seemed absorbed in their own affairs. Very well, let them ignore her. Today she would ignore them as well.

Suldrun went around the throne to the back wall, where she slid the hood from her candle. Just one look; that was all she intended. She was far too wise a girl to venture into danger. She pushed aside the hanging. Candlelight illuminated the room, and the stone wall to the rear.

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