“Calandor,” she said. “Why did you tell such things to Satoris Third-Born, yet not to Haomane First-Born?”
“Because,” the dragon said. “He asssked.”
For a long moment, neither spoke. At length, Lilias said, “Is that why Haomane despises him?”
The dragon shifted. “Perhapss, Liliasss. I cannot sssay.”
“Between them, they will tear the world asunder anew,” she said in a low voice.
“Yesss,” Calandor agreed. “One in his pride, one in his defiansse. Sso it musst be. All things change and transsmute, even Shapers. They play the roles they mussst.”
“Do they know?” she asked.
Calandor blinked once, slowly. “Sssatoriss knows.”
In the unseasonal warmth she shivered, wrapping her arms about herself, pressing her body against the scaled forelimb. Even the forge-heat of the dragon’s body could not dispel her chill. “Calandor, what of us? What happens if we fail?”
“Fail?” There was amusement in the dragon’s deep voice. “What is failure?”
“RIGHT.” THE CAPTAIN OF THE Ilona’s Gull scratched his stubbled chin, running a calculating eye over Carfax’ company. “My bargain was for twenty men, not horses. ’Specially not these horses. Reckon they’ll wreak right hell in my hold if the crossing’s rough, won’t they?”
In the bright sunlight of Harrington Bay, the measures taken to disguise the horses of Darkhaven held up poorly. Even with burred manes and ill-kept coats, their eyes gleamed with preternatural intellect, muscles gliding like oil under their bunching hides.
“Look, man.” Carfax struggled for calm, finding his hand reaching for his sword-hilt. Nothing on earth was more frustrating than dealing with the Free Fishers of Harrington Inlet. They owed allegiance to no mortal ruler, and their independence was legendary. “A bargain was made. My understanding is that it was for passage for my men and their mounts … and for the lady. Will you keep it or no?”
A crowd was gathering on the quai, which was to the good. They wanted witnesses who could testify that a group of armed men, likely Pelmaran, had departed on the Ilona’s Gull, escorting a woman garbed in a cloak of white silk wrought by Ellylon, the gold-embroidered crowns and ruby Souma glinting in the sunlight.
What they didn’t want was witnesses who crowded close enough to note that the supposed Pelmarans spoke the common tongue with a Staccian accent, the horses they rode were found nowhere else on earth, and beneath the shadow of her exquisite hood, the Ellyl noblewoman sported blond beard-stubble.
“I might …” the captain drawled, winking at his mates. “For a price. A damage tax, y’see.”
“Fine,” Carfax snapped. If he’d had the luxury of time, he’d have showed the Free Fisherman what it meant to bargain with a disciple of mighty Vorax, whose appetite was matched only by his shrewdness. But somewhere behind them—hours, at best—a host of Haomane’s Allies pursued them. “Name your price.”
The Free Fisher captain pursed his wind-chapped lips. “I might do it for a pair of those fine steeds you ride, goodman.”
“Two horses?” Carfax raised his hand, cutting off a protest from his comrades.
“Two.” The captain nodded. “Aye, two will do it. Reckon they’ll fetch a good price in Port Calibus.” He grinned, revealing strong white teeth. “They do like to cut a fine figure astride, those Vedasian knights.”
“Done.”
The bargain struck, the planks were laid, and Carfax’s company began boarding the Ilona’s Gull. The horses of Darkhaven permitted themselves to be led down the ramps with wary dignity, eyes rolling as they descended into the ship’s hold. Turin in his Ellyl cloak was hustled aboard, surrounded by an escort. Carfax breathed a sigh of relief as he disappeared.
“Lieutenant.” One of his men, young Mantuas, tugged at his elbow. “Lieutenant,” he hissed in Staccian, “we can’t part with any of the horses! ’Twill leave a trail pointing straight to Darkhaven!”
“Peace, lad,” Carfax muttered out of the side of his mouth. “At least speak in common, if you must. Hey!” he added, shouting at the pressing crowd, affecting a Pelmaran accent rather well, he thought. “You and you, get back! This is important business, and none of yours!”
They withdrew a few paces, the Free Fishers; net-men and fish-wives, curious children with bright eyes. A few paces, no more. Carfax hid a smile. Lord Vorax had a fondness for the Free Fishers of Harrington Inlet, truth be told. Stubborn as they were, they had the pride of their self-interest, unabashed and free—some, like this captain, even willing to strike deals with agents of suspect origin.
But when it came to war, the Free Fishers would side with Haomane’s Allies, believing Lord Satoris would strip away their independence. Mantuas was right, of course. They couldn’t afford to lose the horses.
If there were more time, Carfax thought, he might try to sway the captain and his crew. They seemed like shrewd men who understood profit and would listen to reason, who could be brought to understand that Lord Satoris offered a greater freedom than they knew existed; freedom from the yolk of Haomane’s will, under which they labored unknowing, trudging like a miller’s oxen in endless circles.
But given the time constraints, it would be much simpler to kill them at sea.
Carfax hoped he remembered how to sail a ship. It had been a long time since he had summered on the shores of Laefrost Lake with his mother’s kin, the clear, ice-blue waters swollen with snowmelt. Well, he thought, crossing the ramp, standing at the railings as the planks were drawn aboard and the mainsail hoisted, the winch grinding as the anchor was raised; we will find out.
The sail bellied full, showing the proud insignia of the Free Fishers of Harrington Inlet, the stone anchor and fishhook. Crewmen scrambled here and there, obeying the captain’s shouted orders. A wedge of open water divided them from the shore, growing steadily as the Ilona’s Gull nudged her prow seaward.
NINE
THEY EMERGED FROM THE TUNNELS in the outskirts of a ruined city.
Once, there had been walls and towers of white onyx, proud spires rising from the plains. Now, the walls were breached and broken, and plain-hawks nested in the toppled towers. Sturdy heart-grass grew in the empty streets, cracking the marble flagstones, and the wind made a mournful sound in the ruins.
The entrance to the tunnel was partially blocked by great slabs of blue chalcedony, and they picked their way out one by one. Cerelinde, emerging into the cloud-shrouded daylight, reached out from her saddle to touch the cracked walls of the adjacent structure from which slabs of precious stone had slid, revealing the granite beneath. “Ellylon made this.”
“Careful, Lady,” Tanaros muttered. “It is unstable.”
“What is this place?” She shivered. “There is sorrow in its bones.”
Hyrgolf glanced backward, his massive head silhouetted against the lowering sky. “Your people called it the City of Long Grass, Lady of the Ellylon,” he answered in his guttural voice. “A long time ago.”
“Ah, Haomane!” Cerelinde flung herself from her mount’s back, kneeling at the base of one chalcedony slab. “Cuilos Tuillenrad.” Her fingers brushed the moon-blue surface with delicate reverence, revealing lines of Ellylon runes therein engraved. “This city belonged to Numireth the Fleet,” she breathed.
“Yes.” Tanaros caught the reins of her mount, glancing around uneasily. The city, or what remained of it, was a desolate place. It had been conquered long ago, in the Third Age of the Sundered World, when Lord Satoris had led the Fjeltroll out of the fastness of the north and swept westward, driving the Ellylon before him. The plains had reclaimed it since. No one else wanted it. “Lady Cerelinde, we must ride.”
“A moment,” she whispered, tracing the runes with her fingertips. “I beg you.”
He glanced at Hyrgolf, who shrugged. The Fjel were engaged in hauling supplies from the tunnel, assessing what must be ported, what could be left behind. There would be ample grazing now that they were on the open plains. I
t had been carefully chosen, this site; close enough to Darkhaven to ensure a safe return, far enough to ensure that the Lady of the Ellylon did not guess the extent of the tunnel system that lay beneath Urulat, which led to the door of Darkhaven itself.
And, of course, there was the history, which was supposed to remind her of the folly of opposing Lord Satoris’ will. All of these matters were well considered, which did naught to assuage the prickling sensation at the back of Tanaros’ neck.
Why had the plains gone wind-still?
“Cousin.” Ushahin sidled his mount close to Tanaros. His good eye squinted tight. “I mislike this stillness. Something is wrong.”
The Fjel had paused in their labors, broad nostrils sniffing the air. Vorax’s Staccians were huddled together, crowding their mounts’ flanks. Pressure built all around. At the base of the chalcedony slab, the Lady Cerelinde traced runes, whispering under her breath.
“Dreamspinner!” Tanaros grabbed the half-breed’s wrist. “What is she doing?”
“You do not know?” Ushahin’s smile was sickly. “This is the crypt where the fallen of the House of Numireth were interred. The tunnels lie beneath it. Where she kneels?” He nodded toward Cerelinde, whose bridal skirts lay spread in a pool. “It is where their kin offered prayers for vengeance against the Sunderer. I imagine she does the same.”
Every blade of heart-grass stood motionless, waiting, in the gaps of the walls, the cracked and desolate streets. There was only the whisper of Cerelinde’s voice.
Tanaros swore.
“Put on the helm,” he said, his fingers tightening hard on the half-breed’s wrist. “Dreamspinner! Don the Helm of Shadows!”
Too late.
From everywhere and nowhere they came at once; wraiths, the host of the House of Numireth. Misty riders on misty horses, converging from all quarters of the forsaken city. With hollow eyes filled with white flame, the Ellylon dead heeded Cerelinde’s prayer, and the clamor of ancient battle rose as they rode, a grief-stricken wail riding above it all.
“Tungskulder Fjel!” Somewhere, Hyrgolf was roaring. “Form a square! Kaldjager! To the hunt!”
Tanaros swore again, having lost his grip on the reins of Cerelinde’s mount and on Ushahin. He drew his Pelmaran sword as a ghostly warrior bore down upon him, swinging hard. His blade cleaved only mist, and Ellyl laughter pealed like bells, bright and bitter. Again, and again. The Host of Numireth encircled him, pale mocking in their unsubstantial beauty, riding past to swipe at him with ghostly blades. Filled with unreasoning terror, Tanaros dug his heels into the black’s sides, turning him in a tight circle, lashing out with his sword.
Everywhere he turned, the wraiths surrounded him, riding in a ring, swirling into mist when his steel passed through them, only to coalesce unharmed. White fire filled the hollows of their eyes, and death was written in it. Some yards away through the wraith-mist, Ushahin Dreamspinner had fallen writhing to the ground, clutching his twisted hands over his ears. And then one of the riding wraiths brushed close enough to touch him, and Tanaros heard the voices of the dead whispering in his own mind.
… because of you we were slain whom the Lord-of-Thought made deathless, because of you the world was Sundered, because of you we are bound here …
“No!” Tanaros shouted to silence the rising chorus. “It’s not true!”
… dwelled in peace until the Enemy came from the north and hordes upon hordes of Fjeltroll tore down our walls and slaughtered our armies …
“It’s not true!”
Numireth, Valwe, Nandinor … names out of legend, slain before his birth. Tall lords of the Ellylon with eyes of white fire, and on their breastplates the insignia of their House, the swift plains elbok, picked out in sable shadow. Numireth the Fleet, whose silver helm was crowned with wings. They closed around him, wraith-mist touching his living flesh, the tide of their litany rising in his straining mind.
… plains of Curonan ran red with blood and the screams of the dying, and we were driven from our homes, we who are the Rivenlost …
“No.” Tanaros shut his eyes against them in desperate denial, putting up his sword. Under his right elbow, he felt the lump of Hyrgolf’s rhios in its pouch. A familiar rage rose in his heart. “Dwelled in peace, my arse! You marched against him in Neherinach!”
Elsewhere, the sound of battle raged; but the voices fell silent in his mind.
Without daring open his eyes, Tanaros dismounted, letting the reins fall slack. Crawling, he groped his way across the cracked marble and tufted heart-grass toward the sound of Ushahin’s agonized keening. There, a few paces from the half-breed, his hands found what he sought—the leather case that held the Helm of Shadows.
“Cousin.” He reached out blindly to touch Ushahin. “I’m taking the Helm.”
“Tanaros!” A breath hissed through clenched teeth. “Get them out of my head!”
“I will try.” With fingers stiff from clutching his hilt, Tanaros undid the clasps and withdrew the Helm. It throbbed with pain at his touch and he winced at the ache in his bones. His hands trembled as he removed the Pelmaran helmet and placed the Helm of Shadows on his head, opening his eyes.
Darkness.
Pain.
Darkness like a veil over his vision, casting the plains and the ruined city in shadow; pain, a constant companion. The ghost of a wound throbbed in his groin, deep and searing, pumping a steady trickle of ichor down the inside of his leg. Such was the pain of Satoris, stabbed by Oronin Last-Born before the world was Sundered, and the darkness of the Helm was the darkness in his heart.
Once it had been Haomane’s weapon. No longer.
Tanaros rose. Before him, the wraiths of the House of Numireth arrayed themselves in a line, silent warriors on silent horses. In the Helm’s shadowed vision they had taken on solidity, and he saw bitter sorrow in their eyes instead of flames, and the marks of their death-wounds upon their ageless flesh.
Across the plains and throughout the city, other battles raged. Westward, the surviving Staccian riders fled in full-blown terror, not even the horses of Darkhaven able to outrun the wraiths. In a deserted plaza where once a fountain had played, Hyrgolf’s Fjel fought shadows, their guttural cries hoarse with exhaustion and fear. Here and there in the streets, the stalking Kaldjager waged battle with the dead.
And to the south, a lone rider streaked in flight, unpursued.
“Numireth.” Tanaros gazed steadily through the eyeslits of the Helm of Shadows. “I claim this city in the name of Satoris the Shaper. This quarrel is older than your loss, and your shades have no power in Urulat. Begone.”
The Lord of Cuilos Tuillenrad, the City of Long Grass, grimaced in the face of the Helm’s dark visage; held up one hand, turned away, his figure fading as he rode. One by one, the wraith-host followed, growing insubstantial and vanishing.
“Well done.” Breathing hard, Ushahin struggled to his feet. His mouth was twisted in self-deprecation. “My apologies, Blacksword. I’ve walked in the dreams of the living. I’ve never had the dead enter mine. It was … painful.”
“It doesn’t matter.” Tanaros removed the Helm, blinking at the sudden brightness. The piercing throb in his groin subsided to a vestigial ache. “Can you summon her horse? I’ve not the skill for it.”
“Aye.” Donning the Helm of Shadows, Ushahin faced south, sending out a whip-crack of thought. In the distance, the small, fleeting figure of a horse balked. There was a struggle between horse and rider; a brief one. The horses of Darkhaven had strong wills and hard mouths. This one turned in a sweeping loop, heading back for the ruined city at a steady canter, bearing its rider with it.
Tanaros watched long enough to be certain Cerelinde would not throw herself from the saddle, then turned his attention to his company. To the west, the Staccians had regrouped, returning shame-faced at their flight. Singly and in pairs, the Kaldjager loped through the streets, irritable at the false hunt. But Hyrgolf’s Fjel … ah, no!
They came slowly, carrying one of
their number with uncommon care.
“General Tanaros.” Hyrgolf’s salute was sombre. “I am sorry to report—”
“Jei morderran!” It was a young Tungskulder Fjel, one of the new recruits, who interrupted, hurling himself prone on the cracked marble, offering his bloodstained axe with both hands. “Gojdta mahk åxrekke—”
“Field marshal!” Tanaros cut the lad short. “Report.”
“Aye, General.” Hyrgolf met his gaze. “Bogvar is wounded. I do not think he will live. Thorun asks you to take his axe-hand in penance.”
“He asks what? No, never mind.” Tanaros turned his attention to the injured Fjeltroll, laid gently on the ground by the four comrades who carried him. “Bogvar, can you hear me?”
“Lord … General.” Bogvar’s leathery lips parted, flecked with blood. One of his eyetusks was chipped. A dreadful gash opened his massive chest, and air whistled in it as he struggled for breath, blood bubbling in the opening, gurgling as he spoke. “You … were … right.” The claws on his left hand flexed, and he forced his lips into a horrible smile. “Should have held … my shield higher.”
“Ah, curse it, Bogvar!” Kneeling beside him, Tanaros pressed both hands hard over the gash. “Someone bring a—ah, no!” A rush of blood welled in the Fjel’s open mouth, dribbled from one comer. Bogvar of the Tungskulder Fjel lay still, and bled no more. Tanaros sighed and ran a hand through his hair, forgetful of the blood. “You should have held your shield higher,” he muttered, clambering wearily to his feet. “The lad Thorun did this?”
“Aye.” Hyrgolf’s voice came from deep in his chest. “An accident. The dead came among us, and some broke ranks. Thorun was one. He thought he struck a blow at an Ellyl wraith. My fault, General. I reckoned him ready.”