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Volume I in The
Legends of Camber of Culdi Katherine Kurtz chapter oneIn the
multitude of people is the kings honour; but in the want of the people is the
destruction of the prince. —Proverbs 14:28 Though it was but
late September, a wintry wind howled and battered at the ramparts of Tor
Caerrorie, rattling the narrow, glazed windows in their frames and snapping to
tatters the gules/azure MacRorie standard atop the tower keep. Inside, the only
daughter of the Earl of Culdi sat huddled over the manorial accounts beside a
crackling hearth, wrapped in a fur-lined mantle against the chill of the
deserted great hall, a brindle wolfhound asleep at her feet. Torches guttered
on the wall behind her, though it was not yet mid-afternoon, besmirching the
stone walls with soot. Smoke mingled with the scent of mutton roasting in the
nearby kitchens, and a rushlight cast a yellow glow across the table where she
worked. It was with some relief that she finally marked the last entry with her
cipher and laid down her quill. Umphred, her father’s bailiff, heard her sigh
and came to collect the rolls with a bow. “That completes
the accounts for last quarter, mistress. Is all in order?” Evaine MacRorie,
chatelaine of Tor Caerrorie since her mother’s death seven years before,
favored Umphred with a gentle smile. The wolfhound raised his great head to
look at the bailiff, then went back to sleep. “You knew it would
be,” Evaine smiled. She touched the old man’s hand in affection as he curled
the membranes into their storage tubes and gathered them into his arms. “Would
you please ask one of the squires to saddle a horse and come to me?” she added.
“I have a letter to go to Cathan in Valoret.” As Umphred bowed
and turned to go, Evaine pushed a strand of flaxen hair from her forehead, then
began nibbling at an inkstain on her thumb as she glanced at the letter on the
table. She wondered what Cathan would say when he got the letter. For that
matter, she wondered how her other brother, Joram, would react when the news
reached him. Actually, Cathan’s
reaction was not difficult to predict. He would be shocked, dismayed, outraged,
in turn; but then the double bond of friendship to his king and duty to his
father’s people would move him to plead the king’s mercy, to urge the tempering
of royal wrath with princely pardon. Though the MacRories themselves were not
implicated in what had happened, the incident had taken place on
Camber’s hereditary lands. She wondered whether Imre would be in one of his
difficult moods. Joram, on the other hand, was not so bound by the
cautious duty which ruled his elder brother. An avowed priest of the militant
Order of Saint Michael, Joram was apt to explode in one of the grandiloquent
tirades for which the Michaelines were so justly famous, when he heard the
news. However, it was not the possibility of Joram’s eloquent and caustic
rhetoric which made Evaine apprehensive; it was the fact that the priests of
Saint Michael were just as likely to follow verbal pyrotechnics with physical
action, if prudence did not take the upper hand. The Michaelines were a
fighting as well as a teaching order. More than once, their intervention in
secular affairs had touched off incidents best forgotten by their more contemplative
brethren. She consoled
herself with the probability that Joram would not receive the news until he got
home for Michaelmas two days hence, then stood and stretched and fished for a
missing slipper in the rushes with one stockinged toe, bidding the hound remain
in the hall. Perhaps, by
Michaelmas, the situation would have resolved itself—though Evaine doubted it.
But whatever the outcome, the MacRories’ Michaelmas would be a bit more sober
than usual this year. Joram would be home, of course, bringing her beloved Rhys
with him; but Cathan and his wife and sons must remain in Valoret with the
Court. The young king was demanding, and no more than on the time and attention
of his favorites, like Cathan. Evaine remembered the long months her father had
spent at Court, when he had been in the old king’s service. A squire came and
bent his knee to her, and she bantered with him briefly before handing over the
missive he was to deliver to her brother. Then she pulled her mantle close and
crossed the rush-strewn hall, to make her way up the narrow, newel staircase to
her father’s study. She and Camber had been translating the classic sagas of
Pargan Howiccan, the Deryni lyric poet, and this afternoon Camber had promised
to go over a particularly difficult passage with her. She marvelled again at
the many facets of the man who was her father, fond memories accompanying her
up the spiral stair. Camber’s secular
successes had never been quite anticipated, nor were they by design. In his
youth, he had been preparing for the clergy and had earned impressive academic
credentials at the new university in Grecotha, under some of the greatest minds
of the century. There would have been no limit to his rise in the Church. But when plague
took two elder brothers and left him heir to the MacRorie lands and name—and he
not yet under his final vows—he had found himself quite rudely plucked from the
religious life by his father and thrust into the secular world—and found he
liked it. Further honing of his abilities as an educated layman, and an earl’s
son at that, had been accomplished, earning him wide academic notoriety long
before he was first called to the Court at Valoret. When the old king’s father,
Festil III, had sought the most brilliant men in the land to advise him, Camber
had had little competition. The next quarter-century was spent mostly in the
royal service. But that was past.
Now in his late fifties, Camber had retired three years ago, on the death of
King Blaine, to his beloved Caerrorie, birthplace of himself and his five
children. It was not the principal seat of the Culdi earls; that was reserved
to the great fortress tower of Cor Culdi, on the Kierney border, which Camber
still visited several times a year to preside over the feudal court. But here,
near to the capital and his children’s active lives, he was free at last to
resume the academic pursuits which he had abandoned for the Court so many years
before—this time in the company of a fair, witty, and insatiably curious
daughter whose depths he had but lately begun to discover. If confronted, he
would have vigorously denied that he favored any one of his children above the
others, for he loved all of them fiercely; but Evaine unquestionably occupied a
special place in his life and his heart—Evaine, youngest of his living children
and the last to remain at home. Evaine accepted this facet of her father as she
accepted all the others, without consciously stopping to analyze it—and without
needing to. She reached her
father’s door and knocked lightly before slipping the latch and going inside. Camber was seated
behind a curved hunt table, the leather surface littered with rolls of
parchment and ink-stained quills and other accoutrements of the academic mind.
Her cousin, James Drummond, was with him, and both of them stopped speaking as
she entered the room. Cousin James
looked decidedly angry, though he tried to conceal it. Camber’s face was
inscrutable. “I beg your
pardon, Father. I didn’t know Jamie was with you. I can come back later.” “There’s no need,
child.” Camber stood, both hands resting lightly on the table. “James was just
leaving, weren’t you, James?” James, a blurred,
darker copy of the silver-blond man behind the table, hitched at his belt in
annoyance and controlled a scowl. “Very well, sir, but I’m still not satisfied
with your analysis. I’d like to return tomorrow and discuss it further, if you
don’t mind.” “Certainly I don’t
mind, James,” the older man said easily. “I am always willing to listen to
well-reasoned arguments different from my own. In fact, stay and share
Michaelmas with us, if you can. Cathan won’t be here, but Joram is coming, and
Rhys. We’d love to have you join us.” Disarmed by
Camber’s reply, James murmured his thanks and something about having things to
do, then bowed stiffly and made his exit. With raised
eyebrows, Evaine turned to face her father, leaning thoughtfully against the
closed door. “Goodness, what
was that about? Or shouldn’t I ask?” Camber crossed to
the stone fireplace—a rare luxury in so small a room—and pulled two chairs
closer, gesturing for her to sit. “A slight difference of opinion, that’s all.
James looks to me for guidance, now that his father is dead. I fear he didn’t
get the answer he wanted to hear.” He yanked on a
bell cord, then busied himself with poking at the fire until a liveried servant
appeared at the door with refreshment. Evaine watched curiously as her father
took the tray and bade the servant go. Then, cupping a goblet of mulled wine
between her palms, she gazed across at him. Despite the fire and the tapestried
walls, it was chill in the old room. “You’re very quiet
this afternoon, Father. What is it? Did Jamie tell you about the murder in the
village last night?” Camber tensed for
just an instant, then relaxed. He did not look up. “You know about that?” She spoke
carefully. “When a Deryni is killed, practically, under one’s window, one
learns of it. They say that the king’s men have taken fifty human hostages, and
that the king intends to invoke the Law of Festil if the murderer is not
found.” Camber drank
deeply of his wine and stared into the fire. “A barbarous custom—to hold an
entire village to blame for the death of one man—even if the-man was a
Deryni.” “Aye. Maybe it was
a necessary barbarism in the early days,” Evaine mused. “How else for a conquering
race, few in numbers, to secure its hold over the conquered? But you know how
much Rannulf was disliked, even among our own people. Why, I remember that
Cathan practically had to evict him bodily from Caerrorie one day, when you
were still at Court. If gentle Cathan would do that, I can imagine how boorish
the man must have been.” “If we execute
every boor in Gwynedd, I think there will be few folk left.” Camber smiled
wryly. “However you feel about Rannulf as a person, he did not deserve
death—and certainly not the sort of death he met.” He paused. “I assume, since
you know of the incident, that you also know the details of the murder?” “Only that it was
not a pretty sight.” “And it was not
the work of our peasants, though the king’s agents would have it so,”
Camber retorted. He stood and leaned his arm against the mantelpiece, his thumb
tracing the wood graining on the goblet in his hand. “Rannulf was hanged,
drawn, and quartered, Evaine, in as professional a manner as I have ever seen.
The peasants of this village aren’t capable of such finesse. Besides, the
king’s Truth-Readers have already probed the hostages and learned nothing. Some
of the villagers think—mind you, they think— that it may have been the
work of the Willimites. But no one really knows, or can supply any names.” Evaine snorted
derisively. “The Willimites! Yes, I suppose Rannulf would have been a
likely target. There’s been talk that a child was molested last week in one of
Rannulf’s villages a few miles from here. Did you know that?” “Are you implying
that Rannulf was responsible?” Evaine arched an
eyebrow at him. “The villagers think so. And it’s well known that Rannulf kept
a catamite at his castle in Eastmarch. He was nearly excommunicated last year,
until he bought off his local bishop. The Willimites may have decided that the
time had come to take matters into their own hands. Saint Willim was a
martyr from Deryni ill-use, you know.” “You hardly need
remind me of my history, daughter,” Camber smiled. “You’ve been talking to Joram
again, haven’t you?” “May I not speak
with my own brother?” “Nay, don’t ruffle
your feathers, child.” Camber chuckled. “I shouldn’t want to be accused of
fostering ill-will between brother and sister. Only, be a little prudent with
Joram. He’s young yet, and a bit impulsive sometimes. If he and his Michaelines
aren’t careful, they’re liable to have young Imre breathing down their necks
with an inquisition, Deryni or not.” “I know Joram’s
weaknesses, Father—just as I know yours.” She glanced at him
coyly and caught his indulgent expression, then smiled and stood, relieved by
the chance to change the subject. “May we translate
now, Father? I’ve prepared the next two cantos.” “Have you, now?”
he asked. “Very well, bring the manuscript.” With a pleased
sigh, Evaine darted to the table and began searching among the rolls. She
located the scroll she was looking for, but before she could turn away her eye
was caught by a small, pale golden stone lying beside one of the inkwells. She
picked it up. “What is this?” “What?” “This curious
golden stone. Is it a gem?” Camber smiled and
shook his head. “Not really. The mountain folk in Kierney call it shiral. It
comes out of the river that way, already polished. Bring it here and I’ll show
you something peculiar about it.” Evaine returned to
her chair and sat, settling the forgotten scroll in her lap as she held the
stone to the firelight. It glittered, slightly translucent, strangely
compelling. She passed it to her father without a word as he set aside his wine
goblet. “Now,” said
Camber, gesturing expansively with the stone in his hand, “you’re familiar with
the spell Rhys uses to extend perception before he heals—the one he taught you
and Joram as an aid to meditation?” Rhys’s image
flashed before her for just an instant and she blushed. “Of course.” “Well, on my last
trip to Culdi, I found this. I happened to have it in my hand one night while I
said my evening devotions, and it— Well, watch. It’s easiest to show you.” Holding the object
lightly in the fingers of his two hands, Camber inhaled, exhaled, his eyes
narrowing slightly as he passed into the earliest stages of a Deryni trance.
His breathing slowed, the handsome face relaxed—and then the stone began to
glow faintly. Camber brought his eyes back to focus and extended his hands
toward Evaine, still in trance, the stone still glowing. Evaine’s lips
formed a silent O. “How do you do
it?” she breathed. “I’m not exactly
sure.” Camber blinked and
broke the spell, and the stone-light died. He cupped it between his hands for a
mere heartbeat, then held it out to her with a shake of his head. “You try it.” “Very well.” Taking the stone
in one hand, Evaine passed her other hand over it and bowed her head, mentally
reciting the words which would bring Rhys’s trance. The stone did nothing for
several seconds as she explored its several avenues of approach; then it began
to glow. With a sigh, Evaine returned to the world, held the stone closer as
the light was extinguished. “Strange. It
hardly takes any effort at all, once you know what you’re doing. What is it
for?” Camber shrugged.
“I don’t know. I haven’t been able to find a single use for it yet—other than
to fascinate gullible daughters, that is. You may keep it, if you like.” “May I, really?” “Of course. But
don’t think it’s going to help you with Pargan Howiccan. Two cantos, indeed! If
you make it through more than two pages, I shall be very surprised.
Pleased, but surprised.” “Is that a
challenge, sir?” Evaine grinned delightedly, opening the scroll and leaning
closer to her father. “Canto Four, being the Rise of the Lleassi and Johanan’s
Quest. “ ‘Now, in
those days, the Lords of the Dark Places were exceedingly powerful, and their
sphere was the orb of the Earth. “ ‘And the
Deryni Lord Johanan said unto the Servant of the High Gods, “Send me, Lord, to
cast out the Lleassi. For Thou hast seen their iniquities, and their sins are
great.” “ ‘And the eyes
of Makurias-in-Glory were inclined with favour upon the Lord Johanan, and His
hands He laid upon the head of His servant in the blessing of the Lord of
Hosts. “ ‘And the Lord
Johanan gathered to him his hosts of liegemen, and laid siege to the Lords of
the Dark Places. And great was their strength. . . .’ “ chapter twoHe shall go to
the generation of his fathers . . . —Psalms 49:19 Hurrying through
the crowds and morning mist, Rhys Thuryn spied the old woolen merchant’s house
up ahead, its thatched upper story thrust rudely among the more imposing
facades of stone and brick. Despite the early
hour, Fullers’ Alley was alive with sound and motion, wily merchants opening
their shops and market stalls, traders unloading precious silks and brocades
and velvets from protesting beasts of burden, wandering peddlers hawking their
wares with raucous calls. Beggars and street urchins also roamed the narrow
thoroughfare—and undoubtedly cutpurses, too, Rhys thought ruefully—but they
gave his Healer’s green a wide berth as he passed, some of them even tugging at
forelocks in respect. He supposed it was a bit unusual to see a Deryni
in this street these days, and a Healer, at that. But even had the
denizens of Fullers’ Alley not been disposed to give him way, that could not
have kept Rhys from his appointment this morning. Old Daniel Draper had been
one of Rhys’s first patients, and a valued friend long before that. And
Fullers’ Alley had not always been a den of merchants and thieves. Conditions
had deteriorated since the beginning of the current regime. Rhys gained the
relative shelter of one of the brick-and-timber buildings and glanced ahead to
get his bearings; then he lifted the edge of his mantle to avoid a dungheap and
slipped back into the street. Daniel’s door was the next one down, and already
Gifford, Rhys’s manservant, was battering at the door with his staff, his
master’s medical pouch slung from his shoulder by a stout leather strap. Rhys started to
take the pouch as he reached Gifford’s side, but then he stayed his hand.
Neither medicines nor the special healing craft practiced by men like Rhys
could cure old Dan Draper now. When a man lived to the age of eighty-three (or
so Dan said), even a Deryni Healer could not hope to do more than ease that
soul’s passage to the next world. And Dan had been dying for a long time. He thought about
Dan as he and Gifford waited for the door to open. The old man had been a
remarkable part of Rhys’s growing up—a veritable treasure trove of tales about
the years immediately after the change of royal house. Dan claimed to remember
the early years of Festil I, who had deposed the last Haldane king. And Dan had
lived through the reigns of three other Festillic monarchs—though he would not
live through the fifth: the current representative of the new dynasty was a
young man of twenty-two, king since the death of his father Blaine three years
before, and in excellent health. No, the old man would not see a sixth
Festillic king on the Throne of Gwynedd. They were admitted
by one of the maids, who burst into tears as she recognized Rhys and stepped
aside to let them pass. Several more servants were huddled together in the shop
itself, some of them making halfhearted attempts to perform their customary
duties, but all stopped what they were doing as the Healer moved among them.
Rhys tried to appear reassuring as he crossed the beaten-earth floor and
mounted the stairway to the living quarters, but he knew he was not succeeding.
He bounded up the stairs three at a time, reaching the upper landing only a
little out of breath. He ran a hand through unruly red hair in a nervous
gesture. Rhys did not need
to be shown the master’s door; he had been
there many times before. He
eased the door open to find the
room in dimness, the draperies pulled across the windows; and the air was
stifling with incense and the odor of
impending death. A priest he did not know was aspersing the bed with holy water
and murmuring a prayer, and for a moment Rhys was afraid he had come too late.
He waited by the door until the priest had finished his prayer, then moved
closer to the foot of the bed. “I’m Lord Rhys,
Father,” he said, his green mantle proclaiming his calling. “Is he—?” The priest shook
his head. “Not yet, my lord. He’s received the last rites and is in a state of
grace, but he keeps asking for you. I’m afraid he’s beyond even your healing
powers—with all due respect, sir.” “I’m aware of
that, Father.” Rhys gestured apologetically toward the door. “Do you mind
leaving us for a few minutes? He said he wanted some time alone with me, before
the end.” “Very well, my
lord.” As the priest
closed the door behind him, Rhys moved to the left of the bed and gazed down at
the face of the dying man. The gray eyes stared at the ceiling—Rhys could not
be certain at first glance whether they saw or not—and the man’s breathing was
very shallow. Rhys reached to the drapes and pushed them aside to admit light
and air, then touched the gnarled wrist and found a pulse. Gently, he bent
beside the old man’s ear. “It’s Rhys, Dan.
Can you hear me? I came as soon as I could.” The eyes flickered
and the lips moved, and then the gray head turned slowly toward the young
Deryni. A thin hand was feebly raised, and Rhys took it in his own with a
smile. “Are you in pain?
Is there anything I can do?” “Just don’t be so
impatient,” the old man breathed. “I’m not ready to die yet. Overanxious
priests!” His voice was
stronger than Rhys had expected, and Rhys squeezed the old hand affectionately. “Do you mean to
tell me you’ve let all those servants and apprentices get teary-eyed for
nothing?” The old man gave a
dry chuckle and shook his head. “No, I’m not
gaming this time. The Dark Angel is nearby. I can hear the rustle of His wings
sometimes. But I wanted to tell you something before I go. I couldn’t let it
die with me, and you—you’re something special to me, Rhys. You could almost be
the son I lost—or my grandson.” Pause. “I wonder where he is now?” “Your grandson? I
never knew you had one.” “ ‘Twas safer they
thought him dead, like his father. Besides, the Church has him now, if he still
lives. He went when he was nineteen, right after we lost his father. It was the
plague that year, you know. But you were only a lad then, if you were even
born. You probably don’t remember.” Rhys laughed
softly. “How old do you think I am, old one?” “Old enough to
know better than to listen to the rantings of a dying old man,” Dan smiled.
“But you will listen, won’t you, Rhys? It’s important.” “You know I will.” The old man sighed
deeply and let his gaze wander the room absently. “Who am I?” he
asked in a low voice. Rhys raised a
skeptical eyebrow and frowned. “Now, don’t go senile on me, after all these
years. Even if you are a cantankerous old rascal, I’m very fond of you.” Dan closed his
eyes and smiled, then looked up at the ceiling again. “Rhys, what ever happened
to the Haldanes, after your Deryni Festil led the coup that toppled the throne?
Did you ever wonder?” “Not really,” Rhys
replied. “I was taught that Ifor and all his family were executed during the
revolt.” “Not precisely
true. There was one survivor, one of the younger princes—he was only three or
four at the time. He was smuggled out of the castle by a servant and raised as
the man’s own bastard son. But he was never allowed to forget his true
parentage. His foster father hoped that one day he might overthrow the House of
Festil and restore human rule to Gwynedd—but of course, he never did. Nor did
the prince’s son. That prince would be very old by now, if he were alive.” “If he were . . .”
Rhys started to repeat the old man’s words, then trailed to a halt, suddenly
suspecting what the old man was going to say next. Dan coughed and
took a deep breath. “Go ahead, ask. I
know you won’t believe me, but it’s true. I was known as Prince Aidan in those
days; and in the normal order of things, I probably would have been content to
rule a distant barony or earldom in my royal brother’s name, for there were
three before me for the throne. But with the execution of all my kin, I became
the sole Haldane heir.” He paused. “I never had the chance even to try to win
back my throne. Nor did my son: he died too young, and the time was not right.
But my grandson—” “Now, wait a
minute, Dan.” Rhys’s brow was furrowed in disbelief. “You’re telling me that
you’re really Prince Aidan, the rightful Haldane heir, and that your grandson
is still alive?” “His royal name is
Cinhil—Prince Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane,” Dan murmured. “He would be, oh, forty
or so by now—I can’t remember exactly. It’s been over twenty years since I last
saw him. He entered a contemplative order, walled away from the world. He is
safe there, the knowledge of his true identity locked deep in his earliest
memories. I thought, at the time, that it was better that way.” His voice
trailed off, and Rhys blinked at him in amazement, his stomach doing queasy
flip-flops. “Why are you
telling me this?” Rhys breathed, after nearly a full minute of silence. “I trust you.” “But, I— Dan, I’m Deryni,
a member of the conquering race. You can’t have forgotten that. How long do
you think your grandson would be permitted to live, if anyone even suspected
his existence? Besides, you yourself said that it’s been twenty years. He may
be dead already.” Daniel tried to
shrug, but the movement brought on a coughing fit which wracked the frail old
body. Rhys helped him to sit, trying to ease his discomfort, then lowered him
gently to the pillows when the spell had passed. Daniel swallowed noisily,
gestured with a veined, translucent hand. “You may be right.
Perhaps I am the last living Haldane, and have spent my years of hoping for
nought. If so, my telling you can do no harm. But if I am not the last.. .” His voice trailed
off in speculation, and Rhys shook his head again. “Too many ifs, Dan. For all
I know, what you’ve told me could just be the demented death rattlings of a
foolish old man. Besides, what could I do?” Dan stared up into
Rhys’s face, aged gray eyes meeting young golden ones. “Am I a foolish old man,
Rhys? I think you know better. Come, you’re Deryni. Your race can probe men’s
souls. Probe mine, then, and read the truth. I am not afraid.” “I—am not
accustomed to touching the minds of humans in that way.” Rhys hesitated,
lowering his eyes uncomfortably. “Don’t be silly. I
have felt your healing touch before. If you cannot heal age, that is not your
fault. But you can touch my mind, Rhys. You can read the truth of
what I say.” Rhys glanced
behind him at the closed door, then back at the quiet form of Daniel
Draper—perhaps Prince Aidan Haldane. He looked down at the old man’s hand still
twined in his and touched the pulse spot, then slowly raised his eyes once
more. “You’re very weak.
I should not intrude so near the end. It’s your priest who should be beside you
now, not I.” “But I have
finished with the priest, and besides, these words were not his to know,”
Daniel whispered. “Please, Rhys. Humor a dying man.” “The strain could
kill you,” Rhys insisted. “Then I will be
dead. I am dying, anyway. The truth is more important than a few minutes or a
few hours more. Hurry, Rhys. There’s very little time.” With a sigh, Rhys
eased himself to sit on the edge of the bed beside the old man. Surrounding the
hand he still held between his two hands, he gazed down into the calm gray eyes
and willed the eyes to close. The sere lids fluttered and obeyed as Rhys
extended his senses, secured control, and entered. Swirling grayness
engulfed him, broken intermittently by hazy snatches of color and sound—almost
as though he were making his way through patchy, rolling fog. Only, this was
the fog of Death, as the Darkness encroached already on parts of the old man’s
mind. The images were flashing past with no discernible order. He must keep
moving, lest he, too, be snared by them. There. A fleeting
ghost-image of a young man— he somehow knew it was Dan’s son—with a young child
in his arms. Was the child Cinhil? Then that same man, older now, laid out on a
bier with candles all around, his fair face mottled by the plague signs. A
young, dark-haired man and an old gray one standing fearfully in the doorway,
drawn by their love yet afraid to come closer. The young man bore the glossy
black hair and gray eyes of the Haldanes. Then the picture was gone. More
darkness—thick, gray-black stuff which was stifling, almost impassable. But
then there was more: a tension building in the shadows, a mindless fear, and
sounds—the sounds of slaughter. He was a tiny boy,
cowering and sobbing beneath a shattered stair, and there were people screaming
and running past him, fire licking at the castle ramparts, blazing on the
thatching of the castle’s outbuildings. Soldiers seized
two older boys whom he knew to be his brothers and dragged them into the
already bloody courtyard, then slew them with swords which hacked and stabbed
and were raised up dripping again and again. An infant sister was dashed
against the stones of the courtyard paving, another tossed aloft and spitted on
a laughing soldier’s lance. And then his
father, tall and gray-eyed, gory in blood-soaked nightclothes, unarmed but for
a bright blade in his hand, roaring defiance as he tried to cut a path to his
anguished queen. The rain of arrows falling on the king and cutting him down
like a trapped animal—because the butchers feared to come within reach of his
blade. And his mother’s
shrieks as they pinned her limbs and ripped the living child from her belly.... Rhys drew back
with a gasp and severed the contact, unable to endure the visions any longer.
Stunned wordless by what he had seen, he forced himself to focus on his hands
and was shocked to find that they were trembling. Willing them to
calm, his pounding heart to slow, he breathed deeply several times, relaxing as
the world settled into its customary order. Gently, he chafed the old man’s
hand to bring him back to consciousness. He was hardly aware of the tears
welling in his eyes. “Dan?” he
whispered. “Dan? Prince Aidan?” The gray eyes
opened weakly and the old lips parted. “You saw.” Rhys nodded
slowly, his golden eyes wide with wonder and a little horror still. “Then, you know I
spoke the truth,” Dan said. “Will you guard that truth, against the time when
the throne may be restored to a Haldane?” “A Deryni king is
on the throne now, Dan. Would you have me betray him to restore your kin?” “Watch and pray,
Rhys. And then ask yourself if the man on the throne is worthy of the golden
circlet. Ask if this is the sort of rule you wish for your children and your
children’s children. Then you decide. And when the time comes, and you reach
the decision which I think you must, at least consider my grandson. Once I am
gone, only you will know, Rhys.” “You speak
treason, old friend,” Rhys murmured, lowering his eyes as he remembered what he
had seen. “But, if the time comes, I—I will consider what you have told
me.” “God bless you, my
son.” The old man smiled. He reached up with his free hand to wipe a tear from
Rhys’s cheek with his thumb. “And I, who thought ever to curse the Deryni . .
.” He paused, and a flicker of pain crossed his face. “Around my neck you will
find a silver coin on a cord. I do not read, but I am told that it was struck
at the abbey where Cinhil, my grandson, took his vows. His name in religion is—
is—” The old man gasped
for breath, and Rhys had to lean forward to catch his next words. “Go on, Dan. His
name?” “His name—his name
is—Benedict. Benedictus. He ... is ... a Haldane . . . and . . . King.” Rhys bowed his
head and closed his eyes in sorrow, automatically searching for a pulse but
knowing that this time there would be none. He slipped to his knees and knelt
there for several minutes, then shook his head and let the old man’s hand go.
Folding the wrinkled old hands on the silent breast and closing the dulling
eyes, he then crossed himself numbly and turned away. He was nearly to the door
before he remembered the coin, and he returned quickly to take it from around
the dead man’s neck. But though Rhys
could read the words inscribed in the silver, they meant nothing to him. And
with a sudden, sinking feeling, he realized that Daniel had given him only the
religious name of his grandson— Benedictus—and not his secular one. If he ever
did want to locate the man, it was going to be very difficult. With a troubled mind,
he slipped the coin into the pouch at his belt and moved toward the door. There
he paused to collect his wits, to resume his professional demeanor, to steel
himself for the servants and the waiting priest. A last glance at the old man,
and then he opened the door. “It is finished,
my lord?” the priest asked. Rhys nodded. “The
end was easy. He did not suffer much.” The priest bowed,
then slipped past Rhys to begin chanting the final prayers, the servants slowly
sinking to their knees around the doorway, some of them weeping softly. As the
words drifted out of the room, Rhys, suddenly very tired, picked his way slowly
down the stairs to where Gifford awaited him. Gifford stood as
his master approached, clutching Rhys’s medical pouch to his chest. “Is it over,
master?” Rhys nodded, then
gestured for Gifford to open the door and proceed. Yes, it’s over,
he thought to himself, as they stepped into the street again. Or, is it only
just beginning? chapter threeThen give place
to the physician, for the Lord hath created him: let him not go from thee, for
thou hast need of him. —Ecclesiasticus
38:12 It was raining
steadily by the next morning, when Rhys Thuryn drew rein before the Abbey of
Saint Liam. Unaccompanied by any servant or attendant, he had ridden most of
the night to reach the abbey, for the coin Daniel had given him would not let
him sleep. He dismounted and led his horse beneath the eaves extending around
the courtyard, then waited until a young novice came to take charge of the
animal. His leather cloak was nearly soaked through, his fur leggings spattered
with mud. Rain dripped from his cap and the ends of his hair as he strode into
the shelter of the cloister walk and scanned the area. He had been to
Saint Liam’s many times before, of course—had studied here with Joram, years
ago, before he had discovered his talents in the healing arts. The memories
were happy ones, of more carefree days. But the reason for
his visit today was not mere nostalgia. For, of the men Rhys knew he could
trust, there was but one who might know the origin of the worn silver coin now
lying in the pouch at his waist. Joram MacRorie, Rhys’s boyhood companion and
probably his closest friend, was currently a master here at the abbey school.
If Rhys’s information proved to be correct, and the man Benedict in the unknown
monastery really was the Haldane heir, then it was also Joram who would know
how best to use that knowledge for the good of all concerned. With a sigh, Rhys
swept off his sodden cap and began to make his way along the roofed cloister
walk toward the Chapter House, ruffling his gloved fingers through wet, unruly
hair. Joram would not be in the Chapter House at this hour, of course. Chapter would have
been concluded hours ago, before most folk were even rising for the day. But the
schoolrooms and the quarters of the schoolmasters lay through the passage just
ahead. If he could not himself locate Joram, there was a good chance of finding
someone who did know where the young priest was. He stood aside as
a double line of schoolboys marched past with their master, solemn in their
blue school cloaks with the badge of Saint Liam blazoned on the breast. Then he
was moving through the passage to the central hall, into which the schoolrooms
opened. Across the hall he spied a priest he knew, and he approached with a
respectful bow. “Good morning,
Father Dominic. Do you know where I might find Father MacRorie?” The old priest
peered at him myopically, then beamed as recognition came. “Why, it’s young
Rhys Thuryn, isn’t it? Were you not one of my pupils some years ago?” Rhys smiled and
bowed again. “I’m flattered that you remember after so long, Father.” The priest’s
rheumy eyes had flicked to the Healer’s insignia on Rhys’s tunic, and this time
it was his turn to bow. “How could I
forget, my lord? Your sacred calling was apparent to me even in those early
days.” He glanced around as though to reorient himself, then turned back to
Rhys with a smile. “You’re looking for Father Joram, are you? As I recall, he’s
reading in the library this morning. It’s fortunate you came when you did,
however, for I believe he said he was leaving later today to go home for
Michaelmas.” “Yes, I know. I’m
invited to spend Michaelmas with the MacRorie household myself this year, so I
thought to lure him away a few hours early and save him the ride alone.” “Well, then, don’t
let me keep you, lad. God go wi’ ye.” “Thank you,
Father.” Retracing his
steps, Rhys made his way back through the covered passageway, past the Chapter
House, then mounted the wide day stair toward the library. True to Father
Dominic’s directions, he found Joram in the third carrel chamber into which he
peered. Joram had his feet
up, the manuscript in his lap tilted to catch the light which filtered through
the rain-washed window above his head. He looked up with a pleased grin as Rhys
entered and perched himself on the edge of the table. “Rhys, brother!
Why, you look like the proverbial drowned cat himself. What brings you here in
this weather? I would have seen you at home tomorrow.” With silence for
answer, Rhys reached into his pouch and produced the silver coin, gave it a
perfunctory glance, dropped it into Joram’s outstretched hand. “Ever seen one of
these?” he asked. Joram bent his
head and studied the object closely for several minutes. Father Joram
MacRorie was lean and fit, blond like his father, and with the uncanny ability
to appear perfectly garbed and unruffled whether serving High Mass with the
Archbishop or gutting out a deer after a long afternoon’s chase. Just now he
was clad in the simple cassock and cowled surcoat of his order, the hood pushed
back casually from tonsured yellow hair. The sandalled feet had not moved from
their resting place on the table edge. The slender fingers were still as they
read the silver coin. The outward aplomb
of the man was not inappropriate. Ordained at age twenty by the Archbishop of
Valoret himself, it had been clear from the outset that young Joram MacRorie
was slated for high Church preferment. As younger son of an extremely
well-connected house, such would have been his due even had he not been so
brilliant a scholar or so shrewd a judge of men. He was his father’s son in
every way. The fact that he would probably deserve every future honor bestowed
upon him spoke well of the man, was an unexpected nicety in a world
characterized by nepotism and the purchase of office and political influence. Indeed, even in
the religious life it was difficult to be anything but political,
especially if one moved in the upper circles of Deryni society. In the past
century, religious establishments had gained an unenviable reputation for being
corrupt, most of the corruption blamed, directly or indirectly, on the Deryni
regime. Joram’s Michaeline Order was thought to be spiritually and
intellectually sound, with better attention than most to the Rule of their
order. But they were also a militant brotherhood, whose knights had more than
once taken sides in a controversy which should, by rights, have remained in
secular hands. Such was the way of the Church in Gwynedd. Nor had Joram
himself been entirely able to avoid political entanglements, for all his
protestations and honest calling. Sought out by his fellow priests whenever
royal crisis threatened, he was not often permitted to forget that his father,
Camber, had once been a high-ranking minister of the Crown. After all, it was
no great secret, among those acquainted with the situation, just why Camber
had resigned. Though the official explanation had mentioned something about
Camber wishing to retire from government service “while still young enough to
enjoy his academic pursuits,” it was widely known that Camber had not approved
of young Imre’s policies as prince, while his father lived; and still less did
he approve, once the young man became king. Camber MacRorie was not a man who
could continue to serve a crown whose wearer he did not respect. Adding to the
complication was the fact that Joram’s older brother Cathan was a friend of
Imre, and had, at the new king’s request, stepped in to fill the place left
vacant by Camber’s departure. There was no enmity between father and son:
Camber well realized that a younger, more flexible man might be better able to
temper the king’s rash boldness with reason. In Cathan’s abilities and judgment
he had no doubt. But Cathan’s entry
into the political arena continued the difficulties Joram faced, as the priest
must constantly try to curb the natural gift for politicking which he had
inherited in full measure from his father. Joram and Rhys had discussed the
quandary more than once over a glass of Fianna wine, when the wind howled
outside through the long Gwyneddan winter nights. For himself, Rhys
believed that a physician, like a cleric, should try to remain neutral, despite
the temptation to become politically involved. Only now that neutrality was
being shaken as never before, by the simple expedient of a dying man’s words
and the flash of a silver coin in a priest’s long fingers. “Where did you get
this?” Joram asked. There was no trace of suspicion in his question—only,
perhaps, a certain wistful curiosity. “Never mind that
for now,” Rhys said. “What is it?” “It’s a dower
coin. They were sometimes given as mementoes to the next of kin of postulants
entering the old religious orders. They aren’t made anymore.” “Can you tell
where it’s from?” Rhys tried to keep the impatience from his voice. “I mean,
can you tell which monastery?” “Hmm. I have an
idea, but I fancy you want something more definite than that. Come on, we’ll
look it up.” Without a word,
Rhys got up and followed Joram into the main portion of the library, past the
reading brothers with heads bowed over parchment membranes, past the scrivener
monks painstakingly copying texts in their fine majuscule hands. A very aged
monk sat atop a high stool behind a reading desk, guardian of a polished oak
door barred with a stout beam. Joram murmured a
few words to the monk, then bowed and raised the bar on the door and opened it.
Taking a rushlight from a stand by the monk’s desk, he motioned for Rhys to
follow him into the next room. It was a small,
dark chamber lined with row upon row of open shelves holding rolls of parchment
and a few bound volumes. The volumes were massive and ragged-looking, since
they had originally been assembled from roll entries cut to fit, and. they were
secured to the shelves by chains which allowed them to be moved only as far as
a small reading stand. Handing the
rushlight to Rhys to hold aloft, Joram roamed the row in front of them, then
pulled down a dusty volume and inspected the cover. With a grunt, he replaced
the book and moved farther down the row, where he removed another volume. This
one he opened and began scanning, opening his hand to glance at the coin again
as Rhys peered over his shoulder. “Hmm. I suspected
as much. It was struck at Saint Jarlath’s, which is the mother house of the Ordo
Verbi Dei. They’re a cloistered order based at Barwicke, not far from here.
Saint Jarlath himself was a sixth-century bishop of Meara—an abbot, too, if I’m
not mistaken.” Rhys lowered his
eyes and was silent for a moment. Then: “Barwicke—you said that’s not far from
here. How far?” “Oh, a few hours’
ride. Why are you so interested in Saint Jarlath’s?” “I—” Rhys paused,
then went on cautiously. “An old man died yesterday, Joram. A patient of mine.
His grandson may have taken vows at Saint Jarlath’s about twenty years ago.
It’s important that I find him.” “To tell the monk
his grandfather is dead?” “Yes.” Joram replaced the
volume on the shelf and turned to eye Rhys curiously. “And then what?”
Joram asked softly. “Rhys, you’re not making much sense. If the man took vows
at Saint Jarlath’s twenty years ago, he may not even be alive by now. Even if
he is, he’ll be a cloistered monk. You couldn’t see him. The most you could
hope from him would be prayers for his kinsman’s repose— which, if he’s any
kind of monk at all, he’ll have been giving all these years, regardless of
whether his grandsire was alive or dead. Did the old man leave him an
inheritance or something?” “In a way,” Rhys
murmured. He took the coin from Joram and glanced at it distractedly, but would
not meet the priest’s eyes. Joram frowned and
folded his arms across his chest. “What do you mean,
‘in a way’? If the old man left him anything, it belongs to his order now. You
know that monks haven’t any property of their own.” Rhys smiled in
spite of himself. “Not this inheritance, my friend. This is not for monks.” “Will you stop
dissembling and get to the point? You know about cloistered orders; you know
about community property; and you know what would be involved to find this man
after twenty years. Who is this monk?” Rhys paused, then
wet his lips nervously. “All that you have said is true, or would be true in
ordinary circumstances,” he whispered, looking up. “But this is no ordinary
monk, Joram. We must find him. God help us, and him, but we must! His father is
long dead, and his grandfather also, now. But his grandfather claimed to be
Aidan Haldane, last living son of King Ifor. Your so-called cloistered monk may
well be the rightful Haldane King of Gwynedd!” Joram’s jaw
dropped, and he stared at the Healer in disbelief. “The rightful Haldane heir?” At Rhys’s guarded
nod, Joram reached blindly for the bench he remembered being somewhere behind
him, eased himself down upon it gently. “Rhys, do you
realize what you’re saying?” Rhys shifted
uncomfortably. “I’m trying to avoid thinking about the political ramifications
just yet, if that’s what you mean. Can’t we simply say that we’re looking for a
monk whose grandfather died? Besides,
the man himself may be dead by now, for all we know.” “But, what if he’s
not?” Joram replied softly. “Rhys, you may not want to think about it, but I’m
not sure you can afford that luxury. If what you say is true...” With a defeated
sigh, Rhys sank down on the bench beside the priest. “I know,” he murmured,
after a long silence. “But the illusion of innocence gives me a semblance of
comfort. God knows, I’m not a political creature, Joram, but I ...” He bowed
his head. “I had a friend,” he said. “I gave him my hand and comfort in his
final hour, and he gave me his most precious possession: the identity of his
only grandson. He showed me an ancient and noble heritage, and a potential for
something different from what we know. And then he said, ‘Ask yourself if the
man on the throne is worthy of the golden circlet,’ Joram. He said, ‘Ask if
this is the sort of rule you wish for your children and your children’s
children. Then you decide.’ “ “And, have you
decided?” Rhys shook his
head. “Not yet. I don’t think I, or you, or any one man can make a decision
like that alone.” He looked up wistfully. “But I have considered what
old Daniel told me, Joram. And now— well, I think we must try to find his
grandson.” “To tell him his
grandfather is dead?” Joram asked. Rhys glanced
quickly at his companion, fearing to find some hint of mockery in the other’s
expression. But there was none—only a gentle, indulgent wisp of a smile
flicking across the other’s mouth. “Thank you for
knowing when not to push,” he said simply, his own lips curving in response.
“I’m afraid I’ve not been honed for this sort of thing the way you Michaelines
have. It may take me a while to adjust.” Joram chuckled as
he stood, clasping a hand to the other’s shoulder. “You’re doing fine,” he
said, picking up the rushlight again. “For now, let’s just worry about that
monk that wants finding, who will doubtless wish to offer prayers for his
grandfather’s repose.” Within half an
hour, Rhys and Joram were gone from Saint Liam’s, riding pell-mell through
driving rain toward the tiny village of Barwicke, where Saint Jarlath’s lay.
Once the full implications of Rhys’s news had sunk in, Joram had moved quickly
to secure fresh horses for the two of them and obtain leave to depart early.
More details of the previous day’s events had been imparted to Joram as he
changed to riding attire in his chamber—boots and cloak and sleek, fur-lined
riding leathers. Then they were mounting up on two of the abbey’s sleek,
blooded horses, clattering hellbent out through the abbey yard. By the time they
reached Barwicke, both men were half frozen and soaked to the skin. It was also
quite dark. “Where is the
monastery?” Rhys croaked, as the two drew rein under a tree at the edge of the
village square. Joram wiped
silver-gilt hair out of his eyes and turned in the saddle, standing in the
stirrups to get his bearings. “That way, I
think.” He gestured north with a wetly gloved hand. “I only hope they’ll let us
in this late. We may have to pull rank on them. Come on.” With a sigh, Rhys
hunched down further in the saddle and followed the priest, trying
unsuccessfully to keep the rain from running down his neck. He was beginning to
wonder whether they would ever be dry and warm again, and whether the whole
thing was worth it, when he saw the monastery looming ahead in the driving
rain. Thankfully, he reined in before the monastery gate, stifling a cough as
Joram reached up and gave the gate bell a hefty yank. When there was no
response, Joram yanked the bell again, then dismounted preparatory to pounding
on the gate with his fist. Before he had to resort to that measure, a small
shutter was opened in the gate and an annoyed-looking face was thrust through
the opening. “All right, all
right, don’t pull the building down,” the man said, scowling against the rain. “Why
don’t you go back to the village? There’s lodging to be had there for the
night.” “I wish to speak
to your Father Superior,” Joram said quietly. “And while you’re thinking about
it, my companion and I should like some Christian charity from the rain.” Joram’s cultured
tone took the man aback for a moment, but then he shook his head. “Sorry, sir.
We don’t open the gates after dark. Marauders and thieves, you know. Besides,
you couldn’t see the Reverend Father tonight, anyway. He’s in bed with a bad
cold. Come back in the morning.” “My good man, my
name is Father Joram MacRorie, of the Order of Saint Michael. My companion is
the Lord Rhys Thuryn. Now, we would not have ridden all this way in this
weather if it were not important. Are you going to open this gate, or must I
report your rudeness to your superiors in the morning?” The man’s eyes had
gotten progressively wider as Joram spoke, and abruptly he bobbed his head in a
bow and closed the shutter. When the gate opened seconds later, he was still
bowing nervously. A lay brother in
coarse brown robes and hood was waiting to take their horses, and another monk
in deep gray nodded greeting and indicated that they should follow him. No word
was spoken as they strode down the corridor with the silent monk. They passed
several others, but the men seemed not even to notice them. They were shown
into a small room strewn with sweet-smelling rushes and herbs, and with a
modest fire burning well back on the stone hearth. The man who had been their
escort pointed out a stack of dry blankets and indicated that they should warm
themselves before the fire, then withdrew behind a heavy, carved door, which
closed softly behind him. Joram immediately
began stripping off sodden cap and gloves, spreading his dripping cloak on the
rushes to dry. “They’ll bring us
dry clothes in a few minutes,” he said, unlacing his leggings and discarding
those, then beginning on his tunic. “Meanwhile, we’d best get out of these wet
things before we catch our deaths.” Rhys sneezed for
reply, then began following Joram’s example. Wrapping himself, cocoon-like, in
one of the scratchy abbey blankets, he huddled shivering by the fire, damp hair
beginning to steam from the heat. Beside him, Joram was typically unruffled,
looking every inch the noble’s son he was, even in his currently bedraggled
state. It figures, Rhys thought, and decided that he would probably
never see Joram look anything less than impeccable. The door opened
silently, and the two of them stood as two men entered the room. The first was
obviously the abbot of the place, silver gleaming on hand and breast against
the burgundy richness of his habit. The man’s cowl was pushed back to reveal a
shaven head, and he was holding a swatch of grayish linen to his nose and
sniffling audibly. The monk who had escorted them to the room bore a pair of
gray woolen robes across his arms. Joram crossed immediately to the abbot,
blanket clutched around himself like a royal mantle, and bowed to kiss the
abbot’s ring. “Thank you for
seeing us, Reverend Father. I am Father MacRorie, and this is the Lord Rhys
Thuryn, a Healer.” Rhys bent to kiss the ring also. “We are most grateful for
your hospitality.” The abbot bowed in
acknowledgment. “Be at ease, Father, and please to accept the dry clothing
which Brother Egbert has brought. I am Gregory of Arden, Abbot of Saint
Jarlath’s.” He paused to sneeze, then held the handkerchief to his nose once
more as Brother Egbert assisted the two visitors into their robes. .When the
men had been decently clad and the monk had withdrawn, Abbot Gregory moved
closer to the hearth and warmed thin hands before the fire. “I am told that
you are of the Order of Saint Michael, Father,” he said, his voice croaking
hoarsely. “How may I assist you?” Joram smiled
disarmingly and gave the cord at his waist a final tug. “We wish to inspect the
records of postulants in this order for the past few years, Father Abbot.” “Ah, is this an
official inquiry of some sort, Father?” “Oh, no. It’s
personal. A matter of conscience, Father Abbot.” “I see.” The abbot
shrugged, obviously relieved. “Well, certainly it can be arranged. But if
you’re looking for a particular postulant, you must surely be aware that he has
likely taken his final vows by now and, hence, could not receive you.” Rhys glanced sidelong
at his companion, then cleared his throat. “Forgive me,
Reverend Father, but perhaps Father Joram has not made himself clear. He makes
the request in my behalf. The grandfather of the man we are looking for was in
my care until his recent death, and begged me on his deathbed to find his
grandson and inform him of his grandsire’s demise. Surely, you would not refuse
the dying wish of a man whose only fault was in wishing his holy grandson to
say prayers for his soul.” The abbot raised
an eyebrow, then shrugged apologetically. “Well, the news could be taken to him
by his superior, I suppose. Certainly, a man is entitled to mourn his
grandsire, even if the rest of the world has been renounced. What is the man’s
name? Perhaps I can tell you his whereabouts.” “Benedict, now.
Before that—ah, it was the grandfather’s wish that we not reveal his grandson’s
identity, Reverend Father,” Joram replied. “Might we see those records now?” “Now,
Father?” The abbot looked at Joram a little strangely. “Can it not wait until
morning?” “The grandfather
felt himself much in need of prayer, Reverend Father,” Joram lied, “and we
promised to find his grandson as soon as possible. Also, we would not disturb
the routine of your house any more than necessary. If one of your brothers
could show us to your archives and provide us with light, we would be most
grateful.” “I understand, of
course.” The abbot shrugged and bowed, his manner declaring that he did not
understand at all. “Very well. Brother Egbert will show you the pertinent
records and see to your needs. Perhaps you will at least join us at Mass in the
morning and then break your fast with us?” “We would be most
honored.” Joram bowed. “Our thanks to you, Reverend Father.” With a last,
disbelieving look at them, the abbot dabbed at his reddened nose and took his
leave, disappearing down the corridor in one direction while Brother Egbert led
them along another way. Rushlights were
procured and lit outside a heavy wooden door which Brother Egbert unlocked with
a large iron key. In a far corner of the library, Egbert indicated a shelf of
neatly rolled scrolls—the induction records of the Ordo Verbi Dei—then
bowed silently and turned to go. When the sound of
the closing door had confirmed his departure, Joram set a rushlight on the
reading desk and pulled out a scroll at random. Spreading it open on the desk,
he scanned the legend at the top. “Decimus
Blainus—the tenth year of the reign of King Blaine. That’s too recent.
Daniel said the boy entered the order about twenty years ago?” Rhys nodded. “He
said more than twenty, but I think we’d better check five or ten years to
either side of that. Dan said the boy was nineteen when he took his
vows, and that he’d be about forty now, but Dan was eighty-three, by his
reckoning. He may be hazy on the dates.” “All right. Twenty
years—that would be 833, just toward the end of Festil III. We’ll go back to,
oh, 22 Festil III, through, uh—3 Blaine ought to be far enough. That’s ten
years back and five forward. Too bad we don’t know his secular name—even Draper
won’t help us, since ecclesiastical records generally fail to show commoners’
surnames. But there can’t be that many men in a fifteen-year spread who took
the religious name of Benedict. See if you can locate some writing materials
while I start looking.” Joram’s optimism
proved to be unfounded. By the time Rhys had returned with some scraps of
parchment and a quill and ink, the priest had already found four Benedicts. “And that’s only
through 25 Festilus III,” Joram lamented, as Rhys put down the writing
materials and looked over his shoulder. “Look at this. 22 Festilus III: ‘Rolf
the son of Carrolan was received into the Ordo Verbi Dei and took the
name Benedictus, and was cloistered at the Priory of Saint Piran.’ “23 Festilus III: ‘Abel
the son of John the Goldsmith was received into the Ordo Verbi Dei on
Candlemas and took the name Benedictus, and was sent forthwith to the Monastery
of Saint Illtyd.’ “25 Festilus III: ‘Henricus,
youngest son of the Earl of Legain—’ Well, I guess we can eliminate him, at
least. Definitely the wrong father for our man. “25 Festilus III: ‘Josephus
the son of Master Galiardi the Merchant . . . name of Benedictus . . . sent to
Saint Ultan’s.’ And we’ve still got eleven years to go!” Rhys sighed and
sat down at the desk, dipping quill to ink. “Well, let’s get on with it, then.
A lot of those earlier ones will be dead by now—he may even be dead, for
all we know. If you’ll find them, I’ll copy them down.” “All right,” Joram
sighed. “Here’s one in 26 Festilus III, when you get those three. It’s going to
be a long night.” Three hours later,
they had compiled a list of sixteen names, three of which they were able to
eliminate immediately as belonging to identifiable noble houses. Unfortunately,
they did not know the father’s full name, and there was no reference to
grandparents in the records. So the two were
left with a list of thirteen. Further winnowing with regard to age from other
records cut the list to ten. But next they must search out all the death
records for the ten Benedicts and discover which ones, if any, were still
alive. The eastern windows of the library were graying with approaching dawn
when the last scroll was replaced on its shelf and the two sat back to relax. “Five still alive
and of the right age,” Joram murmured, stretching his arms over his head and
indulging in a tremendous yawn. “It’s a good thing we insisted on coming here
tonight. Can you imagine the whole abbey breathing down our necks in the
daytime, wondering what in the world we were up to?” Rhys laid aside
his quill and shook his fingers, then picked up the list. His eyes felt
gravelly from lack of sleep, but the list was in his hands. 26 F III
Andrew, son of James, age 45—Saint Piron’s Priory 28 F III
Nicholas, son of Royston, age 43—Saint Foillan’s Abbey 31 F III John,
son of Daniel, age 42—Saint Piran’s Priory 32 F III
Robert, son of Peter, age 39—Saint Ultan’s Priory 2 Bl.
Matthew, son of
Carlus, age 46— Saint Illtyd’s Monastery He scanned the
list once more, then handed it across to Joram. “Well, what now?
I’ve never even heard of half these places. Where are Saint Ultan’s and Saint
Foillan’s?” Joram looked at
the list also, then folded it and tucked it into his robe. “Saint Ultan’s is
down in Mooryn, near the coast. Saint Foillan’s is in the Lendour highlands,
about three days’ ride southeast of here. I think we’d be better off to try
Saint Piran’s first, though. That’s only a day’s ride north, and two of our
candidates are there. Also, it’s too much to hope for, but this second one at
Saint Piran’s, this John son of Daniel, is an awfully close name to be
associated with the Haldane line. The name John is close to Ifor, who would
have been our Benedict’s great-grandfather, the last Haldane king. And of
course, your man’s name was Daniel. He might have named his son the same.” “And if neither of the Benedicts at Saint
Piran’s is the one, what then?” “Then we’ll try
Saint Foillan’s, and Saint Ultan’s, and even Saint Illtyd’s, if we have
to—though I don’t relish heading down toward Nyford with the building going on.
I hope your riding muscles are in better shape than mine.” He rubbed his
backside and gave a droll grin, and Rhys had to chuckle. Gathering up the extra
parchment they had been using as working notes, Rhys started to wad it up, but
Joram reached across and took it from him, held each piece to the rushlight
flame, and watched it burn to ash. Rhys said nothing during the operation, but
as they rose to go he glanced across at Joram. “You know, you
just destroyed my last illusion of innocence,” he said in a low voice. “We can
still say, for now, that we’re only interested in finding Brother Benedict. As
long as no one makes any other connection, we’re safe enough. But, once we find
him, then what? What do you do with a lost heir except depose the current
monarch and restore the old line?” Joram had picked
up the two rushlights as Rhys spoke, and now he turned to face his companion
once more, his face lit eerily from below by the flickering yellow light. “Yes, it’s high
treason, quite clearly. It’s treason even to be searching for him—never mind
whether we plan to put him on the throne or not. On the other hand, the whole
thing could end very shortly. We may find that our Brother Benedict, even if
he’s still alive, is so entirely unsuitable for the Crown, after twenty years
in seclusion, that even Imre would be preferable.” “My God, I hadn’t
even considered that possibility.” “Again, just a
matter of perspective,” Joram smiled. “Think about this, though: Even if he
should be willing to forsake his vows and reclaim his birthright— which is by
no means certain—that’s only the beginning. A man may be born to be king, but
if he hasn’t also been trained to be king, chances are he’ll have a rough time
of it. Even we Michaelines, critical as we are of Imre and his policies,
haven’t yet preached his overthrow.” He glanced down at
the rushlights, his lips a firm line of shadow. “Not that we
haven’t considered it, I’ll grant you,” he added. “When Imre proclaimed the
tariff for the new capital at Nvford, there was nearly a mutiny in the ranks. A
military order like the Michaelines— Well, you know our reputation. But
deposing an anointed king is serious business, even with due cause. Thank God,
even our hotheads realized that.” Rhys stared at
Joram silently for several heartbeats, then averted his eyes. “Your
Michaelines—they could make much of the information we’ve gathered tonight,
couldn’t they?” “I suspect they
could,” Joram murmured, “if they had it.” Rhys looked up.
“And do you intend to tell them?” “I don’t think
that decision is entirely mine to make, do you?” Joram countered. “Perhaps some
of your native caution has rubbed off on me, Rhys, or perhaps I’m just
remembering the thin edge my order rides just now. In any event, any action we
take if we do find Cinhil, and he is suitable, will involve a lot
of other people. I’d like to tell Father about him first, if you have no
objections.” “Camber? Aye,”
Rhys breathed. “If he thinks a Restoration is the only answer, I’d feel
a lot better about the whole thing.” “Come on, then,”
Joram yawned. “We’d best get what sleep we can before they roust this place for
morning prayers.” chapter fourHear counsel
and receive instruction, that thou mayest be wise in thy latter end. —Proverbs 19:20 They got little
sleep in what remained of the night, though neither counted that amiss in light
of the information they had gleaned. No sooner had they staggered back to the
receiving room and rolled up in blankets by the fire than it was time to rise
for morning devotions. Far earlier than they had hoped, in these days of
slackening ecclesiastical discipline, they were roused by one of the abbey’s
lay brethren, who stood vigilant watch in the doorway until both men were on
their feet and pulling on still-damp clothes, however groggily. Rhys thought the
brother’s behavior a little odd, and said as much when they were finally left
alone to finish dressing. But Joram merely laughed at that and reminded his
friend that this was, after all. a monastery. The brother had obviously taken
them for ordinary travellers, who had prevailed upon the abbey for shelter from
the night. In the brother’s estimation, if said travellers could be induced to
reclaim their undoubtedly lapsed souls in exchange for the night’s lodging, so
much the better. Rhys had to agree
that the logic of the argument was probably sound—a warm, dry place to sleep
ought surely to be worth a Mass—but unlike Joram, Rhvs’s brain did not tend to
function at its best so early in the morning, especially after little or no
sleep. It was with some
reluctance, then, that he followed Joram into the abbey church a few minutes
later, trying to assume an air of piety which he simply did not feel at an hour
he tended to regard as ungodly. The morning was
half spent before they could break away. After Mass, the abbot had insisted
upon a leisurely breaking of the night’s fast with them, and had been full of
questions about the capital and what was happening there these days. When, at
last, they were able to take their leave, it was to face a sunless, leaden sky
which promised still more rain to come. The horses were
frisky and eager to be off, their hooves striking sparks off the cobbles of the
windswept abbey yard. But the clatter turned to splash all too soon, as they reached
the muddy road; rain was already beginning to mist again in the sharp, cold
air. Before they had ridden two miles, both men were once more soaked to the
skin. The rain continued
for most of the afternoon, though it had subsided to a mere annoying drizzle
by the time they reached the outskirts of the MacRorie manorial estates. As
they topped the last rise before the descent through the village, their eyes
were drawn to the high hill beyond, to jewel-like Tor Caerrorie, Camber’s seat,
green-gray slate roofs glimmering in their wash of recent rain. The two halted
at the top of the rise and glanced at one another conspiratorially, a roguish
gleam coming into Joram’s priestly eye. Then they rode laughing down the slope
and into the village, whooping like a pair of schoolboys as they splashed along
the road. They would have
thundered on through, sending chickens and dogs and children scurrying for
safety, had they not spied a MacRorie man-at-arms standing with two horses
outside the little village church. One of the horses evoked only passing
interest, for it was of no particular breeding or caparisoning; but the other
was a little sorrel mare which both men recognized instantly. As they drew
rein, the man-at-arms peered at them and then waved enthusiastically, his face
lighting with pleasure. “Father Joram!” Joram grinned as
he jumped from the saddle and embraced the man warmly. “Sam’1, old
friend, how have you been? Is that my sister’s horse I see?” “Aye, Father, you
know it is,” the man chuckled. “Her Ladyship’s just teaching the village lads
their catechism. She’ll be out in a minute. Can ye wait and ride back to the
castle with us?” “Just try to make
me leave!” Joram said. He turned to grin at Rhys, who had dismounted in a more
leisurely fashion. “Rhys, you remember Sam’1, don’t you?” “Of course. How is
everything, Sam’1?” Rhys replied, shaking the older man’s hand. Sam’1 bowed,
pleased at the gesture, then became guarded, lowered his eyes
uncomfortably. “I, ah— Ye won’t have heard about the murder, or
ye would not ask that question.” “Murder?” Rhys glanced at
Joram, and the priest laid his hand on the old retainer’s shoulder. “What’s
happened, Sam’1? Who was killed?” Sam’1 chewed his lower lip for several
seconds, then raised cautious eyes to meet Joram’s. “ ‘Twas a Deryni, Father,
here in the village a few days ago. He was none such as any of us would give a
care about—you knew the upstart, that Lord Rannulf—” “A Deryni!” Joram
breathed. “Aye, and the King
is invoking the Law of Festil. He’s taken fifty hostages, and threatens to hang
two each day until the murderer comes forth, since the Truth-Readers canna
learn the names of the guilty. The killings begin tomorrow.” Rhys whistled low
under his breath. “That explains a lot. It didn’t seem important at the time,
but I wondered why the messengers were going back and forth from Valoret
yesterday. I must have passed three or four on my way to Saint Liam’s.” Joram grunted.
“Haven’t they any clues to the real murderer, Sam’1?” “Not yet, Father.
Not any one person, at any rate. There be those who think it was the
Willimites, but we have no proof. The Lord Camber has had men out asking
questions for the past two days, and his own Truth-Readers among them,
but—nothing. What with the general uneasiness about the tariff and all, and now
this, he’s worried that other Deryni may be threatened. It was he who asked me
to ride along with the young mistress today. He was afraid she might be
harmed.” “Sam’1, I love you
dearly, but you’re an alarmist,” came a light, musical voice behind them. They
turned to see a cloaked Evaine sweeping down the church steps, bright hair
escaping from her hood. “Father knows I
can take care of myself,” she continued. “Besides, who would try to harm me?
I’ve done nothing to offend the Willimites, if they’re the ones to blame. And I
certainly have nothing to fear from these good people.” She gestured
toward the village with a nod of her head and smiled, slipping her arm around
her brother’s waist in warm greeting as her eyes met Rhys’s. Rhys took her hand
and kissed it, trying to control the momentary confusion which a first reunion
with Evaine seemed to bring lately—and was pleasantly startled when she pulled
him closer and kissed him lightly on the cheek, slipping her arm around him,
too. Sam’1 was also feeling the charm which Evaine could exude when she chose
to, and he could not seem to find his tongue. “Very pretty,
Sister dear,” Joram murmured indulgently. “But you’re going to have to do
better than that. Is it true that Father thinks you’re in danger?” “Of course not.”
She touched her forehead playfully to his and made a face. “It’s our loyal
servants like Sam’1 who were concerned about my safety. I’ll be perfectly all
right, really.” “Well, I want to
hear more about this,” Joram said. He disengaged himself from his sister’s
embrace and signed for Sam’1 to bring her horse. “We’d better get back to the
castle, if you’re through here. Rhys, you can go starry-eyed later. I want to
find out what really happened.” “So, that’s as
much as anyone knows,” Camber concluded, when the story had been told around
the fire that evening. “Rannulf was found at dawn by old Widow Claret, and she
went into hysterics because the body was on her land. Or I should say, part of
the body was on her land. The head and one quarter. The rest— Well, let us just
say that several other families in the village got similarly shocking
awakenings that morning. The bailiff reported it to me shortly after dawn.” Rhys and Joram
nodded knowingly as Camber refilled their glasses, imagining the activity which
would have been precipitated by such an event; and no word was spoken for
several minutes. The last of the servants had been sent to bed an hour ago, and
now only the three men and Evaine remained by the fireplace in the Great Hall. Rhys, sitting near
Evaine, sipped distractedly at the mulled wine in his cup and glanced at Joram,
catching his slight nod. Gathering his resolve, he turned to address Camber. “Sir, there is
something which Joram and I think you ought to know about. It may or may not
have a bearing on what we’ve just been discussing.” There was
something in his voice which bespoke more urgency than his mere words, and all
eyes turned toward Rhys. The young man bowed his head and searched for the
proper way to begin, appreciating the gentle hand which Evaine laid on his.
Especially, he could feel Camber’s gaze upon him. “You all know that
I am a Healer, that my calling brings me into contact with many people.” He
cleared his throat nervously and took another swallow of wine before
continuing. “Two days ago, an
old man died. He was not an important man—at least not to outward appearances.
But the story he told me on his deathbed has caused me a great deal of
soul-searching.” He raised golden eyes to meet Camber’s squarely. “Sir, he
claimed to be Prince Aidan Haldane, a younger son of the last Haldane king.” No word was spoken
in response, but the listeners exchanged cautious glances, Camber shifting to
Joram’s face to read in his son’s eyes that what Rhys said Was true. Wordlessly,
he signed for Rhys to continue. Rhys lowered his
gaze once more. “I did something then that I have rarely done,” he said slowly.
“At the old man’s request—nay, almost his command—I went deeply into his mind
to confirm what he had told me; and it was so. He was Prince
Aidan. What is more important, he had a legitimate son, and his son had a son.
The son is long dead—of plague, twenty years ago. But we have reason to believe
that the grandson still lives.” He looked up, directly into Camber’s eyes again.
“The grandson would be Prince Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane, lawful heir to the
Throne of Gwynedd.” There was silence
for a dozen heartbeats, a soft sigh of wonder from Evaine, her blue eyes wide
with the implications of the statement—and then all attention turned to Camber.
The Deryni lord had said nothing yet: he was still weighing and evaluating,
reading the thoughts in Rhys’s eyes. But then he broke the spell and let his
gaze pass over them all. As he scanned them, each unconsciously deferred to
him, respectful yet unafraid. Even the usually ebullient Joram was silent under
his father’s scrutiny. “You say you have
reason to believe this grandson still lives, Rhys. Have you any idea of his
whereabouts?” Rhys shook his
head. “Not exactly, sir. But we think we have the possibilities narrowed down
to five. You see, he’s a contemplative monk of the Ordo Verbi Dei—or he
was some twenty years ago, when he took his vows. That’s the last his
grandfather heard from him. Also, we don’t know Cinhil’s secular name— only the
religious name he took when he was ordained: Benedictus. And we don’t know his
father’s secular name, either—only his royal one, Alroy. There are five
Benedicts of the right age in the order right now. Prince Cinhil, if he’s still
alive, should be one of them.” “I see.” Camber sighed and
leaned back in his chair, carefully setting his wineglass on the hearth beside
him. “This Cinhil, or Benedict, as he is known now, is a cloistered monk, then?
Assuming that you could find him, what do you propose to do with him?” This time it was
Joram’s turn to answer. “We’re not certain, Father. We think that we can
discover which one of the five is the man we’re looking for, without arousing
undue suspicion in the meantime. We have even talked about what might be involved
in smuggling him out of his monastery, if it comes to that. Naturally, we would
have to evaluate his potential first. After that,” he shrugged, “it remains to
be seen.” “Well said,
Joram.” Camber nodded. “Your training has enabled you to talk around treason
quite glibly. But, what is it that you wish me to do? To condone your search,
your possible treason? I resigned from Imre’s council because I do not like the
man personally. And you know my feelings about the laws he has proclaimed since
his accession. But I have never advocated his overthrow. Would you have me
commit myself to such an endeavor, for a man I have never even met?—whom
neither of you has ever met? Even your Michaelines would not be so bold, I
think. Have you told your vicar general about this?” Joram shifted in
his chair and glanced at Rhys, lacing his fingers together uneasily. “No, sir,
I haven’t. And I—we’re certainly not asking for such a commitment from you at
this time. But surely you understand why we must at least investigate, why we
must find out more about this Haldane heir. Then— Well, you’re the one who
knows best among us how the present regime is functioning or not functioning.
We were hoping you might lend us your wise counsel in deciding what must be
done next.” “My wise
counsel, not that of the Michaelines?” Camber asked gently. “Father, I know
you don’t approve of—” “Nay, my approval
or disapproval has nothing to do with it, Son,” Camber interjected. “I shan’t
try to make you choose between your family and your order. In truth, if this
endeavor should go the way you obviously wish it to, I would be the first to
suggest that you seek their assistance. A Restoration needs zealous soldiers,
and the Michaelines are of the finest. You could not succeed without them, were
your Cinhil the Lord God Himself—which I fancy he is not.” Joram nodded
cautiously, taken aback by his father’s unaccustomed support of the
Michaelines, however qualified. “But, back to your
missing Haldane,” Camber continued. “Suppose he’s an imbecile? Or suppose he
doesn’t want to be king?—which is likely, if he has any sense at all. Suppose
he holds his religious vows stronger than a mere accident of birth? Or suppose
that he knows who he is, and wants no part of his royal heritage? Did it
occur to either of you that he may have entered holy orders for that very
reason, to seal himself off forever from the temptation to bring about his own
destruction? I hardly need remind you that the Church frowns upon suicide.” “You’re assuming
that we would fail,” Joram said, resentment edging his voice. “No, I’m simply
asking you to weigh as many of the possibilities as you can. This is not a
game, or an academic exercise. Once you commit yourselves, there will be lives
in jeopardy—and not only your own.” Joram exchanged an
imploring glance with Rhys, and the Healer sat forward in his chair. “Sir,”
said Rhys, “we’ve considered most of what you’ve said, believe me. But for our
own integrity, we must at least talk to the man. If he is who his grandfather
said he is, and if he has any potential at all, then we’ll decide what to do
next. But we’ll need your help, once we reach that stage.” He glanced down at
his feet as he continued. “We can find Cinhil, we can read him, we can know his
soul better than it would be possible for almost any other man. But we’re not
sure we’re competent—at least I don’t think that I am—to make the final
evaluation, that final reckoning as to whether or not the man should be king.
Of course, we won’t let him know anything other than the fact that his
grandfather has died, until we’re sure that he won’t go screaming off to his
abbot. We only want your permission to seek him out at this point. Will you
give us your blessing, sir?” “Would you give
this up if I said no?” Camber countered. Both men stared at
Camber long and hard; then, in unison, they shook their heads, neither needing
to ask the other’s feeling. Camber flicked his glance from Rhys to Joram, and
then to Evaine. His daughter’s face gave no clue as to her stand on the issue. “Well, Daughter,
your brother and Rhys appear intent upon making this a family endeavor,” he
said lightly. “Is this why you drew me into political discussion the other day,
or was that mere coincidence? How far have you been drawn into this thing?” “Why, I knew
nothing of this before tonight,” Evaine began defensively, then realized that
her father was teasing her—and why. “But I’m glad that we did talk,” she went
on, looking at him sidelong, “because I think that Rhys and Joram have some
very valid arguments.” “Very well,”
Camber smiled. “I will play Devil’s advocate and you will defend. Now, what
think you of our would-be King of Gwynedd?” “I think you
cannot expect me to have any opinion, since I have not met the man, Father. But
I agree that Rhys and Joram must investigate further, to discover whether their
Benedict is Cinhil Haldane.” “Why?” “That is more
difficult,” Evaine conceded. “It is not so much this man as it is any
Haldane claimant to the throne.” “You would
overthrow the present king?” Evaine controlled
a smile. “Come, now, Father. We all know your true reasons for resigning from
Imre’s court. I think we must agree that there are few redeeming features about
having such a man on the throne, other than the fact that there have been no
real alternatives up until now. “But, if there is
the possibility of a legitimate heir, a logical successor, a chance for the
restoration of an old and noble line which ruled Gwynedd successfully and well
for several centuries…After all, it was not for ill governing that the Haldanes
were overthrown, however much our Deryni-written histories would like to
justify the coup. To my mind, the Festillic line, in their greed, have broken
trust beyond repair. If a better claimant has come to light, he should be
considered.” Camber had listened
to his daughter’s speech with a slight smile on his face, hands folded before
him, forefingers tapping lightly against pursed lips. As she finished, he gave
a wan chuckle and glanced at Rhys and Joram. “You see what
happens when you educate a daughter? Your words come back to haunt you. Joram,
never educate your daughters.” “I hardly think it
likely that the opportunity will arise,” Joram grinned. “No, I suppose
not. Rhys, you mind what I say, at any rate.” Rhys could not
resist a sidelong glance at Evaine. “I suspect that my lady wife will have
something to say about that, sir.” “Hmm, I dare say.
Evaine, answer me this. If their Benedict is Cinhil Haldane, do you
propose to place an untried, uneducated—” Joram cleared his
throat insistently. “Sir, I suspect he’s very well educated. The O.V.D. places
great emphasis on scholarly pursuits.” Camber raised a
hand in resignation. “Granted. But he’s not been educated for kingship, and
there’s a difference. Don’t interrupt. Evaine, do you propose to place such a
man on the Throne of Gwynedd?” “Did a royal
education help Imre?” she countered. “And, given his background and the record
of his past actions, can we not anticipate the kind of king he will continue to
be? On the other hand, our Cinhil may have the potential to be a very good
king. And if he has the potential, never mind the actual knowledge of kingship;
he can be taught, can’t he? And what better teacher than you, who have served
under two kings and had enough sense to resign when you could not serve the
third?” “Touchй!” Camber
exclaimed, emphasizing both syllables and slapping his hand against
his thigh in delight. “Rhys, did I not tell you she was a paragon of logic? And
now she’s trapped me in my own arguments. But I suppose that I have only myself
to blame. Tell me, Daughter, do I understand rightly that you would be in favor
of a coup, if this Cinhil proves himself worthy of rule?” “Do we really have
a choice?” she retorted. “Even so, we cannot do it without your counsel and
assistance.” “We?” He gave a
slight smile. “Very well. But there are conditions.” “That is
understood.” Joram nodded, relieved. “In that case, I
shall make you the following pledge: Joram, Rhys, if we can find this
Haldane heir; and if he’s not an imbecile or worse; and if he
agrees to let us work with him; and if we adjudge him to be more worthy
than the present man who occupies the Throne of Gwynedd—then perhaps we
can begin to think of ways in which such a change might be accomplished. But
you must, as you promised, keep me apprised of your progress at all times. You
should also keep in mind that your brother Cathan is under constant scrutiny,
and may eventually be endangered by anything we do. So you must not go beyond a
mere search unless all of us agree that such action would be best for Gwynedd.” Joram and Rhys
exchanged glances, and then Joram turned back to his father. “Your terms are
more than reasonable, sir. And we had already agreed between us that Cathan
would be safest if he knows nothing of this for now. If you have no objections,
we thought to ride to Saint Piran’s Priory later this week. Two of our
candidates are there, and perhaps we can eliminate one or both of them at the
outset.” “You’ll not reveal
anything at this time?” Camber queried. “No, sir. We’ll
only deliver the news to the proper one that his grandfather is dead and asked
to be remembered in his prayers. Does this meet with your approval?” “I have no
objections. When will you be back?” “Within three
days, if all goes well. It’s a day’s ride each way, and—” There was a great
baying and barking in the yard outside, and then a muffled pounding at the
outer gate. Shortly, the inner door swung open to reveal one of the household
servants, with another man behind him, the wolfhounds rubbing happily against
his legs. “My lord, it’s
young Jamie Drummond to see you,” the servant said, barring the way with an arm
across the doorway. “Jamie, lad, come
in and join us,” Camber said, standing and extending an arm toward the
newcomer. “Pull up a chair and share a glass of wine. I thought you’d forgotten
your promise to toast Michaelmas with us.” “I hadn’t
forgotten,” he said, striding across to kneel and kiss Camber’s hand formally,
the dogs at his heels. “I was attending to a matter of some urgency. I’ve
brought news from the capital, from your son.” He pulled out a
sealed packet and handed it over to the older man, then hooked a stool with his
toe and pulled it closer to the fire, nodding greeting to the others. “You’d
best read it,” he said, as Camber stared at him curiously. “Cathan sent me with
all haste.” Without further
delay, Camber broke the seal and scanned the contents of the letter. His face
was grim and solemn as he passed the parchment to Joram. “Cathan has been
unable to stay the execution of the first two hostages tomorrow,” he said,
snapping his fingers for the dogs to lie down. “He will continue to press Imre
for a reprieve, but he does not hold out much hope. Coel Howell, the kinsman of
Cathan’s wife, is urging reprisals against the Willimites, and is convinced
that Rannulf’s murderers were part of a Willimite plot. He will not hear of a
reprieve, nor will he permit Imre to consider it.” “Father, couldn’t you
plead the peasants’ cause to Imre?” Evaine whispered. Camber shook his
head wearily. “Nay, child. If Cathan, whom Imre loves, cannot persuade the
king’s favor, what chance have I, who rejected Imre when he gained his crown?
No, it must be Cathan’s work, if our peasants are to be saved.” He glanced at all
of them, then crossed his arms carefully and stared at one slippered toe
protruding beneath his robe. “But this is not
totally unexpected news, I fear: Cathan also wishes us a joyful Michaelmas and
drinks to our health. I think it only fitting that we should drink to his.” With that, he
reached slowly to his goblet and raised it in the air, nodding as his children
stood and did the same. The toast was drunk in silence—a silence which
persisted for several thoughtful minutes until conversation once more resumed,
this time on more neutral topics. chapter fiveHow the king
sat in the winterhouse in the ninth month . . . —Jeremiah
36:22 But neither
neutrality nor sobriety were common at Court in Valoret, and certainly not on
the night of Michaelmas. The young King Imre had done his reluctant duty by his
people by day, had attended Mass and held formal Court and shown himself at the
Lantern Gate, as was customary at that season. But the night
belonged to Imre and his courtiers and friends. No solemnities at the Court of
Valoret after the sun had set. Feasting past, the king had retired to change to
even more resplendent garb for the dancing and revelling to come. Even now, the
royal musicians were tuning shaum and sackbutt and tambour, trilling snatches
of jaunty airs and stately pavanes in the music gallery. Imre’s favorites
strutted peacock-proud in the now-cleared feasting hall where their master
loved to entertain, exchanging small talk and gossip and awaiting the return of
their gay young liege lord. Amid that gaiety, the dour Cathan seemed doubly out
of place. Cathan MacRorie
was well known at Court. Son of the famous Earl of Culdi and heir one day to
all the MacRorie lands and titles, Cathan was a member of Imre’s council and a
royal commissioner for the Tariff Court as well. He was also, as his father
before him, a trusted personal friend of the king. Tonight, standing with one
of Imre’s young officers toward the left of the Great Hall, many saw his father
Camber in him, though the famous gilt features were distorted a bit in the
great man’s eldest son. He was not so tall
as Camber, and a little darker of hair and eye and skin than his illustrious
sire, yet he was still unmistakably a MacRorie; and it was to Cathan that many
now looked as a voice of reason to the headstrong young king. Even the privileged
Deryni did not always approve of Imre’s excesses and his occasional fits of
cruel humor. That Cathan alone had sometimes managed to temper the king’s wrath
remained a source of constant wonderment. Whether he could be as successful
tonight remained to be seen. Cathan glanced
toward the doors through which Imre would shortly emerge, then returned his
attention to his companion, Guaire of Arliss. D’Arliss was one
of Cathan’s closest friends at Court, aide to the notorious Earl Maldred, who
would be in charge of executing the fifty hostages, beginning tomorrow. Just
now, Guaire was ticking off on his fingers the many virtues of his present
employer, Maldred, compared to his previous master, Earl Santare. The latter
gentle was glaring at both of them from across the hall, and obviously mouthing
insulting comments to one of the junior officers at his side. So far, Coel
Howell had not yet made an appearance, for which Cathan was distinctly
grateful. His unctuous brother-in-law would be certain to be in league with
Maldred and Santare when he did arrive. “So, though I’ll
give you that Maldred may be cruel, too,” Guaire was saying, “he does reward
faithful service, and a man can keep his personal integrity. Tanadas knows, I
like a tumble in the hay with a wench as well as the next man—but with a wench,
mind you! Do you think that’s asking too much?” Cathan shook his
head slightly and controlled a smile. “No, but apparently Santare does, or he
wouldn’t have dismissed you. Besides, it’s Maldred I’m concerned about tonight.
Do you think he personally supports the king’s policy on this matter?” “Maldred supports
the king, whatever his policies.” Guaire frowned. “I
don’t think you have much of a chance, Cathan.” “It’s the hostages
who don’t have a chance. And it’s not as if they’ve even done something wrong.
They just happen to live in the wrong village. The Truth-Readers know that
they’re innocent.” Guaire snorted
derisively. “You don’t have to convince me. I’m on your side. But you know the
answer to that argument as well as I—probably better. What does a Deryni king
care for the lives of a few dozen peasants, when a fellow Deryni has been
killed? Especially when the peasants are human, and the Deryni was of the
nobility.” “He was a rotten
man, Guaire, and you know it.” “Granted, he was a
rotten man. But he was still Deryni, and of the nobility, and his murderer has
not come forth or been found. Imre is simply following the law set down by his
grandfather. Fifty human hostages against the life of one Deryni—it’s about even,
as far as Imre is concerned. Back in the days of the original coup, it was the
price one had to pay for conquest. Today— Well, apparently it’s the price Imre
feels he has to pay to hold the conquest for his descendants.” Guaire
snickered, a lewd glint in his eyes. “At least, that’s the theory. He’s not
likely to have any descendants, at his rate.” Cathan looked at
Guaire sharply and was about to probe further on the meaning of that last
comment, when the trumpeters raised their instruments and blew a preliminary
fanfare. From the opposite end of the hall, a double line of guardsmen in
formal brown and gold cleared a swath through the center of the room and took
up their stations behind the twin thrones. Then the trumpets were raised once
more, the golden notes reverberating across the hall as the door fanned apart
to disclose the king: Imre of Festil, by the Grace of God King of Gwynedd and
Lord of Mooryn and Meara. At his side stood his sister, Ariella, six years his
senior and yet unwed. The two posed in
the doorway for effect until the fanfare had died away, light glowing around
their heads in arcane splendor, as High Deryni were wont to appear on formal
occasions. Then, with a nod of acknowledgment, they began to pass slowly toward
the thrones at the opposite end of the hall, courtiers and their ladies bending
like wheat in the breeze of the royal couple’s passage. Whatever might be their
other faults, no one could say that the scions of the Deryni House of Festil
did not know how to maximize an entrance. Imre himself was a
striking young man, for all that he was of small stature and relatively few
years. Shorter by half a head than most of the men in the room, yet he still
cut a regal figure as he and his sister traversed the hall. On his head was a
tall crown of gold filigree set with rubies, cunningly wrought to add
unobtrusive inches to his height and blazing in the glow of his nimbus of
power. His hair was of a deep chestnut hue, cropped shoulder length,
surrounding lively brown eyes which bulged slightly in a pleasant, albeit
somewhat vacant, face. A short, skin-tight tunic of brown velvet revealed every
line of the hard, young body and emphasized a pair of well-turned legs encased
in brown silken hose; he wore leather dancing slippers on his feet. A gold-and-amber
cloak lined with red fox brushed the floor behind him as he mounted the two
steps of the dais, and bright gems winked on slender fingers and at throat and
ears. On his arm walked
his sister, Ariella, every inch his match and more in beauty and sheer visual
splendor. Gowned in dark brown velvet stamped with gold, the perfection of her
form was captured in a supple flow of color from neck to wrist to slippered
toe, save where the neckline made a plunging V to caress the curve of her
breasts. A tawny jewel lay a-tremble in the hollow of the cleft; a tumble of
chestnut curls cascaded negligently over one shoulder where they had escaped
from beneath her coronet and veil. Her quick hazel
eyes missed nothing as she and her royal brother took their places on the two
thrones atop the dais. With a smile, she leaned back in her chair to bask in
the admiration of the Court, then reached to touch Imre’s arm in a gesture
which Cathan somehow found disquieting. “My gentle
friends.” It was Imre who spoke, his young tenor carrying to the furthest
recesses of the smoky, torchlit hall. “My sister and I bid you welcome, and
pray that you will long remember this Michaelmas festivity. “But you have not
come to listen to your king speak, rather to make merry with him. Therefore, we
give you leave to enjoy yourselves—in fact, we command you to enjoy
yourselves.” There was a murmur of polite laughter. “My Lord Music
Master.” He stood and held out his hand to his sister, who rose and placed her
hand on his. “We shall lead the Bren Tigan.” A murmur of
approval sounded as the royal couple descended the dais and took their
positions in the center of the cleared floor, bowing first to one another and
then to the spectators as the musicians droned the opening bars. Then, as the
strains of the old Deryni melody floated through the hall, Imre and his sister
trod the opening pattern of the. ancient dance, moving alone for the first few
measures. Only when they had completed the first set of figures did other
couples begin to join them in the dance. Cathan watched
moodily for several minutes, then turned to take a goblet of wine from a
servant and exchange greetings with another of the king’s courtiers. When he
returned his attention to the floor, Guaire had disappeared to dance with a
lady he had been eyeing all evening, and Imre was nowhere to be seen. Cathan sipped at
his wine as the music shifted to a gavotte cadence, and slowly eased himself to
a relatively quiet corner where he could observe without being disturbed—or so
he thought. He was leaning against one of the main support pillars, nursing his
wine and his conscience, when he felt a light touch on his shoulder. He turned
to find the Princess Ariella standing beside him, a coy smile on her face and a
filled goblet in her hand. Quickly, he collected himself and made a courtly
bow. “Your Highness
honors me with her presence,” he murmured. Ariella smiled and extended her hand to be
kissed. Her Deryni nimbus had been put aside with her coronet, which now rested
on her empty throne. The chestnut hair nearly glowed of its own accord, though.
Ariella of Festil did not need Deryni sorcery to make her alluring. “Why so glum,
Cathan?” she purred, clinging to his hand just an instant longer than
necessary, once the salute had been performed. “I thought to claim you as a
dancing partner, and instead find you moping in the shadows. Where is your
charming lady? Not ill, I trust?” Her eyes danced
teasingly above smiling lips, and Cathan felt his gaze being drawn almost
unwittingly toward the deep cleft of her breasts. He swallowed uneasily,
knowing full well where the conversation might lead if he were not careful. He
had no particular desire to bed Imre’s sister as ransom for the imprisoned
peasants—though he knew that he would, if there were no other way. “My lady sends her
regrets, Your Highness,” he said carefully. “She had not seen her parents since
the birth of our second son, so she has gone to visit them in Carbury. I should
likely be there myself, were it not for the current crisis.” “Crisis?” Ariella
repeated brightly. “I was not aware of any crisis.” Cathan found
himself becoming annoyed at her coy fagade; he lowered his eyes to disguise his
true emotion. “Your Highness will surely have heard of the fifty hostages taken
at Caerrorie. Your royal brother means to have them slain.” “Hostages? Oh,
yes, I remember. The ones who were taken for the murder of Lord Rannulf. How
does that concern you?” Cathan blinked
rapidly, unable to believe she could be so ill-informed, then realized she was
toying with him. “Your Highness cannot have forgotten that Caerrorie is my
father’s estate,” he said coolly. “The hostages are my father’s
tenants—and mine. I must find a way to spare them.” Ariella raised one
eyebrow and touched his arm lightly. “Why, then, find the murderer, Cathan. You
know the law. If the people of the village will not come forth and name his
killer, then the village is amerced for the value of the man. In this case,
considering that Rannulf was both Deryni and of the nobility, I think that
fifty lives is quite a reasonable fine, don’t you?” “I—” Cathan
lowered his eyes, controlling the urge to twist the stem of his goblet out of
all recognition. “I must contradict Your Highness. The villagers have been
Truth-Read. His Grace knows they were not responsible for Rannulf’s
death. We’re almost certain it was the Willimites.” “Then, bring us
some Willimites.” The princess smiled sweetly. “Surely you cannot expect my
brother to release his hostages without some retribution. The law is the law.” “Yes, the law is
the law,” Imre’s clear tenor echoed, as he glided in to slip his arm
through his sister’s. “Maldred, I thought you said he’d given up this insane
idea of saving peasants.” Maldred, a tall,
florid man with the beginnings of a paunch, bowed unctuously. “Indeed, he gave
me the impression he had, Sire.” Imre humphed, then
turned back to Cathan. “Why are you being so stubborn, my friend? It’s not as
if they’re Deryni—they’re peasants. You’re making an issue out of nothing.” “Sire, I beseech
you,” Cathan said dully. “If you do this, the weight of it will be upon your
conscience. Amerce the villagers in coin, if you must. My father will be
willing to pay. But do not take out your wrath in innocent human lives. The
peasants of Caerrorie did not slay Rannulf. You know that.” Imre looked around
at his growing following of courtiers in wry amusement, though it was apparent
that he was beginning to be a little annoyed. “Cathan, you’re making me out to
be a bully,” he said under his breath. “You know I don’t like that.” “Please, Sire,”
Cathan repeated, dropping to his knees and lifting one empty hand in entreaty.
“For the sake of our friendship, have mercy. Will you condone the taking of
innocent human lives?” “Oh, come now, get
up from there! Ariella, why is he doing this to me?” Ariella started to
shrug, then looked at Cathan carefully as he got to his feet, her mouth curving
in a strange smile. “I have a thought, Brother. Why don’t you give him what he
wants? Give him one of those lives he finds so precious. For the sake of your
friendship.” Cathan’s head
snapped around to stare at her aghast, and the room suddenly became silent.
Imre glared at her owl-eyed, then glanced at Cathan uncomfortably. His
annoyance had changed to uncertainty. “One life?” Ariella nodded.
“If Cathan is indeed your friend, dear brother, you could hardly refuse him
this. Forty-nine peasants are enough for the life of Rannulf. He was a
dreadful bore.” “One life . . .”
Imre repeated, savoring the sound of the words on his tongue and wetting his
lips beneath the tiny smudge of mustache. He looked at
Maldred and Santare, at the courtiers watching expectantly, at the growing
horror on Cathan’s face as he realized that the king was considering the
suggestion seriously—then folded his arms across his chest with a sly grin. “It would be
novel.” “And merciful,”
Ariella crooned, clinging to his arm and gazing up at him adoringly. Imre glanced
sidelong at her, his mouth curling in a pleased expression, then returned his
gaze to Cathan. The royal lips parted. “Very well. Done.
One life. Granted.” He glanced at Maldred and gave a curt nod. “Maldred, take
Lord Cathan to the keep and let him choose a prisoner.” “Yes, Sire.” “And it’s not to
be by lot or anything, either, Maldred,” Ariella added, smiling sweetly as
Cathan stared at her in astonishment. “Our Lord Cathan has been granted the
power of life and death—if only over a single person. If he’s to save a life,
he should experience the exquisite torture of having to choose which one it is.” As Maldred bowed,
Cathan fidgeted in disbelief and started to turn to Imre. “Did you have
something to say, Cathan?” Ariella snapped, before he could speak. “Your Highness,
I—” “Before you speak,
let me remind you that His Grace can retract the boon,” Ariella warned, hazel
eyes flashing. “It can be all fifty dead, you know— or more, if you press the
issue. Now, do you still have something to say?” Cathan swallowed
heavily and bowed his head. “No, Your Highness. I—thank you, Sire.” He bowed.
“If Your Highness will excuse me, I—will attend to your command.” “You are excused,
of course,” Ariella purred. “And, Cathan . . .” He stopped, but did not turn to
face her. “You will be riding to the hunt with us in the morning, won’t
you?” she continued. “You promised.” Cathan turned
beseechingly. “Aye, I did promise, Your Highness. But if I might prevail upon
you to relieve me of—” “Nonsense. If you
stay home, you’ll simply brood about those peasants and become even duller than
you’ve been these past few days. Imre, make him keep his promise. You know it
will be good for him.” Imre glanced at
his sister, then at Cathan. “She’s right, you know. You have been almost
boorish lately.” He touched Cathan’s shoulder in a comradely gesture. “Come,
Cathan. You mustn’t take things so seriously. After a week or so in the
country, you’ll forget all about this peasant thing.” Cathan knew the
tone of Imre’s voice, and knew better than to argue—especially when Ariella was
nearby. With a defeated sigh, he nodded in acquiescence and bowed once more,
then turned to follow Maldred from the hall. Just now, he had more important
things on his mind than royal hunting expeditions. Unexpectedly,
victory of a sort had been won—but it was dark, indeed. For out of fifty
prisoners, he must choose one to live. Life for one; death for forty-nine. He
shuddered at the power he now held in his choosing. Ten minutes later,
he was standing with Maldred before a heavy door, watching numbly as a guard
raised the iron bar and swung the door back on groaning hinges. Maldred bowed,
and gestured toward the open doorway with a lazy wave of his hand. “When you’ve made
up your mind, come to the door and call,” Maldred said, not bothering to
disguise a yawn. “I’ll await you here. I find prisons quite depressing.” Cathan nodded, not
daring to trust himself to speak, then slipped past Maldred and onto the
landing. A torch blazed in a cresset on the wall to his left, and a long flight
of stone steps descended into murky darkness before him. Shielding his eyes
against the glare, he took the torch and began descending the staircase. The
brand gave off a greasy smoke that made his nose itch and his eyes water. Eight steps. The
steps turned. Then a narrower progression down eight more steps, another turn,
and he was at the bottom. A corridor stretched off into a brighter area, and
there were roughly forged iron bars along one side of the passage. On the other
side of the bars was a series of interconnected cells, each with eight or ten
human forms lying huddled together in the straw for warmth. A few of the forms
stirred as he began moving down the corridor, and shortly there were soft
murmurs. “Lord Cathan, it’s Lord Cathan!” The prisoners roused themselves and
shuffled to the bars to peer at him. He noticed with a shock that there were at
least five women among the prisoners, and several young males who were scarcely
more than children. “Lord Cathan?” A familiar voice
called from the end of the row of cells, and he approached to find old Edulf
the Ostler clutching at the bars in amazement. Edulf had been one of his first
riding instructors when he was a boy, the keeper of his father’s stables for as
long as he could remember. He found his vision blurring, and he had to look
down. He knew it was not caused by the smoke from the torch. “Lord Cathan?” the
old familiar voice called again. “Yes, Edulf, it’s
Cathan,” he said. He looked up at
the old man, then let himself scan the others briefly. He found that he could
not meet their eyes, and focused instead on their feet. “I’ve come from
the king,” he finally said. It was all he could do to keep his voice from
choking, but he managed to control it. “I—I’ve tried, from the instant I knew,
to gain your release, but I’m afraid the news I bring is not good.
The—executions will proceed tomorrow, as planned—with one exception.” He took a deep
breath and dared to look up at them again, forcing himself to search their
eyes. “I can save one of you. Only one.” There was silence
as the words sank in, and then a few gasps, a muffled sob from one of the
women. Old Edulf shuffled his feet in the straw and glanced at the others, then
looked back at Cathan carefully. “Ye—ye can only
save one, lad?” Cathan nodded
miserably. “My Michaelmas ‘gift’ from Imre. Whom I choose shall live; the
others die. I—don’t know how to make a choice.” A murmuring broke
out among the prisoners, and then dead silence as all eyes turned to him. Faced
with the anguished knowledge that only one of them could live, and that the
choosing lay in the gift of this one man, whom many of them had known from
boyhood, they looked instinctively to him, blindly trusting, each of them, that
he would be the one Cathan would save. The thought that all forty-nine others
would die was pushed to the recesses, as something which could not be comprehended.
The MacRories had always taken care of them in the past. Surely this was all
some kind of terrible jest. And yet, they could not conceive of Lord Cathan
being the perpetrator of so grim a charade. Dazedly, they watched as Cathan
turned away to jam his torch into an empty cresset and bury his face in his
hands. Cathan was no less
affected. How could he choose? How dared he be the arbiter of life and death,
and for his own people—some of them folk he had grown up with? Justice called
for a cool, analytical, unemotional evaluation of the prisoners, with life
given to the one best suited for survival and positive contributions for the
future. But there were
women, and young men scarcely into manhood. His chivalry cried out for the
weak, the helpless. How could he possibly decide? He raised his head
and inhaled deeply, forcing himself to hold the breath for a moment and then
exhale slowly, the while reciting the words of the Deryni charm which would
mask his fatigue. He must have a clear head to make so grave a decision.
Another deep breath, and he felt his pulse steadying, the flat taste in his
mouth receding. Squaring his
shoulders, he turned slowly to face his people. Edulf was
standing, hopefully, near the bars of his cell, two older men behind him, a
young woman and two boys to their right. He recognized one of the boys as a
herdsman from the village, and reasoned that the other was probably his
brother, the girl possibly a sister or cousin. He did not know the two with
Edulf. “Edulf?” he said
softly. “Aye, m’lord.” The
old voice was low, scared. “Much as I regret
it, only one of these fine people will be able to leave with me tonight.” He
swallowed to regain his composure. “And since I shall not have the opportunity
to meet the others again, would you be so kind as to introduce the rest to me?
I’m sure you know them all.” The old man
blinked. “Aye, m’lord. Ye mean— ye want to meet each one by name, sir?” Cathan nodded. Edulf shuffled his
feet uncomfortably and looked at the floor, then turned slightly toward the two
men standing behind him. “Well, sir, if that’s what ye want. These are the
Sellar brothers, Wat and Tun.” Cathan bowed
acknowledgment and the brothers tugged their forelocks in embarrassment. “An’ this is Mary
Weaver, an’ her brother Will an’ a cousin, Tom ...” The introductions
went on, Cathan often recognizing a name, or a face, or remembering that he had
heard of this man or that as being particularly skilled at his trade, or a
troublemaker, or reliable. He saw a young
couple whose wedding he remembered Joram celebrating a year or so ago, the girl
big with child, huddling in the protective circle of her husband’s arm;
another, older man whose house Cathan had always seen teeming with happy,
laughing children—children who would now have no father, unless Cathan
intervened. A young man whose name Cathan recognized as having been one of
Evaine’s brightest pupils in the village school—he was perhaps thirteen by now,
and an apprentice carpenter by trade; another boy, the son of the manor bailiff,
whom Camber had been thinking of sending off to Saint Liam’s for proper
schooling as a clerk, so quick was the boy’s wit, and he but eleven, at that. And the list went
on, each human soul unique in its own way, each properly entitled to life in
its fullest; each, save one, condemned to die—and he must decide. When the last one
had been presented, Cathan scanned them all again, his eyes touching briefly on
Edulf, the pregnant girl and her husband, the young apprentice. Then he turned
away and bowed his head. When he moved again, it was to walk briskly to the
stone steps and vault up them two at a time. There was a grillework in the door
at eye level, and it opened as he reached the landing. “Made up your
mind, Cathan?” Maldred’s cruel voice said. Cathan leaned a
forearm against the door and peered at the vague outline of Maldred’s head on
the other side of the grille. “Maldred, you’ve
got a pregnant woman down there.” “That’s right,”
the voice responded. “Do you want her or the child?” “Her or—” Cathan
cut off his retort in mid-sentence. “You mean that if I choose her, I could
have only her? Not the child as well?” “His Grace said
one, not two, Cathan,” the voice replied. “And you’d better make up your mind
before he changes his. The guards will be here any minute to take the first two
out.” Any minute! Cathan
glanced at Maldred’s shadow, then at the floor, as he tried to calm his
thoughts. “Then, by the same
token,” Cathan continued, “if the woman should have her child before her turn
comes for execution, you’d have to let another one go, wouldn’t you? I mean, a
living child would make the number fifty instead of forty-nine. He’d have to
release another one besides the one I take tonight, wouldn’t he?” There was an
appreciative chortle from behind the grille. “That’s what I admire about you,
Cathan. Always thinking. As a matter of fact, I suppose he might let another
one go, if that were the case. Of course, that assumes that the woman survives
that long, and isn’t chosen before her time comes to deliver.” Cathan glanced
down the steps again, his lip between his teeth, then stood clear of the door. “All right, then,
I’m ready to make my choice. Come down and let’s get on with it.” The door opened,
and Maldred and two guards came through and followed Cathan down the dark
stairs as two more guards closed the door behind them. They reached the bottom
of the stairs and Maldred swept his gaze over the prisoners. “Well, which one
is it to be, Cathan? I haven’t all night.” Cathan gestured
for one of the guards to open the bars, then stepped through the opening to
stand among his people. As he did, several went to their knees, and one of the
women began sobbing softly. His hand brushed her bent head as he passed, and
then he was moving among them, touching a hand here, a face there, this time
extending his Deryni senses to the fullest, delving deep into the emotion
rilling the room, searching for the best of them to save. There—he had
caught it!—the spark for which he searched. Now, to localize. It was coming
from the right, from one of three young— He heard the sound
of the door being opened at the top of the stairs, and he froze. “They’re coming to
take the first two,” Maldred said behind him. “You’d best make up your mind.” He could hear
footsteps descending the stair, the measured tread of well-trained soldiers
coming to do their duty, however grim, and he cast a last, lingering look
across the people gathered around him. Some of the younger men—boys,
really—were trying to hold back sniffles, and two of the women were weeping
openly. As the footsteps reached the bottom of the stairs, Cathan took two
quick steps across the straw and held out his hand. “Revan, come with
me,” he said, mentally flinching a little as the boy looked up at him in blank
amazement. It was the carpenter’s
apprentice, who walked with a slight limp, and from whom Cathan had read the
thoughts worthy of salvation. “M—me, m’lord?” The boy’s eyes
were wide, frightened, awed, and he stood frozen there, unable to reach out his
hand to Cathan’s. The footsteps were approaching the cell now, the door being
swung back to admit three of the soldiers, who were heading in his direction. “Take my hand,
Revan,” Cathan commanded, his eyes boring into the boy’s. “Come out of this
place of death, and live.” The guards took
one of the women out of the cell, and she began moaning softly as the shackles
were fastened to her wrists. As the guards re-entered the cell, the boy slowly
reached out his hand. It touched Cathan’s just as the guards were about to take
him, and they hesitated but a moment before fastening, instead, on Revan’s
young companion, the bailiff’s son, who wailed as they carried him, kicking and
crying, from the cell and shackled him as well. His cries sent the trembling
Revan sobbing to his knees at Cathan’s feet, his hand still linked with the
young lord’s. Maldred observed
the scene with amused distaste. “Well, if that’s
your choice, let’s get him out of here,” the Earl finally said, motioning out
of the cell as the guards took the two prisoners back up the stairs. As Maldred
withdrew, taking the torch from the wall cresset, Cathan drew the boy to his
feet and hugged him close for a moment, letting the boy’s tears relieve his
anguish, then brushed the boy’s head with his palm, forcing calm into the boy’s
mind. After a moment, the sobbing stopped and Revan stood on his own. With a
weary sigh, Cathan put his arm around the boy’s shoulder and guided him out of
the cell. When the guard had locked the bars, Cathan turned to look at them
once more. “Good night, my friends,”
he said quietly. “I dare not hope that I shall see you again in this world.” He
lowered his eyes. “I pray that the next will give you more justice. My prayers
will go with you.” As he turned to
go, there was a faint rustling in the cells, and then all within were on their
knees. “God go wi’ ye,
young master,” Edulf called gently. “Keep the lad
well,” another called. “We thank ye.” chapter SixO that my head
were waters, and mine eyes a fountain, that I might weep day and night for the
slain ... —Jeremiah 9:1 Later, Cathan was
unable to remember leaving the keep. Somehow, he got the boy home safely and
had him fed and put to bed by the servants. He remembered the hour he had spent
writing to his father about the night’s failure (for so he viewed it), which
missive was dispatched straightaway by messenger when Cathan had signed and
sealed it. But of the rest of
that evening’s aftermath, he remembered not a thing, from the time he put his
head down on his arms at the desk, intending only to rest his eyes for a
moment, until he felt a hand on his shoulder, shaking him to wakefulness, and
heard the voice of his steward, Master Wulpher, quietly informing him that it
was near dawn and his bath drawn. Cramped muscles
protesting, he allowed himself to be led into his chamber to bathe and don
fresh clothes, fidgeting in irritation as his body servant tried to shave him.
But he could not stomach the morning ale which Wulpher brought him. The mere
thought made him queasy. After giving Wulpher instructions to cover his absence
with the royal hunt, he looked in once more on the sleeping Revan before making
his reluctant way down to the courtyard where Crinan, his squire, waited with
the horses. Half an hour
later, he was elbowing his way through the throng gathered in the yard of the
Chapel Royal, his head—though not his heart—much cleared by his ride. Cathan
looked neither left nor right as he crossed the yard toward the chapel,
hunching down in the fur collar of his cloak and hoping to avoid conversation
about the night before. But anonymity was
not to be his that morning. Confrontation in the form of his wife’s kinsman,
Coel Howell, was looming unavoidably in his path. Coel had apparently been
watching from the instant Cathan and Crinan rode into the yard. The older man’s
thin lips contorted in a smug, strained little smile as he nodded greeting to
his brother-by-marriage. “Good morning.” He
moved closer so that there was no way Cathan could gracefully avoid him. “Did
you sleep well last night, brother mine? You look a little tired.” Cathan bristled
mentally, but managed to keep any outward sign of his anger from showing. “Well
enough, thank you. And you?” “I generally
have little trouble
sleeping,” Coel drawled,
watching hawklike for any sign of weakness or regret. “But then, I have no
reason to be anxious.” He toyed idly with his riding crop, glancing up at the
watery sun, then returned his attention to Cathan. “I hear that you have a new
page,” was his next remark. “A new page?” “Yes, recruited
from among your peasants.” Cathan felt his jaw muscles tighten, and wondered
how the man had known. Maldred must have told the entire Court, after he and
Cathan left the keep. “That’s true,” he
finally said. “I bring several to Tal Traeth for training each year. Why do you
ask?” Coel shrugged. “No
special reason. I was just curious, I suppose. Surely you will have guessed
that you were a topic of merry conversation after Maldred returned last night?” “How fortunate
that I could provide such amusement for His Grace’s Court, even in my absence,”
Cathan said, in as droll a tone as he could manage. “Now, if you’ll
excuse me, I have things to attend to, as I am sure you must.” He started to push
past Coel and flee into the chapel, but Coel put a gloved hand on his shoulder
and restrained him. “His Grace is in
very good spirits this morning, Cathan,” he said pointedly. “He has asked me to
ride at his side in the hunt today.” “Should I offer my
congratulations?” “That is your
concern. However, if you were to say or do something which distressed him, so
that he became irritable and nasty, as is sometimes his wont, I would not look
upon it as a kindness. In fact, I would be greatly annoyed, kinsman or not.” “You need not
worry on my account,” Cathan said evenly. “I have no intention of speaking with
His Grace unless he himself requests it. Now, if you will permit me to pass, I
should like to pray in private before Mass. Innocent peasant folk are to die
today.” “Innocent?” Coel
arched a skeptical eyebrow as Cathan pressed past him. “Why, Cathan, I’m
surprised. I shouldn’t think that peasants ever qualify as innocent. But then,
you MacRories always were an odd lot.” When Mass was over
and Cathan had received the Sacrament, he was able to make his way back to his
horse and mount up without having to converse with anyone. Mercifully, Crinan
had made a place for them near the rear of the procession of huntsmen, away
from anyone to whom his master might have felt obliged to speak. It was an
awkward moment when the Princess Ariella rode past with several of her ladies
and blew him a lighthearted kiss from the tips of her gloved fingers; but she
did not stop, for which Cathan gave great thanks. He was not certain he could
have faced her just then. It was well that
Crinan had made such provisions; for as they rode out the city gates a little
while later, the huntsmen winding their hunting horns and whipping the hounds
into order, two bodies were swinging from gibbets a little way above the wall,
one of them, by size, hardly more than a child. Cathan’s vision
swam at that, and for a long time he rode in total silence, head bowed, one arm
clutched lightly across his aching, throbbing chest. He tried not to think
about the identities of the two victims, much less of the others who would join
them over the next twenty-four days. But try as he might, he could not resolve
the guilt he was feeling, the sorrow which ate like a canker at his heart and
mind. He could have saved them, if he had tried harder—surely he could have. He could find no
comfort, nor would he for a long time. Most of October
passed, and with it the executions of the hostages. True to his word, Imre did
not relent in the slayings; nor, on the other hand, did he threaten any further
reprisals against the village whose people had failed to come forth with the
killers of his vassal, Lord Rannulf. The peasants mourned their dead, but at
least there were no more deaths. But besides the
kinfolk of the people who died, it was probably Cathan who suffered most from
the tragedy—Cathan who, for twenty-five days, anguished anew with each rising
of the sun, each dawn portending the deaths of two more of his people; each of
whom, but for his choice, might have lived if he had chosen that one instead of
the boy Revan. Somehow he
retained his sanity, possibly because of the special tenacity which has always
been a characteristic of the Deryni race. Through the enforced merriment of the
hunt with King and Court, he tried hard—and successfully—to mask the loathing
he found himself feeling for Imre’s stubbornness, so unlike the Imre he had
known and loved in times past. The hunting
expedition lasted not one week or even two, but nearly three, in the end. And
by the time the royal party returned to Valoret, it was all Cathan could do to
contain his rage and frustration at not being able to get through to Imre and
make him stop the slayings. Imre was likewise
provoked at Cathan’s dogged obstinacy, and began snubbing him at Court. Cathan,
not trusting himself to remain in the capital with the recalcitrant king,
betook himself and the boy Revan to Saint Liam’s and the comfort of his
priest-brother. There he went into retreat for the duration of the appointed
days, sinking into ever deeper depression with each new sunrise. Toward the last,
he took to staying more and more in the room they had assigned him, speaking
little, eating hardly at all, unable even to look at Revan, whose salvation had
been bought at the cost of the other lives. When, on the final day, he received
word of the last death—the pregnant girl, her child born dead the week before,
on the day her husband died— Cathan could no longer contain his grief. Joram’s
frantic message brought both Camber and Rhys hurrying to the retreat at Saint
Liam’s; and it took many hours of talk and prayer and gentle reasoning before
Cathan began to come out of his depression. Even then, Rhys’s healing gifts had
to be applied more than once, before the old Cathan began to re-emerge. A week later, on
All Souls’ Eve, Cathan kept vigil alone in the cold abbey church, all through
the long and lonely night. He never spoke of the preceding month again, nor
would he discuss what must have gone through his mind during his private vigil.
But after Mass the following morning, he and Camber and Joram and Rhys set out
at last for the MacRorie manse at Caerrorie. It was a very quiet homecoming. Understandably,
then, it was some time before Rhys and Joram were able to resume their search
for the Haldane heir. During the executions, they had felt their places to be
with Camber and his people; and Cathan’s breakdown had delayed them further.
Thus it was not until the Feast of Saint Illtyd, in the first week of November,
that they found themselves at last on the road to Saint Piran’s. Anticipation was
high as they covered the few remaining miles. The first snow was
on the ground. It had fallen during the night while they slept, covering the
ground with a fluffy blanket of white which dazzled the eye and made the
horizon blend in with the blank, featureless sky. The damp air chilled them to
the bone, and the horses frisked and pranced at the new sensation, frost
coating the tiny whiskers on their muzzles and making them snort in annoyance.
The two riders sat straight in the saddle, watching the road for hidden
potholes and other hazards; they were the first to come this way this morning.
The horses’ hooves broke the virgin snow in a spray of fine, feathery wake. “Are we nearly
there?” Rhys asked, after they had ridden in silence for nearly an hour. Joram blew on a
gloved hand and held it to his face to warm it. “It’s just ahead. Those are
some of the outbuildings off to the left. Actually, we could have made it last
night, but it would have been late. We stand a much better chance of getting
what we want by showing up at a decent hour.” They topped a
rise, then drew rein to gaze down into a wide valley. Less snow was on the
ground here, and the outbuildings of the monastic compound could be seen spread
across the whole valley floor. At the other end of the valley, the priory
proper stood atop a slight promontory, a gilded cross glinting from the church
tower. In between, the neatly ordered fields were spread in early-morning
tranquillity, the high-piled haystacks and barns covered lightly with the
season’s first snow. To the right, brothers in heavy brown habits and
tabard-aprons were turning the cows out to pasture, the morning milking done. A
thin curl of smoke drifted from the top of the refectory hall, adjacent to the
main monastic buildings. “They must have
hundreds of hides of land here,” Rhys remarked, as they made their way toward
the main gate. “I thought that the Ordo Verbi Dei was fairly small.” Joram nodded.
“There are some younger sons of a cadet branch of the royal family in holy
orders, though–the current royal family, that is. I think the gift of land
dates from the time of Festil I.” Their reception
was far different from the last time they had ridden together through monastic
gates. The gate warder, a layman in gray working tunic, bowed from the waist
and swept off his cap, clutching it to his chest as they passed. No sooner had
they reined in than their horses’ bridles were taken by a pair of black-robed
novices. The novices bowed respectfully as the two men dismounted, though they
appeared to regard the Michaeline badge on Joram’s mantle with some
trepidation. A gray-clad lay
brother hurried across the courtyard to meet them, bowing nervous greeting
first to his fellow religious, then to the Healer’s green. “Good morning,
Father, my lord. God’s blessings be upon you. My name is Brother Cieran. How
may I serve you?” Joram returned the
man’s bow politely, maintaining a cool and slightly aloof air. “Good morning,
Brother. I am Lord Joram MacRorie, of the Order of Saint Michael. This is Lord
Rhys Thuryn. We should like to speak with your prior.” “Certainly, noble
sirs.” The man bowed again. “If you will come this way, please, I shall ask His
Excellency to attend you.” As the man turned
away, Joram cast a sidelong glance of reassurance at Rhys, then fell into step
behind Brother Cieran. They were led
across the courtyard and through a long passageway, then along one side of a
cloister garden, snow-dotted now, and into a rather large presence chamber.
There they were left to wait, surrounded by four wainscotted walls and an
assortment of religious paintings—no chairs or benches—until an elderly man in
a white habit entered from the opposite end of the room. He had pure white hair
and rather startled-looking brown eyes, and wore a plain silver cross on a
braided leather thong around his neck. “I am Father
Stephen, Prior of Saint Piran’s,” he said, bowing slightly. “How may I serve
you, Father, my lord?” Very soon, the two
were being shown by Brother Cieran into a small, close room with a wooden bench
along the wall opposite the door. There was an opening at about waist level, no
more than a handspan in diameter, filled in with a grille made of tightly woven
rushes or strips of bark—Joram could not be certain in the dim light. Brother Cieran
indicated that they should be seated, then bowed and gently closed the door
behind him. Air and some light
came through a tiny skylight in the ceiling, but otherwise the room was very
gloomy. A brighter light came from beyond the grille, but the light source was
apparently the open doorway of a room similar to the one they now occupied. A
shadow momentarily blocked the light as someone entered, and then the door
closed. They could hear someone breathing noisily through his nose—a someone
who then drew near the grille and sat. There was short
silence, during which no one said anything. Abruptly, Joram sat down to the
left of the grille, motioning Rhys to sit opposite him. “Brother
Benedict?” The man cleared
his throat. “I am Brother Benedict. You must forgive me, but I am
ill-accustomed to speaking anymore.” “I understand,”
Joram replied, glancing at Rhys and steeling himself before continuing. “Ah,
Brother Benedict, our mission is a rather delicate one. I am a priest of Saint
Michael, and my companion is a Healer. Recently we had occasion to attend upon
a dying man who claimed to have a grandson called Benedict in your order. Could
you be that man?” They heard a gasp
on the other side, a pause, and then, in a low voice: “What was his name,
Father?” “Ah, we would
really prefer to have you tell us, Brother Benedict,” Joram replied. “I
can tell you that he lived in Valoret.” A low-breathed
sigh followed, and the man cleared his throat. “Praise be to God, my
grandfather lives in Rengarth, and always has. He is a poor cobbler, and would
have no business in the capital that I know of. His name is Dunstan.” Dunstan. Not
Aidan, or even Dan. This, at least, was not their lost Benedict. Joram sighed,
glanced at Rhys, who had lowered his forehead weakly against his hand. “Dunstan,” Joram
repeated. “No, this was not the name of the man we attended. Perhaps the other
Brother Benedict is the man we seek. Would you ask him to come to us, Brother?” “Of course,
Father.” “And may your
grandfather Dunstan live many happy years to come.” “Thank you,
Father.” There was the
shuffling sound of the other rising, the glint of light as the door was opened,
then silence on the far side of the grille. Joram glanced at
Rhys, who was raising his head and looking very frayed around the edges. “What’s the
matter? Too much pressure?” Joram murmured, with a slight smile. Rhys sighed and
shook his head, worrying his lower lip with his teeth. “I don’t think I’m cut
out for a life of intrigue, Joram. I was a simple Healer before you came along.
I moved openly, in high circles. This stealth—” The light on the
other side of the grille was blocked again as someone entered, and Rhys broke
off quickly. Whoever had
entered walked with a pronounced limp, dragging one foot behind him. He was
shaken with a coughing fit before he could cross to the other side; and when
the coughing finally stopped, the effort of lowering himself to the bench was
almost a physical thing. Rhys reached out a mental probe to read the man’s
soundness, but recoiled almost instantly. If this was their Benedict, their
quest would end very shortly; even in finding him, they would soon lose: the
man’s lungs were nearly eaten away by disease. Rhys swallowed
with difficulty, then signalled Joram to go ahead. “Good morning,
Brother Benedict,” Joram said easily. “We thank you for coming to us.” “I try to be
compliant,” the man murmured. “It would do little good to complain at this late
date. If I could but fly— But, no matter, I’ll elude them yet. There is more
than one way to breach these walls.” Rhys glanced
sharply at Joram. “You wish to leave, Brother?” The man coughed
again. “It matters little anymore. If, twenty years ago, my enemies had been
less cruel . . . Still, there are worse ways to be locked away. How may I
assist you, my sons? You did not come to hear my problems.” Joram glanced at
Rhys, certain that the same questions were probably going through the Healer’s
mind. What had happened to this man twenty years ago? He knew what the man was
implying: unprincipled men had been known to place their enemies into enforced
monastic seclusion before. And twenty years ago . . . But if this was their
Benedict, a diseased and dying man... “Ah, I am a priest
of the Order of Saint Michael, Brother Benedict. My colleague is a Healer.
Recently we had occasion to attend upon the death of an old man who may have
been your grandfather.” A sharp intake of
breath was audible on the other side, which brought on another coughing fit.
When it had ceased, there was a long silence, and then: “May he rot in Hell!” “I beg your
pardon?” Rhys stammered. “I said, may he rot in Hell, that miserable man! He
and his friends were the ones who put me here, who stole my youth, my dreams—” “A moment!” Joram
interjected. “What was his name?” “His name?” the
monk repeated. “His name was one hated by me, though it was the same as that of
my blessed father. His name was James.” James. Not Daniel.
Praised be, Joram thought, that this bitter man is not the prince we
have come to seek. It meant that
their search must continue to the remaining three Benedicts, but at least there
was still hope. He stood easily,
beckoning Rhys to do the same, suspecting that the other was as eager as
himself to move on, now that this possibility had proven false. He cleared his
throat to gain the attention of the man on the other side of the grille. “We thank you for
your trouble, Brother Benedict. However, the man we attended was apparently not
the man of whom you speak. I—cannot, in conscience, wish you the vengeance you
seek, but I shall pray that your escape will be quick and merciful.” The man cleared
his throat again, his tone almost meek. “You—you won’t tell the Father Prior
what I said, will you, Father? I— Forgive me. Perhaps this is why we are
allowed so few visitors, why enclosure is so strictly enforced. I thought I had
mastered my hatred, but with death approaching— Forgive me.” “Of course,” Joram
replied. They took their
leave of him then, and were soon emerging into the main courtyard once again,
beckoning to the novices for their horses to be brought. Brother Cieran, who
had greeted them before, accompanied them now, and ran an approving hand along
the neck of Rhys’s horse as the Healer mounted up. “A beautiful
animal, m’lord. Before my profession, I too owned horses such as these.” He
shrugged. “But that is past. I hope that you were not too disappointed. I
gather that you did not find the man you are seeking.” Rhys shook his
head. “That second Benedict to whom we spoke—has he seen a Healer recently?” Cieran gave a deep
sigh. “I fear not, noble lord. He does not wish it.” “He has only a little
time left,” Rhys replied. “Does he know how little?” “I think he does,
nor does he care,” Cieran said. “He has been a bitter man from the first time I
met him, and that is ten years ago and more. He is entitled to his own kind of
peace, I think. All of us enter these walls for different reasons.” “Even against your
will?” Joram asked quietly. “Oh, did he say
that? I’m afraid his mind has slipped in the past few years. He’s mentioned
that several times, but of course it couldn’t be true. No one is here who does
not wish to be.” “Of course not,”
Joram said, keeping all hint of sarcasm out of his voice. “Thank you for your
help, Brother Cieran. God keep you well.” “And you, my
lords,” Cieran replied, lifting his hand in blessing. He watched
wistfully as the two rode out the priory gates and back up the road they had
come. In the distance, another storm was brewing. chapter sevenThe skill of
the physician shall lift up his head: and
in the sight of great men he shall be in admiration. —Ecclesiasticus
38:3 It was a few days
before the search could be resumed; and this time it was not Joram who rode at
Rhys Thuryn’s side, but Camber himself, disguised as a Gabrilite monk. Joram had wanted
to accompany them, had begged his father to delay until he could secure leave
from his duties at Saint Liam’s. But they could not wait, and dared not permit
Joram to arouse suspicion by an unsanctioned absence. Time was of the essence
now, the need for action intensified by a series of new scandals perpetrated by
the brash young king. After the first
snows at Nyford, where Imre’s new capital was under construction, more than one
hundred serfs and indentured workers had died of exposure because Imre had
failed to provide adequate winter clothing and shelter. Another thirty-two
perished when an earthwork collapsed for want of sufficient shoring. At
Rhemuth, the old Gwyneddan capital, two score and ten peasants were bound over
to serfdom and a half-dozen lesser nobles hanged for refusing either to pay the
building tariff or submit to voluntary servitude. At Marywell in the north, a
royal garrison ran amuck one night and destroyed most of the town without being
punished, though the Archbishop of Valoret himself appealed to Imre to avenge
the innocents who had perished there. Camber had all but
flown into a rage as the news of Imre’s actions assumed greater proportions,
for such wanton disregard by a king for his subjects’ welfare was inexcusable.
Before a week had passed, he and a nervous Rhys Thuryn were making their ascent
into the Lendour highlands toward Saint Foillan’s Abbey. They had been
travelling for nearly three days, on a road which daily became more devoid of
fellow travellers, before they began the final, snow-swept approach. Now, riding alone
between the vast, terraced fields of the abbey’s holdings, they could see coils
of smoke rising from the abbatial kitchens, the only signs of life against the
frozen landscape. The great granaries were sealed tight against the winter
blizzards, the last crops harvested weeks before. Even the enormous dairy
herds, which roamed the mountainsides in milder seasons, were nowhere to be
seen. The two riders
huddled in fur-lined clothes, their horses blanketed and hooded against the
icy, needling wind, as they waited for admittance outside the abbey precincts. “Who seeks
entrance at the gate of Saint Foillan’s?” an ancient voice cried from a window
high in the stone gatehouse. The wind whipped
his words away, and Camber edged his horse a few paces closer to the wall. “Pray, open your
gate to a pair of fair-frozen travellers,” Camber shouted. “I come from the
Archbishop. I’m Brother Kyriell, and this is Lord Rhys Thuryn. We have been
riding long to reach you.” “You’re a monk?” A
hooded head was poked through the window and appeared to stare down at them,
but the expression was lost in the shadows. “Yes, of the Order
of Saint Gabriel. Lord Rhys is a Healer. May we be admitted, please? We have
business with your abbot.” No answer came,
but the head withdrew, the window closed, and shortly a postern door opened in
the main gate. Camber dismounted and led his horse through, followed by Rhys,
and a monk closed the door behind them before taking their horses. Another monk
bowed wordlessly and indicated that they should follow him across the snow-covered
Great Court. The stone towers
and walls of the abbey church loomed gray and forbidding against the snow, but
they were dwarfed and completely overshadowed by the sheer rock face of the
neighboring mountain, which formed the abbey’s north and eastern limits. That
slope was wind-scoured and bare of snow. Near the monastic church itself was an
artificial facade on the mountainside, with a large, timbered door set into its
face. The horses were led through that door just before Camber and Rhys and
their escort reached the shelter of the abbot’s gate. It must be a stable, Camber
mused. If so, it is probably where Saint Foillan’s dairy herds go
during the winter. Five minutes
later, Camber and Rhys were sharing a bench before a roaring fire in the
abbot’s parlor, each with a tankard of mulled cider in his hands and a cushion
beneath his feet. The abbot had not yet made an appearance, but their
monk-escort was bustling around the room, lighting candles in sconces and
generally tidying up. Camber cast a
sidelong glance at Rhys as though to suggest keeping an eye open, then loosened
the collar of his fur-lined mantle and let it slip back from his shoulders.
Rhys, too, was beginning to warm up, and as he stood to move farther from the
fire, a door opened into the room and the abbot entered. Immediately, Camber
was on his feet as well, setting down his tankard on the bench as he rose. “Good morrow,
Father Abbot,” he said, moving to kiss the cleric’s ring. “I am Brother
Kyriell, in the service of His Grace, the Archbishop. This is my colleague,
Lord Rhys, a Healer.” Rhys set down his
tankard and came to kiss the ring. The abbot, when the duties had been done,
raised a bony hand and shook his head. “Nay, Brother
Kyriell, my lord, stand not on ceremony. You have ridden far, and in hostile
weather, and Brother Jubal tells me that your coming is not by chance. How may
I assist you?” He gestured for
the monk to move his chair before the fire, then signed for the two to resume
their seats as he took his. When they were settled and the abbot held a tankard
of cider in his hand, Camber folded his hands before him and cleared his
throat. “Father Abbott,
this is a matter of some delicacy, especially in light of your hospitality.” He
glanced at his tankard. “But we have come to speak with one of your claustral
brothers. It is rather important.” The abbot studied
both of them over the rim of his tankard, then warmed his hands on its sides.
“So one might gather,” he finally replied, his eyes sweeping their
snow-bedraggled condition. “Might one ask why, however? My compliance with your
request would involve a considerable relaxing of our Rule. If I am to do that
for you, or for His Grace, the Archbishop, I should like to know why.” Camber inclined
his head in agreement. “A few months ago, an old man died. He had been under
the care of Lord Rhys, and on his deathbed asked Rhys to inform his grandson of
his death. Unfortunately, he could only tell us that his grandson was a monk of
your order, and that his name in religion was Benedictus. Rhys asked my help in
locating this monk, and our search has led us here.” “I see.” The abbot
glanced down at his cider. “This grandfather—was he an important man?” “Only to me—and to
his grandson,” Rhys answered. “He was in a greatly agitated state about his
past life, and hoped that his grandson might be induced to pray for his soul. I
promised that I would try to find his grandson—and so I believe I have. Might
we speak with him, Father Abbot?” “This is highly
irregular—” the abbot began. “We can appreciate
your position, Father Abbot,” Camber said. “But surely it could do no great
harm. The old man felt he had much to atone for, and that his grandson’s
prayers might substantially ease his way to Heaven, if only the grandson knew.
I have spoken with His Grace, the Archbishop, in the matter, and while it is
not his general practice to interfere in the local governance of the
establishments under his jurisdiction, he did indicate that he felt this a
reasonable relaxation of your Rule. We would require but a few minutes.” “Hmm,” the abbot
grunted. It was obvious
that Camber’s invocation of the archbishop’s name carried considerable weight
with him, and also that he resented that invocation. “What was the
grandson’s name again?” he asked grudgingly. “We know him only
as Brother Benedict, Father Abbot.” The abbot rose and
began pacing the chamber, hands clasped in the sleeves of his white robe. His
thin face mirrored his annoyance. “You place me in
an awkward position, Brother. You must understand that Brother Benedict has
taken a vow of silence. He has not spoken, other than in his Divine Office and
to me, his Confessor, in more than twelve years. His vocation is certain. He is
a most holy man. I do not know if he will wish to see anyone from the outside
world.” Camber stood in
the abbot’s path, and the abbot stopped his pacing. “I am a monk, Father Abbot.
Lord Rhys is a Healer, which is also a divine calling. Though we live and work
in the world, I think our vocations as certain and as holy as any cloistered priest’s,
if in different ways. If your Brother Benedict is as upright and holy a man as
you say, I think his compassion for his grandsire will compel him to see us.
But, let us not take such a decision upon ourselves. Brother Benedict is the
one who should decide.” The abbot searched
Camber’s face carefully, looking for he knew not what; then he switched his
gaze to Rhys. “And you, my
lord—do you concur with Brother Kyriell’s estimation of Brother Benedict, whom
you have never seen? Do you deem yourself worthy to speak with so holy a man?” Rhys bowed his
head, guilt at their charade playing at the corners of his mind, then looked
the abbot in the eye. They had played no sham. All that they had said so far
was true, even if it was not all the truth. Why should he be ashamed? “Who among us is
truly worthy of anything, Father Abbot?” he said softly. “Do we not say in the
liturgy, ‘Domini, non sum dignus’—’Lord, I am not worthy’? But in the
next breath we add, ‘Speak but the word and my soul shall be healed.’ As a Healer,
I daily feel His healing power working through me, and I know it is a gift of
God. If Brother Benedict will see us, I shall strive to continue to be worthy,
in my own way.” The abbot smiled
wanly and bowed. “Touchй, my lord. Your training as a Healer has not
overshadowed your theology.” He became sober again. “Very well, I shall ask
Brother Benedict if he wishes to see you. I cannot promise anything, but I will
ask.” With that, the
abbot walked slowly out of the room. Ten minutes later,
after being led through the abbot’s hall and cloister yard, Camber and Rhys
were shown into a small, wainscotted chamber with a brass grillework in the
wall at one end. The room was warm enough, opening off an annex of the abbot’s
hall, but it was very dim. A single candle in a sconce beside the door was the
only illumination except for a faint light coming through the grillework from
the other side. A padded kneeler lay against the wall beneath the grille, just
wide enough for two people. Camber stood
easily in the center of the chamber, inspecting it carefully as the outer door
was closed behind them. Rhys regarded the grille suspiciously. “Apparently he’s
agreed,” the Healer murmured. “Aye. Now pray God
he may be the right one,” Camber replied. He moved closer to Rhys and laid his
hand on the other’s arm, his voice dropping to an almost inaudible whisper.
“Stay close, my friend. I have a strange premonition, and I’m not certain I
like it.” Rhys nodded
agreement, knowing that the closeness of which Camber spoke was not physical
proximity; then he knelt beside the grille as a rustle of movement on the other
side caught his attention. Camber immediately eased down beside him, his hand
resting lightly on the other’s arm as he signed for Rhys to speak. “Brother
Benedict?” Rhys murmured. The rustling
ceased. Rhys could
sense the newcomer’s face behind
the grille and caught a whiff of his breath, clean and fresh. It was impossible
to see anything. “Brother
Benedict?” Rhys repeated softly. There was a slight sound from the other side—
not quite a cough. “I am Brother
Benedict,” a low voice said. “How may I serve you?” Healer and
pseudo-monk exchanged tense glances, each abundantly aware of the anxiety in
the other. Camber leaned closer to the grille. “We beg your
pardon for this intrusion, Brother Benedict, but we hope you may be the man we
seek. My name is Brother Kyriell. The man with me is Lord Rhys Thuryn, a
Healer. We believe he may have attended your grandfather in his last hours.” A gasp of
surprise. “My grandfather? Dear Jesus and all the Saints, I thought him dead
these ten or fifteen years!” “Dead?” Camber
said. “I’m afraid I don’t understand. What was your grandfather’s name?” “His name? Why, it
was Daniel. I tried to reach him some ten years ago, before I took my solemn
vows. When I did not hear, I assumed— But you said —forgive me, you said that
Lord Rhys attended him in his last hours. Then, he is dead—now.” “I fear that he
is,” Camber answered lamely. “He—” His voice failed him momentarily, so
overcome was he by the growing knowledge of the man’s true identity, and Rhys’s grip on his arm was like a vise as he
leaned closer to the grille. “Brother Benedict, this is Lord Rhys. You said
your grandfather’s name was Daniel. What was his last name? If you are the man
I seek, I have a message for you from him, but I must be sure. Tell me what you
remember of your grandfather.” A pause. Total
silence from the other side. Then, quietly: “His full name was Daniel Draper,
and he was a merchant in woolen cloth when I left him to join the order. My
father, Royston, had died in the plague the year before .. .” At the mention of
the name, Rhys had a flash of the same picture he had seen in Daniel’s mind: of
the father, Royston, laid out for burial, old Daniel and the boy Cinhil looking
on fearfully. He suddenly knew what the man on the other side of the grille
would look like, grown to middle age: the glossy black hair, silvered at the
temples with the passing years; the clear, gray Haldane eyes, sage and serene
in the lean, handsome face; the slender hands, smooth through years of prayer,
but strong, capable of whatever the man should will... He shared the
image with Camber and felt the older man wince with the intensity. But in that
instant he was aware of another impression coming from Camber himself: the
knowledge that Cinhil—no, Benedict, for now, for it was safer that way—was not
alone! No malice was
inherent in that realization; Benedict himself had probably requested a
witness. In fact, it was the abbot who stood so quietly beside the door on the
other side. But now they would have to be very careful what they said to their
quarry. And how were they to find out more about him, without arousing
suspicion? “. . . but I
prattle on in a most unseemly fashion,” Benedict was saying. “You must pardon
me, my lords, but my heart is so overjoyed at learning that my dear grandsire
lived these many years, that I find myself quite addled. Pray, tell me. did his
later years go well. with him? Did he die a good death?” “He was a good
man,” Rhys said gently, raising an eyebrow to Camber as though to ask what
next. “I was privileged to attend him from the time I first began to practice
my healing craft. He asked on his deathbed that I find you and entreat you to
pray for his soul.” “Oh, that poor,
gentle soul,” the other breathed. “Your pardon, my lord, but I must pray a
moment.” There was a rustle
of movement on the other side, and Rhys looked at Camber. What now? He
spoke mind to mind. I’m not
certain. We must find out more, but we dare not arouse the abbot’s suspicion. That won’t be
easy. He— I have an idea,
Camber’s thought broke in. Rhys, could you make him ill? What?.’ No, listen to
me. Use your healing powers to simulate illness. Make him pass out or
something. That may enable us to get inside and see him face-to-face. I doubt
they have a Healer of their own. But, to—to use
my powers to harm instead of heal . . . Not to harm. To
help, in the long run. There would be no lasting effect unless you make it so.
Rhys, we must get closer to him. We must find out whether it’s worth the risk
to get him out of here! “I beg your
pardon, my lords,” the Haldane’s voice broke in. “I was momentarily overcome,
and…” Do it! Camber
urged. He’s disoriented, confused. You can easily bring on a fainting spell.
Do it! “. . . you will
forgive me. What was it you wished to tell me about my grandfather?” Camber cleared his
throat, nodding to Rhys: “I wonder if there might be anything of which you know
that could account for your grandfather’s fear of the afterlife, Brother
Benedict? Daniel felt that he had sinned terribly. I spoke with his confessor,
and the good father assured me that he had made a proper contrition, but ...” Rhys steeled
himself and calmed his mind, letting Camber’s words run over his head unheard,
willing himself to the state of tranquillity which was necessary to reach out
and tamper with another’s body. Closing his eyes, he blocked out all input from
the external world, mentally articulating the words which would bring him into
his full healing trance. He felt the tingle
of heightened awareness in his fingertips, in his lips, behind his eyes; he
sensed the nearness of the man Benedict on the other side of the grille,
listening carefully to what Camber was saying, though Rhys himself heard not a
word. Gently, he brought his right hand up to the brass of the grillework,
rested his fingertips against the metal, warm to the touch. Slitting his eyes
open, bringing them close to the grille, he could see the outline of Benedict’s
head against it, see the skin of his face pressed against the metal as he
leaned close to hear the words which Camber spoke but Rhys did not hear. He
marshalled his strength for a leap across the short space separating him from
the man on the other side, letting his hand go flat against the grille, only
millimeters of brass separating hand from other’s head. Then he was
extending himself across the greater void of mind to mind, slipping undetected
through the other’s consciousness, which was so intent on words, mere words,
while the real meaning wrapped itself around his mind. Then Rhys was in the
other’s mind, questing gently for the proper spots to touch, probing
relentlessly, but undetected, for the contact which would bring temporary
oblivion. He found it. He
steadied his healing hold around the cause of consciousness, exerted pressure,
and felt the other’s growing dizziness, the buzz of blurred responsiveness as
Camber’s words ceased to make sense. Then the other was slumping against the
wall, sliding to the floor unconscious, and another was rushing to his side,
amazement and fear radiating from him. Rhys gave a final
touch to the other’s mind, to be certain that consciousness would be gone a
sufficient length of time, then withdrew abruptly. He found that he was
drenched with sweat, his left hand gripped tightly on Camber’s arm, the older
man staring at him with respect and a little discomfort. He let go of Camber’s
arm, reverting to spoken speech with a tremulous voice. “What’s happened?” “He’s fainted,”
Camber murmured, a faint smile playing across his lips. “Brother Benedict!” he
called. “Brother Benedict, are you all right?” “He’s passed out.
I think he’s ill,” came the voice of the abbot from the other side. “Brother
Paul, Brother Phineas, attend us!” A sound of running
feet. “Benedict, speak
to us! Phineas, send for the infirmarian. He’s had a shock and passed out.
Benedict, are you all right?” Rhys tried to peer
through the grille, but Camber merely continued to kneel, his head cocked
slightly as he listened. Offer to help, he
mouthed silently. Rhys pressed
closer to the grille. “Father Abbot, is
there anything I can do to help? It’s Lord Rhys.” Again they were
ignored. There was the sound of more running feet, a low murmur of voices, and
then a new voice saying, “I don’t understand why he doesn’t come around, Father
Abbot. If he’s just fainted, he should have come around by now.” “He’s been bled
too much, if you ask me,” another voice said. “I told him that twice in the
same month was too much.” “Perhaps it isn’t
just a fainting spell,” said a third. “Maybe it’s the plague!” “The plague?”
someone whispered. “Heaven preserve us!” “Nonsense. Do you
want to start a panic?” It was the voice of the abbot. “Lord Rhys, are you
still there?” “Yes, Father
Abbot. I heard what happened. Is there anything I can do to help?” He looked at
Camber, and Camber nodded in hopeful anticipation. “I’m not certain,
my lord. Brother Benedict seems to have fainted, and our infirmarian is unable
to revive him. Would you be willing to see him?” “Please, Father
Abbot, I would be most honored to lend whatever assistance I can. I feel
somewhat responsible.” Camber rolled his eyes, smothering a chuckle, and Rhys
flashed him a nervous glance. “I had no idea he would become so overwrought at
the news of his grandfather’s death,” he added hastily. “You are not to
blame, my lord. Brother Phineas, please bring Lord Rhys inside. The rest of
you, help me to take Brother Benedict to his cell.” As sounds faded
from the adjoining room, Camber stood stiffly and gave a great sigh. “How long?” he
whispered. “Perhaps fifteen
or twenty minutes.” Rhys hauled himself to his feet while trying to peer again
through the brass grille. “I had a devil of a time putting him out, though. I
should try to read him properly before I bring him around. It may be our only
chance.” “At least we’ll
get a look at the inside, of the compound,” Camber agreed. “If we—” He broke off and
coughed just before the door opened, and was straightening his robe as Brother
Phineas peered into the chamber. “Lord Rhys?” “May I bring
Brother Kyriell with me? We’ve worked together before.” “Well—” “Please, Brother.
I am a monk,” Camber reminded him. “Come, there isn’t time to
waste.” That night, in
their room at a distant inn, Camber and Rhys sat on either side of a small
table, a lighted candle between them, their hands linked loosely to either
side. On arriving, they had eaten a hasty meal in the common room downstairs,
again thawing out from their wintry ride, then had hied themselves to their
chamber. The past half-hour had been spent in deep trance, as Rhys imparted to
Camber the little he had learned in his brief exploration of Cinhil’s mind; the
impressions were more easily conveyed from mind to mind than in spoken words. Cinhil. Now
they were free to voice the name. Camber was the
first to stir, and he sat back in his chair with a sigh as he broke off
contact, shaking his fingertips to restore the circulation. Rhys’s eyelids
fluttered, and then he too was taking one deep breath, two, three, clearing
away the residual effects of the trance from his mind. Camber suppressed a yawn
as he poured mulled ale for the two of them. “Your reading was
only superficial, of course— and had to be, under the circumstances. But
offhand, I will have to say that I’m impressed.” Rhys rubbed his
eyes and forced them to focus on the older man. “Aye. He’s brilliant, if
undeveloped. But—” He sighed, a weary, frustrated sound. “Damn it, why does the
man have to have a true vocation for the priesthood? That’s going to complicate
things.” “The man must be
true to himself, else he would not be a true Haldane,” Camber smiled. “Cinhil
is a priest, he feels that he was called to be that, and he is a good one. He
could be no other, given his present circumstances.” “Joram would
understand that; I don’t,” Rhys said testily. “The question is, will he forsake
that vocation for a crown? I think it’s clear that, with proper training, he
has the ability to rule. But will he? Which will come first for
him? The duty of his birth, or the duty of his vows? He’s going to have to make
one hell of a choice. For that matter, can we even afford to let him make that
choice?” “To forsake his
vows and wear the Crown.” Camber sighed. “To take a wife, produce heirs,
re-establish a dynasty—things which, for most men, would be a joyous task. But
it will never be so for Cinhil. He is a priest forever, I fear. And
though we may force him to put aside his monkish robes, and walk the world
again, and take a wife, and wear the crown of his ancestors—and we must do
that, I know that now—I suspect he will nevermore be a truly happy man. We dare
not even let him make the decision for himself, if there is any chance he will
refuse us. Cinhil Haldane must be King.” “Aye ...” Rhys rested his
elbows on the table and let his hands support his head, strangely melancholy. Camber was silent
for a long time. Then: “You’re not certain, are you?” Rhys shook his
head wearily. “We know so little about him, Camber. What if we’re wrong?” “That’s supposed
to be my line.” Camber chuckled. “You and Joram are the ones who were
going to be the crusaders against tyranny, and oust the evil king, and restore
the true heir.” Rhys smiled
despite his fatigue, but his expression was solemn as he looked again at
Camber. “I know. And you’re right, of course. Cinhil has too much potential for
us not to attempt a Restoration. But the price...” “It will be high
for all of us,” Camber nodded. “The peasants’ deaths will not be the last we
shall have to pay. And Cinhil— Even if we bring him out of Saint Foillan’s,
there’s still the matter of convincing him that he and only he can make the
coup successful. I hesitate even to contemplate what that will cost the inner
man.” Rhys could only
nod agreement as he readied himself for bed. But sleep did not come easily that
night, for all his bone-weariness and mental fog from the day’s exertions. Long
after Camber’s deep breathing told him that the other slept, Rhys lay staring
at the dark ceiling of the chamber, listening to the night sounds of the inn,
the winter wind whistling outside the shutters. He kept thinking
of the parts of Cinhil which he nad not been able to read, which lay behind
close-guarded shields that he had not expected to find in a human, and which he
had not dared to probe, for fear of discovery. He wondered how
much Cinhil really knew of his true identity. And he wondered if the thought
had ever crossed Cinhil’s mind that he might one day be called upon to assume
his Haldane heritage and the Crown of Gwynedd. chapter eightWrath is cruel,
and anger is outrageous; but who is able to stand before envy? —Proverbs
27:4 In the practice
yard of the royal armory at Valoret, Imre of Festil was hacking at a pell with
a blunted blade, under the sharp-eyed scrutiny of a master of arms. A score of
his retainers watched from the perimeter of the yard and occasionally shouted
out words of encouragement and advice. But all other arms play had ceased when
the king took the field. The caprice of Imre’s favor being what it was of late,
few men were anxious to risk a misunderstanding of their intent. Imre was
exceedingly nervous of unsheathed steel in his presence, even when it was borne
by men known to be loyal to the Crown. Some few men he permitted this
liberty—Armagh and Selkirk, his chief weapons masters, and a handful of others.
But to raise steel against the king at any time could be construed as treason,
if the king chose to view it that way-even if the alleged traitor believed
himself to have acted in sport. Would-be sparring partners risked contending
with the king’s bodyguards, two of whom were lounging even now, with deceptive
casualness, near the entrance to the armory proper, within easy hearing of the
royal voice. It made the session less than relaxed. Imre’s own martial
abilities were not outstanding, which partly accounted for his attitude. His
slight stature and indulgent upbringing had not been conducive to the molding
of a master swordsman, nor was this really in Imre’s area of interest. He was
judged by his fighting masters to be merely competent with broadsword and
shield, and they had long ago despaired of teaching him to wield a greatsword
or couch a lance with any degree of proficiency. However, this did not mean
that the king’s skill should be taken lightly. His apparent level of competence
was often deceiving. More than one adversary had made a mistake, only to have
Imre’s blade slip suddenly home beneath a careless guard. Though his bodyguards
were always nearby, it was clear—to those who knew—that Imre did not always
have to rely on others’ steel to save him from would-be assassins. Indeed, Imre’s
favored weapon was not the sword at all, but the more subtle dagger. At this
deadly game, even his instructors had to concede that the king had few peers.
Armagh, the master now scrutinizing Imre’s swordwork with the pells, bore a
long, raised scar across one forearm to this day—lasting reminder of a practice
bout in which he had allowed himself to become careless. Imre, his pell
work completed, turned and saluted the instructor in question, then strode into
the center of the yard and began readjusting a vambrace that had begun to slip. Master Selkirk,
who had been arming on the sidelines, took this as his signal and moved onto
the field, ponderous in heavy padding, mail, and great barrel helm. Bending
knee before the king, he offered up his blunted sword, hilt first, as was
customary when requesting permission to cross blades with the Crown. Imre laughed
inside his helmet and touched Selkirk’s helm lightly with his own sword in
acceptance, then saluted his retainers with a flourish as they burst into
scattered applause. Soon he and Selkirk were circling warily, each looking for
the best opening blow. The retainers resumed their low conversation as Selkirk
and the king began sparring. Cathan MacRorie
was among the circle of intimates waiting upon the king this morning. Indeed,
it was Cathan’s first appearance at an inner Court function in many a week.
Though he had dutifully appeared at Court each day since his return after the
executions, he had not been summoned to the royal presence until this very day.
In fact, Imre had made pointed detours to avoid any encounter with his former
favorite. But today had been
different. Cathan had presented himself at the Chapel Royal for the morning
devotions of the Court as usual, fully expecting to be royally snubbed as he
had been for the past three weeks. But instead, when the king had emerged from
his session with his confessor, he had headed straight for Cathan and embraced
him warmly, declaring his unhappiness at having shunned his friend for these
many weeks. He had realized, he said, that Cathan’s behavior regarding the
executed hostages was out of filial duty to his father, and not out of defiance
of his king and friend. And he, Imre, had been wrong to exclude his good and
faithful Cathan from his presence for doing only what he ought, as a dutiful
son. Could Cathan ever forgive him? Cathan could. Much
taken aback, and flattered by the king’s public show of reconciliation, Cathan
was only too willing to renew the royal friendship: despite Imre’s faults,
Cathan was still devoted to the king. The invitation to watch Imre at the
armoury was further proof that all was forgiven. Now Cathan stood
in the place of honor beside Imre’s
squire, the king’s tankard and towel in his hands. He smiled and nodded
approval as Imre completed a particularly difficult combination move against Selkirk and glanced in his
direction. Behind him, Jamie Drummond and Guaire of Arliss applauded politely,
their faces betraying none of the misgivings they felt about the entire
morning’s events. Cathan, in his happiness, had already decided to ignore the
glares which were coming this way from the other side of the yard. The source of the
majority of these glares was Coel Howell, standing sullenly beside the two
warrior-earls, Maldred and Santare. It was Coel who had supplanted Cathan with
Imre during the past few weeks, and who now faced possible exclusion if Cathan
should be restored to the royal favor. After a few
minutes, Coel called his squire and began pulling on gauntlets, coif, and helm.
He made an inaudible remark which set his companions to sniggering as they
glanced in Cathan’s direction. The sparring slowed to a halt as Coel took up
sword and shield and strode onto the field. “Sire, I mean no
offense to Master Selkirk, but ‘tis apparent that he is weary today, and cannot
give Your Grace the challenge you desire. I am hardly a match for Your
Highness, but I would be honored to provide you more energetic sport.” “Aye, friend
Coel,” the king grinned, dismissing Selkirk with a wave of his sword. “Come and
have to!” Coel bowed in
formal request to approach with steel, and then the two began to spar. Cathan’s mouth
tightened as he watched, not certain what to make of his kinsman’s move. Coel
was more than ten years the king’s senior, and outweighed Imre by a
considerable amount—a fact which made for a distinct advantage against the
small and lightweight king. Imre was
fast—there was no doubt about that. And his form was basically sound: the
finest swordsmen in the land had been his mentors at one time or another. In
fact, Cathan had never seen him in better form than he was today. But Coel was
the better swordsman, though he rarely made a public spectacle of this talent.
And he was pulling his blows whenever he could get away with it. Cathan’s lips
compressed in a hard, tight line as he realized what Coel was doing. It was a typical
Coel maneuver. By slowing his speed just a fraction, by deliberately misjudging
openings, responding to feints, he could make Imre appear to be the master,
pandering to the royal ego, which so needed bolstering. Cathan watched as Imre
slipped and recovered on the beaten earth, backed off to straighten his helm
with a gauntleted sword hand, and resumed his stance. As the fighters closed
once again Cathan saw that Coel was playing with his opponent, maneuvering him
around so that the sun shone in his eyes and made his blows even less sure.
Cathan frowned, for he did not recognize this as part of Coel’s apparent plan. But it was part
and parcel of a larger plan A seemingly chance
parry raised a little to the right brought a flash of sunlight lancing into
Coel’s helm-not Imre’s–reflecting blindingly off a leaded window behind the
king. Coel missed his step and
faltered, dropping his shield just a fraction, and Imre used the opening to
advantage. His blunted sword came swooping from behind his head in a solid blow
to the side of Coel’s helm, connecting with a sound which echoed across the
yard and made Coel stagger. Playing the game
to its proper conclusion–for, with proper weapons, he would have been dead–Coel
reeled and let fall his sword, then toppled slowly and noisily to the ground.
Imre’s courtiers applauded politely as the king doffed his helmet and extended
a hand to help Coel up. “Well fought!” the
king laughed, clenching the older man’s wrist in his fist as Coel scrambled to
his feet. “I’ll swear you nearly had me there. Bad luck for the sun to flash in
your eyes that way!” “Nay, ‘twas your
skill, Sire,” Coel replied, smiling as he gave his shield to a waiting squire.
“I fought well enough today, but you are improving. The best man won–that is
all.” He pulled of his helm and gauntlets, as well, and gave them to a
waiting page. Imre grinned
delightedly, raising a hand to summon Cathan. As Cathan approached, he forced
himself to ignore the indulgent look which Coel was giving him behind the
king’s back. Imre took the towel and mopped it across his sweat-begrimed face.
Then, handing it to Coel to use, he took up the tankard and raised it to
Cathan. “To your most
excellent kinsman,” he said, tipping back his head to drink thirstily. What was
left was passed to Coel, who tossed off the remainder with casual ease. Then the king was
turning to go, his hand outstretched to bid Coel attend him. He did not see the
expression on Coel’s face as he handed Cathan the empty tankard and dropped the
soiled towel across his arm, or hear the laughter of Coel’s friends as Cathan’s
face went crimson at the affront. Cathan watched
until the two had disappeared from view, then shoved the towel into the tankard
in hurt disgust and gave it to Imre’s page, stalking off in the opposite
direction to nurse his pride. Apparently Coel had made greater inroads with
Imre than he had dreamed. Nor had the king totally forgiven him. Later, in the
royal bath, Imre lounged tranquilly in a steaming pool sunk several feet into
the bathhouse floor. The water was scented with fine herbs and spices, the
steam rising from the surface and swirling lazily in the cold air above. Imre
lay back in the pool with his head resting on the edge, eyes closed, the rest
of his body totally submerged. Coel had doffed
his armor and washed perfunctorily before dismissing the bath attendants, and
now he brought a fresh towel from a cupboard on the other side of the room,
dropped to his haunches beside the dozing king. His face betrayed no emotion,
but the tension showed in his voice. “Are you
comfortable, Sire?” Imre opened one
languid eye and peered at Coel. “What is it?
You’ve been bustling around like a hen who’s lost her chicks.” Coel pulled a
stool closer to the pool and sat on it, cradling Imre’s towel in his lap.
“Sire, this may be none of my business—and if that is the case, you have only
to say it and I shall withdraw the question —but I wonder whether, as it
appears, you intend to take Cathan back into your confidence.” “You think I
shouldn’t?” Coel raised an
elegant eyebrow. “Well, perhaps I oughtn’t to say this of my own kinsman, but
I’m not at all certain he’s stable anymore, Sire. He’s changed since he came
back after the executions last month. he’s grown moody, a bit secretive. And
then, there’s the talk about him and Rannulf.” “What talk?” came
the bored query. “Well, that he may
know more than he’s indicated about Rannulf s murder—that he may know
who did it.” “What?” Imre sat
bolt upright in his bath, then immediately hunched back down into the warm
water. “Who told you that? That’s preposterous.” Coel assumed an
injured expression. “Is it, Sire? Cathan has never liked Rannulf. He
disapproved of his life-style, his methods of handling the peasants of his
demesne. I understand he even threw Rannulf off his father’s manor once, during
your Lord Father’s reign, while Camber was here in the capital.” Imre thrust out
his lower lip in a petulant expression. “That doesn’t mean he murdered
Rannulf.” “I didn’t say he
did, Sire,” Coel rejoined quickly. “I simply said that there’s been talk that
he knows who did, and that he may be protecting the real murderers. We’re
fairly certain that it was the Willimites who actually did it.” “Then, Cathan
knows the Willimites? He knows who they are?” Coel shrugged. “I
cannot say, Sire. I merely relate what I have heard. However, until you are
convinced of Cathan’s innocence in this matter, I should keep my counsel to
myself, if I were you. You know how Cathan’s father feels about you. And his
brother, Joram, is a priest of Saint Michael, which order is also not your
friend. If those elements were to come together to oppose you…” He let his voice
trail off suggestively, and Imre’s eyes narrowed. It was obvious to Coel that
Imre had taken the bait, and that his mind was churning in exactly the
direction Coel intended. Abruptly, Imre sat up in his pool, then lurched to his
feet. “Mind you, I’m not
saying I believe what you say,” the king told him, wrapping the towel around
himself and stepping from the bath, “but one can’t be too careful. Send my
dressers in, and then bring Earl Maldred to my study. If there is anything
amiss, I want to know about it, and I don’t want to arouse Cathan’s suspicions.
Hurry, it’s cold standing here.” It was later that
same afternoon when Joram and Rhys arrived in Valoret, heading immediately for
Cathan’s town house of Tal Traeth. Since Camber and Rhys had made their visit
to Saint Foillan’s and gained confirmation of Prince Cinhil’s presence there,
Camber had spent the past two weeks exploring possible approaches to the
situation with Joram and Rhys and Evaine, making preliminary plans. In a
strained meeting with Joram’s Vicar General Cullen at Cheltham, the Michaelines
had been tentatively committed to the endeavor; Camber and Cullen were even now
mapping out the Michaeline strategy in the overall plan. It now fell to Joram and Rhys to determine Cathan’s circumstances, and to decide how much,
if anything, he might or must be told in advance of their move, now planned for
the week before Christmas. If Cathan was still reliable, after the traumas of
the months before, there was a chance he could be of real help to them. But if
they had any doubts, they would simply have to work around him, trusting that
events would permit them to pull him to a place of safety after Cinhil was in
their hands. For now, their greatest strength lay in surprise, in not allowing
any hint of their plans to reach the royal ears. There was no room for error,
for they would have no second chance. If Cinhil died without issue, there would
never be another Haldane heir. They were met in
the loggia by Wulpher, the stew-ard, who informed them that Lord Cathan would
join them presently in the solar. The November day was brisk, and the solar
chill; but the sunshine was warm n the roof beyond. There it was that Cathan
found them a few minutes later, leather riding cloaks thrown back on their
shoulders. They turned and
smiled as Cathan stepped onto the roof. As on the last
time they had seen him, when he rode out of Caerrorie a month before, Cathan
was pale and drawn-looking, though his cheeks were flushed as though from
recent exertion. A child’s ball was clutched in one hand, and he glanced at it
and shrugged apologetically. “I’ve been playing
with the children in the garden,” he said uneasily. “I’m afraid I’d been
neglecting them.” “It’s a good day
for such things,” Joram smiled. “How are my two hellion nephews?” “They’re well.”
Cathan returned the smile automatically, then tossed the ball into a corner and
gestured nervously for them to be seated. He pulled a wooden stool closer to
their bench and straddled it, a shadow of pain flitting across his face as he
added, “Revan’s been playing with them, too. He’s very good with young
children, you know.” As he glanced at
the floor to compose himself, Joram and Rhys exchanged worried glances. “Don’t you think
it might be better if you sent Revan back to Father?” Joram asked softly. “If
every sight or thought of him reminds you of the pain…” “No,” Cathan
whispered. “Revan stays with me. He is the one good thing to survive those
awful weeks, and I need to be reminded of that—that something good did come of
it. Otherwise, I think I should go mad.” “But—” “The subject is
closed!” He pivoted on his
stool to turn his back to them, fighting for control, then slowly returned to
face them once more, his eyes not meeting theirs. “But you didn’t
come to hear me speak of that. What brings you to Valoret this close to
Yuletide? I wasn’t expecting to see you until I got to Caerrorie for
Christmas.” “Ah, I had some
business to attend to for the order,” Joram lied easily, “and thought I would
pay a visit to our future brother-in-law here.” He gestured toward Rhys. “So we
decided to see how you were doing. How are things at Court?” Cathan glanced up,
panic-stricken for just an instant, then concentrated on his hands, folded
between his knees. “Strained, unpredictable, exasperating, fragile.” “If you would
rather not talk about it...” “No, I suppose I
should. Actually, it has been fairly constant up until today—constantly dismal,
that is. Imre has been ignoring me, acting as though I wasn’t even there. Then
this morning, before chapel, he came out of Confession and embraced me like a
brother. He said that he had been wrong to be angry with me, that I had only
been doing, my filial duty by pleading for the villagers. I thought he had
forgiven me. He even invited me to watch his weapons play in the armory yard.” “Isn’t that what
you wanted, to be forgiven?” Joram asked carefully. Cathan signed. “I
don’t know. I suppose so. But once we got there, everything started going wrong
again. Coel started to play up to Imre, as he always does, and then let him win
in a practice bout—though you know what a poor swordsman Imre is, compared with
Coel. But Coel managed to make it look like an honest defeat—or at least, he
convinced Imre. When Imre left, it was Coel who was asked to attend him in the
bath—not I. And Coel left me holding Imre’s empty tankard and dirty towel, with
the Court snickering behind my back.” “Isn’t that
getting rather blatant, even for Coel?” Rhys finally said. Cathan raised his
hands in a helpless gesture, then slumped back on his stool. “What am I to do,
Rhys? I’m beginning to think he actually hates me. It’s gone far beyond
mere rivalry. God knows, we were never what you would call friends, even before
I married his sister, Elinor, but lately ...” He sighed. “I keep telling myself
that if he’s Elinor’s brother, there must be something good to the man. But if
he cares for her—and I sometimes even wonder about that—his fondness certainly
doesn’t extend to the rest of her family. He’s ambitious, Joram. He wants to
rule. And if he can’t rule, he at least wants to be the power behind the
throne. Do you know that he’s even brought Elinor’s half sister to Court? I
wouldn’t be surprised if he tried to get Imre to marry her.” “Is that likely?”
Joram asked. “Who knows? She’s
beautiful, well connected, God knows! Imre will probably never even notice how
deeply she’s in thrall to her brother.” He smiled sardonically. “On the other
hand, Princess Ariella has hated Melissa Howell from the moment she set eyes on
her. Too much competition. I’m sure she realizes that Imre will have to marry
eventually—if only for dynastic reasons—but in the meantime, she wants
to be the one to influence him. In fact, that could be part of what turned Imre
against me. I—ah—haven’t been terribly receptive to Her Highness’s advances.” “I had heard Court
gossip to that effect.” Rhys grinned wickedly. “A very vindictive lady. Serves
you right for being a happily married man!” “Which reminds me,
how is Elinor?” Joram asked. “After our sister, I’ll swear your Elinor is the
fairest damsel in the kingdom—enough to make a man consider forsaking his vows,
I’ll warrant. Is she well?” Pleased at the
compliment despite his depression, Cathan managed a smile. “Aye, she’s well
enough, though she doesn’t deserve the black moods I’ve been showing her
lately. I wish I could shake this—this notion of impending doom, but— Damn it,
Joram, what am I going to do? This constant tension, the indecision—it’s
ripping me apart!” “I know,” Joram
replied with a sigh. He gazed off at
the city lying spread against the horizon, inclining his head slightly at
Rhys’s silent query. When he finally spoke, his voice was very low. “Cathan, do you
remember, when you were ill, how we talked about Imre?” “Yes.” “How do you feel
about the situation now, after the past month, after today?” Cathan-lowered his
eyes, and the words came slowly, haltingly, each word dragged from deep within
him, his voice recalling prior pain. He did not seem to notice when Rhys’s hand
crept to rest lightly on his wrist—ostensibly to gauge his pulse, should Cathan
ask, but also better to read his overall condition, both mental and physical.
Or if he noticed it, he did not show it. His voice was scarcely more than a
whisper. “I—don’t know
anymore. Before, there would have been no doubt. I loved him like a brother, as
I love either of you. We were very close. When he did— what he did—last month,
it nearly killed me, Joram —both to see what he caused to happen to those
people, and to see what his act did to us. But you don’t desert your brother
just because he’s made a mistake, do you?—even if it’s a terrible one.” He
looked up defiantly, first at one of them, then the other. “I still love him,
Joram. God help me, but I do. The past month—even today’s humiliation—they
don’t change that. I suppose I—I’ll just have to learn to live with the
situation.” Joram sighed, the
sound telling Rhys all he needed to know of Joram’s assessment, and the
physician let his hand fall away. They could expect no help from Cathan. Rhys
rose as Joram also stood. “I’m sorry,
Cathan,” Joram murmured, clasping his brother’s shoulders in sympathy. “But at
least you seem to be looking at the situation realistically. I don’t have to
tell you to be wary of the caprices of kings.” Cathan shook his
head, and Joram nodded. “Aye. Well, I wish
we could stay longer, but Rhys has patients to see, and I have a lot to
accomplish before I head back to Saint Liam’s. Take care.” Cathan stood,
feeling suddenly alien and alone. “When will I see you again?” “For Christmas, I
suspect. Imre will let you come home, won’t he?” “I suppose so,
once he’s opened the Yule Court. He likes to have everyone at the formal
ceremonies, but after that I have no particular reason to stay. Elinor and the
boys will be there, at any rate.” He clasped the hands
that were offered and exchanged good-byes, then raised hesitant fingers in
farewell as the two, suddenly strangers to him now, made their way back into
the solar and out the door. He sat alone on the roof for a long time, until the
chiller wind of approaching evening reminded him that it was time to go inside. The two who
descended the stairs at Tal Traeth had planned their next move even before
letting themselves out through the courtyard gate. They had discussed with
Camber the possibility that Cathan would be incapable of assisting them, so
confirmation of that eventuality did not delay their plans. Making arrangements
to meet at Rhys’s house by dusk, they mounted up and went their separate ways.
They did not notice the men-at-arms who watched from across the square, nor
were they aware that they were followed, each by a single rider. The man following
Joram had a short ride, for the priest went only as far as the parish church of
Saint John’s, not far from Fullers’ Alley and the former abode of a deceased
textile merchant—though the man could not know of the latter. There he watched
the priest dismount and enter the parish house, emerging nearly an hour later
with a new briskness to his stride. Joram saw the
guardsman across the way, fiddling with a harness buckle and checking his
horse’s hooves, but he did not make a connection: he had not seen the man
across the square from Cathan’s. Nor did he note that the man followed, at a
discreet distance, all the way back to Rhys’s house. It simply had not occurred
to him that he might be watched so soon. The other man had
a more difficult time of it. He was able to follow Rhys to the castle without
mishap, and observed the Healer enter the royal archives there. But from his
hastily gained vantage point outside the window, he could not see what his
subject did with the several bound volumes which he pulled from the shelves
after the attendant had left the room. Mentally, he marked the places of the
volumes on the shelves and, when Rhys returned them and left a while later, he
went into the room and took the books down again to flip through their pages,
another guardsman being sent to follow the subject from the archives. But the volumes
were very old, and the man’s limited schooling did not enable him to read them.
Furrowing his brow in annoyance, he returned the books to their places and left
to report to his master. He found his colleague already there, and the master
waiting. The priest had
gone to Saint John’s Church in the textile district, the first man reported,
where he had entered the parish house and then left a short while later. He had
then been followed to the house of one Lord Rhys Thuryn, a Healer. No, he had
no idea what the priest had been doing at Saint John’s. There had been no one
with him, so he had not dared linger to investigate, for fear of losing his
quarry. The second man
told his story, then, and added that he had discovered his subject to be that
same Rhys Thuryn to whose house his colleague had trailed the priest; he had
asked the attendant in the archives. Yes, he could identify the volumes which
the young lord had consulted. No, he had no idea what the man had been looking
for. A second pair of men were now guarding the house where the two were holed
up. Did his lordship wish the two brought in? His lordship did
not. Turning the
information over in his mind, Coel Howell considered what his agents had told
him, then gestured for one of them to bring his cloak. This was .working out
just fine. He had no idea what Rhys Thuryn and Joram MacRorie were up to; but
it certainly looked suspicious, and it might well fit in with what he was
already planning. He picked up his riding gloves and began pulling them on. “Bors, I want you
to go back to Saint John’s and find out what your man wanted there. From your
description and the fact that he ended up at Rhys Thuryn’s he has to be
Lord Cathan’s brother, Father Joram-—a Michaeline, I might add, so be careful.” “Aye, m’lord. I’ll
see to it right away.” “Do that. It would
be interesting to learn whether Father Joram also asked to see written records
at Saint John’s. Fulk?” The second agent,
who was adjusting his master’s cloak around his shoulders, inclined his head as
he closed the clasp. “Aye, m’lord?” “I want you to
come with me and show me the books that Thuryn took off the shelves. I want to
know what they were looking for.” And in another
part of the city, unaware that their afternoon’s actions were even then being
pondered and analyzed, Rhys and Joram were spreading the results of their
labors upon a small table in Rhys’s chamber, the room warded against hostile
influence, the high windows sealed from light. Rhys unrolled his
discovery, a painting of a man crowned with gold, a coat of arms embroidered on
the arras behind him. The man was slender and dark, black hair and beard and
mustache silvered with middle age, gray eyes direct, clear, but unable to
foresee the fate which had awaited him but a few years after he sat for the
portrait. The shield on the arras showed the royal arms of the Haldanes of Gwynedd:
gules, a lion rampant guardant or. The name inscribed at the bottom of
the painting read: Iforus, Rex Gwyneddis. “The blood does
run true,” Rhys whispered, holding the painting closer to the light and
appraising it with a critical eye. “Camber will be pleased. Put a beard and
mustache on our Cinhil, grow out his tonsure, take him out of that monk’s robe,
and it could almost be the same man. It’s amazing that no one has ever noticed
the resemblance before.” “Not really,”
Joram replied. “Who would make the connection? Everyone thinks all the Haldanes
died in the coup, and most of the people who could remember what Ifor looked
like, first-hand, are long dead. Besides, who looks closely beyond a monk’s
habit and tonsure, or would have reason to?” “You’re right. I
hadn’t thought of that.” “You’re not a
priest.” Joram grinned. “Are there any other paintings?” “A few. I tried to
take the one least likely to be missed. How did you do?” “Pretty well.” Joram pulled a
packet of parchment from his cassock and began unfolding it into two separate
pieces. He spread the first one on the table. “Here we are: the
third entry for December 28, Anno Domini 843, being 5 Festilus II, under
baptisms. ‘On the Feast of the Holy Innocents was baptized one Royston John,
son of Daniel the Draper and Avis his wife.’ Which makes our prince’s
father legitimately born. “And here”—he
spread the other page—”under baptisms for the 27th of April, Anno Domini 860,
being 10 Festilus III, the Feast of Saint Maccul: ‘Father Edward did baptize
one Nicholas Gabriel, son of Royston the Draper and Nellwyn his wife, who died
in his birth.’ “And with those,
our prince is legitimate, his descent unbroken, and we have written proof to
show to Father and my vicar general. I wanted to pull the pages registering the
marriages of both sets of parents as well, but one of them must have taken
place in another parish—at least it wasn’t in Saint John’s records— and the
other spread onto a second page. These are sufficient, though. And I doubt
they’ll be missed, unless someone is looking for a specific entry that got
pulled with these.” “That should do
it, then.” Rhys nodded, stifling a yawn as he scanned the two pages and handed
them back to Joram. “By the way, I’ve left word for Gifford to wake us just
after Lauds, so we can be away by first light. Wat will have the horses saddled
and ready.” Joram, with the
contented smile of a man with a job well done, nodded and indulged in a
luxurious stretch, then refolded the two pages and slipped them into the
medical pouch which Rhys brought, next to the rolled portrait. Unless total
disaster befell them, the documents would be safe there, for the medical pouch
of a Healer was nearly as sacrosanct as a priest’s person, and arcanely guarded
as well. As Joram spread
his hands to neutralize the wards and Rhys leaned to blow out the candle on the
table, however, they could not know that their abode was being watched. Nor
would they guess that they would be followed the next morning when they rode
out of Valoret. chapter nine“When he
speaketh, fair, believe him not: for there are seven abominations in his heart. —Proverbs
26:25 True to their
plan, Joram and Rhys were among the first travellers to ride out of Valoret
when the Watch opened the city gates the next morning. There was not yet
any snow on the ground. Valoret, lying in the lowlands at the foot of the
Lendour range, was usually among the last to feel the brunt of winter. But a
heavy frost had silvered everything during the night, banishing the previous
day’s warmth with portents of colder weather to come. That, plus the copious
amounts of rain they had already had in the weeks before, had left the road
muddy, slick, and sometimes partially submerged. Hidden holes and stones were a
constant hazard to the horses, and once, after a particularly nasty near-spill,
Rhys even had to dismount to check his horse’s legs for injuries. The animal
had been favoring one foot for several minutes. It was after this
stop, when he and Joram were starting off again, that Joram first noticed the
three men following them. They had been aware, for several hours, that there
were other travellers on the road behind them. That was to be expected, for
this was a major track into the Lendours. The men wore livery; they were
probably in the service of one of the local barons. It was probably
coincidence—and the basic paranoia of the two conspirators, now that
incriminating evidence was secreted in their belongings. But when the three
men dropped back after the stop, Joram’s suspicions were kindled. There was no
benign reason for anyone to be following them; and for whatever reason, the men
represented a potential threat to their mission. Joram had gotten a good look
at the men when they had come their closest, and one of them was familiar from
somewhere. When the connection came, the priest swore softly under his breath,
drew his horse alongside Rhys’s with an annoyed tug on the reins. “We are being
followed!” he said in a low voice. “One of those men was outside Saint John’s
yesterday when I left. He probably picked us up at Cathan’s.” “At Cathan’s?”
Rhys forced himself to keep his eyes straight ahead, resisting the impulse, to
look over his shoulder. “My God, do you suppose I was followed, too? What if
they’ve found out we took the pages?” Joram shook his
head. “I don’t think they have. And if they have, they can’t have discovered
why yet. Imre’s not that astute.” “Don’t
underestimate him,” Rhys said doubtfully. He took several
deep breaths to steady himself, swallowed with a throat that was suddenly dry.
Joram controlled a smile. “Relax, Rhys. If
they’d wanted to take us, they could have done it last night at your house, or
this morning when we left, or just now when we stopped and they almost caught
up with us.” “Then why are they
following us?” Joram shrugged.
“To find out where we’re going, I suppose. Imre may be keeping track of
everyone who contacts Cathan these days. Or he may be watching Michaelines this
week, and it’s just coincidence. We have to assume that someone is asking
questions at Saint John’s and the archives, too, though. I wonder...” “You wonder what?” “I wonder if we
should force their hands, let them know that we know they’re following us, and
confront them.” He glanced sidelong at Rhys, noting the other’s growing
discomfort. “Or, we could try to lose them.” “And risk
confirming that we have something to hide?” Rhys retorted, almost without
thinking. “Innocent people don’t generally have any reason to suspect that
someone is following them.” Joram laughed out
loud. “Very good. You’re learning.” He glanced over his shoulder, but their
pursuers were out of sight behind a bend. Rhys breathed a
mental sigh of relief. “Then, we’re not going to do anything?” “Just ride on to
Caerrorie, as we’d planned,” Joram said. He touched spurs to his horse and
speeded up the pace, then laughed again as the mud flew up behind them. “And if
they want to sit and watch Caerrorie all through Yuletide, they’re certainly
welcome. They’ll do it in the snow, though, if I’m any judge.” He glanced at
the sky. “I’ll bet one of them will be riding back to report to Imre as soon as
we’ve arrived.” Joram was not far
wrong in his last surmise, though it was to Coel Howell, not Imre, that the man
reported. The man arrived at
noon the next day to relate that Joram and Rhys were apparently planning to
stay at Caerrorie for some time. Questioning of the peasants in the adjoining
village had revealed that it was the custom of Clan MacRorie to spend most of
the Yule season at the castle, though Father Joram would probably split his
time between his family and his duties at Saint Liam’s. Lord Cathan and his
family were expected to arrive within the week. Coel received the
news with thoughtful interest, adding it to the rest of the storehouse of
knowledge he was accumulating about the MacRories and their associates. He had
not yet been able to ascertain what part Joram and Rhys had in all of this. In
attempting to oust his rival, Cathan, he had not dared to hope that Cathan’s
own kin might supply corroborative evidence for his ruin; nor was this in any
way certain even now. But he did know
that Joram MacRorie had apparently taken several pages from the parish register
at Saint John’s—perhaps as many as four or five— though it was possible that
some of the missing pages had been removed before Joram came. The priest at
Saint John’s had been able to recall which volumes Father Joram had asked to
see, and had, for a price, been quite cooperative about furnishing an index by
which the missing pages might be reconstructed. Coel had several clerks working
on that already. He further
suspected that more pages would be found missing from the volumes which Rhys
Thuryn had inspected in the archives—and more of his men were checking on that.
So far, however, Coel could see no real connection with Cathan—not that that
meant there was none, or that he could not make it appear that there
was. Thanking the
messenger for the information, Coel gave orders for him to continue the
surveillance at Caerrorie, then dismissed the man and returned to his immediate
plans. Tonight, if all
went well, he would set into motion the wheels which would destroy his rival
once and for all. As for the information on Joram and Rhys, it was not
necessary for his other plan at all—though it might be added fuel for the fire
by morning. He would see how Imre reacted after tonight. That would tell him a
great deal about what he would do next. . . . Early evening
found Coel hunched over a pint of good dark ale with Earl Maldred, whose men
had been assisting in the investigation. The inn where they
had met was not far from Cathan’s Tal Traeth, which was ostensibly why Coel had
asked Maldred to join him here this evening— to discuss what he had learned of
Cathan’s alleged actions so far, and to inspect the area for themselves. Maldred,
who did not often have the opportunity to indulge in personal investigations
anymore, had leaped at the chance to get involved again. For the past hour, he
and Coel had been trading tales of their younger days. Maldred even had stories
told him by his grandfather, who had fought at the side of the first Festillic
king some eighty years before. Coel drained off
the rest of his ale with a hearty swallow as the Watch cried the second hour of
the night, then slapped the tabletop lightly and pushed back his chair. “We’d best take
our positions, my lord,” he said, standing and tugging his swordbelt in place.
“My informant said that a man came shortly after Curfew last night. If he comes
again, we ought to be there.” Maldred grunted
and tossed off the rest of his tankard as well, then wiped his beard across his
sleeve and lurched to his feet. With Maldred’s height and build, it would have
been foolish to think that Maldred was drunk, or even a touch fuddled. An old
military man like himself would have learned to hold his drink long ago in
order to have reached his present station. Nonetheless, Coel suspected that the
ale had taken the edge off Maldred’s alertness—and that was precisely what Coel
intended. Controlling a self-indulgent smile, he led the way out of the inn. It was dark and
cold outside—it would likely snow before midnight—and the grooms waiting beside
the horses were huddled around a torch stuck in the ground, hunched down in
their warm winter cloaks. They snapped to attention as Maldred approached and
gave them some low-voiced orders, then melted into the black beyond the circle
of torchlight. Maldred took up
the torch and strode back to Coel, His manner quite matter-of-fact. “I’ve sent Carle
and Joseph around the side to join your men. Where do we go from here?” “This way,” Coel
murmured, leading down a dark, narrow side street. Coel’s shadow was
harsh before him as he walked; Maldred’s footsteps echoed close behind. A few
turns, and they were moving along an ever darker alleyway, the glow of other
torches at the far end making a beckoning haven a few hundred yards away.
Senses attuned, Coel forced himself to move briskly, confidently, with Maldred
unsuspecting at his heels—for who would attack two armed men? The slightest
scuff of boot on gritted stone, and it was begun! As the torch fell
from Maldred’s fingers, Coel whirled, cloak swirling to conceal the dagger he
now clutched in his hand, the blade tucked close along his forearm. Maldred
made no outcry—could make none. His assailant was a dark shadow close against
his back, sinewy arms pinioning struggles as Maldred clawed frantically,
futilely, at the fine cord biting into bis neck. But Maldred’s
silent struggle was for naught, and quickly finished. In seconds, the assassin
was lowering his lifeless body to the ground, knotting the cord, which had
disappeared into a thin, bloody crease in bis victim’s neck. Coel reached to
his belt with his empty hand and withdrew a small, weighty pouch, which he
tossed to the ground with a golden clink as he stepped closer to the torch
guttering on the ground. “Let’s be quick
about it,” he whispered, drawing his sword and laying it quietly beside the
torch. “Finish up and get out of here. I haven’t got all night.” Quickly,
stealthily, the assassin glided to the pouch and stooped to pick it up, never
seeing or even sensing the dagger which spun from Coel’s hand to bury itself in
his heart. As the man toppled
soundlessly to the ground, Coel darted forward and seized the pouch, jamming it
into his tunic and withdrawing instead a piece of parchment, burned across the
top, a pendant seal attached below. This he placed very near the torch beside
the slain assassin. Then he drew the assassin’s dagger and laid the blade
against his own thigh, steeling himself before plunging it deep into the
muscles of his left leg. As the pain swept over him, he screamed. To the Watch’s
credit, they were not long in coming. But they were too late to save the
illustrious Earl Maldred from the assassin’s garrotte, or to get any
information out of the assassin himself. They found Lord Coel half fainting in
a pool of his own blood, trying to beat out the smouldering edges of a piece of
parchment which was signed and sealed with an all-too-familiar name. Lord Coel, as they
stanched his wound, was able to tell them how he and Maldred had been beset
while they walked through the alley, and that the assailant had tried to burn
the piece of parchment as he died. But Coel urged them not to let news of
Maldred’s death or the parchment become known until he had a chance to tell the
king in the morning. And then he passed out. The Watch,
well-trained men that they were, obeyed his orders without question, conveying
him swiftly to his working quarters at the castle, where his own body squire
tended to his wound and bandaged him. It was not too serious a wound, the
squire assured them— not even serious enough to warrant a Healer’s efforts
—though his lordship had lost a great deal of blood, and would surely be
walking with the aid of a stick for a week or so. Shooing them all
out of his master’s chamber, the squire gave orders for the two bodies to be
held at a nearby abbey, then assured the men that Lord Coel would give further
orders when he awoke in the morning. Coel, when he was certain he was alone,
opened his eyes and glanced around the room triumphantly, then closed them and
promptly went to sleep. It was still very
early the next morning, when Coel made his way, with the help of a staff and
leaning on the arm of a servant, to the entrance to Imre’s suite. He was
dressed soberly but tastefully in gray velvet lined with fur, his thigh heavily
bandaged under its thick woolen hose. One of the watchmen who had shared the
previous night’s misadventure was hovering anxiously at his elbow, clutching
the piece of parchment which Coel had rescued from the torch. A guard challenged
them at the door, but there was something about Coel this morning which forbade
resistance. “I must speak with
His Grace,” Coel said. “His Grace is
still abed, my lord. I shouldn’t disturb him, if I were you.” “I’ll be the judge
of that,” Coel said, and with a weary sigh reached past the guard and opened
the door. The guard stood
aside in confusion, not daring to stop him, and Coel and the watchman passed
into the room. Imre’s sleeping chamber lay beyond another door on the other
side of the room, and one of the king’s body servants ran to announce him as
Coel limped across the polished floor. “Sire, Lord Coel
is here to see you.” “What?” A rustling of
bedclothes and muffled protests sounded from within the room, emphatic but
unintelligible, and then: “Coel? What’s he doing here at this hour?” Coel stepped into
the doorway and addressed the closed curtains of the royal bed. “A thousand
pardons, Sire, but it was unavoidable.” He hobbled into the
room, his staff echoing hollowly on the lozenged tiles. Abruptly, the
royal head was thrust through an opening in the bed curtains, the brown hair
disheveled. “Coel, what the
devil?” As Imre’s eyes
took in the staff, the limp, the bandaged thigh, then flicked beyond to the
watchman standing guard at the door, Coel bowed deeply from the waist,
spreading his empty hands in an apologetic gesture. “I fear I suffered
a mishap during the night, Sire. Fortunately, I was not badly injured. The
wound appears far more serious than it actually is.” “But what
happened?” Imre nearly shouted. He threw back the curtains of his bed and
started to leap out, then thought better of it as he realized how cold it was,
and pulled the bedclothes around himself instead. “By God, Coel, don’t just
stand there. Bring a stool and tell me what happened. You mustn’t fatigue your
leg.” Coel did as he was
bidden, settling painfully with his leg outstretched before him, cradling
his staff against his knee. “We were beset by
an assassin, Sire,” he said, letting a hint of real pain touch his voice. “Earl
Maldred is dead. I’m sorry.” “Maldred dead!”
Imre drew the bedclothes more closely around himself and huddled down, stunned
at the news. “How?” “Garrotted,” Coel
said in a low voice. “We were cutting through an alley, and the man came at him
from behind, got him before I could even turn around. I drew my sword, but the
man was fast—cursed fast. He got me in the leg with his dagger before I could
more than clear the scabbard. When he tried to rob my money pouch, I stopped
him with my throwing knife. I’m afraid I killed him.” “You’re afraid—”
Imre was at once delighted and horrified. “Well, my God, Coel, he was trying to
kill you!” Coel lowered his
eyes. “True, Sire. But now we can never be absolutely certain who hired him to
make the attempt.” “What?” Imre
scrambled to the edge of the bed and leaned toward Coel eagerly, the long hair
falling in his eyes. He pushed it behind his ears with an impatient gesture,
clutching the bedclothes around himself with his other hand. “You mean, you
think he was a hired assassin? Do you have any idea who hired him?” “Unfortunately, I
do,” Coel murmured. He gestured to the
watchman, who approached and bowed, keeping his eyes averted. Imre stared at
him, then at Coel, sensing that he was about to learn more than he had
bargained for. “Watchman, please
tell the King’s Grace what you saw.” The man swallowed and nodded his head. “An’ it
please Your Grace, I was the Watch of the Guard in the sou’western sector of
the city last night. It was nearly Curfew, and I and my partner was walking our
rounds, when we hears this scream from one of the alleys. We runs toward the
scream as fast as we can and finds His Lordship wounded, with the two bodies
beside him. He was trying to stop this from burning in the torchfire.” The man held out
the piece of parchment, and Coel took it from him and extended it toward Imre.
The king started to reach for it, then withdrew Ms hand and sat up straighter,
a sudden foreboding flashing across his mind. “What is it?” the
king asked. Coel swallowed.
“Your Grace will not be pleased to see this, but justice must be done. I myself
do not even remember doing what the watchman just described.” “What is it?” Imre
repeated, bis voice edged with impatience and a little apprehension. Coel signalled the
watchman to leave, then moved bis stool closer to the royal bedside.
“Apparently the assassin was trying to destroy this as he died, to keep it from
being discovered. I can only conclude that he was trying to protect whomever
had hired him to attempt the assassination. He nearly succeeded.” “Who do you think
it was?” Imre asked, his eyes wide. “You won’t like
it, Sire.” “Damn you, Coel, I
already don’t like it!” Imre shouted, slamming his fist into the bed beside
him. “Who was it?” Coel held the
parchment down where Imre could read it. “Cathan MacRorie,”
he said in a low voice. There was no
mistaking the signature or the seal. chapter tenWine is a
mocker, strong drink is raging: and whosoever
is deceived thereby is not wise. —Proverbs 20:1 “Cathan!” Imre
whispered, after he had resumed breathing. “But, that’s not possible. There
must be some mistake. He would never ...” Coel nodded
slowly, closed his eyes as though unwilling to believe it himself. “I know, Sure.
Now you will understand my reluctance to tell you. In light of the rumors
concerning Cathan and the Willimites— Well, the apparent connection is rather
incriminating.” “A connection . .
.” Imre repeated, lying back on the pillows and staring up at the canopy for a
long moment. “How—how do you see this connection?” Coel cleared his
throat uncomfortably. “Well, it was Maldred who was responsible for the
execution of Cathan’s villagers. If Cathan is in league with the
Willimites, as they say, then Maldred would have been an extremely likely next
target.” “But, Maldred was
acting on my orders. I ordered the executions,” Imre said
plaintively. “If Cathan wanted revenge for the villagers, he should have struck
at m— Oh, my God!” He broke off
suddenly, realizing what he had almost said, then brought a clenched fist to
his mouth in horror, turned his face to the wall. For a full minute he remained
that way, Coel longing to know what he was thinking but not daring to attempt
to touch the royal mind. Finally, Imre
turned his face upward again, studying the ceiling of the canopy with eyes that
were cold and dry. His voice, when he spoke, was a deadly monotone. “Bring me my
robe.” Coel, not daring
to disobey, did as he was bidden, holding the fur-lined robe until Imre climbed
mechanically out of the bed, shrugged bare shoulders into it, and knotted the
cord around his waist. The king strode to the fireplace and stood there staring
into the flames for a long time, the firelight reflecting redly off his tousled
hair. Then he turned his face slightly toward Coel. The older man had not moved
from his place near the curtained bed. “If Cathan has
done this thing, he will be punished. Do you understand?” Coel nodded, not
trusting himself to speak. “But I will not
have any official action taken against him. Is that also understood?” Coel looked across
at Imre carefully, trying to discern the reason behind the statement. “No
official action, Sire?” “None,” Imre
replied. He turned back to the fire. “If Cathan is guilty of the crimes which
you have suggested, he is clearly a traitor and shall meet a traitor’s fate.
But I will not have him come to public trial, do you understand that? Cathan
MacRorie will never bow before the headsman’s ax.” “Then, how—?” “That is not your
concern!” Imre snapped. “I shall deal with this myself. Where is the
parchment?” Coel glanced at
the writing in his hand, then brought it to Imre. Without the batting of a
royal eye, Imre consigned it to the flames, watching until there was nothing
left but ash. He poked the ash to powder with a piece of kindling, then threw
that into the fire. “That no longer
exists,” Imre whispered, as the flames leaped up again. “Who else knew of it?” “Only the watchman
and his fellow, Sire. I was apparently clearheaded enough to order them to keep
it secret.” “Very well. You
will obliterate their memories of it. Use whatever means you must, though I
would have you spare their lives, if at all possible. It was not their fault
they saw what they ought not.” “I shall execute
your orders myself, Sire,” Coel replied with a slight bow, glad that Imre could
not see his face. “And you are to
mention this to no one.” “My lips are
sealed, Sire.” “You may go.” “Your Grace,” Coel
murmured, bowing against his staff and turning to leave. “And one last
thing,” the king’s voice added, when Coel had nearly reached the door. “My Liege?” “I wish you to
send a messenger requesting Cathan’s presence here in my chambers before the
feast tonight.” Coel turned as
fast as his wounded leg would permit. “Here, Sire?” “You have heard my
command. Now, go!” Imre choked. As Coel slipped
through the doorway and closed the door behind him, he could hear faint sobs
coming from within. The summons was
relayed to Cathan. Obedient to the king’s command, he presented himself at the
castle at the appointed time, garbed in the prescribed tunic, robe, and cloak
of winter white. It was dark
outside already, and had been snowing steadily since mid-afternoon. Looking up
at the bleak facade of the castle keep, Cathan found himself wishing he were
somewhere else—anywhere but here. He could not explain the feeling; he had
never felt it about Imre before. He put it from his mind as the door was opened
and he climbed from his litter. He was given
admittance by an under-steward, who took his outer cloak and cap without
ceremony and then entrusted him to a young page bearing a torch. The page lighted
him through a series of narrow passageways and vaulted chambers, finally
leading him up the steep, spiral staircase to the royal apartments. The lad’s
knock brought one of Imre’s own white-liveried squires to the door, and the
young man bowed correct welcome before ushering Cathan into an austere presence
chamber. There was no word of explanation. As soon as Cathan
was alone, he turned to survey the room. He had been here many times before,
but that had always been in summertime, at the intimate little supper
gatherings Imre loved—his closest friends and advisors, and perhaps a few
musicians or bards. But Cathan had never been here alone before, and never in
winter. The room—floored, walled, and ceiled in white marble and alabaster—was
cold and drafty, despite the fire burning on the hearth—and it was darker than
he remembered it, though there were lighted candle sconces spaced around the walls.
He supposed it seemed so because the room was empty. He started toward
the fire, but then his eye was caught by a door standing slightly ajar, a gleam
of brighter light streaming from within the adjoining room. Drawn by the light,
he wandered over to it and peered in. It was a tiny,
private chantry, hardly more than a closet, also totally lined in white marble
and ablaze with candles. Even the kneeling cushion before the tiny altar was
covered in pale, silvery damask. The place reminded Cathan of nothing so much
as a tomb. Now, why had he thought that? he wondered, as he folded his arms
across his chest against the chill. In summer, this chamber had always been a
cool refuge from the noonday heat, banked with flowers and rushlights, the
scent of sweet spices and rosemary mingling on the air. How else should it be
in whiter, except cold and bleak, especially when its master— No, he would not
dwell on that. He knew what made the room so bleak, what laid the weight of
winter on his soul. Imre would come—else, why had he called him here? But it
would never be the way it was in the old days, before the murder of a corrupt
and debauched Deryni had rent their friendship for the sake of human lives.
Accept it, Cathan: the world is not what it was. He bowed his head
and breathed a silent prayer at that, then crossed himself and turned to go
back to the fire in the presence chambers but was startled to discover Imre
standing beside the closed outer door, leaning against it with his hands behind
him. Cathan froze and stared. He had not heard the king enter. “So solemn for
Yule Court?” Imre said, slowly crossing the distance separating them. He was garbed from
chin to toes in a sweep of ice-white velvet, furred at hem and sleeves and
throat with bands of white fox. A belt of gem-set silver plaques bound the
fullness of the robe into deep folds which scarcely stirred as he walked. A
heavy silver chain encircled his neck and hung almost to his waist. His head
was bare, the chestnut hair spread shining and loose on his shoulders. His face
was still, guarded, as he gazed across at Cathan. Cathan dropped to
his knees and kissed the hand which was extended. “Pardon, Sire. I was not
certain of the reception I should receive.” “Have you any
reason to be fearful?” Imre inquired, clasping his hands behind him once more
and moving to the chantry doorway. Cathan blinked and
scrambled to his feet, to stand awkwardly a few feet behind his king. “I know of no
reason, Sire. If I have offended in some way of which I am not aware, I pray you
to tell me how, so that I may make amends. Surely the King knows me to be his
good and faithful servant. At one time, he did me the honor to call me friend.” Imre glanced at
the floor at that, then leaned his hands along either side of the chantry doorjamb
with a sigh. A sheathed, silver-chased dagger was thrust through the back of
his belt; it had not been apparent before beneath the wide, fur-lined sleeves.
He did not turn his head as he spoke again. “Aye, you are that, Cathan,” he said quietly. “You must
forgive me if I am but poor company tonight. I have just learned of the death
of a friend.” Cathan controlled
the urge to breathe a sigh of relief. Perhaps he was not the source of Imre’s
moodiness after all. “I’m sorry, Sire.” “Don’t you even
want to know who it was?” Imre said, half turning to gauge Cathan’s reaction.
“It was Earl Maldred.” Cathan’s lips made
a silent O of surprise. “He was struck
down by a hired assassin,” Imre added, watching Cathan’s face change to an
expression of shock. “Garrotted. In fact, I thought you might be praying for
him when I came in—but of course, you couldn’t have known.” “No, I...” Cathan turned his
face away and tried to compose himself, aware of Imre’s eyes on him, searching
out his reaction. Maldred dead! And
struck down by a hired assassin! But there must be more to it than that. There
was a tension in Imre, an anticipation. Imre was waiting for him to say
something. But what? That he was sorry? He dared not he. He had never lied to
Imre— never, in all their years. “If you mourn,
then I am sorry,” Cathan said carefully. “You’re sorry
because I mourn—but not because Maldred is dead.” Imre laughed bitterly. “Well,
I suppose that’s sufficient. I know you had no great love for him. He killed
your peasants, after all. By your reckoning, he deserved his fate.” Cathan glanced at
the floor in confusion, not understanding the direction the conversation was
taking— then fearing that he did. “Sire, if you
suggest that I would have wished this upon Earl Maldred, I beg you to put it
from your mind. Perhaps Maldred did carry out his orders with more zeal than
was necessary. In fact, I am almost certain he did,” he added, almost under his
breath. “But I cannot fault him for doing his duty.” “But you fault me,
don’t you?” Imre snapped, whirling on Cathan to look him in the eye. “I gave
the orders for the executions, Cathan. I am the king. The law is the law. Do
you dare rebuke me for carrying out that law?” “Sire, I never
said—” “Of course, you
never said!” Imre shouted. “Even you would not have dared to presume
upon our friendship to that extent. But you thought it, didn’t you? Ah, Cathan,
I had thought to be better served than this from you, of all people!” Cathan shook his
head in disbelief, no longer certain he was following Imre’s logic. Or that
there was logic. “I never blamed you personally. Sire. I swear it! If
there was bitterness in my heart, it was for your office, your crown, not the
man who must stand and sometimes bend under the weight of it.” As he raised his
gaze to meet Imre’s, there were tears in his eyes. Imre saw and, looked away,
into the chantry, his arms clasped tightly against his chest. “You never, in
thought or deed, held me to blame for the deaths of those peasants?” Cathan dropped to
both knees, lifting his hands in supplication. “As God is my witness, I swear
it, Imre,” he whispered. A long silence
followed, broken only by the sounds of their breathing, and then Imre reached
slowly to the chantry door and pulled it closed. He stood in the presence
chamber with his back to Cathan for a long time, hands resting loosely on the
latch, then turned and leaned against the door once more. “Well, perhaps the
Willimites killed Maldred, then,” he said calmly. “That’s who they say killed
Rannulf, you know. Get up, get up.” Cathan obeyed, standing awkwardly before the now
subdued Imre, but the king would not look him in the eye. He seemed as ill at
ease as Cathan felt, and Cathan had the feeling that he should say
something—anything—but the words would not come. Silently, he watched as Imre
wandered idly over to one of the candle sconces and gazed up at the candle
flames, touched his finger to a rivulet of hot wax. What could he say? What
could Imre say? “There are other
rumors afoot about Rannulf s murder, Cathan. Did you know that?” “Other—rumors,
Sire?” Cathan said, swallowing uneasily. “There are those
who would like to implicate you in some way.” “Me?” “Yes.
Preposterous, isn’t it?” Imre said. The lips were smiling as Imre turned, but
the eyes were cold as flint. “They postulate that the reason you were so
distressed at the executions is that you could have saved those people, that
you were a Willimite sympathizer, and countenanced Rannulf s murder. That’s
specious, of course, but you and he did have words more than once, didn’t you?” “Sire, he was a
cruel, sadistic man,” Cathan said defensively. “Deryni or no, I did not permit
him on our lands, nor did my father. Everyone knew that. I did not countenance
his murder—but I cannot, in conscience, say that I was sorry to hear of it.” “Even when you
learned that he died a common traitor’s death? He was noble, Cathan, noble.” “His murderers
apparently thought he deserved it,” Cathan said enigmatically. Imre started at
that, turning his head away and closing his eyes in pain, though Cathan could
not see that. “Noble traitors
face the headsman’s ax or the sword, not the gibbet and knives, the horrible
agonies which Rannulf suffered.” “And nobility is
not necessarily a thing conferred by birth, Sire,” Cathan said softly. “If a
man be without it, all the laurels and diadems and crowns in the world cannot
make him so.” “No,” Imre
breathed. “Nor can the meanest death take it away,” He stared down at
his hands, turning them front and back dazedly, as though he did not really see
them, then schooled his face to a gentler mien. “But, we digress,”
he said, turning to walk slowly toward Cathan, his hand outstretched. “And the
hour of Court draws near. Come, my friend. We must seem to be merry, though in
our hearts we mourn.” He reached out as though
to embrace Cathan, his lips smiling even as his heart twisted itself in his
breast. But as his arm encircled Cathan’s shoulder, and Cathan smiled with
relief, Imre’s other hand was moving to the hilt of the dagger he wore in the
hollow of his back. A deft shift of weight, a flick of the wrist, and it was
done, the dagger driving upward beneath the ribs, piercing arteries and nerves
and pounding heart in one fatal stab. Cathan died as he
collapsed in Imre’s arms, his handsome face guileless, astonished, as innocent
as a child’s. Imre, when he saw
what he had done, sank slowly to the floor with the dead Cathan in his arms;
cradled his beloved friend wordlessly, mindlessly, Cathan’s blood clotting on
the bold robe of winter white and silver which he wore. It was thus that
Coel Howell found them a quarter-hour later, after repeated inquiries of Imre’s
squires had revealed only that the king was still alone with Lord Cathan and
did not wish to be disturbed. Coel accepted that
excuse at first, toying with the head of his staff in annoyance as the minutes
dragged on. Finally, when he could stand it no longer, he limped to the door
and knocked—then knocked again, louder. When there was no response, he eased
the door open a crack and peered in, froze, then slipped inside and closed the
door securely behind him, his breath catching in his throat. Imre, his back to
the door, was slouched motionless over a still, white-garbed form, a dark smear
of blood staining the tiled floor beside him. The king did not move as Coel
made his way haltingly across the polished marble, and for just an instant Coel
wondered if all the blood was Cathan’s. “Sire? Your Grace,
are you all right?” Imre still did
not respond, though by now Coel could see that he was breathing. The king held
Cathan’s lifeless body loosely in his arms, the tawny head laid close against
his chest, Imre’s dark, hair tumbling down to hide his face. There was blood on
Imre’s hands and on a silver-chased dagger lying by his knee. Carefully, Coel
knelt beside the pair, wincing as he eased his bandaged leg. “Your Grace, are
you injured? What happened?” Imre flinched at
the voice, but he did not look up. “I killed him,
Coel. I had to,” he whispered, so softly that Coel missed the first few words.
“What you said, it was true. He lied to me, but—but— Oh, God, what am I going
to do? I’ve killed him!” He raised a
tear-streaked face to stare miserably at Coel, his eyes puffy and red from
weeping. Then he looked down at Cathan and slowly relaxed his grip, let the
body sag from his arms to lie across his lap. The face was startled still, even
in death, the eyes half open and staring. Imre shuddered as he saw them, but
when Coel tried to reach across and close them, Imre struck his hand away and
closed the eyes himself. Then he eased the body to the floor, shaking his head
as though on the verge of tears again, stifling a sob. Coel swallowed
nervously and wiped damp palms against his thighs, acutely aware that he must
end this scene before Imre broke down completely. He had not expected this. He
had caught Imre’s meaning clearly enough this morning—that Cathan would not die
by the headman’s ax or other public execution—but he had not anticipated that
Imre would do the deed himself. A calculated accident, perhaps, or even an assassination—but
not this bloodying of the royal hands. Still, he must not
falter now. Imre believed himself to have been betrayed by Cathan; and he must
continue to believe that, if Cathan’s death were to do Coel any good. He must
plant the seeds of confirmation now, while Imre was still vulnerable. Besides,
with the investigation proceeding on the activities of Joram MacRorie and Rhys
Thuryn, perhaps soon he would not have to manufacture evidence. “Come away, Sire,”
he said gently. “There is nothing you can do. The past is past forever. You did
as you must do.” Imre sniffed
noisily several times, shook his head from side to side. “He lied to me, Coel,”
he whispered. “I gave him trust and love, and he returned betrayal.” “Yet, even in
that, you showed your love through mercy, Sire. Not every king would let a
traitor die so well.” “Not precisely
traitor,” Imre breathed. “No, this was private treachery we settled. I could
not let him face the ax for that.” “Then, best to die
the way he did, before ought else could be discovered, Sire,” Coel murmured,
casting the new seed and hoping it would grow. There was a short
pause, and then Imre looked up at Coel in dull dismay. “What?” “I am sorry, Sire.
There are indications that he may have been involved in something more. Pray,
do not trouble yourself with it now. The man is dead.” “What else?” Imre
insisted. “I want to know.” “I don’t know
myself, exactly,” Coel said, feigning reluctance. “Something involving his
family, his brother Joram and a Healer named Rhys Thuryn, probably his father
as well. I have no certain proof as yet, only suspicions. But all of them bear
watching. Shall I see to it?” The king blinked
and swallowed hard, his eyes glazed with his grief, then nodded once, curtly.
He raised his arm as though to wipe his sleeve across his face, but there was
blood on his hand and spattered down the fur cuff, as well as the great stain
across his chest where he had held the dying Cathan close. He froze, as though
seeing the blood for the first time, then looked up at Coel with eyes that were
suddenly frightened, like a small, lost boy’s. “My God, he’s
dead. What will his father say?” “What does it
matter?” Coel replied archly. “Though you choose to view him otherwise, Camber
MacRorie is a subject like any other. You need not justify your actions to him.
Besides, he himself is suspect.” “But—” “So far as the
outside world need know, Cathan MacRorie simply collapsed and died while
speaking with his king before the opening of the Yule Court,”“ Coel said
sternly, his eyes catching and holding Imre’s. “You are the king. Who will dare
to gainsay you?” “But, the wound—” “If you do not
acknowledge its existence, then it does not exist,” Coel said firmly. “Come,
Sire.” He held out his hand. “The Court is waiting, and you must change your
clothes. While you do that, I will make arrangements for the body to be
returned to Caerrorie.” Dazedly but
compliantly, Imre gazed down once more at the still form of Cathan and touched
his shoulder a final time in farewell. Then he sighed deeply and climbed to his
feet. But he did not
take the hand which Coel offered, nor would he meet the older man’s eyes. And
when Coel left the king in the hands of his dressers to wash and change, the
nobleman was both thoughtful and uneasy. Coel’s words, as he penned his orders
to the guards, were studied, cautious. Half an hour
later, armed with the orders he had written, Coel knocked on the door to Imre’s
inner chambers and then opened it, not waiting for the servants to admit him. A crash of
breaking glass rang out in the next room, followed by the emergence of a
red-faced squire who was trying to mop a purple stain off his white winter
livery. Almost immediately, Imre could be heard calling for more wine. By the
sound, he had already had more than was wise. “My Liege,” Coel
called, stepping cautiously into the sleeping room, “it’s getting very late.” With a clatter of
wooden rings, the curtain of a dressing alcove was pulled back to reveal a
flushed and wild-eyed Imre clutching at the fabric with one bejewelled hand, a
silver goblet in the other. Hair awry, he was wearing a court tunic of scarlet
velvet, almost indecently short, which was richly encrusted across the front
and at throat and wrists with threads of gold bullion. Two body servants,
clad in white velvet and fur as Imre had been earlier, were looking very
uncomfortable, one of them holding Imre’s crown in nervous, gloved fingers, the
other clutching an ivory comb. Beyond them, in the next room, Coel could see
the ruin of what had been Imre’s dressing chamber, chests of clothes dumped in
disarray, a mound of crimson-stained white velvet lying in a heap in the middle
of the floor. It took little imagination to picture the royal mayhem which must
have taken place once Imre was alone with his servants and had a copious amount
of wine in his otherwise empty stomach. The servant with
the comb shifted uneasily and started to bring it toward his master’s head,
then thought better of it and glanced warily at Coel. “His Grace has
decided to wear scarlet tonight, my lord,” he announced, his tone clearly
indicating his disapproval and that he hoped for the older man’s support. “Whatever His
Grace wishes,” Coel replied. He sketched a short bow in Imre’s direction and
tucked the parchment he was holding into his tunic. “Sire, your appearance will
dazzle all the Court. However, if you will permit, I would be honored to assist
you to finish dressing, so that these gentle lads can be about their other
duties.” Imre looked at him
closely, swaying slightly on his feet, then stifled a slight, uncontrollable
giggle. “Of course, my dear man. Send the louts away.” Snatching the
comb, he made an energetic attempt to tame his hair, nearly sloshing wine down
the front of his new tunic with the vigor of his attack; then he stood meekly
as Coel rescued the goblet and set it on a side table. Coel ushered the
servants to the door of the dressing chamber and gestured toward the
bloodstained robe, mouthing the order to burn it, then closed the door behind
them and returned to where Imre was cheerfully tangling his hair worse than it
had been before. With a bow and a
smile, Coel prised the comb out of Imre’s hand and began working the tangles
out of the long chestnut locks. When he had finished, he turned away to pick up
the crown which the squires had left, and returned his attention just in time
to keep Imre from draining the goblet again. Luckily, Imre was
still at the pliable stage, so he did not resist when Coel took the cup from
him. But God knew, the king had had enough to drink for a while. Whether Imre
came out of the Great Hall under his own power was his own business; and if he
had to be carried out, that would not be the first time. But he must at least
be able to maneuver his way into the hall, or the Princess Ariella would be
even more furious than she was certain to be at their late arrival. Coel put
the cup out of reach and hoped that Imre would not make a scene. Imre, drunk,
could. be a very difficult young man. But Imre did not
resist. He let himself be drawn up to attention, and the crown put on his head,
then stood still while Coel fastened the short, ermine-lined mantle over one
shoulder, the fur contrasting vividly against the blood red of tunic, hose, and
shoes. Only when they were heading for the door, Imre leaning heavily on his
arm, did Coel remember the orders stuck inside his tunic. Abruptly, he turned
the king around and marched him back to a writing desk, pulling the parchment
out. “Just one last
thing, Sire,” he said, spreading the parchment on the writing table, “and then
we’ll go into the hall and get you some more wine.” As he dipped a
quill in ink and extended it to Imre, the king’s eyes grew cold, like agate,
and Coel suddenly realized that much, if not all, of the drunkenness was a
facade. “The orders concerning
Camber?” Imre asked, enunciating each syllable with great care. Coel nodded, an
instant of uncertainty racing through his mind, though no trace of it showed on
his face. Imre studied him
for a long moment, then snatched the pen from him and scrawled his name at the
bottom of the page. Half in apprehension and half in amazement, Coel watched as
Imre thrust the quill back into its holder, ruining the point in the process,
and turned away. Imre had not even read the orders, had not glanced at the contents. “Do you not wish
to read it first, Sire?” “No.” Imre took a few
steps away and bowed his head, and Coel looked down at the page, at the drying
ink, at the words he himself had inscribed—innocuous, this time, at least—then
decided to risk further inquiry. “I could have
written anything, you know, Sire. It could be death warrants for all of them.” “Not even you would
dare that,” Imre replied in a low voice, not looking back at him. “I have
signed it; most men would take that as a sign of trust. Do you question the
judgment of your king?” Coel contained a
smile, then picked up the parchment and inspected the signature—dry now—before
creasing the orders sharply. “Certainly not, Sire. Do you wish to seal it, or
shall I?” “The seal is in
the box,” Imre said softly. “Once, it was his province. Now it is yours,
to tell of his foul murder.” “His sad demise,
Sire,” Coel corrected, in a similar tone but with growing confidence.
“Unfortunate”—he paused for emphasis, plucking the seal from its box—”but
necessary.” “Necessary,” Imre
repeated in a strained whisper. He did not hear
the wax as it hissed and spat, falling on the parchment and receiving the
imprint of the royal seal. And shortly after that, they were striding down the
corridor toward the Great Hall, Imre with a cup in his hand once more—Coel had
not dared to refuse it to him—and the orders on their way to the guards who
would escort Cathan’s body home to Camber. The feast that
night went even more badly than Coel had feared, given Imre’s initial state of
inebriation. Ariella,
predictably annoyed at her brother’s failure to appear at the appointed hour,
had waited a reasonable amount of time, the guests milling restlessly in the
hall, then had made her own entrance and ordered the company seated—though even
she did not dare to begin the feast without Imre. But the musicians played and
the wine flowed freely, and the conversation sparkled at the Yule Court of Imre
of Festil, as did his guests. Seated at the high
table beside her brother’s empty chair, Ariella laughed and drank and flirted
with the great lords and gentlemen seated near her, her vivid beauty glowing
from its setting of velvet and satin and snow-white fur. Diamonds blazed at
throat and wrists and around the hem of her gown; more trembled seductively on
her forehead beneath the silky fur hood which confined her hair and framed her
face like some strange whiter flower. All the company
was garbed in white tonight, out of deference to Imre’s wishes for a true
winter court, and thus it was with a breath of surprise that the assembled
gentles greeted the appearance of their monarch in the doorway of the Great
Hall, clothed from head to toe in scarlet, except for the lining of the mantle
he wore. From his demeanor and the cup in his hand, it was simple to deduce
what had delayed the King’s Grace—or so they thought. Without pausing
for ceremony, Imre wove his way down the hall, Coel limping in a little
embarrassment at his right elbow. The surprised guests knocked over benches and
stools to get to their feet and bow as he passed, though Imre would not have
known the difference if they had not moved. Ariella, better accustomed than
most to her brother’s idiosyncrasies when he had been drinking, picked up a new
goblet of wine as he approached and offered it to him with a curtsey as he
reached the dais and staggered to his seat. “You’re drunk and
you’re late,” she whispered, sotto voce, as he took the cup and drained
it to the dregs. “Where on earth have you been?” “In Hell, madame,
in Hell.” Imre burped, then
waved the Court to their seats and bade the musicians play. As music and
conversation resumed, Coel slipped to his accustomed seat near the high table
and sat, watching apprehensively, as Imre drank a second goblet, ignored
Ariella’s further attempts to question him, then paused while a page refilled
his cup and drained that, too. The stewards had not even been able to get the
first course served before the king lurched to his feet, his face flushed from
the wine, the cup unsteady in his hand. “Why do you laugh and
sport among yourselves?” he shouted. The room was
quickly hushed, and the musicians broke off with a few discordant notes. “Why do you make
merry?” the king repeated, indignation coarsening his voice, his eyes
glittering dangerously. “You, Selkirk, why such merriment on this night, of all
nights?” The weapons
master, seated at a table partway down the hall with a number of his fellows,
jumped hastily to his feet and bowed, his face as white as the tunic he wore. “By your leave,
Your Grace, but you did command it.” “I?” Imre paused
to take a deep draught from his goblet. “I did command it,” he repeated
incredulously, as though he had never heard of anything so preposterous. “Damn
you, Selkirk, do you not know that a man is dead?” He hurled the
goblet toward the shrinking weapons master, where it narrowly missed a page’s
ducking head, then swept his arm across the table, sending silver ewers and
platters crashing to the floor. “Damn you, get
out! All of you, get out!” He picked up
another ewer—this one of glass— and dashed it to the floor with an oath, then
lurched backward and overturned his chair as he stumbled from the hall. His sister,
stunned and outraged at his actions, murmured instructions to the head steward
to clear the hall, then followed in the direction Imre had gone. A wide-eyed
guard pointed out the chamber into which the king had disappeared, but all of
Ariella’s cajoling and pleading could not induce him to come out. Finally, in a
fit of temper herself, Ariella stalked back to the hall to see that her orders
had been obeyed, before retiring to her chambers to sleep. Imre also slept,
after a time, sprawled facedown on the floor of his refuge chamber, a cup of
wine staining the carpet beside his head. But guilt and an urgent bladder
awakened him before many hours had passed, and it was with extreme care that he
staggered, still quite drunk, into the room’s garderobe to relieve himself. His
head was reeling from the wine, and he poured himself another cup with shaking
hands before venturing to the chamber door and raising the bar. Outside, the
torches in the cressets were nearly burned down, the corridors silent. A lone
guard snapped to attention and gave a royal salute as the king made his way
down the narrow passage, fending himself off from the walls with his empty
hand. Faintly, from the direction he had come, Imre could hear the sounds of
servants clearing away the disaster in the Great Hall, and abruptly the reason
for his drinking came back to him. With that, he was
taken by a fit of shaking, and it was all he could do to bring the cup to his
lips and drink again. Then he was climbing the winding stairs toward his
chambers, halting to rest halfway up, then turning and descending again,
shuffling uncertainly down another passageway to another winding stair. He would go to
Ariella. She would understand— though he thought he remembered her shouting at
him through the door as he fell asleep earlier. She would know what to do. She
who had soothed his childhood hurts and held him close against the terrors of
the dark—she would find the words to comfort him now. She would not fail him,
though Cathan and all others did. Within minutes, he
was standing hesitantly outside her chambers, swaying uncertainly on his feet,
staring into the depths of his nearly empty cup. Abruptly, he drained off the
contents and then knocked thunderously on the door. “Ar—Ari?” he
called, his voice cracking on the first attempt. “Ari, open-the door—please?” “Who—who is it?”
came a timorous voice on the other side of the door. One of the servants, no
doubt. “I want to see
Ari. It’s me, Imre.” There was a gasp,
an unintelligible command from farther away, and then the door was open and a
maid was making a deep curtsey. Ignoring her, Imre stumbled past and headed for
the doorway of the inner chamber. Candles were being lit by another servant
within, and as he entered he was aware of the shadowy form of his sister
pulling on a robe over her sleeping shift near the great, curtained and
canopied bed. The glare of the candles hurt his eyes, and he could not seem to
see her clearly. “My cup is empty,
Ari,” he whispered plaintively, turning the cup upside down and giving it a
shake to demonstrate that it was indeed so. His sister’s voice
came from the shadows, soothing, reassuring. “Maris, pour some wine for His
Grace and then leave us.” The girl by the
candles came to him then, dipping in a quick curtsey before filling his cup.
But when she started to go, he caught her sleeve and held her fast while he
drained the cup and extended it again. With a glance at her mistress, the girl
filled the cup a second time, then left the flagon on a table and went out.
Imre began to drink again, but something blocked his light and he looked up.
His sister was standing between him and the candles, her reddish hair tumbling
down around her shoulders. He could not see her face, but the flames touched
her hair with fire. “Ari?” he said in
a small voice. A slim white hand
was extended toward him, resting on his where he held the cup. “Don’t you think
you’ve had enough for one night?” “Never enough to
wash this away,” he mumbled, starting to raise the cup again and
frowning as she did not release his hand. “You don’t
understand, Ari. He’s dead. I killed him.” The hand on his
did not move. “Who is dead,
Imre? Whom did you kill?” His hand jerked
spasmodically at that, and he lost his grip on the cup; he would have dropped
it had she not caught it. His sob stuck in his throat and shook his body as he
buried his face in his hands. “Cathan. I’ve
killed Cathan. He was a traitor, and I had to do it, but— Oh, God, Ari, I’ve
killed him. And I—loved—him.” Ariella closed her
eyes briefly, remembering the solemn, determined Deryni lord, whose price she
and Imre had never found, and slowly raised Imre’s cup to her lips and drank
deeply in ironic salute. Then she let the empty cup fall to the carpet beside
her and took her brother in her arms as she had done when they were children. “It will be all
right, Imre,” she murmured, as he clung to her shoulders and the tears stung
his eyes. “You are the king, and must do what you must do. But you are also a
man, and a man may mourn a friend.” With that, Imre’s grief came pouring over him and he
sank, sobbing, to his knees, to bury his face against her waist. So he remained
for a long time, sobbing bitterly. She stroked his hair, rubbed the tension
from his shoulders, and brushed the top of his head with her lips. At length
the anguish faded, to be replaced by a growing tingling in every part of his
body—and in hers. And as he raised his tear-streaked face and read the passion
in her eyes, he was suddenly aware of the soft promise of her body locked in
the circle of his arms. In one dazzling
flash of revelation, he knew that both of them had been moving toward this
moment for a long time. As he struggled to
his feet, her mouth sought his, as hungry as his own need. He was aware of her
pressing hard against him as they clung to one another, the exquisite softness
as his lips moved down her throat, as he crushed his face against her flawless breasts. Then they were being drawn, one by the other, toward
the shadowed recesses of the great, curtained bed, and his blood was roaring in
his head, and he lost himself in the urgency of sweet oblivion. chapter elevenThe just shall
be in everlasting remembrance. —Psalms
112:6 It was a stunned
and hushed contingent which met the royal escort that next day bore Cathan
MacRorie home. The cortege from
Valoret arrived amid light snowfall near noon, bearing Cathan’s body on a
two-horse litter, the horses plumed and caparisoned in black, the body covered
with a velvet pall, snow-frosted. The king’s men, a score of them, carried
their spears reversed in their stirrups. A pair of monks walked to either side
of the bier, swinging censers and chanting prayers for the soul of the
departed. After the royal escort, another litter bore the dead man’s widow and
children, young Revan following behind on horseback with Wulpher and a handful
of the loyal Tal Traeth servants. None of them were misled by the royal
pageantry, for they had seen the blood-stained body before it was washed and
dressed and laid out in state for the short journey home. They knew the king’s
hypocrisy for what it was, though even they did not dream of the extent. Word had flown
from the capital as only news of tragedy can fly, reaching Tor Caerrorie in the
small hours of the night. The man who brought the news was Crinan, Cathan’s
devoted body squire. He had been at Tal Traeth when the soldiers brought his
master home; he had watched, mindless in his grief, as the king’s lieutenant
barked orders for the preparation of the body; and he had bristled with pride
as old Wulpher, the steward, pushed the man aside and himself performed this
last service for their slain young lord. Torn at first
between his wish to stay at his master’s side and the necessity to warn the
rest of the family of what had happened, Crinan held his peace until the king’s
men had bedded down in the Great Hall for the night—for they would be
accompanying the body to Caerrorie the next morning. Then, spurred by the fear
that the king might make retribution against all the MacRories, Crinan left his
grieving vigil and took horse for Caerrorie. Three hours later, he was pounding
up the approach to the outer gate. The sound of his
horse’s hooves shattered the night silence of the castle and set the hounds to
baying, and soon the entire household was awake and shivering in the cold,
ill-lit Great Hall. At first Crinan
could not tell them—he was physically unable, after his long and breathless ride
in the cold and snow. But he was sure that Camber knew before he spoke, in that
uncanny way which only Deryni seemed to have. Camber had received his words
with wooden silence, had turned his face away for a mere instant before
tonelessly asking Sam’1 to ride on to Saint Liam’s and pass the word to Joram.
Rhys Thuryn was already in the house, had been working late on documents in the
MacRorie library, and he, too, came into the Great Hall at the commotion, to
hear the news in shock and hold the weeping Evaine close in helpless comfort.
After a few more low-voiced commands to the servants regarding necessary
preparations for the morrow, Camber had requested them all to return to their
respective chambers to try to rest. There was little further sleep for anyone
at Caerrorie that night. Next morning,
under a cold, sapphire sky, Camber’s household gathered in Caerrorie’s village
church to pray for the soul of Cathan MacRorie and wait for his body to come
home. Joram arrived before dawn, and young James Drummond an hour later. Evaine
and Rhys knelt together at Camber’s side, with Crinan and Sam’l and a dozen of
the closest household servants, as Joram led the prayers for the dead. Outside, the
people of the village gathered, and Camber permitted as many of them to enter
the church as could be accommodated, the rest of them kneeling quietly in the
outer yard. When, at last, word came that the cortege was approaching, the
villagers still outside went and lined the road in silence, each one making a
deep obeisance as the bier passed. The king’s
lieutenant was visibly annoyed at this sign of devotion—which, to his mind,
should have been reserved for their sovereign—but he dared do nothing. For
there was a grim, proud man waiting on the steps of the church to receive his
son—a High Deryni Lord capable of unspeakable vengeance if he chose to wreak
it. The lieutenant was Deryni himself, and not unskilled in the use of his
powers, but he did not relish an arcane confrontation with Camber of Culdi. The
lieutenant ordered his men to stand quiet, and silently prayed that the Earl of
Culdi would not defy the king’s commands. The lieutenant’s
fears were unjustified. He should have known that violence was not Camber’s
way, even in extreme grief. Camber stood straight and calm—deadly calm—as the
cortege drew to a halt, fixing the soldiers coldly with his gaze as Joram,
Rhys, and the faithful Crinan and Sam’l removed the bier from the horse-litter
and bore it into the church. He embraced Elinor and his grandsons before
sending them inside. Then Camber stood watch until Wulpher and Revan and the
other servants from Cathan’s household were permitted to come forward, to kneel
weeping at his feet until he raised them up and, with low and gentle voice,
bade them also go inside. Slowly and
deliberately, he himself followed them and closed the doors, making it clear to
the most hardened of them that the king’s men were not welcome in this hour of
grief. The Lieutenant wisely chose not to challenge that statement, but bade
his aide command the men to stand at ease. Inside, Joram MacRorie began the
Requiem Mass for his slain brother. When the Mass had
ended, Camber remained kneeling for a long time beside the body of his son,
pondering his next move. Burial would not be until that evening, for the grave
was not ready, so most of the villagers had gone into the courtyard after Mass,
leaving only members of the immediate family and household to keep silent
vigil. But the guards
were still outside, and Camber wondered about that, wondered why they were
staying, what orders they had received besides the command to escort Cathan’s
body home. Though the king’s lieutenant had said nothing to him—indeed, he had
not given the man a chance—Camber considered whether their mission might entail
more than they had done thus far. (Or was this his own guilt projecting
suspicion?) What if they were holding arrest warrants for the entire family,
and awaited only the conclusion of the burial rite tonight to serve those
warrants? There had been some reason for Cathan’s murder. Suppose Imre had
somehow gotten wind of their quest for Prince Cinhil? He let his eyes
search those remaining: Rhys at his side; Evaine, comforting the grieving
Elinor; James Drummond, kneeling sullen and alone far to the right of the nave;
the family servants of his and Cathan’s households. Sam’l had taken the
children back to the castle minutes before—no need for them to stay in the
church for the rest of the afternoon, grief-strained and frightened. What he
now planned would be difficult, but it must be done. With a slight
sigh, Camber crossed himself and got to his feet, shaking his head when Rhys
looked up and made as though to accompany him. Moving alone toward the back of
the church, he stopped beside one of the young pages still kneeling there and
spoke with him quietly for some minutes, the boy nodding vigorously from time
to time. Then Camber was tousling the boy’s head in affection, a slight smile
crossing his face as he turned and moved back up the aisle. Just before Camber
reached his former place by Rhys, the page glanced around nonchalantly, got to
his feet, and slipped away through a side door. Now, what was
all of that about? Rhys wondered, and started to ask as Camber knelt beside
him once more. But the proud old
Deryni shook his head and held a finger to his lips, his head bowed as though
in prayer once more. Puzzled, Rhys watched as Camber reached out and caught the
edge of the pall shrouding Cathan’s body, to bring the silk-fringed velvet
gently to his lips. It was not the pall
which Imre had sent, Rhys knew. That had been removed as soon as the body was
safely inside the church and the doors closed, to be replaced by another one
bearing the MacRorie arms, Cathan’s label of cadency stitched to it lovingly in
the pre-dawn hours by his sister Evaine. Rhys watched with
compassion as Camber let the velvet fall, sharing the older man’s grief as few
men could. As he laid his hand on Camber’s arm in a spontaneous gesture of
comfort, Camber looked up, his gray eyes sage, serene beyond all expectation. “Gentle Rhys, dear
to me as any son,” he murmured. “Will you come with me and help me?” Rhys nodded, not
trusting himself to speak, and Camber smiled fleetingly, covering Rhys’s hand
briefly with his own as the two of them stood. Walking quietly behind the altar
rail and out of the sanctuary, they went to the sacristy chamber, where Joram
had retired after Mass. Joram was kneeling at a prie-dieu, devoid of
vestments save for the black stole over his cassock, head cradled in his arms.
He looked up as his father and Rhys came into the room, hastily wiping a sleeve
across his eyes. The pale hair was dishevelled, and he smoothed it in an
automatic gesture. “Is anything
wrong?” “Nothing else,”
Camber said gently. He closed the door behind him and leaned against it,
warding the chamber from interference with a casual wave of his hand. “We have to talk,
Joram,” he said then. “Imre’s guards are still outside, and they don’t appear
to be leaving. Did you tell Cathan what we have been trying to do?” “No, sir, we
decided against it.” Joram removed his stole, touched it to his lips, and
paused before putting it away in the vestment press. “My God, you don’t suppose
Imre suspects, do you? He couldn’t! There’s no way he could know!” Camber raised an
eyebrow. “You were followed from Valoret two days ago, weren’t you? He
obviously suspects something, though I agree that it seems unlikely he could
have put all the pieces together so soon. But he apparently thought that Cathan
was involved in something treasonous. Or what happened—wouldn’t have happened.”
He glanced at the floor. “At any rate, and for whatever reason, Imre is taking
a hard look at us. I’m not sure we can stand the scrutiny.” Joram sat
carefully on the edge of the vestment press. “Are you saying we should give it
up?” “Good God, no! I’m
asking you to ride with Rhys to Saint Foillan’s now, today! If we don’t
get Cinhil out now, we may not get another chance.” “Now?” Joram
whirled on Rhys. “Did you know about this?” As surprised as
Joram, Rhys shook his head. “Sir, I mean no disrespect, but what makes you
think we have the chance now? You yourself said that Imre’s soldiers are still
outside. We can’t even use the Transfer Portal in the castle. It’s three weeks
before we’re expected in Dhassa.” Dhassa was the free, holy city in the Lendour
Mountains—a place where Imre’s power could not touch them. “You’ll have to
ride the entire way, then,” Camber said. “There’s an underground passage
leading out of this very room; Joram knows where it is. I’ve already sent a
page to secure horses and the other things you’ll need. He’ll be waiting at the
edge of the north woods within the hour.” “You’ve obviously
thought this out,” Joram said slowly. “But how are you going to explain our
absence, if we leave now?” “I don’t plan to
explain it,” Camber said, folding his arms across his chest and studying the
floor. “As far as the guards are concerned, you’ll still be here.” “We’ll still—
But—” Rhys broke off uncertainly and glanced at Joram, who had frozen at his
father’s words and now drew himself up stiffly. “Joram, what is
it?” Rhys whispered. Ignoring Rhys,
Joram stared steadily at his father. “Sir, if you have
in mind what I think you do—” “Hear me,” Camber
interrupted. His voice was low, but it suddenly crackled with authority. Rhys,
who had been about to ask what Camber was talking about, shut his mouth in
surprise. Joram was bristling with hostility, though he had not continued
speaking, and Rhys could feel the tension suddenly generated between the two.
Meekly, he backed off a pace, wanting no part of the clash of wills which he
sensed was about to unfold. “Father—” Joram
began again. “No. Hear me out.
I understand your reluctance. But, believe me, I have pondered the moral
aspects long and carefully. To be sure, there is deceit, but there are times
when such things cannot be avoided.” “They can be
avoided! Father, I don’t think—” “You don’t think?
Then, you admit that your view is only opinion!” Camber snapped. “You don’t
know that it’s morally wrong.” He glanced at Rhys briefly, his voice
still low, controlled, coolly logical. “Joram, if there
were any other way, you know I would take it. And if you can offer me another
option that will not endanger more lives than my way, I shall be delighted to
concede. But if we ever hope to see our Haldane on the throne, we must act now.
Imre’s soldiers are without. Someone suspects something, or they would not
still be here, and Cathan would not be dead. Even if Cathan was innocent of
conspiracy, we most assuredly are not. We’ve gone too far to stop now.” Joram, his eyes
blazing defiance, had stood stiffly, fists clenched at his sides, throughout
Camber’s argument, but now he turned his face away and let his shoulders sag.
Rhys, mystified at not knowing what the two were arguing about, sensed only
that Joram had lost and Camber had won. Wordlessly, he turned to Camber,
watching as the older man moved slowly to the side of his son—though he did not
touch him. “I’m sorry, Joram.
I understand, believe me. You know that I would never subject you to this if it
were not absolutely necessary. Oh, I admit that at first I thought your plan
the rash enthusiasm of youth. The arguments I gave you and Rhys nearly two
months ago are still valid, logically. But that was before I met Cinhil, and before
Cathan was murdered by that man who sits on the throne at Valoret. We have no
option but to proceed.” There was a long
silence, a period of several heartbeats in which no one moved. Then Joram bowed
his head. “Concede,” he
murmured. Muffling a sigh of
relief, Camber turned his attention back to Rhys. Before he could speak,
however, Joram pulled himself together and laid a restraining hand on his
father’s arm. “Rhys, have you
understood any of what we’ve been talking about?” the priest asked. “Well, frankly,
no. I gather that you—don’t approve of something on moral grounds, but I ...”
His voice trailed off lamely, and Camber sighed again, rubbing a weary hand
across his eyes. “Rhys, we’re
talking about shape-changing. Do you know what that is?” Rhys’s lips made
an awed O and he blinked in astonishment. “Well, I’ve read a little about it,
of course, but I thought it was only theory. And the sources that say anything
about it at all, claim that it’s—bl—” “Black magic,”
Camber said softly, speaking the words which Rhys only mouthed in awful
fascination. The older man cleared his throat, searching for the right words.
“Actually, it’s considered to be a gray area—a shade more dark than light,
perhaps, because it is deception; and deception is rarely used except for
personal gain. At the risk of sounding hypocritical, I’ll maintain that this is
a fair example of the end justifying the means. The escape of innocents from
danger not of their own doing is a generally accepted defense by all but the
most rigid purists,” Joram raised an
eyebrow at that and folded his arms across his chest. “I suppose that will
suffice for a logical argument for now, though we hardly qualify as innocents.” “But Imre doesn’t know
that yet—he only suspects.” Rhys, nagged by
the suspicion that he had just missed something crucial, cleared his throat
uneasily. “Just what is it you plan to do, sir?” “Um, sorry. I
assumed you realized. I intend to place your shapes on two of the servants
whose presence won’t be missed. I’ll use Crinan for you, Rhys, and Master
Wulpher, the steward, for Joram. Both of them have been loyal retainers of the
family from early boyhood, and I know they can be trusted. Also, they’re
somewhat used to magic, after having been around us for these many years.” “They’re not used
to this kind of magic,” Joram said sullenly. “And another thing: I was
to read the final rites for burial tonight. Wulpher is not a priest.” “No, but he’s a
well-read, God-fearing man who loved Cathan very much, and we can give him the
knowledge he needs to get by. I know you would rather be the one to do this
last thing for your brother, but it’s more important that you and Rhys be on
your way. You’ve already performed the essential rites. Besides, there will be
other priests here.” “But—” “I know, son,”
Camber said gently. And with a sigh, he placed a hand on the shoulder of each
man. “Rhys, would you
please find Crinan and Wulpher and bring them here? Don’t tell them why I want
to see them, just ask them to accompany you. But give me a few minutes with
Joram first, will you?” “Yes, sir.” Rhys
spoke with difficulty. Still stunned by
what he had heard, and sensing how Joram must be churning inside, judging from
his outward lack of composure, Rhys slipped from the sacristy and, outside,
leaned his forehead against the door, hands on the latch. He took several deep
breaths to calm his racing heart, but his mind refused to approach the topic of
shape-changing, ancient fears nibbling around the edges of his soul without
discipline until he, at length, applied one of his own charms for calmness and
willed his thoughts to order. He felt tranquillity wash over him like a gentle
wave. Only then was he able to approach the forbidden area with any degree of
rationality. Shape-changing. .
. . He remembered a passing mention of it in an old volume of conjury, of how
the conjuror superimposed the image of one person over that of another. The
book had mentioned pentagrams and blood circles, and charges to keep evil
influences out of the spell, but had not gone into any specifics as to how it
was actually done. Another source—now he found himself able to scan his
memories like a written index, ferreting out the information he needed—another
source had mentioned animal sacrifices and the assistance of demons. He counted
that as spurious. Still another text had insisted that shape-changing was not
possible at all—though that was obviously false in light of what Camber had
just said. Searching through his memory, Rhys found that he could not pin down
a single fact about shape-changing. He concluded that he was probably about to
learn far more about it than he really wanted to know. With a sigh, he
raised his head and went back into the church. Enough time had passed that
Camber and Joram should have resolved any remaining differences. He found the
servants easily enough, and managed to get them to the sacristy door without
too many questions. He paused only long enough to knock lightly before opening
the door and ushering them inside. The room was aglow
with candles, several dozen of them placed about the perimeter and dispelling
all sense of gloom or prescience of what was to come. Camber was standing
motionless before the vesting altar in one corner of the room, the candles
turning his hair to ruddy gold. Joram had his back to them, leaning with both
hands on the lid of the vestment press. His shoulders tensed as he heard the
door open, but he did not move. As the door closed and the wards were
re-established, Camber turned and came to greet the servants. “Thank you for
coming, my friends,” he said, extending his hand to each of them in turn. Crinan clasped the
hand nervously, eyes downcast, but Wulpher took it and, kneeling, kissed it,
tears welling in his eyes. “Forgive me for
bringing the young master back to you thus, m’lord,” the old man croaked, his
voice husky with grief. “I promised I would look after him for ye, and I—” “You are not to
blame, old friend,” Camber said, tenderly raising the old man up. “I know how
you loved my son. Your devotion shall not go unrewarded.” Wulpher could not
speak, but nodded gratefully. Crinan, too, swallowed hard and bowed his head. “But, I did not
ask you here for further grieving,” Camber said then, glancing at Rhys and
signalling with his eyes that he should go to Joram. “I wished to ask if you
would be willing to undertake a great risk for the sake of your master’s
memory. I cannot tell you in detail why I ask what I do, but it would be a
final service which you could render. Will you do this for him?” As the two nodded,
eyes wide and awed, Rhys moved silently behind them to touch Joram’s arm. The
priest nodded, then turned to face them. His expression was calm, composed, his
hair silver-pale in the candlelight. His eyes, like Rhys’s and the two
servants’, turned toward his father. “Very well,”
Camber said lightly. “It is necessary, I cannot tell you why, for Father Joram
and Lord Rhys to leave here now, before the burial tonight and without being
seen. This, in itself, presents no problem. Horses and supplies are being
prepared even now. However, their presence will be expected at the burial
tonight, as well as to be seen casually here on the grounds for the rest of the
afternoon, so that the king’s soldiers do not become suspicious. Your
assistance will give us the time we need.” The two servants
looked at one another, then back at Camber. Crinan wet his lips apprehensively. “You need someone
to play their parts, m’lord?” “Yes.” Crinan looked at
Joram and Rhys, at Wulpher, at himself, then back at Camber. “Begging your
pardon, m’lord, but I don’t think we look very much like Father Joram and Lord
Rhys. Oh, I could maybe pass for Lord Rhys in the dark, but—” Wulpher, too, had
finally found his tongue, and could not contain his skepticism any longer. “That’s right,
m’lord. We don’t look anything like the young lords.” “I can make you
look like them, if you will permit it,” Camber said. His tone was such
that both men froze, suddenly suspecting what he was talking about. Wulpher
gulped, and when he spoke, his voice was very small. “By—magic, m’lord?” Camber nodded, and
Crinan, too, swallowed nervously. “Isn’t
that—dangerous, sir?” “Not to you. A
little to me, to Joram and Rhys. You would remember nothing of it, once the
shape-changing was past. I would restore you to your own forms this evening, after
the household has retired for the night.” Crinan coughed
nervously, trying to formulate his question. “Ah, what if something goes wrong,
sir?” “With the spell?” “No, I mean,
suppose we’re recognized by the king’s men?” Camber smiled,
relieved. “You will not be recognized by anyone—not even my daughter, unless I
tell her. To all outward appearances, all voice and movement, you will be Joram
and Rhys. But I would rather not go into details which might alarm you
needlessly. Trust that I will not allow you to come to harm, and that I can do
what I say. Will you permit this?” There was a long
silence as each man thought about it, and then Wulpher dropped to his knees and
bowed his head with a sob. “I am your man, my
lord, and the Lord Cathan’s, as I have been since I swore you fealty many years
ago. If I can perform this last service for the young master, then I will do
it.” “Thank you,
Wulpher,” Camber murmured, clapping the man on the shoulder and looking across
at Crinan. “And you, Crinan? I would not rush your decision, but we haven’t
much time.” Crinan bowed his
head. “This—task that the young lords will undertake— They do not ride to slay
the king?” “They seek no
vengeance, Crinan. They ride not to Valoret or to Imre.” “Very well, then,
sir. I am also your man. What must we do?” With a slight
smile, Camber offered his hand, then signalled Wulpher to rise. “Wulpher, I’ll ask
you to wait outside with Joram for a few minutes. Rhys, please exchange clothes
with Crinan.” As the four moved
to do Camber’s bidding, the Deryni went back to the vesting altar and took up a
single candle, staring into its flame for a long time to prepare himself for
what was to come. When he was ready, he turned to inspect the room. Rhys was
helping a fumbling Crinan with the clasp of the physician’s mantle around his
shoulders, the physician now wearing the simple riding garb of Cathan’s former
squire. “The green of the Healer becomes you, Crinan,” Camber said, walking leisurely to stand before
Crinan and trying to put the young man at ease. Crinan swallowed
awkwardly, then squared his shoulders and stood a little taller as Camber put
the candle in his hands. . Four more candles
were placed on the floor, forming a five-foot square inside of which Camber
bade Crinan stand. Another candle was procured for Rhys, this one unlighted;
and then the two Deryni, Healer and Sage, joined Crinan within the square, Rhys
standing to Crinan’s right and Camber facing them. Casually, Camber laid his
hands on Crinan’s where they held the first candle. Crinan flinched. “Be not afraid,”
Camber smiled, his voice already lulling his subject to obey. “Thou hast but to
gaze into the flame and let thy thoughts go slack. Relax and watch the flame,
which blocks out thine awareness of ought else within these walls. I shall not
leave thee; thou art safe with me.” Unable to resist,
the squire did as he was bidden, staring deeply into the candle flame as
Camber’s voice soothed and silenced. After only seconds, Crinan swayed
slightly, his head drooping lower toward the flame. Abruptly, Camber tightened
his grasp on the man’s hands and extended control. Crinan’s eyes closed as
though in sleep. “Good,” Camber
breathed, releasing the hands and looking across at Rhys. “Now, stand while I
set the wards”—he gestured toward the candles of the square, and a circle of
silver light flared around them—”and we begin.” He lowered his
head and murmured a short passage which Rhys could not catch, before blowing
out Crinan’s candle with a scarce-breathed “Amen.” Then he held his left hand
beside Rhys’s darkened candle, fingers spread slightly. His eyes met Rhys’s,
calm, serene. “Match hand and
mind with mine, my friend, and let your candle flare when we are one.” With a solemn nod,
Rhys touched his fingertips to Camber’s, stilling his thoughts that the other
might come in. His eyes slitted shut, the better to exclude the outer world,
and then he was aware of Camber’s palm pressed firmly against his own. In total
calm and all control, he bade the light flare in his other hand, and felt the
still, almost musical resonance he had come to cherish, as his thoughts meshed
with those of the Master. Then he was seeing
through Camber’s eyes, noting the candle burning steadily in his own left hand,
his right pressed palm to palm with Camber’s. He watched Camber’s other hand
rise slowly to rest on Crinan’s forehead. The Master’s eyes
closed, and there was only the crystal stillness, the peace, the all-pervading
oneness of the bond they shared. Camber’s voice was like the whisper of leaves
rustling in a summer breeze, which no mere mortal may command; and Rhys knew
that what Camber bade would be. ‘‘Behold the light
in thy mind’s eye,” the Master said to him. “It is the essence of thine outward
form upon the earth. Extend it now, and let it flow around the man here
standing. His visage shall be thine until the need is past, as like to thee as
any man may see.” And as he spoke,
Rhys felt a soothing lethargy coursing through his limbs, a pulling of energy
which tingled on his skin and centered in the hand that held the flame, which
now ached to leap the void to Crinan’s hands. None saw the mist which gathered
round, or watched the fire flare from hand to hand. But suddenly Rhys knew the
deed was done, the spell complete. He staggered as
the bond dissolved away, and looked to see his candle dark, the one in Crinan’s
hands ablaze with light. And as his gaze swept upward to the face, he gasped to
see his own. His hands dropped to his sides in wonder; the candle fell
forgotten to the floor. “My God!” was all
Rhys could manage to whisper. Camber smiled
distractedly and sighed, the silvery eyes veiled now, shrouded with fatigue.
“And no demons or other evil that I could detect,” he quipped. “Joram will be
pleased.” He passed his
hands above the wards and murmured words, and the silver circle died. Then he
bent to douse the candle in Crinan’s hand, touched the squire lightly on the
forehead. Rhys could only stand and watch, speechless with awe, as Crinan’s
eyelids fluttered wide. “Crinan, attend
us. Look at me.” Crinan did so, his
face—or rather, Rhys’s face— bewildered. “Did it w—work?” He faltered as he
realized the voice was not his own. Smiling
reassurance, Camber took his arm and led him to the vestment press and showed
him a small mirror. Crinan gasped and ran his hands over his face; and even the
gesture was Rhys’s. Rhys shook his head disbelievingly as Camber laid a hand on
Crinan’s shoulder and calmed him once more. “Crinan, I’ll ask
you to assume your role now, and to go outside with Rhys. Then, when you’re ready,
you’re to go back into the church as Rhys, and meditate. I’ll join you
directly. If anyone tries to make conversation, which I doubt, just do what you
think Rhys would do. You’ll be guided when there’s need.” “I will, sir.” The
voice was crisp, professional— and Rhys’s. Rhys was still
shaking his head as he opened the door and let his double go through. Joram and Wulpher
were directly outside, Wulpher already in a light trance from Joram’s
ministrations, so the steward did not see the two Rhyses who emerged from the
sacristy. But Joram did, and he froze in amazement as the first one, wearing
Rhys’s clothes, nodded acknowledgment and then went past to wait, hand on the
outer door latch; a second Rhys stood hard against the wall. Joram looked at
the second one then, and realized that this must be the real one. But Rhys only
shook his head and put a finger to his lips in silence as his double opened the
door and went back inside the church. Rhys himself was
still a little dazzled at what had just occurred, though he had been privy to
every part of the operation. He watched silently as Joram and the entranced
Wulpher disappeared behind the sacristy door, but he did not care to envision
what was about to occur. Not that he felt guilty, in any wise, about the deed
just done: they had done no wrong. But there was something vaguely disquieting
about the whole thing, if only because of the shock of meeting his twin when he
knew he had been an only child. Instead, he went
to the spy hole in the door to the church and watched his double kneel by
Cathan’s bier, saw Evaine touch one hand in compassion before returning to her
own devotions. He was still watching a few minutes later when the sacristy door
opened and Camber and Joram emerged, neither giving him a second glance as they
passed on into the church and knelt together beside the other Rhys. A second
Joram stayed in the doorway of the sacristy, and he beckoned to Rhys to join
him as the physician turned to stare. “I’d rather not
talk about this until we’re well away from here, if you don’t mind,” Joram
murmured, standing aside so that Rhys could enter. “Come, the passageway is
open.” An hour later,
they were on their way to Saint Foillan’s. chapter twelveFor by wise
counsel thou shall make thy war. —Proverbs
24:6 The burial that
evening took its sad course. The words were said, the earth scattered, the
gravesite blessed by old Father Jonas, the parish priest, as well as
Wulpher/Joram and the two monks who had come with the soldiers from Valoret.
Snow had begun falling gently as the grave was closed, softening the harsh
outlines of earth and stone and frost-burned sod piled grim in the dancing
torchlight. The final psalms floated clear and lonely on the crystalline air.
The incense swirled and made a small child sneeze. After, the folk of
the village escorted their beloved lord and his family back to the castle—for
Camber had had his son buried in the village churchyard, close by the people he
had loved—not in the vaults beneath the keep. The walk was ghostly silent, made
more so by the muffling snow which drifted down and glittered in the
torchlight, making torches sputter and snap. Only the metallic clink of the
soldiers’ harness punctuated the slow procession back. Other than that, stunned
silence prevailed—a reluctance to speak of the unspeakable, the
incomprehensible. The king’s
soldiers displayed an unexpected sympathy throughout. Despite their orders to
keep Camber and his family under watch, they had also been instructed to
interfere as little as possible with the baring of MacRorie grief. And so they
merely followed along at the end of the procession, their lieutenant
requesting—and receiving—permission from Camber himself to camp that night in
the castle yard. Camber gave his
unbidden guests good night and retired to his chambers, the ensorcelled Crinan
and Wulpher taking Rhys’s and Joram’s rooms until Camber should determine that
it was safe to release them. Presently, Evaine came to his study, and father
and daughter communed as only two Deryni might. When they had finished, they
stepped into a corner of the room which glittered with hidden power. Camber
wove the magic of a spell, and they were no longer in Caerrorie. “Where are we?”
Evaine whispered, as her eyes adjusted to the near-darkness and she pressed a
little closer to her father’s side. Wainscotted walls
and ceiling surrounded them at arm’s reach all around, covering solid rock such
as lay beneath their feet. The walls glowed faintly— arcane wards to keep one’s
power in, not out. Camber reached out tentatively to explore the fastness of
the warding spell, then sighed and withdrew, pressing his daughter’s shoulder
with his encircling arm. “Someone will be
along directly to let us out,” he said in a low voice. “This is the Michaeline
Commanderie at Cheltham.” “Will the Vicar
General come to meet us?” “I suspect so,
though I doubt he’ll be pleased to see us—especially when he hears the news we
bring.” Evaine scanned the
walls around them—it was getting more difficult to breathe—and acknowledged
that it was one of the most secure confinements that she had ever experienced.
Even without the wards, this Portal chamber would have been impervious to
invasion, for no Deryni could reach through so much solid rock and loose the
bolts which held the rock door closed. If no one chose to give admittance, a
would-be intruder had but two choices: to stay and slowly suffocate, for there
was no ventilation, or to quit the place entirely and go back the way he had
come. That could be a
problem, if one had been forced to destroy the Portal used to get here, she
realized, as her eyes continued to sweep the panelled walls. If one had no
place to go back to, and knew no other portal place, he could die here. The closeness of
the air and walls was growing more oppressive, when there was a scraping of
stone against stone before them, and a vibration as the outer rock was
unsealed. Then the wall swung back to reveal cold steel thrust into the opening
before them—swords held by faceless men in cloaks of midnight blue, their
identity obscured by the glare of blazing torches. Evaine raised her
hand to shield against the unaccustomed brightness, trying to see beyond to the
shadow forms who stood without. Camber merely stood and closed his eyes,
willing them to adjust to the light, but not moving his hands. There was a brief
silence, and then: “It’s Lord Camber,” a low voice said. The swords were
lowered and the torches withdrawn a space. As the glare
receded, Camber opened his eyes again and stepped forward, his hand on Evaine’s
elbow. Outside the Transfer Portal, a tall, blue-cassocked man with steel-gray
hair was waiting, while three blue-mantled knights of the Michaeline Order
sheathed their swords and moved into the background with their torches. Their
leader, Alister Cullen, bowed stiffly as Camber saw and recognized him—for he
was still wary of the turn of events which had made Camber MacRorie ally
instead of adversary, however much he loved and trusted the great man’s son.
Camber returned the bow, himself a little ill at ease, and gestured toward
Evaine. “My daughter,
Evaine, of whom I’ve spoken,” he said, by way of introduction. Cullen nodded in
her direction, as Evaine returned a slight curtsey; then he directed his
attention back to Camber, eyes glittering like sea ice, heavy brows nearly
meeting on his forehead. “We had not
expected you tonight, Lord Camber. Is something wrong?” “I’m afraid
there’s been a change of plans,” Camber said. “May I speak freely?” He gestured
toward the three Michaelines and raised an eyebrow. Cullen’s mouth set
in a firm line. “I will stand pledge for their loyalty. What is it?” “Joram and Rhys
will be at the haven with the prince within four days, if all goes well.” “Four days!”
Cullen exclaimed, his composure rattled. “But, we had agreed—it was to be the
week before Christmas!” “I know. We will
simply have to adjust somehow. My son Cathan is dead. We buried him but a few
hours ago.” Cullen’s jaw
dropped in shock, and then he closed his eyes and shook his head, crossing
himself with a hand which was suddenly a century older than it had been three
heartbeats before. The three behind him likewise signed themselves and bowed
their heads. Cullen, when he
looked up, was visibly shaken. He yearned to reach out to the shining man and
comfort him, to try to ease the pent-up grief; but his hands remained slack at
his sides. He could not do that yet. Pride forbade. Through Joram, he had known
Camber’s resistance to his order for far too long to trust fully so soon. And
so he folded his hands together awkwardly and searched for words, sighing at
the inadequacy of whatever he might say. “I’m sorry,” he
finally murmured. “Joram spoke of his older brother quite fondly, and I always
felt I knew him myself, though we never met. How did it happen?” “We don’t know for
certain,” Camber said quietly. Evaine bit her lip and clasped her father’s arm
more tightly, blinking back the tears. “The guards who brought his body back to
Caerrorie said that he simply collapsed and died with Imre, before the Yule
Court last night. The truth is that there was a wound in his chest, however—of
a sword thrust or a dagger. He must have died instantly.” A strained silence
followed. Then: “Do the guards know who did it?” “If they know,
they will not say,” Camber answered. “I believe Imre suspects us of something,
though, else the soldiers would not still be in my castle yard. Tomorrow, I
will have to make some excuse that Joram and Rhys left before dawn, to go into
retreat or on some other errand. We’ve not been formally forbidden to leave the
castle, so perhaps the ruse will work. Actually, they left for Saint Foillan’s
just after mid-day, though the soldiers don’t know that. With luck, they should
reach the abbey two nights from now.” Cullen’s quick
mind caught the glossing-over of time, the half-omission, and he looked
steadily across at Camber. “You say the
guards don’t know?” “I—ah—covered
their absence by placing a shape-changing spell on two of the servants,” Camber
said reluctantly. “I’ll restore them when I return.” Cullen’s face
hardened at the mention of the spell, though he had, in a way, been prepared
for such a revelation. Nonetheless, his hand twitched as if longing to move in
some protective counter-spell, though he knew that was superstitious nonsense. “Though I cannot
condone your action, I can see the necessity for it,” he permitted himself to
say. “But, ignore that for the moment. We must make our own preparations. How
many people do you intend to bring to the haven?” “We’ll be ten in
all: eight family and two servants—the ones I shape-changed; if Imre finds out
what I’ve done, it might not be safe for them to remain behind.” “I see,” Cullen
nodded. “When may we expect you?” “We’ll try to stay
at least the four days it will take Joram and Rhys to get Cinhil to safety. If
Imre doesn’t move against us before then, there should be no difficulty. If he
does—well, we’ll have a problem. If we must escape through our own Portal, and
I see no reasonable alternative if we’re discovered, we run the risk of Imre
placing troops before every known Portal in the kingdom to try to catch us. If
he goes that far, I doubt that Joram and the others could reach safety without
being captured. We’ll just have to do our best to stall.” Cullen nodded
thoughtfully. “We can probably cut our safety margin to three days, if
necessary. Imre can’t close off all the Portals that quickly, even if that
occurs to him: we may be giving him credit for more astuteness than he
possesses. And there’s no way for him to guess that Dhassa is our target. A
calculated risk, but it may be our only chance.” Camber controlled
a smile, admiring the logic of the man. “How are your preparations? Can your
people be ready?” Cullen turned to
the three behind him, his clasped hands behind his back. “You’ve been
listening, Jeb,” he said to the tallest of the men. “We’re talking about a
three-week compression of our timetable. Can you gather the order in three
days?” Jeb, Lord Jebediah
of Alcara, Grand Master of the order’s military arm, stepped forward with the
easy assurance of a trained warrior. “It will require judicious planning to
keep down suspicion at the increased Portal activity, Father. But, yes, I think
we can do it.” “How many men?”
Camber asked. “Two hundred
knights, my lord, carefully dispersed to places of safety until we have need of
them.” He smiled. “Your own son’s prowess with weapons will tell you of their
training.” Camber returned the smile,
and Cullen nodded. “Nathan?” The second man, a
scar sleek and white along his chin, stepped forward and bowed. “Provisioning will
be finished within a day, Father General. The grain ship arrived this
afternoon. We should have it unloaded and transferred to our hidden storerooms
by nightfall tomorrow. Everything else is in readiness.” “And the
non-combatants?” Cullen asked the third man. Jasper Miller laid
a hand on the Michaeline emblem on his mantle and bowed. “Three days hence,
even the king himself will find no servant of Saint Michael upon the land.
Until the true king comes again, the Michaelines shall cease to exist.” “You risk much for
an untried prince, sir,” Camber breathed, marvelling at the man’s faith. “Better the
untried prince of a once-noble house than the usurping son of regicides who now
sits on our throne!” the man retorted. “The Haldanes were ever friends to our
order, and to the people of Gwynedd.” “God grant that
they always will be,” Camber replied. “And pray that this Haldane comes. It
will be two days at best before Joram and Rhys even reach his side, and longer
before we see his face. Suppose he is unwilling to take up his crown?” “He will not fail
us,” Cullen said. “He must not. But in the meantime, our energies were
best spent ensuring him a safe haven when he comes. And at Caerrorie—is there
ought we can do to ease your work there?” Camber shook his
head. “We’ll begin tomorrow to bring through the few things we will need, in
small lots. Evaine will help me,” he added, laying his hand over his
daughter’s, who had been watching and listening all the while. “Very well,”
Cullen said. He stroked his
chin in a thoughtful gesture, then looked up at Camber with a slightly sheepish
expression which seemed doubly out of place on his dour, craggy face. “Ah, knowing how I
feel about the darker aspects of our abilities, you will probably think me
addled to ask this, but might I suggest that you leave the shape-changes on the
two servants for a few days—since the deed is already done,” he added
defensively. “It would help to alleviate needless suspicion, and perhaps gain
us a little more time.” Camber raised an
eyebrow and smiled in spite of himself. “I had not considered it, and might not
have mentioned it if I had, but yes, it could be done, provided Crinan and
Wulpher are willing—and I see no reason to suspect that they would not be.” Cullen looked very
uncomfortable, and cleared his throat uneasily. “Yes, well—ah—good. It should
ease matters a little. Are there—ah—any Deryni in the guard contingent?” “The lieutenant is
Deryni. There may be others. I’ve not spoken with anyone else, however.” “Hmm, well. I
don’t suppose I need remind you to be careful.” Camber controlled
the urge to smile again—he had the distinct feeling that he had taken the
measure of the gruff old vicar general, and found himself liking the man—then
held out his hand. “We’d best get
back before we’re missed. Will you pray for us, Father?” Cullen, taken by
surprise at the request, automatically put his hand in Camber’s and clasped it
in farewell. “If you truly wish it, my lord,” he said, as he realized what he
had done. “Though, frankly, I had not thought to hear such a plea from your
lips.” “Because of our
past differences? I think we both, perhaps, misread the other badly. God keep
you, Father.” And as Camber,
with his daughter, turned and stepped back across the Portal threshold, he
heard Cullen murmur, “And you, my son.” Then they were
back in his study at Caerrorie, and the newly widowed Elinor was rushing toward
him to fling herself into his arms. “Thank God, you’ve
returned,” she whispered, hugging him close for comfort. “The king’s lieutenant
wants to see you. I’ve been stalling him for nearly five minutes.” “Did he say why he
wants to see me?” Camber asked, stepping from the Portal and beginning to strip
off his outer garments. “It’s snowing
harder. He wants to move his men into the hall. I have the distinct impression
that they plan to stay longer than just overnight.” “That’s splendid,”
Camber answered, his tone indicating that he did not think it splendid at all.
“Where will I find this lieutenant?” Five minutes
later, he was entering the Great Hall, where, the lieutenant was waiting,
having paused to don a nightrobe and to clear his mind of his recent
activities. (After all, the man was a Deryni.) The lieutenant was
pacing the floor before the hearth, rustling the sweet rushes and disturbing
the sleep of the hounds sprawled by the fire. Several of his men were gathered
silently at the other end of the hall, muffled in great cloaks. Camber took in
the scene at a glance as he emerged from the stairwell, then crossed to the
hearth. The dogs raised their heads to greet him, but he stilled their motion
with a firm hand signal. “I’m sorry you had
to wait, Lieutenant,” he said quietly, drawing his robe around him against the
cold. “It is my custom to meditate before retiring, especially in times of
stress. I’m afraid I have trained my daughters too well that I am not to be
disturbed.” “I understand, my
Lord Earl” The lieutenant bowed. “I came to ask whether I might move my
men into the hall for the night. It’s beginning to snow harder. I think we’re
in for a storm.” “Certainly, sir,
though I hope you will not overstay your welcome,” Camber said softly. “I’m
afraid I haven’t the means to house an entire garrison indefinitely.” “Well, I hardly
think a score of men constitutes a garrison, my lord—” the man started to
protest “No, but it is a
reasonable substitute at a time like this. And I did not hear you clarify my
‘indefinitely,’ either. Just how long do you intend to stay?” The lieutenant
looked down in embarrassment. “I’m sorry, my lord. I dislike being here at such
a time just as much as you dislike having me here. But I am commanded to remain
until I receive further orders. You are acquainted with soldiers, sir, though
you were not one yourself. I’m sure you will understand—” “I understand your
orders, sir. I am not that far removed from military matters after twenty-five
years at Court. What I do not understand is the reason for those orders. Am I
and my household under arrest?” “Of course not,”
the lieutenant said uncomfortably. “We were sent to escort your son’s body home
in honor, and, I assume, to render you that same honor until it has been
determined just what really happened to your son.” “Then, you
acknowledge that he did not merely collapse and die, as your instructions first
gave you to say?” “I—er—I am not
permitted to discuss that, my lord. I’m sorry.” His voice trailed
off, very uncomfortably, and Camber smiled, with a gentle, resigned lifting of
one corner of his mouth. “I suspected as
much. You are not to blame,” he said. “Please feel free to billet your men here
in the hall, by all means. I will have the steward see to building up the
fire.” As the man bowed
thanks, Camber turned and made his way down the hall, nodding civilly to the
soldiers as he passed. One of them, who stood apart and made an especially
respectful bow, seemed strangely familiar. When Camber had instructed the
steward about the fire, he paused thoughtfully in the shadows at the end of the
hall, studying the young man’s back. Almost immediately, the man turned and
peered in his direction, then glanced casually at his fellows and began to walk
slowly toward him. Camber retreated farther into the shadows, to an alcove
hidden from the rest of the hall, and waited. The man joined him almost
immediately. “Do I know you,
sir?” Camber said, his eyes searching the young man’s face. “Guaire of Arliss,
Lord Camber,” the young man murmured, going down on one knee. “Your son and I
were friends at Court. You probably don’t remember me.” “But I do!” Camber
replied, taking Guaire’s hand and raising him to his feet. “Cathan spoke of you
often, and affectionately. But”—he glanced toward the hall—”what brings you
here with the likes of them? I thought you were aide to one of the military
earls?” “I was. To Earl
Maldred,” Guaire nodded. “Only he’s dead, killed by an assassin three days ago.
That’s part of what I came to tell you about. There’s something—” He broke off as
Camber glanced beyond him and held a finger to his lips, then led him into a
small storage room near the kitchens, away from the growing noise of the hall
as the king’s men made their camp. “Are you Der— No,
I can see that you are not of us,” Camber murmured, taking Guaire urgently by
the shoulders. “Young friend, we daren’t take much more time. Did you ever link
minds with Cathan? Were you and he that close?” Wordlessly, Guaire
nodded, his brown eyes wide. “Would you be
willing to share that bond with me, Guaire?” Camber continued. “I would not ask
it if I did not feel it needful.” As Guaire nodded a
second time, Camber moved his hands to either side of Guaire’s head and closed
his own eyes, thumbs resting lightly on the other’s temples. “Then, do it now.
Open your mind to me without delay. For Cathan’s sake, I beg it.” There was a
breathless pause, a lengthening time of stillness, and then Camber was opening
his eyes and pulling the younger man into close embrace, staring sightlessly
over the other’s shoulder as he analyzed what he had seen. Then he put Guaire
at arm’s length and looked into his eyes. If he had lost a son, he had gained a
worthy friend—though one more human, he could never hope to find. And now he knew,
too, that he was doing what had to be done. There was no proof yet that the
king had killed; but there was little doubt in Guaire’s own mind that Imre was,
in some way, responsible—or that Cathan’s own kinsman, Coel Howell, had had a
heavy hand in what happened at Valoret. Camber smiled and
clasped Guaire’s shoulders reassuringly, then glanced out of the storage room
to see if the way was clear. “You’d best get
back. I’ll wait until you’ve gone.” “Aye, sir. I’ll
bring you word when other orders arrive. They’ll not take you by surprise.” “God bless you,
son,” Camber murmured, as the young man slipped back into the passageway and
out of sight. Camber waited for
several minutes, composing himself to traverse the hall again, to be certain he
would give no inkling of what he had just learned. Then he left the tiny
chamber and made his way back through the hall, nodding distractedly to the men
as they stood at his passage, some of them saluting him courteously. The dogs
stirred as he came near the fireplace, but he stayed them with his hand as he
continued on. He did not see Guaire in the hall, but a very young soldier stood
and bowed as he approached the foot of the newel staircase. “Thank you for
allowing us inside, m’lord,” the young man said, tugging at his forelock. “
‘Tis no fit night for man nor beast to be outside.” Camber glanced up
at the high windows, saw them rattling under the attack of the storm, and
nodded acknowledgment as he stepped past the man. And as he made his way up the
stairs to his chambers, he thought about his son and son-to-be, riding the road
to a distant abbey in the storm; and of the other son, whom he would never see
again except in dreams, who slept outside beneath the storm’s reach, in the
growing cold of an early grave. He did not sleep
until very late. chapter thirteenFor your hands
Are defiled with blood. —Isaiah 59:3 The next two days
were spent, for the most part, in uneasy seclusion, awaiting further royal
reaction which did not come. Receiving no new orders to the contrary, the
king’s men stayed on, trying to intrude as little as possible on the MacRories’
grief, but they were forced by the worsening weather to remain close in the
hall. Camber was a gracious host under the circumstances, going out of his way
to see that the men’s physical needs were provided, but relations grew strained
as the days wore on. He spoke once more with Guaire, on the second day, when
the waiting had grown almost intolerable, but their meeting was short, and
nearly interrupted by Guaire’s lieutenant. Besides, the young lord had nothing
to add beyond what he had already made known to Camber. Further evidence of
familiarity could only breed suspicion where there was none as yet. The residents of
Caerrorie were careful not to engender such suspicion, either. Below stairs,
nothing occurred which was not in keeping with the expected behavior in a
household recently bereft of its eldest son. Life went on, but in a subdued
fashion. The growing tension in those who waited did not manifest itself within
the sight of the royal guards. But above stairs, where the guards were not invited,
preparations continued at near-fever pitch. Camber and Evaine spent hours
gathering and transporting the few belongings they deemed essential for their
impending exile, and briefing the others—Elinor, James —on the method, if not
the precise reason, for their escape. Wulpher/Joram and Crinan/Rhys remained in
their chambers except for meals and family devotions, engaged, as Camber
explained to the guard lieutenant, in prayer and meditation for the soul of
their departed brother. In point of fact, both spent the greater part of their
time in dreamless Deryni trance, both to keep them safely out of sight and
possible discovery, and to conserve their strength. Camber’s spell had never
been intended to last so long, and had to be reinforced periodically. And elsewhere,
others made preparations and played their various waiting games. In the haven, the
Brothers of Saint Michael completed the last of their provisioning for the long
winter exile ahead, dispersing the noncombatant brethren and arranging for the
safe billeting of the militant arm of the order. At Dhassa, four
Michaeline knights set up a watch to be certain that three very important
riders would reach safety without mishap. In Valoret, a
tense Deryni conspirator, unwittingly playing both sides of a desperate game,
perused five reconstructed pages from a parish register and sent out his agents
to learn more about the only three names on those pages which appeared to be
connected: members of a family named Draper—Daniel and Royston and Nicholas.
And so the time passed.... But if the days
were taut for MacRories and Michaelines and a wayward Deryni lord, they were as
nothing beside the misery of their king and liege lord, Imre. Grief stalked the
towers of the royal apartments like an uninvited specter, wept and raged and
hoarded vengeful thoughts in the keep of the House of Festil. The king, his
senses no longer dulled to gray oblivion by the balm of too much wine, spent
the day of Cathan’s funeral thrashing in sweat-soaked delirium, the fire in his
brain assuaged but little by the tender ministrations of his sister. Sick with
the aftereffects of wrung emotions, as well as the spirits he had consumed,
unable to draw the strength to quell his pain arcanely, too proud to ask
another’s aid to ease the ache which lay upon him like a stifling mantle, he
brooded in the sunless rooms and bore his suffering with an ever-sharper
temper, terrorizing the servants until they feared to venture past the outer
threshold. Only Ariella
seemed to understand, as she had always comprehended, from his youngest
childhood days. And that, too, plagued him: the dimly recalled memory of her
body next to his; their passion; a quirk of conscience urging condemnation
while another, more fleshly part of him still yearned for her again. In the end, he
succumbed—though that, too, brought him little comfort for the rending in his
soul. For two full days he kept his morbid isolation within his sister’s
chambers, seeing no one but her, taking little food, sleeping less, and
indulging in hysterical fits of weeping rage at fate, at Maldred and Rannulf
for letting themselves be slain, at Cathan for his betrayal, at Coel for
telling him about it and compelling him to act, and at God, who had somehow
conspired to make a shambles of Imre’s world. It was with full
knowledge of this indulgence in kingly self-pity that Coel Howell dared to
approach the royal apartments on the afternoon of the second day—with that
knowledge, and armed with protection in the form of a handful of new parchment
scrolls obtained but lately from his scribes. He was received in
Ariella’s presence chamber, where the king sat in fur-lined robes before a
roaring fire. Imre was strained and nervous—one had only to watch the tremor in
his hands to ascertain that— but his mental faculties had not been impaired,
and he listened to Coel’s findings with great attention. Ariella sat on a cushioned
stool at his side, her hand resting negligently on his shoulder, her darting
eyes missing no nuance. When Coel had finished, Imre perused the scrolls
superficially, then handed them to his sister. “Birth records of
a father and son,” he said, furrowing his brow. “Why the interest in them, and
why now?” Coel frowned. “I
don’t know, Sire. The father, Royston, has been dead for more than twenty
years. But his father, Daniel, died only a few months ago. In fact, Rhys
Thuryn was his physician—which makes me wonder why he and MacRorie stole the
records. I can only surmise that it was because of something the old man said
on his deathbed.” “How about the
son, this Nicholas? Does he still live?” Imre asked. “Unknown, Sire. If
he is still alive, he did not follow the profession of his father or
grandfather—at least not in this city. He seems to have disappeared shortly
after his father’s death. It’s possible that he died of the plague as well.” Ariella coughed
and turned her attention entirely on Coel. “This Daniel Draper, who died
recently— who was he?” “A merchant in
woolens, Your Highness. He apparently did moderately well in his trade, paid
his debts, and left his goods and business to his apprentice, one Jason
Brown—which would seem to indicate that his grandson was either estranged or
dead. Other than that, no one seems to know much about him. He was in his
eighties, after all. Most of his contemporaries died long ago.” “His
contemporaries,” Imre repeated. “I wonder . ..” “Beg pardon,
Sire?” “His contemporaries
. . .” Imre said again. “If he was as old as you claim, he was probably alive
in my great-great-grandfather’s time. He may even have lived through the Coup.” “Do you see a
connection?” Ariella asked. “Probably not.
Still—” Imre cocked his
head to one side and then rose thoughtfully to begin pacing slowly back and
forth across the room. Ariella watched him curiously, a little possessively.
Coel wondered what Imre was driving at. “Alive at the time
of the Coup,” Imre murmured, thinking out loud. “And Thuryn and MacRorie have
stolen the birth records of his son and grandson. Coel, what does this suggest
to you?—the theft of the records, I mean.” “That they were
trying to establish a line of legitimate descent?” Coel ventured. “Correct.” Imre
nodded, picking up a stylus from the table and gesturing to make his point.
“But for whom? A family of woolen merchants? We’re missing something here.
There’s something we’re overlooking. But what?” “What about the
books, Imre?” Ariella said, after a long pause, obviously thinking in tandem
with her brother now. “Coel, did you not say that Thuryn had consulted certain
volumes in the royal archives?” “Yes, Highness.” “That’s right.”
Imre stopped his pacing. “Coel, what volumes were they? From what time?” Sensing the direction
Imre’s thoughts were taking, Coel consulted his notes, then looked up in
fascination. “From the time of the Coup, Sire.” “And why,” Imre
whispered to the room at large, “why would Thuryn be interested in such books,
when his accomplice has stolen records to prove the legitimate descent of a man
possibly living now, unless they hoped somehow to forge a link with the past?”
He whirled to point the stylus at Coel like a weapon. “What link were they
trying to form? Who was this mysterious Daniel Draper before he became a
merchant in woolen cloth?” “I—don’t know,”
Coel stammered, uncertainty hampering his speech. “But one can
guess,” Ariella stated, her voice edged with steel. “They plot against you,
Imre. They seek to establish a link with the past, with the old regime, perhaps
with the Haldane line itself! It would be fascinating to learn whether any
pages were removed from the volumes Thuryn used. And if there are, and they
deal with the old nobility—” She bared her teeth in a predatory smile. “Then I
think we have certain evidence of a MacRorie conspiracy.” Coel,
thunderstruck at the turn of logic she had taken, bowed deeply as his mind
raced to catch up with all the implications. If Ariella’s reasoning was sound,
then Cathan MacRorie undoubtedly had been involved in his brother’s
treachery, and Coel’s position was considerably reinforced. He allowed himself
a slight smile as he straightened from his bow. “I will
investigate the possibility, Your Highness. In the meantime, all of the
MacRories are under surveillance at Camber’s seat at Caerrorie, where they
gathered for Cathan’s funeral. Do you wish Thuryn and Joram MacRorie brought in
for interrogation?” Ariella nodded
briskly. “An excellent idea. Imre?” But Imre had moved
to stare stiffly out a window at the mention of Cathan’s name, his chestnut
hair silhouetted darkly against the snowfall, his hands clenched tightly at his
sides. Ariella, realizing that he had resumed his previous depression, started
toward him to try to comfort him, but he whirled before she could reach him,
and stood glaring both at her and at Coel. “Arrest them all,”
he said in a low voice. “Thuryn and Joram and
Camber, Sire?” Coel asked, with some surprise. “I said all, Coel,”
the king repeated, his eyes glowing with an almost hysterical light. “You were
right about Cathan.” He swallowed heavily. “And doubtless you are right about
the rest. I want all the MacRories in chains by nightfall, do you
understand? All of them! There is not one who can be trusted!” The royal warrant actually reached Caerrorie just
past suppertime, when all of Camber’s family had gathered in his study,
ostensibly for evening devotions. Guaire of Arliss
was dicing with the lieutenant and two of the other officers when the courier
arrived, and even as the man approached, he knew how the message must read. He
controlled the urge to glance over his shoulder at the doorway to the
newel-stair leading to Camber’s chambers, forced himself to maintain an
appropriate air of detached boredom as the lieutenant broke the seal and
scanned the missive. He had already decided what he must do, if it came to
this, so he was fully prepared for the lieutenant’s next words. “It’s a warrant
for the arrest of the entire household, to bring all the MacRories back to
Valoret for questioning,” he said, reaching down to gather his sword and
baldric from the rushes. “Sergeant, see to the security of the hall. You men,
come with me.” He gestured in
Guaire’s direction and slipped the baldric over his shoulder as he stood,
waiting while his men armed themselves. Then he picked up the order once more
and headed for Camber’s stair. If he noticed that Guaire had made certain to
get there before him, he gave no sign of it. Consequently, Guaire was the first
to reach the door. The others stood back a few paces, all but two of them
around the curve of the staircase, as Guaire, at the signal of the lieutenant,
rapped gloved knuckles against the heavy oak. “My Lord Earl?” For a moment, the
only sounds were those of the men’s breathing in the close stairwell, a few
furtive clinks of metal against stone, and then the door opened. Camber stood in
the doorway, his body blocking vision of the rest of the chamber. His eyes
flicked over Guaire seemingly without particular recognition, then came to rest
on the guard lieutenant two steps farther down the stairwell. Guaire knew that
the glance had been far from inconsequential. “May I assist you
in some way, Lieutenant?” His words were the
essence of courtesy, and the lieutenant cleared his throat uneasily before extending
the order he had just received. “I have a warrant
for your arrest, sir. You and your family, and especially your son Joram and
the Healer they call Rhys Thuryn. By order of His Grace, King Imre of Festil.” There was a
skipped heartbeat in which no one moved or breathed, and then Camber slowly
reached out and took the parchment. Behind Camber, Guaire thought he detected
the sound of furtive movement, but he could not be sure. The lieutenant, his
Deryni senses more keen than Guaire’s, evidently heard it, too, for he came up
another step and laid his hand on the hilt of his sword as Camber read the
missive. “There is no
provision for question, sir,” the lieutenant said, as Camber reached the bottom
of the sheet and took in the royal seal. “I must ask you to step outside now,
and to open the door. We don’t want to use force, but we will if we must.” “Yes, I’m certain
you would, Lieutenant,” Camber said, a little sadly, Guaire thought. He started to open
the door further, James appearing at his side and looking very grave, and for a
moment Guaire thought he meant to surrender, after all. Then he noticed that
James’s sword arm was hidden behind the door, and that there were fewer people
in the room behind Camber and James than there should have been. But before that
could register with the lieutenant, James was bursting past Camber and pushing
the lieutenant down into the arms of his waiting men, while Camber dashed back
into the room to bundle Father Joram and Lord Rhys into a corner of the room,
where they promptly disappeared—all three! Then Guaire and
James were holding the stair at swords’ length, keeping the lieutenant and his
men at bay in the narrow stairwell while flashes of light behind them told only
that something arcane was going on, which Guaire did not care to know anything
more about. He parried a sword
thrust and slashed at a wrist, to send a second adversary screaming down the
stairwell into the arms of his comrades with a nearly severed hand. James took
another by surprise and ran him through the thigh, pushing the wounded man back
so he only narrowly missed impalement on one of his own weapons. Guaire glanced
over his shoulder to see the Lady Evaine pop into existence in that same corner
of the room where Camber had just disappeared, and then he was fighting for his
life again, warding off a concerted rush from two of his former fellows who had
somehow managed to slip past James and his adversary and both attack at once.
When he had remedied that situation, and could hazard another glance behind
him, he was just in time to see Camber emerge from the corner of the room and
herd the Lady Elinor and her younger son into the space with Evaine. Then the
women and the child were gone, and Camber was the only one in the room; and he
was dashing toward them and shouting at Guaire to look out. A stabbing pain in
his side brought his attention back to the stairwell—too late to avoid the
lieutenant’s blade. He felt a searing wetness all down one side of his body as
the lieutenant withdrew apace, his blade crimsoned with blood Guaire knew was
his own. But then sweet
reprisal was upon the lieutenant in the form of Jamie’s sword. The man
staggered back with blood spurting from severed jugular and carotid, a scream
gurgling in his throat. The damage to Guaire was already done, but even as the
young lord started to crumple, he found himself being whisked into the strong
arms of Camber and borne toward that same corner of the room where such strange
things had been happening only seconds before. James slammed the
door and dashed to join them, but as the door gave under the fresh onslaught of
men from below stairs, Guaire’s world began fading to a blissful shade of gray.
Just before he lost consciousness, he had a sickening, swooping sensation, as
though he were falling, and a blast of pure, brilliant energy which nearly held
back the darkness. For just that instant, he could have sworn that Camber
glowed. chapter fourteenBlessed shall
they be that shall be in those days,/He bringeth back His anointed. —Psalms of Solomon
18:6 In another part of
the kingdom, darkness came early that night. The wind drove a new storm through
the mountain passes, turning the twilight to white-shrouded blankness as two
riders approached the fastness of Saint Foillan’s Abbey. They had met no
one on their ride that day. The road was little travelled once the Yuletide
season had begun, and there had already been more snow than was normal for this
time of year. Even without the impending storm, the way would have been
difficult. With the drifts growing higher by the hour, most men would have
deemed the journey impossible, and have waited until the spring. Joram and Rhys
were counting on that, reckoning, rightly, that even if Imre could have
discovered their intent by now, word of their flight could not have reached
Saint Foillan’s before them—and might not now until the spring thaws came. But this knowledge
did little to ease their minds about the immediate problem. Somehow, they must
enter the abbey confines undetected, find Prince Cinhil, and bring him out
without being apprehended. Though they had reviewed their plans and all their
combined knowledge of the place at least a dozen times in the past two days,
with a thoroughness possible only for Deryni, they still could not know in
advance what human agents might unwittingly shatter the best laid of their
plans. It had been dark
for several hours when they drew rein in the shadow of the abbey’s outer wall.
The moon had gone behind a heavy cloudbank, and would likely remain there for
some time. Rhys huddled
closer in his fur cloak—white, to help him blend into the snowbanks—then turned
in his saddle to pull the extra horse in beside him. All of the animals were
hooded and blanketed in white, both for protection against the elements and for
camouflage, and in the dimness he could hardly see Joram, sitting his horse not
four feet away. Joram swung down
and secured his horse to a stump of winter-blasted tree, then moved to lay a
hand on Rhys’s bridle. “Our timing is
good so far,” he whispered. “They dare not ring the abbey bells at this time of
year because of snowslides, but it must be close to Compline. Remember, no more
talking until we’re out. Sound carries.” And that was not
the only kind of communication they had agreed not to use, Rhys reflected,
as he dismounted and began taking another fur cloak and a pair of woolen
leggings from the spare horse’s saddle. Even their Deryni mind-speech must be
used sparingly, if at all. The Ordo Verbi Dei was not a Deryni order,
but there might be a few individual Deryni in it. And if one of them should be
in deep meditation and chance to catch a careless word . . . It was not likely,
but it was possible. And far too much was at stake to risk all on a chance
which could be avoided. He moved close
against the wall and watched as Joram drew out a coil of braided cord ending in
a leather-padded, three-pronged throwing hook. The priest spent several seconds
ordering the coil, arranging the loops to his satisfaction. Then he stepped
carefully out a few paces from the wall and looked up. Rhys glanced back the
way they had come and was relieved to note that he could not see the horses. The snow was
falling harder now, and the snow flakes caught and glittered in Joram’s furred
hood. After a studied appraisal of the wall, the priest swung the padded hook
on its cord and flung it up and over. There was a muffled clunk as it hit the
other side a few feet below the edge, and Immediately Joram darted back to the
shelter of the wall to freeze and listen, gradually raising his head only when
he was certain that the slight sound had aroused no alarm. Slowly, he began
pulling on the cord—then stifled an oath as the hook failed to catch, and came
tumbling back, nearly on his head. The process was
repeated three more times before the hook held. But then they were very quickly
up the wall and over. A narrow catwalk ran along the inner edge of the wall,
and snow-caked steps led to the ground a few paces to the left. Soon they were
safely on the ground and huddled in the shadows, between two outbuildings,
their escape cord firmly anchored to the edge of the wall and camouflaged in
the shadow of a seam in the stone. In the next twenty
minutes, the two worked their way through the south applegarth and over the
nearest footbridge, then past the lay brothers’ range, the cellarer’s yard, and
under the very windows of the darkened abbot’s hall; past the abbot’s yard and
across a final expanse of open court; and then they were crouching in the
darkness of the abbey’s outer porch, listening for any sound of activity
within. Through here lay
the safest route to their quarry—provided, of course, that Saint Foillan’s
followed the traditional monastic building plan. Along the nave and up the
night stair, they should reach the monks’ sleeping quarters and the tiny cell
where Rhys had last seen Cinhil. (The Healer did not even wish to consider what
would happen if they could not reach Cinhil through the abbey proper. If they
had to go through the abbot’s hall and cloister yard, the way Rhys and Camber had
gone to see Cinhil the first time—no, better not even to think of that for
now.) A sudden twinge of
panic seized Rhys, a fear that he was a child playing at a very dangerous man’s
game, but he forced the feeling down and concentrated upon removing his cloak,
on bundling it with Joram’s and the one for Cinhil in the darkest corner of the
porch. Then he was
hovering anxiously at Joram’s elbow as the other slid a slender dagger from his
boot top, knelt beside the entry door, and slipped the thin blade deftly
between door and jamb until the latch gave with a satisfying snick. Flashing a grim
smile, Joram sheathed the dagger and eased the door a crack, peering into the
dimness for a long time. Finally he whispered, “Clear,” and glanced at his
partner. The word was more
breathed than spoken, and as he edged the door open enough to slip through, he
motioned Rhys into the shadows to the right of the nave. A short pause, just
long enough to relatch the door, and he was kneeling behind a column with Rhys
to scan the long expanse of nave, straining to pierce the gloom which the few
candles only barely touched. They watched for a
long time, studying the arrangement of pillars and side chapels and occasional
funeral effigies along the clerestory aisle. A processional door was given
their fleeting attention, but then they cast wary eyes on the lay brothers’
stair, which disappeared into the darkness to their right. There was no need to
fear the door, for it was used only by day; but the stairway was an entirely
different matter. If some zealous lay brother, seeking extra devotions, should
slip down those stairs undetected before they could gain the relative safety of
the south transept, they would surely be discovered. They must penetrate beyond
the nave altar, with its revealing candles and exposed approach and its side
chapels potentially housing hostile monks. And once that was accomplished,
there still remained the other night stairs, which led to Cinhil’s cell. Best
not to think of that yet, either. Touching a finger
to his lips, Joram glided to the foot of the lay brothers’ stair and peered up
into the darkness, casting out with his Deryni senses for some indication of
movement above. But there was none, save the slight echo of snoring. This early
after Compline, most of the brethren should be getting what meager sleep the
Rule allowed such an order. From now until Matins, well after midnight, should
be the quietest time for the entire abbey. With an
inclination of his head, Joram gestured Rhys to follow, then began making his
silent way down the side aisle, staying close to the wall, taking advantage of
every possible shadow. The first of the side chapels lay ahead, flanking the
nave altar. The chapels on the
left were empty—they could see that already—their recesses dimly lit by
Presence lamps and the banks of vigil candles guarding the nave altar itself.
Behind the main altar, the brass interlace of the rood screen glowed darkly in
the candlelight, mostly in shadow. Beyond that stretched the rest of the nave,
with more side chapels, and the choir looming in the transept crossing. The
night stairs they were seeking lay in the south transept itself, hard against
the west wall. So far there was no sign of movement, but they could not count
on that until they had made certain. They reached the
side wall of the first chapel on the right, and Joram peered gingerly around
the corner and inside. Deserted. The process was
repeated with the second. Again, deserted.
Thus far, their luck was holding. They crossed the
second chapel, venturing as close to the rood screen as they dared, to peer up
the rest of the nave and scan the north chapels before venturing further into
the open for the breaching of the screen itself. But the remainder of the nave
appeared to be clear, and the darkened choir showed no sign of movement. If
anyone was stirring in the cloistered portion of the church, they could only
hope that whoever it was would stay safely in the apse, far beyond the transept
and the stairs which Rhys and Joram sought. Neither man wanted to have to
desecrate a church by harming anyone within its precincts—and both men knew,
though they had never voiced it, that they would kill, if necessary, to
ensure Cinhil’s safe removal from Saint Foillan’s. They crouched and
listened for several minutes, finally satisfying themselves that all was still.
Then Joram eased his way behind the altar to the rood screen and laid his hand
on the gate latch, cursing silently under his breath as the thing resisted and
he realized it was locked. He cast a tense look at Rhys, who was anxiously
scanning back the way they had come; then he knelt and laid his hands on the
locking mechanism and extended his senses around it. After a few seconds, which
only seemed interminable, the latch moved in Joram’s hands. But before
he could begin easing the gate open, wondering whether it would squeak, he
caught Rhys’s frantic hand signal out of the corner of his eye and flattened
himsell against the back of the altar. Now he, too, could
hear the slap-slap of sandal-clad feet moving up the nave. The man was
alone, for which Joram thanked Providence, but if he continued on his present
course he would soon be abreast of Rhys’s hiding place. Silently, Joram willed
the man to move into one of the first side chapels—he had to choose one
of the first side chapels, or Rhys would be discovered. He was never
precisely certain, later, whether he or Rhys had any influence over the choice
made by the hapless lay brother. But for whatever reason, the monk paused only
briefly to bow before the nave altar, then moved noisily into the first chapel
on the right, next to the one where Rhys was hiding. After several minutes, in
which there was no further sound from the chapel in question, Joram eased his
way to the left of the altar and peeped around the corner. He could not see
into the chapel where the monk must be—but that was good, because it meant that
the monk could not see him, either. Rhys had crept silently to the wall common
to the two chapels and was peering around the edge when Joram looked out. After
a moment, he withdrew and glanced at Joram, giving a slight nod of his head. If
the monk’s suspicions should be aroused now, at least Rhys could silence him
before he could give the alarm. With a deep breath
to steady his nerves, Joram moved back to the rood screen and turned the latch.
No sound came from the metal as he eased the gate back far enough to enter.
Thank God for the monks’ industry; the hinges were well oiled and silent. They
gained the relative shelter of the next side chapel without mishap, leaving the
rood-screen gate closed but not latched as they passed into the domain of the
cloistered monks. A sound from the
direction of the occupied chapel froze them in the shadows, and they watched
unmoving as the monk shuffled before the nave altar to bow again. They had
about decided that the man meant to pray there forever, when he bowed again and
moved into a chapel on the other side of the nave. Grateful for that, at least,
Joram and Rhys, turned their attention to the tasks ahead. They dared not worry
where the man might be when they had to come out again, or that next time there
might be more than one. They were within
the cloister precincts now, and doubly damned should they be caught. Creeping
past the great processional door—barred now—which led, by day, from cloister
garth to church, they found their way blocked by yet another brass grillework.
Joram had already dismissed it, and was moving on to try entrance through the
choir, when Rhys laid his hand on the gate and felt it move under his hand.
Sending the briefest and weakest of calls to Joram, he swung back the gate and
slipped through. Joram, startled, doubled back and followed him through the
gate to crouch silently at the foot of the night stairs. Rhys’s shoulder
pressed hard against his as they peered up the stairway into the darkness. “Now?” Rhys
mouthed silently. For answer, Joram
took a deep breath and nodded resolutely. Then they began making their cautious
way up the stairs. The door stood
open at the top, and another, narrower stair continued upward from the landing
beside the door. They listened for several minutes, but other than the sounds
of sleep, they heard only the creak of the building itself as the snow settled
on the leaded roof. Now they must find Cinhil and bring him safely out. There was a single
vigil light burning at the top of the stairs, but it cast only scant
illumination down the long dormitory. Straining to see in the dimness, Rhys led
Joram slowly past the first of the curtained sleeping cubicles, moving to the
right of the chests and shelves ranged down the center of the room. Cinhil’s
cell was the fifth from the end-—Rhys had marked it well on his last visit
here—and as he paused in the curtained entryway, Joram pulled two spare white
robes of the professed brothers from a stack just outside. Stealthily they
entered the cell, to stop with pounding hearts until Joram had conjured a tiny
sphere of handfire. By its light, Rhys moved toward the head of the narrow
pallet and leaned close enough to verify the sleeper’s identity. Then they were
pulling on the robes over their clothes, Joram nudging the handfire near while
Rhys bent to gaze at their sleeping quarry’s face. Gently, he sought to touch
Cinhil’s mind, hoping to ease the man from sleep to deep control without
awakening him. But the touch’ was
not gentle enough, or Cinhil’s sleep not so deep as they had thought. Cinhil’s
eyes popped open with a start; he was fully awake at once. And when he saw two
figures bending over him, illuminated by the ghostly glow of Joram’s handfire,
his immediate and natural impulse was to panic. Rhys had clamped
his hand against the monk’s mouth at the first sign of movement, so Cinhil
could make no outcry; but now the monk was trying to twist from under his hand,
legs kicking frantically underneath his thin blanket. Joram threw himself
across Cinhil’s body to hold him quiet, pinning arms and legs while Rhys tried
to force control, but the Healer could not seem to get through. It was as
though the shields which he had sensed before grew doubly strong under assault,
to keep Rhys from even touching the mind behind those shields. Clearly, they
would not take Cinhil this way. And if they did not subdue him in the next few
seconds, his struggling would awaken his brethren all around him. It was a time for
drastic measures. Without further
waste of motion, Rhys clamped his free hand across the Prince’s throat and
applied carotid pressure, not relenting even when CinhiPs body arched a final
time before going limp beneath his hands. There was resistance still, as Rhys
extended his senses, Cinhil’s shielding of memory and intellect remaining
intact; but his center of consciousness, at least, was taken. Securing control
as he had on his previous visit, Rhys straightened carefully and allowed
himself a scarce-breathed sigh of relief. Joram cast a nervous glance at the
curtained doorway as he picked himself up. There had been no
sound outside, no indication that their scuffle with Cinhil had awakened the
other monks. Nonetheless, they waited for several steamed minutes to make
certain. Finally, Rhys bent and pulled the unconscious Cinhil to his feet, got
a shoulder under his arm. He watched anxiously as Joram let the light vanish
and peered out the curtains. Miraculously, the dormitory still echoed only to
the sounds of snoring men. They slipped out
the way they had come, Cinhil between them, keeping close to the shelves and
chests until they reached the vigil light again. They had just stepped onto the
landing when Joram froze in a listening attitude, then motioned urgently for
Rhys to get their unconscious burden up the stairs toward the tower. As Rhys
struggled to obey, he could hear the sounds of sandal-clad feet approaching the
night stairs from below. There must have
been monks in the east end of the church all this time! Not daring to
breathe, they eased their way up the spiral staircase past the first bend, to
huddle motionless as the feet ascended the night stairs. They heard no
conversation, nor did they expect to, and at length the footsteps faded away
into the dormitory. They waited for several minutes, in case the monks just
returned had come to awaken replacements for some all-night vigil, but no
further sound came from above or below the night stairs. Finally, they gathered
the courage to bundle their senseless charge down the stairs and through the
transept gate, to shrink breathlessly against the closed processional door and
listen again for a long moment. The next half-hour
was later to be remembered only hazily by both of those conscious enough to
recall it at all. They were able to make their way back through the rood screen
without being detected, and actually gained the shelter of the last side
chapel. But their plans were nearly foiled by the approach of another lay
brother from the stairs at the west end of the nave. Joram heard him
long before he came into view, for the man coughed and wheezed asthmatically
all the way down the stairs. But there was nowhere to hide. Quickly, they
arranged the unconscious Cinhil on one of the prie-dieus, Rhys kneeling
to support him while Joram hid in the shadows at the back corner. But it was not
sufficient to fool the old brother who came shuffling down the nave. One look
at the pair kneeling in the side chapel was enough to convince him that
something was amiss. After all, the two wore the white robes of professed
monks, not the gray of the lay brethren. Not that there was anything wrong with
the monks using the lay brothers’ area of the church—especially in deep winter,
when there was not likely to be an outsider on the premises. But the lay
brother, being the friendly, talkative sort, was curious as to who the two
monks might be, kneeling in what he had come to think of as his chapel. And naturally, he
had to ask them. He had time only
to gaze in astonishment at the fierce, redheaded stranger who looked up from
beneath his cowled hood, and at Brother Benedictus, who appeared to be asleep.
Then there was another brother standing behind him and taking him by the
shoulders—a tall, golden man with piercing eyes which bored into his and made
his head spin. As he sank to his
knees, oblivious to all around him, his memory of the entire encounter
conveniently fled. He would awaken during Matins, when the rest of the brethren
joined him in the great nave, joints stiff and aching from the hours he had
spent kneeling in the cold church, unable to explain what urgent need he had
felt to spend his night in prayer.... By the time the
abbey was rousing for the Great Office of the Night, Joram and Rhys were lowering
their precious burden over the wall, wrapped once again in their white fur
cloaks, their quarry bundled into a similar cloak and bound hand and foot to
his horse for his long, unconscious ride. The snow fell more
heavily now, erasing all sign of their passage, and they rode with their backs
to the storm, Cinhil’s horse between them on a double lead. They would ride
thus until tomorrow night, with stops only as necessary, until they reached the
relative safety of Dhassa. There, if all went well, they would make their way
to the Portal held by the Bishop of Dhassa. By now, it was probably the only
Portal which was not barred to them, one way or another. They should be safe in
Camber’s haven by this time tomorrow night. But for now, there
remained only to ride, and to try to keep the cold a thing apart, that they
might eventually reach Dhassa alive and uncaptured. If the hue and cry had been
raised against them in the past three days since Cathan’s burial, as it well
might have, they would have to be doubly careful. Capture now would be certain
disaster for their new and fragile cause. chapter fifteenI have
forsaken mine house, I have left mine heritage. —Jeremiah
12:7 As it happened,
they were never in any real danger on the journey to Dhassa, for news travels
slowly across winter-bound Gwynedd. But Rhys and Joram learned a great deal
about their captive in the course of their ride. The first few
hours, and those most crucial to their escape, were accomplished under cover of
darkness and the gradually slackening storm—that and the snow-filtered
moonlight which slowly faded as gray dawn approached. The snow layered
everything with a drifting powder which muffled sound and concealed their
tracks; but it also concealed holes and buried branches—hazards to the horses,
who stamped and shied at every snap of snow-laden bough. Their unconscious
captive, bound hand and foot to his horse between his two abductors, had a less
than gentle ride. They had been
riding without speaking for some time, alternating between a trot and a brisk
walk, snatching what fitful naps they could, when Rhys first became aware that
he was being watched. He had been drifting on the edge of consciousness while
the horses walked, mentally rehearsing what they would do and say when they reached
the Dhassa gate the next evening. To discover the gray eyes observing him,
albeit somewhat dazedly, gave him a start in that first instant of realization. He flashed a
reassuring smile at the man, mentally chasing the cobwebs of sleep from his
mind, but the gesture brought no response other than the continued fogged
appraisal—and perhaps a glimmer of recognition. Raising an eyebrow
at that, Rhys glanced across at the still-dozing Joram, hunched down in the
saddle and swaying easily with the motion of his mount. Though he knew that
Joram needed the sleep—they had been largely without for nearly thirty-six
hours now—it was important that they establish communication immediately. He
suspected from Cinhil’s expression that the monk remembered who he was. “Joram, we have
company again,” he said in a low voice. Joram raised his
head immediately, to become instantly alert and awake as only Joram seemed to
be able to do, and their captive turned his head to blink at his other escort. “Why have you
brought me out of Saint Foillan’s?” he asked, without giving Joram time for
amenities. “Who are you?” The priest studied
the fur-hooded face for several seconds, apparently considering how best to
answer the question, then decided on the truth. “My name is Joram
MacRorie. I’m a Michaeline priest. As for why we have brought you out of Saint
Foillan’s, that should be abundantly clear, my lord—or should I say, Your
Highness?” The man recoiled
as though struck, an instant of terror darting across his eyes before he could
mask it, but both Joram and Rhys heard the scarcely whispered “No,” as Cinhil
lowered his head and tried to turn his face away. The two exchanged
glances, and then Joram gestured ahead to where a stand of pines afforded some
protection from the wind. It was time to rest the horses anyway, and better
they say what they must on solid ground, face to face, where there could be no
mistaking their intent. The horses blew
and snorted gratefully as their riders reined in beneath the snow-laden trees,
and Joram, with a sigh, hitched their captive’s lead over his saddle and jumped
to the ground. Moving around to Cinhil’s right, Joram released the thongs
binding the man’s foot to the off stirrup, then repeated the process on the
other side. Rhys, Cinhil’s other lead still in his hands, swung his right leg
over his horse’s neck and around the saddletree to ease cramped muscles. They
had already agreed that one of them would remain mounted whenever Cinhil was on
horseback, for they dared not risk an ill-considered escape. “Come down and
walk a bit, Sire,” Joram said, loosing Cinhil’s hands from the saddletree but
not from the thongs which bound them together. “You must be stiff. I apologize
for the rough treatment, but we feared you would not come with us of your own
free will.” Cinhil turned his
head away and shrank from the offered assistance. “Call me not Sire,” he
whispered. “I am sire to no man, nor ever like to be. You have mistaken me for
someone else. I am a simple, cloistered monk, having quarrel with no one.” Joram shook his
head slowly, understanding what the man was trying to do, but knowing that he
could not permit it. He cast a resigned glance at Rhys, and knew that the
Healer recognized it, too. “You are Nicholas
Gabriel Draper, known in religion as Brother Benedict,” Joram said. “Your
father was called Royston, and your grandfather Daniel. But both had other
names, my lord, and other names have you.” “No,” the monk
murmured. “No other names.” “Your father’s
other name was Alroy, an ancient royal name; your grandfather was known as
Aidan, Prince of Haldane, in the years before the Coup,” Joram continued
relentlessly. “And you—you are Cinhil Donal Ifor, Prince of Haldane and last of
your grandfather’s royal line. The time has come for you to claim your birthright,
Your Highness. The time has come for you to mount the Throne of Gwynedd.” “No,” the captive
choked. “Say it not. I will not hear you. Such names are past, and best
forgotten. I am only Benedict, a monk, a priest. I have no other birthright in
this world.” Joram glanced at
Rhys uneasily, trying not to show the distaste he was feeling for what he must
do. They had planned the strategy for miles, on the long ride toward Saint
Foillan’s, crafting arguments to cover every possible contingency. But they had
not reckoned on the gentleness of the man, or the childlike grief evoked by the
threat of an ending to the life he had known until now. Joram steeled himself
for the next words he must utter, but it was Cinhil himself who broke the
silence, raising his head to stare unseeing between his horse’s ears, not
deigning to look at them. “I pray you, take
me back to Saint Foillan’s.” “We may not, my
lord,” Joram said. “Then, send me.
You need not go yourselves. I will tell no one what you have done.” “We may not,
my lord,” Joram repeated. “Other lives than your own have been touched—and some
ended.” “Ended? You mean
that men have died on my account?” Joram nodded,
unwilling to meet the man’s eyes just then, and the monk shifted his stunned
gaze to the winter-bare forest beyond, as though reading a half-forgotten
vision which he had tried to put aside. “Where are you
taking me?” he finally asked. “Among friends.” “I have no friends
outside the walls of my abbey. Nor are they friends who would end my life.” “One life ends,
another begins, my lord,” Joram said, laying a hand on the horse’s bridle and
gazing up unwaveringly. “You were born to other than monastic cells and hours
of prayer, however comfortable you may have found that life in recent years. It
is only now that you begin to enter your true destiny.” “No! It is this
I was born for!” He struck his white-cloaked breast with his bound hands
and turned frantic eyes to Rhys in appeal. “You, my lord—the story told you by
my grandsire—it was a fantasy he wove. I am not what he would have you think. I
am not of the stuff from which princes are made.” “You are a
Haldane, my lord.” “No! The Haldanes
all are dead. I was a Draper before I took my vows—and my father before me. I
know no other names.” Joram sighed and
glanced at Rhys, then shrugged lightly. “I think it’s pointless to continue for
now, don’t you? He’s tired and frightened. Perhaps later—” “That will not
change the truth,” Cinhil interjected. “No, but the truth
may be different than you now perceive it, my lord. You have been away from the
world for many years. Why not reserve judgment until you have a chance to
become reacquainted?” “It is a world I
have renounced. You, who claim to be a priest, should understand that.” “All too well,”
Joram sighed. “However, it does not change my present intent. Come, if I have
your word you’ll not try to escape, I would be pleased to release your bonds.
You’ll feel better if you get down and walk a bit.” Cinhil stared at
Joram for a long moment, as though weighing what he had said, then lowered his
eyes. “I will not resist
you.” “Your word on it?” “My word,” the
captive whispered. With a nod, Joram
reached up and cut the thongs binding Cinhil’s wrists. But when he held out a
hand to assist the man from his horse, Cinhil pursed his lips and brushed the
hand aside, sliding down the other side, past Rhys, to stagger but a half-dozen
steps before sinking to his knees in the snow. As the man bowed
his head and fought dry sobs, Joram frowned and glanced at Rhys, then hitched
his cloak back on his shoulders and folded his arms resignedly. Both were
painfully aware that the rest of the ride to Dhassa was likely to seem even
longer than they had feared. And indeed, the
rest of the ride was accomplished, though without further incident, in nearly
total silence. They stopped once at midday to change mounts at a small
hostelry, Rhys guarding the prince while Joram negotiated for the horses’
exchange. But Cinhil volunteered not one word of further conversation or
resistance in all that time. By that evening,
they were within an hour’s ride of their destination. A small, swiftly-running
stream wound alongside the road they travelled, crusted with snow along the
edges but not yet iced over for the winter. Men and horses were showing the
effects of the journey. Rhys was especially concerned about Cinhil, for the
prince was totally unaccustomed to the rigors of riding. He had nearly cried
out from the pain of aching muscles when they dismounted at their last rest
stop a few hours before, only pride maintaining the silence he had imposed upon
himself. It had taken both of them to assist him, half fainting, back into the
saddle when they were ready to ride on. Cinhil had been
looking more and more pale for the past half-hour, and Rhys knew that they
would have to rest soon or risk having Cinhil pass out. There was also the very
real uncertainty as to what Cinhil might do when they entered the city and
tried to make their way to the bishop’s palace. If he should resist, if his
seeming compliance all day was but preparation for a public denunciation— Rhys
preferred not even to think about that possibility. Nor had Rhys been
able to probe their royal captive’s mind during the long, silent hours of
riding. It was as though a sleek, rigid wall had been erected— one which Rhys
felt certain he could eventually broach, given time and rest and the proper
preparations, but one which he dared not even attempt without making Cinhil
more alert than he already was to the potential power of the Deryni men who
held him captive. No, some more
insidious method would have to be used on Cinhil—at least until they were
safely among allies, where his protests would do no good. What Rhys had in mind
for now would also help to numb the pain of tortured leg and thigh muscles
until more thorough and lasting methods could be applied. As though sensing
Rhys’s growing disquiet, if not the exact reasons or solution for it, Joram
stood in his stirrups to stretch and yawn, then gestured toward the side of the
road where the configuration of the stream bank allowed an approach to the
swiftly running water. Dismounting, he moved to Cinhil’s side to assist him
from his horse, then supported the limping prince to a seat on a rock sheltered
from the wind. Rhys, in a more leisurely manner, got down and led the three
horses to the stream to drink, then took an empty water flask from his saddle
and knelt by the water, hiding the flask with his body as he filled it from the
icy stream. Joram was helping
to massage the knots from Cinhil’s legs when Rhys returned. The prince, when he
had drunk deeply from Rhys’s flask, passed it to Joram without thinking. Before
the priest could drink in turn, Rhys reached across and took the flask with a
slight shake of his head, pouring the rest of the contents into the snow. “You’ve drugged
him.” Joram’s words were a simple statement of fact, only a little surprised. Rhys nodded as
Cinhil turned his head to stare. “The water?”
Cinhil whispered. “It was necessary.
A sleeping potion to calm you, to ease your discomfort until we can rest
properly.” “And to guard
against my betrayal, as well,” Cinhil said, a strained smile playing across his
lips. A muffled sob escaped him and he bowed his head, closing his eyes
briefly. When he looked up again, he would not meet their eyes. “What—what will
happen to me?” “From the drug?”
Rhys looked across at him steadily. “You will become very sleepy. Your
perception will be blurred. You will probably drift in and out of
consciousness. It will be better this way, believe me.” “Better for whom?”
Cinhil whispered. “Did you really fear I would betray you? I gave my word. It”
—he gestured toward the flask—”it was not necessary.” At that, Joram
stood abruptly and strode back to the horses, to kneel at the edge of the
stream, his back to Cinhil. Rhys followed, keeping a wistful eye on Cinhil, to
hunch down beside the priest. He could tell that Joram was annoyed. “Was it
necessary?” Joram asked, leaning down to scoop water from the stream and drink.
“I thought it was.
Joram, I’ve been trying to read him for hours, hoping something would slip.
Nothing. He’s like a blank wall. He has some kind of natural shield when he’s
under pressure, which I couldn’t penetrate—at least not without letting him
know what I was trying to do. I think that’s why we had trouble controlling him
last night. I didn’t think we could afford to take chances with him in Dhassa,
especially with both of us as tired as we are.” “No, I suppose
not.” Joram dried his hands on his cloak, then half turned toward Rhys. “He
really has that kind of natural defense, eh? Do you think you’ll be able to get
through to him later?” Rhys shrugged,
permitting himself a slight, nervous smile. “There are ways to overcome
anyone’s resistance eventually, especially if one is a Healer. Besides, I’ll
have Camber working with me, once we reach the haven. It’s a bit of a
challenge, but I think we’ll be able to handle it between us.” With a raise of
his eyebrow, Joram stood and stretched, then glanced toward the resting Cinhil.
“Did you tell him the truth about the effects of the drug?” “Yes. We should
have ample time to get him through the Portal before it wears off. And he will
sleep, if we let him.” “Hmm. Won’t he
attract attention, if he’s in a stupor?” “Not as much as he
would if he made a scene,” Rhys replied. He put the flask back on his saddle.
“If there should be any question, he’s ill and we’re taking him to the Bishop’s
Healer. That seemed like a simple enough ruse to me.” “Aye.” With a
resigned sigh, Joram shook his head and gave a smile. “I must be more tired
than I thought. I must say, though, you’ve certainly caught on to the ways of
conspiracy with the proper enthusiasm. And this is a man who never played the
treason game before.” “I wish you
wouldn’t use that word.” “What, ‘treason’?” With a chuckle,
Joram clapped Rhys on the shoulder and gestured toward their nodding prince.
Now they must get Cinhil back on his horse and ride. On the next hour rested
the fate of a kingdom. Fortunately for
the three who rode toward Dhassa at that hour, the wheels of feudal bureaucracy
were grinding with their accustomed slowness, with the result that only now was
the Abbot of Saint Foillan’s putting the pieces together properly to explain
the absence of a man known as Brother Benedictus. As Rhys and Joram
had suspected, Brother Benedict’s absence was not first noted until after
Matins, when it was remarked by the precentor that he had not seen Brother
Benedict in choir during that Divine Office. But the precentor was a busy man,
with many duties to perform, and it was not until several hours later, when
Bother Benedict did not appear at Lauds or Prime, that he became truly
concerned. Fearing that
Brother Benedict might have taken ill, the precentor checked with the
infirmarian; but Brother Reynard had not seen the missing monk for several
days. A thorough search of the rest of the abbey precincts after Terce likewise
revealed no trace of the missing monk. To be sure, his bed had been slept in,
but no one remembered seeing him after Compline the night before. A pair of lay
brethren went out on horseback to scout the road as far as a man might have
strayed on foot—just in case Brother Benedict had, indeed, taken ill and
wandered off in delirium. But the storm had done its work well. If Brother
Benedict had managed to wander off and die, they would not know for sure until
spring. Sadly, but with the resignation necessitated by the situation, the
abbot had a Mass sung for Brother Benedict the next morning, and life went on
in the abbey as usual. So the matter
might have remained indefinitely, had not the abby’s vestiarian, Brother
Leviticus, chosen the next afternoon to begin his winter inventory of the
abbey’s clothing supply. Checking the shelves near the cell of the missing
Brother Benedict, Brother Leviticus was astonished to discover that two robes
could not be accounted for. Careful inquiry among the brethren who shared the
area revealed that the robes had almost certainly been there two days before,
but no one could explain their absence now. Puzzled, the
vestiarian reported the matter to the subprior, who told the prior, who
eventually told the abbot himself, that evening after dinner. The abbot started
to shrug it off, but his mind had been lingering all day on the disappearance
of his friend, Benedict. Abruptly, the pieces began to fall together. “Brother Patrick,
how many robes did Brother Leviticus say were missing?” “Why, two, Father
Abbot.” The abbot picked
up a quill pen and twirled it between bony fingers. “Tell me, do you remember
the two men who came to see Brother Benedict a few weeks ago?” “The Healer and
the monk?” The young man blinked. “I remember the visit, of course, Father. And
the monk was in the service of the archbishop, but—” “Aye, I remember
that,” the abbot snapped. “He was a Gabrilite brother—or claimed to be!” As the prior
watched owlishly, not daring to say a word, the abbot pushed back his chair and
extracted a calendar roll from a shelf behind his desk. Not finding what he
sought among its notations, he tossed it back on the shelf in annoyance and
drummed his fingers on the desk. “Please ask the
infirmarian to attend us at once, Brother Patrick. Also Brother Paul and
Brother Phineas and Brother Jubal.” “At once, Father
Abbot.” The prior blinked myopically and backed out the door. For the next ten
minutes, the abbot sat and chewed at a hangnail, suspicion growing in his mind
that his theory would prove correct. The two men had come on the same day that
Benedict had fainted and had been speaking with him when it happened. Something
about an important message from Brother Benedict’s dead grandfather. He himself
had been standing in the background, listening. And the one had
been a Healer—what was his name? Lord Re—Ro—Rhys— Yes, that was it. And when
Benedict had not responded to the ministrations of the infirmarian, they had
asked this Rhys person to take a look at him, had even permitted the man to
enter the cloistered area. Why, he and the monk with him had been permitted
to attend Benedict in his very cell! Stifling an unholy
but entirely provoked oath, the abbot sat bolt upright and crumpled the letter
he had just finished writing to his vicar general in Valoret. He tossed it into
the fire with an angry gesture. Benedict had not
become delirious with some new illness and wandered out of the abbey to die in
the snow. Indeed, he probably had not been ill at all, either two nights ago or
a few weeks earlier! He had been kidnapped from right within the abbey walls—
from the cloistered area itself!—and spirited away by those two— His anger was
interrupted by a timid knock on the door, and he forced himself to submerge his
anger and assume the proper paternal mien. “Come.” Brother Patrick
peered in apprehensively before entering, followed by Brothers Jubal, Paul,
Phineas, and Reynald. The abbot stood as each came forward to bow and kiss his
ring, then waited until Brother Patrick had closed the door before sitting down
again. The monks stood silently, hands folded and hidden ia their voluminous
sleeves, as the abbot dipped his quill to ink and drew a fresh piece of
parchment in front of him. “Brother Reynald,
do you recall the date of Brother Benedict’s last illness?—the day he fainted
whilst speaking with the two visitors.” Brother Reynald
studied his sandalled toes for a moment, then looked up. “That would have been
about the Feast of Saint Margetan, Father Abbot. No, it was the day after,
Saint Edmund’s Eve.” “Which one,
Brother Reynald?” “Saint Edmund’s
Eve, the”—he consulted his calendar
again—”the fourteenth of
November.” He jotted down the date,
then looked up at Brother Jubal. “Brother Jubal,
you were gate warder that week, I believe.” “Yes, Father
Abbot.” “Can you recall
the names of the two visitors? There was a Healer and an older man, a monk.” After considering
the question for a moment, the monk raised an eyebrow. “I believe the monk’s
name was Brother Kyriell, Father Abbot. From the Order of Saint Gabriel.” “Ah, yes. Brother
Kyriell,” the abbot repeated. “Did he give any other name?” “No, only his
order,” Brother Phineas volunteered. “And that he was in the service of
Archbishop Anscom, of course, Father Abbot.” The abbot chewed
on the tip of his quill for a moment, then shook his head. He could associate
nothing more with the name, though he had the feeling he should be able to. But
even the one name ought to enable the vicar general to do something—if the monk
called Brother Kyriell really was in the service ;i of the
archbishop, of course. He wrote the name
down, tracing each letter carefully, then scanned the brethren once more. “Now, the name of
the Healer—Lord Rhys Something.” “Moorin, or
Toorin, or something like that?” Brother Jubal interjected. “I think it was
Thoorin, Brother Jubal,” Brother Reynard murmured, craning his neck a little as
the abbot started to write it down. “I’m not sure about the spelling, but that
was the sound of it. Thoor-in. He was a Healer, all right. I had a
toothache that day, and he—” He broke off as
the abbot looked up at him sharply, then bowed his head self-consciously. After
a long moment, the abbot bent his head to write again. The pen scratched
briefly on the parchment, and then he dismissed all of them with a wave of his
hand. As the doors closed behind them, he took out a fresh piece of parchment
and began a new letter to his superior, this time making all his letters clear
and round. “Most Reverend
and Excellent Father General,” the letter began. “I regret to report the
abduction from Saint Foillan’s of one of our brethren in Christ, Brother
Benedictus, two nights past. The wise of his taking is described as
follows....” “ ‘And so,’“ the
vicar general read to his superior, the Archbishop of Valoret, five days later,
“ ‘it appears likely that Brother Benedict was taken by the said Brother
Kyriell and Lord Rhys Thuryn in the manner I have described, though for what
reason I cannot discern. I am forwarding copies of all our records
pertaining to Brother Benedict, in the hopes that Your Reverence will be able
to make some connection which I have missed, and beg to remain Your Reverence’s
good and faithful servant, et cetera, et cetera.’“ The vicar general
lowered the letter and glanced up at his superior with something of a perplexed
expression on his face. The archbishop, who had been sipping at an earthen
goblet of goat’s milk, drained the glass with a final swallow and made a face,
then held out a gnarled hand for the missive. As he sat back to read, the vicar
general helped himself to another slice of cheese. It was
mid-morning, and the archbishop’s custom was to break his fast with his
subordinates while reviewing the day’s correspondence. Of course, Robert Oriss,
Vicar General of the Order of Saint Jarlath, hardly qualified as a mere
subordinate. Born within a week of the archbishop, he and Anscom of Trevas had
been reared a scant ten miles apart, and had first met at the tender age of
ten, when both boys were enrolled in the famous monastery school at Saint
Neot’s. Though Anscom was Deryni and Robert was not, this had not diminished
the friendship which had sprung up between them. In fact, when Robert was
resident in Valoret and not out inspecting the abbeys and monasteries under his
care, it was his custom to meet with the archbishop at least once a week.
Anscom was one of those rare men who did not forget his old friends simply
because he had risen above them; and Robert, though he did not always
understand everything his Deryni colleague did, greatly valued their continuing
interaction. But the good vicar
general had already made his visit for this week, two days before. It was the
receipt of the letter now in the archbishop’s hand which had prompted his
urgent message last night, and that same letter which accounted for Robert’s
presence here this morning. The vicar general poured more goat’s milk for the
archbishop—Anscom hated it, but drank it to soothe a delicate digestion—then
nibbled at a piece of bread until the archbishop looked up. Anscom’s seamed
face was puzzled and a little sad. “What is so
special about this particular monk, Robert? Why would anyone want to abduct
him?” The vicar general
shook his head. “I am at a loss to explain it, Your Grace. I’ve gone over his
records: He’s a poor draper’s son, an orphan. He has taken a vow of
poverty ... I simply don’t know.” “And this abbot of
yours, this Zephram of Lorda— is he trustworthy?” The vicar general
started to protest—for he believed all of his subordinates to be trustworthy—
then spread his palms in a yea-nay gesture. “I have received no unfavorable
reports of him, so I must assume ...” The archbishop
grunted, and dropped the letter on the table, staring past the vicar general
for several seconds. “Did you know that
Cathan MacRorie died last week?” “The king’s
advisor?” “The son of Earl
Camber of Culdi,” the archbishop amended. “And Camber’s daughter Evaine is
betrothed to Rhys Thuryn.” “Rhys Th—” The
vicar general broke off and flicked a glance at the letter on the table. “The
same Rhys Thuryn?” “The same.” The vicar general let out a long sigh and sat back
in his chair, all thought of breakfast forgotten. When his superior did not
volunteer further comments, the vicar general pursed his lips and gazed
thoughtfully across the table. “Your Grace,
you’re not implying that Earl Camber had something to do with Brother
Benedict’s abduction, are you?” The archbishop
looked up with a start, an instant of pain darting across his usually
inscrutable face. “Are you mad?” he whispered softly. “I know Camber. He
and I studied for the priesthood together at Grecotha, before his brothers died
and made him his father’s heir. I married him to his wife, baptized all his
children, ordained his son Joram, married Cathan and Elinor— Besides, what
possible reason could he have?” “I don’t know,
Your Grace. By your comment, I thought you might.” He sighed. “This Rhys
Thuryn— I’ve never heard of him. Is he active at Court? You seem to know him.” “I know of him,”
the archbishop replied. “He is very young for a Healer, but has an excellent
reputation. He is also very close to Camber’s younger son, Joram, who is a
Michaeline— Hmm, I wonder.” “You think that
this Joram may have been the monk?” “I don’t know,”
the archbishop replied, though his tone sounded doubtful. “On the other hand,
Joram is a Michaeline, and they have long been agitators.” “Agitators, yes,”
Robert Oriss snorted. “But, against a fellow priest? I see no political issue
in a man like Brother Benedict.” “Nor do I,” the
archbishop sighed. “But there is a political issue” surrounding the
MacRories. You’ve heard the rumors about Cathan MacRorie’s death, haven’t you?” Robert had not. “Well, there is
now some talk that young Cathan did not simply die—that he was killed, some say
by the king’s own hand. If true, it could explain Imre’s erratic behavior at
his Yule Court feast. And it certainly gives Joram, or Camber, or Rhys a motive
for political retaliation of some kind.” He frowned. “But not against a
cloistered monk. I’ll confess, I haven’t any answers, Robert. Have you?” The vicar general
had none. After another
silent period, the archbishop stood and slowly walked to the window, laying his
hands wearily along the wide casement edging. Outside, the snow was falling. “Leave us, please,
Robert,” the archbishop finally said in a low voice. The vicar general,
noting the lapse into the formal “we,” stood at once and bowed, backing
silently out the door and closing it behind him. The archbishop, when he had
gone, returned to his chair and sat down, touched the discarded letter briefly,
folded his arms on the table, and lowered his head to pray. Though he had not
indicated so to Robert Oriss, Archbishop Anscom knew who had accompanied Rhys
Thuryn to Saint Foillan’s, and was now implicated in an abduction. He and the
“monk” had studied for the priesthood together at Grecotha and had shared a
thousand moments of the joys and sorrows of the world. For “Brother
Kyriell” was the name which had been used in religion by Camber of Culdi. chapter sixteenThere is one
alone, and there is not a second; yea, he hath neither child nor brother; yet
is there no end to all his labour;
neither is his eye satisfied with riches. —Ecclesiastes
4:8 Whatever Anscom’s
personal feelings about the MacRories, and about Camber MacRorie in particular,
the good archbishop was also a servant of the Crown; and duty dictated that,
even though the abduction of a monk was an ecclesiastical matter, it must be
reported to the king. Anscom did delete
the physical description of Brother Kyriell; let Imre figure out who the
mysterious monk was. In the meantime, perhaps Anscom could contact Camber and
find out what was going on. For Camber to reassume his old religious name as a
subterfuge was very much out of character for the Camber Anscom knew. Perhaps
Camber was trying to tell him something; or perhaps there was another Brother
Kyriell, and it was all coincidence—though Anscom tended to mistrust coincidence.
Whatever the explanation, Anscom wanted to know. Accordingly, the
archbishop’s missive went through regular channels; no sense in giving the king
a head start, if Camber was involved. And so, in due
course, it was delivered, not to the king but to Earl Santare, named but the
week before to head the investigation of the apparent MacRorie conspiracy. Coel
Howell had made it his practice in the past week to shadow Santare and be as
helpful as possible, even to the extent of sharing with Santare some of the intelligence
he had gathered on his own; and thus he was also present when the missive
arrived. But even before they received the new information, their combined
resources had already turned up some interesting coincidences—or were they
coincidences? They had known for
some time, for example, that Daniel Draper, one of the men named in the
documents stolen by Joram, had died of natural causes but a scant two months
ago—and that he had been attended on his deathbed by none other than Lord Rhys
Thuryn. But further
inquiry, in Thuryn’s household and surrounds, had revealed that the same Rhys
Thuryn, on the evening after the old man’s death, had taken horse and ridden
out of the city. Though his servants insisted that he had but gone to Caerrorie
for Michaelmas, the brethren of Saint Liam’s Monastery School— where Father
Joram MacRorie was currently assigned —claimed that Thuryn and Father Joram had
ridden off in great haste the same day, and in driving rain, in the direction
of Saint Jarlath’s Monastery. Curious. And as if that
were not enough, the monks of Saint Jarlath’s told how the two had inveigled
permission, in the dead of night, to consult the abbey’s induction records. The
crowning touch to the entire piece of work was the statement of one Gregory of
Arden, Abbot of Saint Jarlath’s, who remembered the two saying that they were
looking for a Brother Benedict whose grandfather had died recently in Valoret.
Coel’s scribes were compiling a list of Brothers Benedict in the order even
now. It was just possible that they were on the verge of locating the missing
Nicholas Draper. Coel and Santare
were together with a couple of Santare’s aides when the archbishop’s messenger
arrived, and it fell to Coel to receive the letter and break the seal. His feet
propped comfortably on the edge of the raised hearth, a tankard of ale at his
elbow, Coel read impassively until he had come almost to the end, the silence
broken only by the crackle of the fire. Then he started and sat up abruptly,
swinging his feet under him in astonishment. “S’blood! Would
you look at this?” He shoved the parchment under the earl’s nose. “You wanted
to know what Joram MacRorie and Thuryn were doing? Well, I can tell you about
Thuryn. And I’ll bet that this Brother Kyriell was MacRorie! What do you want
to bet that this Brother Benedict and our Nicholas Draper are one and the same
person?” Santare pulled the
missive before him and scanned it briefly. When he had finished, he leaned back
in his chair and hooked thumbs in his ample belt, nodding slowly. “No wonder we
couldn’t find Draper. He’s been holed up in a monastery all these years. They
must’ve traced him through the records at Saint Jarlath’s, the same way we were
trying to trace Benedict. And yet...” The earl got to
his feet and began pacing, his boots stirring the rushes beneath them. Coel
watched him, hawk-like, scarcely able to contain his impatience. “You know, that’s
odd,” Santare continued, after several circuits of the room. “According to the
archbishop’s report, they went to Saint Foillan’s for the first time a good
month ago, but they didn’t do anything. It’s as though they weren’t sure he was
the right one. The question is, the right one what? Why all this
interest in a simple monk from a family of merchants?” One of the aides
cleared his throat hesitantly. “There—ah—have been the rumors of the
Haldane, m’lord. You’ve seen the handbills that are starting to appear.” “Willimite
speculation and wishful thinking!” Coel snapped. “That may be what they’re
trying to imply, but it simply won’t work.” “But, Thuryn did
steal the painting of Ifor Haldane, sir,” the second aide
volunteered. “He must have had a reason.” “It’s a fraud. It
has to be!” Coel insisted. “No Haldane survived the Coup. Everyone knows
that.” “But if one had,
wouldn’t this be a bloody good time for him to turn up?” Santare said,
motioning the aides to leave them. Coel sat back and
planted a booted foot on the edge of the hearth in disgust as the door closed
behind the aides. “Yes, it would,” he agreed grudgingly. “But, it doesn’t make
sense. This whole thing doesn’t make sense. What is a Haldane to the MacRories?
They’re Deryni, the same as you and I. Certainly, Camber has no reason to love
the king, especially after the way Cathan died; but, damn it, they’re all Deryni!
He can’t seriously mean to replace Imre with a human king of the old line—or
worse, one who only says he’s of the old line. Where’s their proof? And
where is Camber?” “I don’t know,”
Santare shrugged. “We’ve questioned the servants and peasants at Caerrorie, of
course—” “And learned
nothing! Santare, I find it difficult to believe that skilled inquisitors were
unable to extract even one jot of information about Camber’s plans or
motivations. If it were up to me—” “If it were up to
you, I have no doubt that half of Camber’s servants would now be swinging at
the ends of ropes, the way those peasants ended up in October —for not
divulging information which they did not have,” Santare said pointedly. “Don’t
you think that a Deryni as powerful as Camber could manage to keep his plans
secure from a few human servants, if he wanted to—and be certain that no one
could get that information out of them?” “But, he’s got to
be somewhere!” Further argument
was curtailed by the explosive entrance of a very out-of-breath young squire in
Imre’s personal colors. A look of relief crossed the lad’s face as he swept off
his cap and bowed. “My lords, the King’s Grace commands your presence
in his chambers at once. He—” The boy paused to gulp another breath. “He is
most distraught, my lords. It would do well not to tarry.” As one, Coel and
Santare bolted for the door. “Miserable,
ungrateful, misbegotten whoresons!” Imre was screaming, as Coel and Santare
were admitted to his chamber. “Lying, deceitful— Coel! Do you know what they’ve
done? Can you conceive—” “What who has
done, Your Grace?” Coel interjected, bowing cautiously. “The Michaelines!
Filthy, two-faced, double-crossing, treacherous—” “Sire! What have
they done?” Imre glared at
him, wild-eyed, then flung his hands into the air and flounced into a chair.
“They’ve disappeared—every last treasonous one of them! They took their
treasury, their altar
plate—everything! They’re just—gone!” “Gone...” Santare
breathed. His reaction was
lost on Imre, who lurched to his feet and immediately launched into a new
stream of invective, proclaiming fluent and obscene descriptions of the base
birth and gross physical habits of the order in question. Santare, awed and
more than a little apprehensive, tried to discern a motive, forcing himself to
begin planning for the safety of the realm. Such action by an
order as wealthy and powerful as the Michaelines, coupled with the evidence of
a MacRorie conspiracy, pointed to only one thing: there was a plot brewing to
attempt the overthrow of Imre and replace him with an alleged Haldane heir. And
if the Michaelines were involved, then they must be well convinced that this
heir was a true Haldane, and that they looked for at least a reasonable chance
of success in their endeavor. Even now, the Michaeline knights must be
gathering somewhere, preparing to make their move. By removing their
noncombatant members to places of safety, they had rendered themselves
invulnerable to reprisal. Why, the Michaelines could be anywhere! Coel, too, was not
blind to the ramifications of the Michaeline disappearance, though his
thoughts, as the king raged on, were of a more personal and immediately
sobering bent. He had thought himself so clever. Why, he had not been clever at
all! All of his planning, his merciless engineering of Cathan’s apparent
betrayal, the assassination of Maldred, Cathan’s own murder—all of these had
been unwittingly aiding a real conspiracy. He had seen himself as architect of
a new power base in Gwynedd, not dreaming of the real enormity of the greater plan.
He was but a pawn in a game whose magnitude he was only now beginning to
comprehend. And now he could envision himself being swept along in that game,
impelled by forces which he, himself, had helped to focus. Would he eventually
be a sacrifice for his own king? “I’ll show them!”
Imre was shouting, as Coel’s attention snapped back to the immediate crisis.
“They’ll be sorry they dared to defy me!” Still cursing
under his breath, Imre flung himself into the chair behind his writing desk and
began scribbling furiously, muttering all the while as Coel and Santare
exchanged stunned glances. At length, the king sanded the ink, sealed the foot
of the page with his personal signet, and stood, flourishing it under Santare’s
nose with a malicious smirk contorting his face. “You will see to
the execution of these commands immediately, Santare.” “Sire?” “Go ahead, take
it!” Imre said, shaking the page impatiently. “The Michaelines dare to oppose
me? They think to replace me with another king? Well, we’ll see! The present
king intends to make things very uncomfortable. See to it!” he barked. Santare bowed his
head, not daring to look at the page he now held in his hand. “Aye, My Liege.” “And if, in the
process, you should happen to run any stray Michaelines to ground,” Imre added,
“I want them brought to me immediately.
Do you understand? Regardless of the hour. I want to question each one of them
personally, before he’s executed as a traitor!” “Yes, Sire.” “Then get out!
Both of you!” Outside, Santare
exhaled in relief—the first real breathing he had allowed himself since
entering the king’s presence—then unrolled the parchment, turning away
pointedly when Coel made as though to read over his shoulder. The earl scanned
the document slowly, meticulously, as Coel fidgeted in impatience; then he
handed it over, as Coel had known he would. Imre, by the
Grace of God, etc., to all leal subjects of Our Realm, greeting. Know that We
have this day been most grievously and treacherously betrayed by members of the
Order of Saint Michael, which Order We do dissolve, disband, and abolish. We
declare its former brethren outlaw, its goods and lands forfeit to the Crown.
We include in this ban all those bearing the name MacRorie: especially Camber,
the former Earl of Culdi; Joram MacRorie, a priest of the Michaeline Order; and
the Healer known as Rhys Thuryn. To Our
well-beloved Santare, Earl of Grand-Tellie, we give command to proceed to the
Michaeline Commanderie at Cheltham with a royal force and take into custody all
persons residing there. The establishment shall be sacked and burned, its
buildings levelled, its lands sown with salt, this to be accomplished no later
than the Feast of Saint Olympias, one week hence. An additional Michaeline
establishment shall be dealt with in this manner each week, until the Vicar
General of the Order shall present himself before Us on bended knee and
surrender both his Order and all members of Clan MacRorie, severally and
collectively. Reward is offered for the capture of any and all... There was more,
but even Coel had no stomach for it. “Per
intercessionem beati Michaelis Archangeli, stantis a dextris altari incensi..
.” The words of the
liturgy floated fervent and a little desperate on the incense-laden air, barely
audible in the listening gallery where Camber MacRorie waited. The celebrant
was Cinhil Haldane, thurible in hand, a deacon following behind to lift the
edge of his chasuble as he circled and censed the altar. Camber observed in
silence as priest-prince and monk completed their circuit and incensed one
another again, watching as the deacon put the incense aside and then poured
water over Cinhil’s fingertips into a small earthen bowl. “Lavabo inter
innocentes manus meets .. .” He had not talked
with Cinhil yet today—in fact had not seen the prince since the previous
afternoon, just prior to his last discussion with Alister Cullen. But he had
not been heartened by their progress to date. Though Cinhil had been with them
for nearly two weeks now, they still had not been able to win him to their
cause. Physically, Cinhil
was docile enough. He went where he was told and did as he was bidden. He read
the writings they brought him, answered dutifully when questioned on what he
had read—even, on occasion, showed sparks of genuine insight into the problems
of this land he was but now coming to know about. But he volunteered no word or
action and did his best, to show no sign of interest or caring about the
position for which he was being groomed at such great cost. It was not
resistance as such. That they could have coped with, with force, if necessary.
It was an almost studied apathy; an immersion, to the exclusion of nearly all
outside influence, in the world he had chosen as a very young man over twenty
years before. He tolerated his present situation because he must; but he would
allow no inkling of human feeling for his denied birthright to intrude upon his
conscience and the world in which he had lived for the past score of years. So
long as they permitted him to celebrate Mass daily, he was reluctantly
compliant. Except that this
morning, for the first time since his arrival, he was showing signs of human
apprehension, almost despair. Camber suspected he knew the reason why. Footsteps warned
of the approach of another in the passageway behind him, and then Alister
Cullen was slipping into the gallery to join him. Nodding greeting, Camber
stepped aside to let the Michaeline general peer down into the chapel. Cullen’s
demeanor betrayed nothing. “Orate
fratres,” Cinhil prayed, his arms spread in desperate supplication, “ut
meum ac vestrum sacri-ficium acceptabile fiat apud Deum Patrem omnipote-tem.” Camber glanced at
Cullen carefully. “I assume you’ve told him?” Cullen sighed and
nodded once, wearily, then gestured with his chin that they should go outside.
By the brighter torchlight in the outer corridor, Camber could read the concern
which had not been evident in the dim listening gallery. He suspected that
Cullen was suffering from more than lack of sleep. “I spoke with him
last night for a long time,” Cullen said. “I surmised as
much. And?” Cullen shook his
head in frustration. “I really don’t know. I think I’ve finally convinced him
that he really will have to give up his priesthood, but he’s scared witless.” “So was I ...”
Camber mused, almost without thinking. Then, realizing that Cullen might not
understand, he continued. “Of course, I didn’t give up mine for a crown—only
for the promise of an earldom, after my older brothers died. Nor had I actually
been ordained—I was only a deacon. But I recall the anguish, the
soul-searching. I thought at the time that I had a real vocation as a priest.” “You would have
been wasted on the Church, and you know it,” Cullen growled, admiration tinging
his voice despite the actual words. “Perhaps—though I
think I could have been a good priest. On the other hand, I like to think I’ve
been privileged to do important work in the outside world. And of course, if
I’d ignored my family obligations and gone your way”—he chanced a sidelong
glance at Cullen and controlled the urge to smile—”there’d have been no Joram,
and probably no Prince Cinhil, here and now, causing us our present dilemma.
What, besides his understandable apprehension, seems to be the problem?” “He’s convinced
that he has a true vocation— which he has,” Cullen said brusquely. “He also
feels that, even if he were to make the sacrifices we’re demanding, the people
wouldn’t accept him. After all, why should they?” “Ask those who
have suffered at the hands of our current king, whether they be human or Deryni,
and you need not ask any further. The Haldanes were never guilty of such acts.
Besides, no one has seen Cinhil yet.” He broke into a grin. “For that matter,
he hasn’t seen himself for a few weeks. With that beard, and with his
tonsure grown out!” He permitted himself a grim chuckle. “Well, let’s just say
that when the barber gets through with him this morning, he’s going to bear
very little resemblance to the clean-shaven, ascetic Brother Benedict who came
to us two weeks ago.” “Has he seen the
painting yet?” “It will be
waiting for him after he’s trimmed, right beside the mirror. And if that
doesn’t jolt him into an awareness of who and what he is, I don’t know what
will.” “I do.” The
Michaeline general extracted a much-folded piece of parchment from his cassock.
“Take a look at this.” “Which is?” “My list of
candidates for future queen of Gwynedd.” Cullen smiled wanly as Camber
uncreased the parchment. “I know he’s going to fight this, too, but we’ve got
to get that man married. We need another heir after Cinhil, and we need one
quickly.” “It still takes
nine months, the last I heard,” Camber murmured. He was aware of Cullen folding
his arms across his chest as he scanned the list. “If I could get
him married today, it wouldn’t be soon enough to suit me,” Cullen muttered. “As
it is, I’d like to make a choice by the end of the week, and marry them on
Christmas Eve. That’s a week from today.” “I see,” Camber
said. “I notice that your list includes my young ward, Megan de Cameron. Do you
consider her a serious contender?” “If you have no
objections. My main concern, other than her ability to bear children, of
course, is that our future queen be of absolutely impeccable background. Other
than Cinhil’s having left the priesthood, there must be no breath of scandal
touching the marriage and eventual heir.” “Well, you’ll find
none concerning Megan,” Camber said. “She’s young, but I suspect that’s what
Cinhil needs. Besides that, she has a strong sense of duty, no other
attachments, she’s healthy—and I think she just might like him.” “That’s
coincidental,” Cullen rumbled. “My main concern is finding someone who—” “No, it’s not
coincidental, Alister,” Camber interrupted. “Megan may be my ward, and
technically I have the right to bestow her marriage on whom I choose, but I
would never match her with someone she couldn’t care for. No more than I would
force my own daughter to marry for dynastic reasons.” “For God’s sake,
stop sounding like a father, Camber. I haven’t even picked her yet.” “I–” Abruptly, Camber
closed his mouth and stared at Cullen, then shook his head and began to
chuckle. After a few seconds, Cullen, too, began to smile. “Christmas Eve . .
.” Camber finally said, as the tension dissolved away. “Do you plan to perform
the ceremony yourself?” “Unless you have
someone better in mind.” “Not intrinsically
better, but better for Cinhil,” Camber replied. “May I make the arrangements?” “Please do.” “Thank you.” “Can you tell me
whom you have in mind?” “No. But I assure
you, if I can get him to agree, you’ll approve.” “Hmm. Very well.”
Cullen glanced at his feet, then raised his eyes to meet Camber’s once more.
“There’s —ah—one other thing. I wasn’t going to tell you yet, bu.t I suppose
you ought to know. Imre has started reprisals against the order.” Camber was instantly
serious once more. “What happened?” “The Commanderie
at Cheltham,” Cullen said dully. “Imre’s troops occupied it two days ago. They
took everything they could carry off, torched the rest. Now I understand
they’re pulling down the walls that are still standing and salting the fields.
The rumor is that they will destroy a former Michaeline establishment every
week until I surrender you and the order. Of course, that’s out of the
question.” Camber could only
nod mutely. “So, it seems that
honor extracts a high price from all of us, eh, my friend?” Cullen finally
said, recovering some of his former bravado. “But no one ever promised us it
would be easy.” He glanced toward the gallery and sighed. “Well, I’d best be
waiting when His Highness finishes Mass. I’ll send him to you when the barber
and I are done with him.” “Send him to
Joram, if I’m not in my chamber,” Camber agreed. “Perhaps some of Joram’s
enthusiasm will rub off.” Cullen shrugged at
that, as though to indicate his doubt that anything enthusiastic could rub off
on the despondent Cinhil, then lifted a hand in farewell and headed off down
the corridor. Camber returned to
the listening gallery, but Cinhil had finished his Mass and was disappearing
with his monk escort through the door. With a sigh, Camber made his way down to
the chapel door and slipped inside. Rhys was waiting for him, standing
expectantly to one side of the altar. “How is he this
morning?” Camber asked. Rhys shook his
head gravely. “He didn’t sleep last night. His hands were shaking during Mass.
I think he sensed that this might be the last time. His distress was so
poignant that I could sense it in the air, like a gray pall surrounding the
altar. Didn’t you feel it, too?” Camber looked at
him carefully. “I was called away. When did this occur?” “During the
Consecration,” Rhys said. He glanced toward the altar, then back at Camber,
whose face had gone quite still. “What are you thinking, Camber?” the Healer
whispered. “I can’t read you at all when you do that.” “I am thinking,”
said Camber, slowly mounting the three low steps, “that our Cinhil Haldane may
be even more remarkable than we thought.” He spread one hand
above the altar and extended his senses, careful not to touch anything
physically. After a moment, he turned his head slightly toward Rhys. “Rhys, will you
help me, please?” The physician
moved to Camber’s left to stand expectantly, one reddish eyebrow arched in
question. “Now, lend me your
strength and support while I probe this more thoroughly,” Camber continued.
“There is something very strange here, which I’ve never encountered before. If
Cinhil is the cause of it, we may have some very interesting times ahead of
us.” With that, he
closed his eyes and laid his hands flat on the altar cloth, flinching at the
initial contact. Rhys stayed at his elbow, a hand resting lightly on the
other’s sleeve as he poured his strength into the other’s mind and shared the
impressions gathered. When Camber withdrew, his brow was beaded with
perspiration, his eyes slightly glazed. A trifle unsteady on his feet, he
allowed Rhys to help him turn and sit on the altar step, noting with detachment
that the younger man’s hands were shaking, too. It was several
minutes before he dared to speak, and then his voice was tinged with a little
awe. “How much of that
were you able to pick up?” “Nearly all,
though not with the same intensity second-hand, of course. What do you think?” Camber shook his
head. “I’m not sure I have it all sorted out yet. We’re going to have to
discuss this with the others, of course. But if we could pick up impressions
like that when Cinhil isn’t even in the same room, I don’t wonder that you and
Joram weren’t able to breach his shields when you took him out of Saint
Foillan’s. In fact, I’m surprised that you were able to make him faint, when we
first found him.” “He wasn’t
expecting it then,” Rhys countered. “He was agitated, but not directly about
himself. His shields were down.” “But his shields
also went down during Mass this morning—again, an instance of great mental
stress which wasn’t directly threatening. He was agitated because he knows that
we’re going to make him give up his priesthood, sooner or later, but—” Camber
shook his head again. “No. That’s the wrong approach. It’s his ability to
maintain these shields of his in stress which should concern us—the
power he must be able to generate without even thinking about it. My God, do
you realize that if we could teach him to concentrate and direct that power, he
could do anything a Deryni can do? With power like that, he could be a king for
both humans and Deryni!” “For Deryni? Oh,
come now, he’d have to be Deryni for that,” Rhys replied. “The best we can
probably hope for is simple tolerance from a human king, even if he is
powerful.” “No, wait. Of
course he’s not Deryni, Rhys. But he’s not entirely human, either. And I mean
that in the finest sense of the term. We’ve always maintained that there is
something extra in our people which sets them apart from humans—but maybe it’s
not something extra, but only something changed. And if that’s the case,
maybe we could make Cinhil Deryni.” “But, that’s
impossible—” “I know it’s
impossible to make him an actual Deryni. But perhaps we could make him a functional
Deryni. Perhaps we could give him Deryni powers and abilities. You have to
admit, if we could do it, it would make it that much easier for him to oust
Imre.” Rhys thought about that for a moment, pursing his
lips in concentration. “I don’t think it would work, even so. We’ve been basing
our entire strategy on human support when we actually make our move—on the fact
that Cinhil, the last living representative of the line usurped by the
Festillic dynasty, is human, as opposed to Imre, who is the symbol of all the
Deryni atrocities.” “But don’t you
see, there’s danger of a backlash,” Camber said. “If we incite the humans to
rise against the Deryni Imre, we may start a reverse persecution the likes of
which we’ve never dreamed. There have been only a few Deryni responsible for
the evil that’s happened in the last eighty years. We have to be certain that
our revolt is against the man Imre, and his followers—not against the Deryni
race.” Rhys whistled low
under his breath. “I see what you mean. If Cinhil were more than a human king,
if he were also Deryni, or nearly so, he could be a ruler for both peoples. He
might accomplish the overthrow of Imre and the re-establishment of the Haldane
rule with a minimum of bloodshed.” Camber nodded.
“Cinhil, a human king with Deryni-like powers, would unite us, instead of
letting us continue to tear ourselves apart with interracial bickering, and
oppression by whichever race is currently in power.” “And we thought we
were talking about a simple coup,” Rhys finally said, when he had digested what
Camber was suggesting. “I guess things are never as simple as they seem.” “Never,” Camber
agreed. “And wait until I tell you what Imre’s done now.” chapter seventeenBut he shall
take a virgin of his own people to wife. —Leviticus
21:14 But Imre’s latest
move, at least so far as Camber and Rhys knew, was not to have nearly the
impact of his next and far less obviously menacing one. For Imre’s men, four
days after the destruction of the Michaeline Commanderie began, chanced to
capture one Humphrey of Gallareaux, a Deryni priest of the Michaeline
persuasion. Taken captive at
Saint Neot’s, while claiming sanctuary with the Gabrilite Order there, Humphrey
had been spirited away to Valoret under close guard, permitted no sleep and but
little food on the grueling, three-day ride to the capital. Imre was informed of
the prisoner’s capture within half an hour of his arrival. It was but minutes
before he had taken leave of his sister and friends and was striding into a
lower room where the Deryni captive waited. Coel and Santare
were already there, Coel paring his nails with a jewelled dagger Imre had given
him, while Santare conversed softly with the guard captain who had brought the
prisoner in. The prisoner himself was nodding in a heavy wooden armchair,
prodded to wakefulness from time to time by one of the two guards stationed to
either side of him. He glanced up dully as Imre entered the room, seeming about
to faint when the guards jerked him roughly to his feet. Imre waved the
others to their ease, then signalled the guards to release the prisoner’s arms.
The man swayed unsteadily under the king’s sharp gaze. Humphrey of
Gallareaux was an unimposing man, of the indeterminate years which are so often
attributed to those in religious life. By appearance alone, he would have
alerted no one to the fact that he was anything but the simple country cleric
his habit proclaimed him to be. (It was not the Michaeline habit, Imre
noted disdainfully. The man had obviously been trying to pass as an itinerant
friar.) But the real clue
to his otherness was in the way the eyes, even dulled with fatigue, gazed
across at Imre with a calm serenity which came only with Deryni discipline.
Imre reached mentally to Truth-Read the man, and was not surprised to find that
he could not. With a grim smile, he gestured for the man to be seated, then
nodded curt thanks as one of the guards brought a second chair for him_ to sit
facing the prisoner. “Dispensing with
formalities, you are Humphrey of Gallareaux, a Deryni of the Michaeline Order,
despite your habit,” Imre said, his eyes locking with Humphrey’s in a
no-nonsense stare. “I believe you know who I am.” “The King’s Grace
is well informed.” The priest’s voice was carefully neutral. “Thank you. Do you
know why you have been brought here?” “I know only that
Your Grace’s soldiers broke sanctuary at Saint Neot’s to take me from retreat,”
Humphrey replied. “And that I have not been permitted to rest in the three days
since my arrest. May I ask why?” “You may not. Tell
me, is it usual for a Michaeline to go into retreat in a Gabrilite
establishment?” “Not usual, no.
However, the novice master at Saint Neot’s was my spiritual director before I
chose my own order. I had sought out his guidance.” “I see.” Imre
studied the priest’s face for a long moment. “And I suppose you will next tell
me that you did not know that your order has been outlawed, that the rest of
your brethren have gone into hiding, that I have ordered the destruction of
Michaeline establishments and the surrender of your vicar general?” “I have been in
retreat, Your Grace,” Humphrey replied softly. “I can only say that I am
shocked to hear Your Grace’s words.” Imre flicked his
glance down Humphrey’s spare body, then back to the face, irritation beginning
to touch the corners of his mouth. “Are you aware
that you will likely be executed as a traitor?” Humphrey’s face
blanched and his hands tightened on the chair arms, but other than that he did
not move. “I claim benefit of clergy,” he whispered. “Coel?” The king
swung to face the older man, who had been watching and listening in silence. Coel sauntered to
Imre’s side with an easy grace, folding his arms across his chest. “Archbishop
Anscom claimed benefit of clergy for the Michaelines when he first learned that
they had been put to the horn. Unfortunately for him, and for any Michaelines who
chance to fall into our nets, Archbishop Anscom does not know that Father
Humphrey is our guest. Nor is he likely to find out.” “How regrettable.”
Imre smiled. “For Father Humphrey, that is. Of course, if he were to give us
certain information which we seek, his release might be arranged ...” His eyes, slipping
over Humphrey’s face, hardened as he saw defiance written there. In a single,
abrupt, movement, he was standing at Humphrey’s knee, leaning both hands on the
chair arms to stare into the grim brown eyes. “Don’t be a fool,
Humphrey,” he whispered. “I may lack the finesse of your Michaeline training,
but I come from a long line of ruthless Deryni, who were not afraid to take
what they wanted by brute force. I can break you if I must.” “Then, do what you
must, Sire,” Humphrey said in a low voice. “And I must resist you with all my
might. I give you my word as holy bond that I am innocent of treason, but
beyond that I may not go. My mind is mine own and God’s, holding the secrets of
many men, imparted to me in perfect trust. Not even my Lord King may command
that of me, though it cost me my life.” “The seal of the
confessional,” Imre said with a sigh, straightening wearily to shake his head
and lean back against the arm of his own chair. “How convenient. And how
useless. Santare, ask the Healer to attend us. I want to be certain of his
physical condition before I start tampering with his mind.” Mind-tampering of
a sort was the concern elsewhere, as well, only there it must be coercion
rather than brute force; for the mind to be influenced was that of Prince
Cinhill Haldane, who must be persuaded to take up his inheritance and become
his people’s champion. Some outward
progress had been made. The lean, elegant man who stood so defiantly before the
fireplace this Christmas Eve bore little resemblance to the frightened monk
whom Joram and Rhys had whisked from Saint Foillan’s but a scant three weeks
before. Clad in a winter robe of claret velvet, his high, Haldane cheekbones
accentuated by the trim of the neat beard and mustache, the physical
resemblance to his great-grandsire was uncanny. Even Cinhill, looking at his
ancestor’s portrait when he must, could not control a shiver of kinship
whenever his eyes met the identical gray ones of his predecessor. He avoided
this whenever possible, but the life-sized copy of the original portrait now
hung above the fireplace, where he could scarcely miss it. Time and again he
found his eyes drawn to it when he thought he should be meditating. But if Cinhil
looked a prince, he did not yet act it. Camber, with the aid of Rhys and Joram
and even Evaine, had worked with Cinhil daily, trying to coax a yielding in the
royal will, hinting at the power which might be bestowed, if he would only
cooperate. The prince was polite but firm. Today, the Eve of
Christmas, was doubly difficult, since each of the five of them present in the
room knew what the night must bring—and Cinhil was still having none of it. He
had been telling them so for the past two hours. Camber decided
that it was time to change the direction of the discussion. “Tell me, Your
Highness, does your silence mean that you condone what the king is doing?”
Camber asked, when Cinhil’s arguments against matrimony had at least
temporarily run down. Cinhil looked at
the older man sharply and started to make an indignant retort, then remembered
who he was desperately trying to be and folded his hands piously instead. “I am a man of
God,” he said evenly. “I could never condone the deaths of innocent men.” “No, but you could
cause them,” Joram said. “By your non-action,” he added, when Cinhil opened his
mouth as though to protest. Cinhil turned back
toward the fireplace, hands clasped stubbornly behind his back. “I cannot be
concerned with the affairs of the world. You do not understand my mission.” “No, it’s you who
don’t understand,” Camber corrected. “Can’t you get it through your head that
you’re involved already with the outside world, that a great number of people
are going through a lot of pain and suffering, and some of them dying, because
they believe in you and your cause?” “My cause?”
Cinhil retorted. “Nay, ‘tis yours. I never asked to be made king. I
never wanted anything but to be left alone, to find my peace with myself.” “And can you be at
peace,” Evaine murmured, “when you know that you could make a great change in
the world, that you could ease much suffering? And yet, you do nothing.” “What would you
know of such things?” Cinhil snapped. “Am I not a man? Am I not entitled to
lead my own life as I see fit?” Camber sighed
impatiently. “If you were my son, speaking that irresponsibly, I’d thrash you
within an inch of your life, even at your age!” “You wouldn’t
dare!” Cinhil stated, a hard edge of command biting into his words. Camber controlled
the urge to smile a little as he noted the reply. “No, you’re right, I
wouldn’t. And part of the reason is because you’re starting to sound like a
prince, despite your best efforts to the contrary. Do you think that Brother
Benedict would have answered me the way you did just now?” Cinhil dropped his
gaze to the floor uncomfortably, the whir of his tangled emotions almost
audible, then fumbled his way awkwardly to his chair and sat. He would not look
at Camber, and he was keeping his hands folded in his lap only with a visible
exertion of control. “I—I’m sorry.
Please forgive me.” “Forgive you? For
acting like a man for once? Certainly not. Don’t you see, you are Prince
Cinhil Haldane. That is where your destiny lies—not in the alias of your
Brother Benedict. Think of that identity as a temporary refuge, which you used
when it was needed, which kept you safe until it was time to answer your
greater call.” “But—” “Princes are not
like ordinary men, Cinhil. They have obligations—don’t you understand?—to push
back and defeat the destroyers. Your royal line had a knack for it in the old
days. Your great-great-grandsire, father to that same Ifor Haldane whose
portrait hangs on yonder wall, was known among his people as Saint Bearand,
even during his lifetime. It wasn’t all for being gentle and pious, either,
though he was that. He pushed the Moorish invaders back into the sea and broke
the back of their naval power once and for all. Their legions have never dared
to cross the great wastes or to sail the Southern Seas again. That saintly man
did all of this.” Cinhil was silent
for a long moment, but when he spoke his voice was edged with bitterness.
“Saint Bearand. Very pretty. Of course, you’re not asking me to do anything as
spectacular as pushing back the Moors —no, only to forsake my priestly vows and
depose a powerful Deryni king. And you’ll have to admit that there’s little
chance of an apostate priest ever being known as Saint Cinhil.” “Is that your
aim: sainthood?” Rhys asked quietly. “Most of us are not so proud as to think
that we could ever attain that kind of perfection.” Cinhil recoiled as
though struck a physical blow, myriad emotions flashing across his face in
rapid succession. Then he sagged in his chair, his hands fluttering uncertainly
as he searched for the proper words. “It—it isn’t like
that at all. How can I make you understand what it’s like to be able to live a
life totally committed to God? Father Joram might, if he weren’t constantly
playing devil’s advocate, but…” As he spoke, the
door opened quietly behind him and Alister Cullen appeared in the doorway,
pausing unseen to listen as the prince continued. “It’s as though
you’re shielded in a soft, golden light, floating about a handspan off the
ground, and you’re safe from anything that might try to harm you, because you know
that He is there, all around you,” Cinhil said, wrapped up now in his own
remembrance. “It’s as though—you reach out with your mind and grasp a beam of
sunlight, yet even as you grasp it, it’s all around. You ...” As Cinhil spoke,
his eyes took on a strange, other glow, and the air around him became
gently suffused with light—a pale, ghostly flickering which was almost, but not
quite, indiscernible in the firelight and wavering candle flames. Camber was
the first to notice it, followed almost immediately by Rhys; and Camber shook
his head slightly as Rhys started to make a reaction. While Cinhil rambled on
dreamily, his words no longer important to Camber, the Deryni lord reached out
with his own senses and poised on the brink, mentally ready to fling himself
across the void to essay the opening he could sense was imminent. Cullen must have
made some indication of his presence at that instant, for Cinhil suddenly
turned in his chair and saw the vicar general. He broke off his detached
monologue in mid-syllable, before Camber could make the contact he had so
desperately sought. As Cinhil scrambled to his feet to bow nervously to the
vicar general, Camber let out a long sigh which was mentally echoed by Rhys.
Joram and Evaine appeared unaware of the exchange, until Camber saw Evaine
touch her brother’s hand and nod. “Father Cullen,”
Cinhil murmured. Cullen returned
the bow, scowling somewhat. “Your Highness.” He flicked his gaze past Cinhil to
Rhys. “Lady Megan is here, Rhys. I think you should see her before she’s given
any further information. Camber, we told her you’d sent for her. I think you
ought to be the one to tell her why.” Camber got to his
feet with a sigh and nodded, glancing at the wide-eyed Cinhil with an almost
fatherly mien, despite the fact that there was only a dozen or so years’
difference in their ages. “Your bride has
arrived, Your Highness. I’ll send her in to meet you in a little while.” “My—my bride?”
Cinhil croaked, his face gray against his velvet robe. “The Lady Megan de
Cameron, my ward,” Camber said, studying Cinhil’s reaction hopefully. “She’s
human like yourself—a lovely, well-bred girl. She’ll make you a worthy queen
and wife.” “I— My lord, I cannot!” “Your Highness,
you will,” Camber replied, his eyes flint-hard on Cinhil’s face.
“Evaine, will you join Rhys and me? Megan is far from home, and will appreciate
another woman’s reassurance.” He bowed stiffly. “By your leave, Your Highness,”
he said, and turned and followed Cullen out the door. When they had
gone, a shaken Cinhil turned back to the circle of chairs by the fire, startled
to find Joram still sitting there, unmoving, studying him with an infuriating
detachment. “You’re still
here,” Cinhil said—then immediately felt foolish because that fact, at least,
was abundantly clear. To cover his
discomfiture, he wandered to the fireplace and poked the toe of his slipper
dangerously close to a smoldering coal, then ran a trembling fingertip along
the wing of an ivory statue of the Archangel Michael on the mantel. “Father Joram, is
there nothing I can say which will soften your heart?” he finally asked in a
small voice. “Yours is the
heart which must be softened, Your Highness,” Joram replied. “Weighed in the
greater balance, one man’s personal wishes have little substance. You have the
wherewithal to stop the slayings, the persecutions, to restore order and peace
to the people your forefathers ruled and loved. I should think the choice an
easy one. How can you, who claim to know the love of God, turn your heart from
His people, your people, while Imre ravishes the land and brutalizes them?” “They’re not my
people,” Cinhil whispered. “Not in that sense.” “Ah, but they
are,” Joram replied, pointing a finger at him emphatically. “I am the
good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine.” “No!” “I am
the good shepherd, and I lay down my life for the sheep.” Cinhil cast a
desperate, frantic look at the door through which Camber and Rhys and Evaine
had disappeared. “I beseech you, Father Joram, spare me this. I cannot do it.
You know the vows I took. You, of all people—” “Priest or prince,
sheep or people, you can stop Imre, Your Highness.” “I pray you, do
not do this!” “Think on it, Your
Highness,” Joram said, rising and moving toward the door. “Where, if anywhere,
is the break between your duty to God and your obligations to His people, your
people? Is there even a difference?” “I vowed vows,”
Cinhil moaned. Joram paused in
the doorway to gaze compassionately at his fellow priest. “Feed my sheep,”
he whispered--then slipped out and closed the door behind him. Cinhil spent the
next hour on his knees, storming the heavens relentlessly for the answer he
craved so desperately, and which he feared, more and more, would not come. At
length, when his supplications had left him no more comforted than when he had
begun, he lurched to his feet and stumbled to a small table near the fireplace.
Hands shaking, he poured a cup of wine and gulped it down. They would send
her to him soon. Only, he had no idea what he was supposed to do or say. He
supposed that he was to make sure he did not find her too ugly, or stupid, or
whatever it was he was supposed to use as a gauge for measuring what his
future—wife! —the word shook him—should or should not be. But he didn’t want
to see her. It was unthinkable enough that he must face her in the chapel
tonight, before God and all his Deryni captors. They would force him to go
through with it. His and Camber’s parting words had been almost a threat. “My
lord, I cannot!” “Your Highness, you will!” And, he realized
sickly, he would. He would have to. It was clear by now that they were
determined to have their way with him, that they would settle for nothing less
than a crown on his head, a wife at his side, the Deryni Imre toppled from his
throne. He trembled anew
at that thought, his mind going back immediately to the very real threat of
their power. They were Deryni. God knew, they would probably make him
obey, if he continued to resist them. Even the usually patient Camber had
become almost menacing today. The idea that he
did not really have control over the coming event was comforting for a moment,
for it relieved him of the responsibility for making the decision himself—at
least for a time. But then he was forced to recognize another, darker part of
himself which he had thought buried for many, many years, and somehow that
frightened him even more. Was he afraid of
the wrath of Heaven if he broke his monastic vows and left the priesthood? Or
was he afraid that it would be all too easy to break them, that he was actually
beginning to look forward to this new life they had been waving so
tantalizingly before him for these past weeks? The remark Camber had made about
him beginning to sound like a prince had hit agonizingly close to home. He had
sounded like a prince—or what he had always imagined a prince would sound
like—and, at the same time, it had been the most natural thing in the world. It
terrified him in a way he had never been frightened before in his life. And to marry! He
poured another cup of wine— fortunately, the cup was small—and drained it. To
take a wife he had never seen, to—he forced himself to think in the scriptural
term—to “know” her, to beget heirs— He found his hands
shaking, and he could not seem to make them stop. What was he doing? This was
not the sort of thing a man should have to worry about —especially not a man of
forty-three who had never known a woman. Why, marriage was supposed to be a
young man’s game. It was madness. They were insane! He heard a
fumbling at the doorlatch, and he turned away and froze. There was a pause, and
then the sound of soft footsteps entering the room. He closed his eyes. He did
not want to see her. He could not bring himself to turn. “Your Highness ...
?” The voice was
timid, shy, and sounded very young. Cinhil’s eyes flew open and his shoulders
tensed, but he found himself rooted to the spot, unable to move. They had sent
him a child, a mere girl! He could not marry a child! “I—I beg your
pardon, Your Highness, but they told me I should come to you. I’m Megan de Cameron.
I’m to be your wife.” Cinhil bowed his
head, leaning heavily against the table in front of him. The irony of her
position, coupled with his own, had suddenly struck him, and he had an almost
uncontrollable urge to laugh. “Is that what they
told you, child? How old are you?” “Fif—fifteen,
Highness.” She paused. “I beg Your Highness’s pardon, but—have I misunderstood
my guardian’s intent? Are we not to be married this night?” Cinhil smiled, a
bitter chuckle escaping his lips despite his best efforts. “Aye, little lass.
Though ‘tis dynastic considerations and none other which ordain this marriage.
The lost King of Gwynedd must have a wife. You’re to be the royal broodmare,
don’t you see?” “No, Your
Highness, I’m to be your Queen,” the young voice replied, strangely
mature-sounding now, in the hollow silence his laughter had left. Cinhil’s face
froze and he looked down at his hands, not seeing them at all. He wondered what
had possessed him to say so cruel a thing, realizing he had hurt her. “If you marry me,
you will be the mother either of kings or of traitors, if we all live that
long, child. Are you truly willing to risk the latter, with a man who cannot
love you as a husband should, who can never give you ought but woe?” “Who cannot love,
Your Highness?” the voice asked softly. “I am a priest,
child. Did they not tell you?” Another long
silence followed, and then: “They told me that you are the last Haldane, Your
Highness; that they would make you king.” The voice was low, almost husky with
tears. “I said I would risk all, even unto my life, to bring back the Haldane
line and end Imre’s bloody rule; and so I shall.” A short sob escaped her. “But
if, in your heart, there is no room for love, I had liefer die a maid than be
the unloved bride of God himself!” As Cinhil froze in
shock at the blasphemy of her words, he heard her footsteps running toward the
door, whirled just in time to see a mane of wheaten hair disappearing from
sight, a delicate hand pulling the door behind her, a slender ankle flashing
beneath voluminous turquoise skirts. Then the door was reverberating from the
force with which she slammed it, and he was standing there all alone, a hand
unwittingly outstretched in the direction she had gone, his heart wrenched by
her words. He started to follow
her, to apologize, to try to explain that he was not a king at all, that he was
but a simple monk, that he had never wanted to be king or even prince—but then
the old pathways took over and it was too late. Like an old man, he sank slowly
to a bench beside the table, letting his hand fall loosely to his side. And then he put
his head down upon the table and wept long, bitter tears for his lost youth,
his lost faith, for himself, for the girl—whose name he could not even
recall—and for all of them who would be lost. They would find him there,
unmoved, when they came a few hours later to prepare him for his wedding. chapter eighteenThe Lord said
to my lord, “You are my son. This day I have begotten you!” —Psalms 2:7 It was on the
Vigil of Christmas, the night of the Saviour’s birth, that Archbishop Anscom of
Trevas left his Evensong devotions in the Lady Chapel of All Saints’ Cathedral
in Valoret and made his way back to his apartments, there to watch and pray
until it should be time to celebrate the first Mass of Christmas. As was his
custom on Christmas Eve, he was preparing to meditate alone upon the successes
and failures of the fleeing year. He was not expecting the gray-hooded shadow
which stepped from a recess in the corridor just before he reached the refuge
of his chambers. “Will you hear my
confession, Father?” asked a strangely familiar voice. Anscom held his
candle a little higher and tried to pierce the gloom and darkness surrounding
the man’s face. Then he realized that it was more than mere shadow which
shrouded the speaker’s visage. The man in the cowled gray robe was a Deryni,
his head veiled in an arcane haze which obscured his features and also muffled
his voice. And yet there was no hint of menace in the voice or the presence, no
threat of danger. The mysterious visitor was benign, though still
unrecognizable. More curious and
anticipatory than alarmed, Anscom bowed his head in acquiescence and held the
door open for the man to enter, then closed it behind them. No words were
spoken as Anscom crossed to his oratory and lit another candle, took a purple
stole from the prie-dieu there, touched it to his lips, and draped it
around his neck. But when he turned to face the man again, the visitor reached
to his hood and pushed it back to reveal a head of gilded silver hair, a
countenance long familiar and loved. “Camber!” the
archbishop breathed, then embraced the other man warmly. “Praise God, I
wondered where you’d been,” Anscom whispered, as the two parted and he held his
friend at arm’s length to look at him. “When I learned that ‘Brother Kyriell’—
But, what are you doing here? Surely you know that the king has out a warrant
for your arrest.” “Would you betray
me?” Camber said with a smile which clearly indicated the preposterousness of
the question. Anscom fingered
the end of his stole with a wry smile. “Even if I wanted to, you bound me by
this. I am under the seal of the confessional. Whatever you tell me, I am bound
to keep silence.” “I require more
than your silence, Anscom,” Cam-ber said. “I require your help.” “You know you have
but to ask,” Anscom replied. “Tell me what you need, and if I can help you, I
will.” “I am wanted for
treason,” Camber said tentatively. “Are you a
traitor?” “By Imre’s
reckoning, I am. The facts speak a little differently. If you will agree to
come with me now, I would rather show you what I’m talking about.” “Come with you?
Where?” Camber glanced at
the floor. “I may not tell you that. I can tell you that we will reach
it through your own Transfer Portal, that you will be perfectly safe, that I
will not hold you to your promise to help if you decide otherwise once you know
the facts.” He looked up at his friend. “But you are going to have to trust me
with the location. I may not reveal that, even to you, even under the seal of
the confessional.” “Are the others
there, too?” “Evaine, Joram,
Rhys, a few others—yes.” “Rhys? But he—” “I would prefer
not to discuss it here, if you don’t mind. Will you come with me?” Anscom hesitated
for just an instant, torn by his curiosity to question Camber further, then
inclined his head. “As you wish. How long will we be gone?” “Several hours, at
least. Can you make arrangements for someone else to cover your duties?” The archbishop
raised an eyebrow at that. “On Christmas Eve? You know that I’m expected to be
the celebrant at Midnight Mass.” “We would be
greatly honored if you would perform that office for us, Anscom,” Camber said
quietly. “When you see, you’ll understand why.” Anscom studied his
friend’s face for a long moment, reading the importance there of the request,
then gestured for him to step into the oratory and draw the curtain. When
Camber had done so, the archbishop moved to the wall and pulled a velvet cord.
A few minutes later, a black-cassocked priest knocked and entered. He found the
archbishop sitting on his bed, looking quite unwell. “Your Grace, is
anything wrong?” “I’m feeling
rather ill,” the archbishop said weakly. “Would you please ask Bishop Roland to
take my place at Mass tonight?” “The Midnight
Mass? Why, certainly, Your Grace, but—is there anything I can do for you? May I
send for the apothecary or a Healer to attend you?” “No, that won’t be
necessary,” Anscom murmured, lying back on the bed and giving a pained sigh.
“Something I ate, I have no doubt. I shall meditate, and try to sleep. It will
pass by morning.” “Very well, Your
Grace,” the priest said doubtfully. “If you’re sure—” “I’m sure, Father.
Please go now, and on no account am I to be disturbed. Is that clear?” “Yes, Your Grace.” No sooner had the
door closed behind the priest than Anscom was leaping out of bed to draw back
the curtains of the oratory doorway. Camber chuckled at
the look on the Archbishop’s face. “Does this remind you of the pranks two
young subdeacons played at Grecotha? Though, I’ll warrant, neither you nor I
ever handled a subterfuge with better wit or finesse in those days.” “Humph! I would
hope that we had improved since then,” Anscom rumbled. “What next?” “Your nearest
Transfer Portal.” “You’re standing
in front of it,” Anscom replied, pushing Camber back a few steps farther into
the oratory and taking his place beside him. “What do you want me to do?” “Just open your
mind to me and let me take you through. I promise to give you the background
information as soon as we’re there.” “And also ensure
that I can’t figure out where we’ve gone.” Anscom snorted with a slight smile,
folding his arms across his chest. “Go ahead. I understand why you have to do
it that way. I just want you to remember,” he said, closing his eyes, “that I see
right through you, Camber MacRorie.” “And so you always
did, my friend.” Camber grinned and laid his hands on either side of Anscom’s
head from behind. “Open to me now ...” And they were
gone. And standing in
another Portal, in another place. Anscom opened his
eyes, stunned, and turned to stare at Camber incredulously. “You can’t be
serious,” he whispered. “A Haldane heir here? It was the Haldane that
was stolen out of Saint Foillan’s? Camber, you’re mad! It can’t possibly
succeed!” “There are a great
many who don’t agree,” Camber said quietly. “Even our Haldane himself is
beginning to believe that it’s possible and desirable. Unfortunately, his moral
scruples are interfering a bit with his dynastic duties. Your sanction of his
cause would be the seal of approval which he needs.” “You want me to give him
my blessing?” “I want you to
acknowledge the legitimacy of his descent, to declare him a lawful Prince of
Gwynedd, to release him from his vows, and to marry him to my ward—tonight.
Will you do that for me?” “What you’re
asking—” “I know what I’m
asking. If you cannot find it in your conscience to do it, then I’ll release
you, as I promised. We’ll just have to make do with Father Cullen.” “Alister Cullen,
the Vicar General of the Mi-chaelines? He’s here?” Camber nodded.
“And has been with us almost from the beginning, though it was Rhys who
discovered the first clue to the prince. Cullen can do what I’ve asked you to
do, but it won’t carry the same weight.” Anscom drew
himself to his full height and looked across at Camber indignantly, his craggy
face a mask of resentment. “I forbid Alister Cullen to do those things. If
they’re to be done, I will do them.” “And will they be
done?” Camber asked, controlling a smile and suspecting that he was about to
net his quarry securely in the snare of sacerdotal jealousy. “It is the
prerogative of the Archbishop of Valoret,” Anscom intoned, “to acknowledge the
royal succession, to perform royal marriages, and to crown the kings of
Gwynedd. While it is impossible to do the last tonight, I shall certainly
perform the first two!” “Good,” Camber
said simply. He turned away so that Anscom could not see the grin of triumph on
his face. “If you’ll come with me, I’ll introduce you to our reluctant
bridegroom and prince.” And the intended
bridegroom was, at that moment, still reluctant. “Father Joram, I
beseech you, do not let them do this. I cannot go through with the marriage. I
will be forsworn.” Joram, partially
vested for his role as deacon later on, folded his hands and prayed for
patience. “Your Highness,
believe me, I understand your hesitation—” “My hesitation?”
Cinhil shook his head and began pacing again, the silver tissue-cloth of his
wedding garments rustling with his agitation. “Nay, my refusal. It is all well
and good for you to promise that Father Cullen will release me from my vows.
But I did not make my vows to him, or even to his order. I made them to the
Vicar General of the Ordo Verbi Dei, and to God. The archbishop himself
could not—” “Suppose we allow
the archbishop to speak for himself, Your Highness,” Camber said, entering the
room with a man whom Cinhil had never seen. “May I present His Grace, the
Archbishop of Valoret, Anscom of Trevas. Your Grace, His Royal Highness, Prince
Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane.” Cinhil had
whirled, alarmed, at Camber’s first words, and now stared with blank amazement
at the gaunt, purple-cassocked man at Camber’s elbow. The man introduced as
Archbishop Anscom gazed sympathetically at the startled prince and made a
slight bow before extending the ring of his office. Cinhil’s resolve crumbled
at that, and stifling a sob he seized Anscom’s hand and dropped to both knees,
pressing the ringed hand first to his lips and then to his bowed head as he
collapsed at the feet of his superior. “Help me, I beg
you, Your Grace!” he choked. “I cannot do it! They say I must forsake my vows
and return to the world. I am afraid, Father. I do not know the world!” In compassion,
Anscom laid his free hand on Cinhil’s head, signed with his eyes for the others
to leave them alone. “I understand your
fear, my son,” he murmured, when they had gone. “I grieve with you that such a
cup must be placed before you. But these are grievous times in which we live,
and all of us must make sacrifices.” Cinhil looked up
at that, his wide eyes abrim with tears. “Are—are you telling me that I must
obey them? That I must forsake my vows, as they ask, and take up this crown
that they would thrust upon me?” “It is not always
an easy thing to walk the path which has been chosen for us, Cinhil,” Anscom
said gently. “But we who strive to serve the true path, to listen to the will
of God, must realize that we cannot hope to comprehend all which the Creator
has laid out for us. You can do a great service for Our Lord, and for all His
people, if you will take up this cross and bear it faithfully for Him.” “But I have given
Him my life already! I have served Him these twenty years and more, and would
gladly have given the rest of it for—” “I know, my son,”
Anscom nodded. “You have served Him, and well. But now He demands a different
kind of sacrifice. All of us have things which we alone can do best; now He
asks for that unique service which only you can give. It cannot be by accident
that the Lord allowed one Haldane to survive until this troubled time, waiting
in safety and love until His will might be fulfilled.” There was a spark
of defiance in Cinhil’s eyes as he searched Anscom’s gaunt face. “You’re
telling me, then, that I have no choice in the matter? That my fate is bound to
Camber’s futile cause?” Anscom shook his
head. “Not Camber’s cause only, my son. And ‘futile’ only if you choose it to
be so. Nor are you bound by other than your knowledge of God’s will. He has
called, and clearly; and the power to disregard His call is in your hands. But
if you make that decision, the lives of many thousands of His people will be
upon your head. The choice is yours; but you must also bear the consequences.” “Your Grace, how
can you do this to me?” Cinhil whispered. “You are no better than they, playing
on my emotions like a master lutenist, knowing exactly which strings will tug
most insistently at my heart and mind. It isn’t fair ...” “In your eyes,
no,” Anscom agreed. “But we are only mortal, Cinhil. We can only listen to that
silent voice within, and remember that we shall have to live with the
consequences of whatever we do, at least for the remainder of our allotted time
here on earth. My conscience is clear, my son. Is yours?” Cinhil could make
no answer to that. Sinking back on his heels, he buried his face in his hands
and wept silent, bitter tears for the road which now unrolled before him, and
which he knew he could not choose to refuse. The archbishop, a
shrewd judge of men, finally knelt down beside the prince and laid gentle hands
on his shoulders, holding the sobbing man close and letting him weep. After a while,
they prayed. Half an hour
before midnight, two women sitting in the listening gallery above the haven’s
chapel peered repeatedly through the viewing slits as they waited for the hour
to arrive. Below, most of the inhabitants of the haven had gathered in the
chapel—MacRories and priests and Michaeline knights—and the chapel itself
shimmered with the light of many candles. Racks of holly-twined candelabra had
been set along the faceted walls, throwing gay shadow-shapes among the ribs and
columns of the shallow vaulting, glinting gold and amber on the altar plate. A
rectangle of precious Kheldish carpet had been laid at the foot of the altar
steps, where the ceremonies of recognition and marriage would take place. In anticipation of
the first Mass of Christmas (and, all hoped, the promised royal wedding), the
altar had been dressed with evergreen boughs and the best altar linens which
the haven could provide. There was an air of uncertainty, a hushed
anticipation, as all waited for midnight and the coming of their king. The
bride, at least, was present, though nerves were wearing more than a little
thin. Megan de Cameron,
ward of the Earl of Culdi and soon to be Princess of Gwynedd, had borne up
bravely following her lone encounter with her intended, but now fatigue and
tension were beginning to take their toll. She was flushed with excitement and
had not been able to eat since her arrival that afternoon. Evaine had tried to
assure her that all would be well, but such attempts fell on deaf ears. She
suspected that Megan would probably be just as nervous, even were the situation
not charged with so much uncertainty. All things
considered, Evaine wondered how Megan and Cinhil would suit if the marriage did
take place —and right now, there appeared to be no guarantee that it would.
Rhys had told her of Cinhil’s mood when he and Joram went to prepare him for
the ceremonies, and of Archbishop Anscom’s unexpected arrival. She wondered
whether Anscom had been successful. According to Megan, the prince had not even
looked at her when she tried to speak with him. That was bothering
Megan most, Evaine knew. And from as objective a point of view as she could
manage under the circumstances, that was Cinhil’s loss: Megan was beautiful. Of
medium height, willow slender, with wide turquoise eyes spiced by a spray of
freckles across the slightly tip-tilted nose, Megan even moved with an
unaffected grace—an unspoiled girl-woman with, perhaps, just the right
combination of guile and innocence to appeal to the shy and conscience-stricken
Cinhil. She was gowned in silver tissue, as befitted a princess, her wheaten
hair caught up in shining coils beneath the crown of holly and rosemary. Truly
a vision to turn a prince’s fancy— at least an ordinary prince. The question
was, could she turn the head of a prince who wanted to be a priest? The vision glanced
at Evaine and twisted a fold of silver tissue between shaking fingers. “Oh, what’s the
use?” she whispered. “He does not need me. He—he does not even wish to marry at
all, and I—I fear I do not please him.” “Give him time,
Megan,” Evaine said, laying a reassuring hand on the younger girl’s arm. “He is
as afraid as you are—more afraid, for he had never thought to marry, and
you”—she touched the girl’s nose impishly—”you have been the object of men’s
devotion almost from birth, beginning with your father, God rest his soul, and
not ending with mine. For you, it was never a question of whether you would
marry, but when, and to whom.” “But, he said—he
said that the marriage was only for dynastic purposes, and that I should be
nought but a royal b—broodmare,” she stammered, her eyes reflecting her hurt. “He said what?” Evaine tried to
keep the shock and anger from her voice, unsuccessfully, and wished she could
take Cinhil by the shoulders and give him a good shaking, prince or not. “Oh, I don’t think
he meant to hurt me,” Megan added quickly. “He was lashing out at all his own
hurt of the past few weeks. It can’t have been easy for him.” “No, it has not.” “And I know what
it will cost him to take me to wife,” Megan continued softly. “For his own
sake, I wish I might spare him, but for all our sakes, I dare not. If it were
not to me, then it would be to some other maid he must be wed. Even I
understand that.” She sighed
resignedly, and Evaine studied her carefully for several seconds. “I think you love
him already,” she finally said, not moving as Megan’s head snapped up to stare
at her. “You do, don’t you?” Megan nodded miserably,
and Evaine returned a gentle smile. “I know. It’s
difficult, isn’t it, to love and not be loved in return? God grant his love
will grow.” “Easy enough for
you to say, who have Lord Rhys who loves you dearly,” Megan whispered. “I shall
have only a crown, and perhaps not even that, if we fail.” “And so, he needs
you even more, don’t you see?” Evaine answered. “He needs a gentle, loving
wife— more than just a bedmate—who can comfort him when he is afraid and
encourage him when he grows faint of heart. He is so much younger than you,
Megan, in so many important ways, and he has such a heavy burden to bear. Do
not make him bear it alone.” “But, I’m afraid .
..” Megan began. “So am I. Constantly,” Evaine replied gently. “But
if we do not support our men in their good works, what hope is there for any of
us? Think what has been risked already, even to bring us this far. You said
that I am fortunate to have Rhys. Oh, how right you are! But he has been in
grave danger for these many months now, and every day there was the chance that
I might lose him. Still, I would not have held him back from doing what he had
to do—nor will I. Just as I would not expect him to keep me from my part,
simply because I might be harmed. Do you understand what I’m trying to say?” “A little, I
think.” Megan sniffed, wiping at her eyes, and finally managed a smile. After a
minute, she asked, “Evaine, will you promise me something?” “If I can.” “Promise that you
will not leave me when I am queen. I shall be very lonely, otherwise.” “Oh, Megan!” Evaine hugged the
younger girl close, tears welling in her own eyes, but suddenly there was the
sound of movement in the chapel below, and both of them moved breathlessly to
the viewing slits. It was midnight;
it was Christmas Day. And as the door was thrown open and the processional
cross appeared in the doorway, they knew that this day brought the coming of
more than just the Christmas King. “Dominus dixit
ad me: Filius meus es tu, ego hodie genui te . . .” the Michaeline knights
and monks sang. The Lord said to my Lord, You are my Son. This day I have
begotten you. . . . And as the strains
of the ancient introit swelled in the chapel, reverberating from vaulting to
the gallery, Anscom led Joram and Cullen as escort to a pale but stately
Cinhil. Cathan’s young sons followed the princely procession, each bearing a
silver circlet upon a velvet cushion. The boys stood beside their grandfather,
eyes wide with wonder, as Archbishop Anscom ascended the altar. Cinhil, with
Joram and Cullen bowing to either side, knelt before the lowest step and
inclined his head, his face still and emotionless in the candlelight. When the prayers
had been concluded, Anscom turned and descended the three low steps, cope and
miter glittering in the candlelit chamber. Joram and Cullen moved from Cinhil’s
sides to Anscom’s, waited for the archbishop to speak. ‘‘Who art thou,”
the archbishop demanded, “who makest bold to approach the altar of the Lord?” Blanching, Cinhil
stood up and managed a nervous bow, all self-possession dissolving as the time
came to speak the fateful words. “May—may it please Your Grace, I am”—he
swallowed hard—”Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane, son of Alroy, grandson of Aidan,
great-grandson of King Ifor Haldane of Gwynedd, and the last of my line.” He
paused to draw shaky breath. “I come to claim the birthright of my name and
family.” “And what proof
bringest thou, Cinhil Haldane, that thou art, indeed, the true-born heir of
Gwynedd and, therefore, Prince in this realm?” The green-cloaked
Rhys stepped forward and presented a sheaf of parchment. “Your Grace, I present
the baptismal records of Prince Cinhil and his father, Alroy. Though the
records were kept in the mundane names which the Haldanes were forced to use
while in hiding these past eighty years, I vow and affirm that Daniel Draper,
Prince Cinhil’s grandsire of record, was, in reality, Prince Aidan, true-born
son of Ifor Haldane, last of the Haldane kings before the present dynasty.” Joram brought
forth the Gospel, and Rhys laid his hand upon it. “This I swear by my gifts of
Sight and Healing, and may God rip them from me and destroy me if I speak ought
but the truth.” At this Rhys
bowed, Anscom bowed, and Rhys returned to his former place to be replaced by
young Davin MacRorie, bearing his silver circlet on its cushion of velvet. As
Joram extended the book once more, Anscom took the circlet in his gloved hands
and laid it on the open pages. “Kneel, Cinhil
Haldane,” he said in a firm voice. Cinhil obeyed. “Cinhil Donal Ifor
Haldane,” the archbishop intoned, holding his hands above the prince’s bowed
head, “I acknowledge thee Heir of Haldane and Prince of Gwynedd in exile.” The
hands came to rest upon the silvered head. “Though it is not within my power to
restore thee to thy rightful place at this time, I give thee this circlet as a
token of thy royalty.” He took the circlet and held it above Cinhil’s head. “It
is my fervent prayer that one day soon I may replace it with a crown of gold,
in regal, public splendor, as is thy due. Until then, wear this as a reminder
of the weight of responsibility which thou assumest for thy people.” With that, he put
the circlet of silver on Cinhil’s head, then raised him up and bowed. Cinhil
acknowledged the bow awkwardly, then glanced at Camber and Rhys and, removing
the circlet, knelt once more. “Your Grace, I accept this circlet in the spirit
it was given, but I bear the burden of prior vows which prevent my full
assumption of the duties that accompany it.” “Dost thou, then,
wish release from those vows, my son?” “Not for myself,
but for the sake of my people, Your Grace,” Cinhil murmured, barely audible. “I
am the last of my royal line. If I shrink from my responsibilities, my people
will suffer longer under the tyrant’s heel. Though I love my former life, I am
told that I may better serve God’s purpose, for now, by taking up my birthright
and my crown, to free my people from the bondage of the conquerors and restore
just rule.” “We thank thee for
thy former service and do release thee from thy vows. Ego te absolve . . .” As the archbishop
recited the words of the release, Evaine stirred in the gallery chamber, to
lead a frightened but determined young girl down the narrow steps to the chapel
door. A moment later, the door was opening again, this time to admit a
silver-clad princess who kept her eyes averted as she came to meet her
bridegroom. All eyes turned toward her as she glided to the altar and made her
obeisance—all save Cinhil’s. The prince, standing to her right, kept his
attention fixed mostly on the crucifix on the archbishop’s breast, not daring
to glance aside. His vows released,
it was this part of the ceremony which frightened Cinhil most; and he had
difficulty concentrating on what was being said. He let himself be led through
the ceremony, responding when he was told, until he suddenly realized that he
had said the vows of marriage, and that a low, quavering contralto voice was
now repeating similar vows at his side. “I, Megan de
Cameron, only begotten daughter of the Lord and Lady of Farnham and ward of my
Lord Camber MacRorie, Earl of Culdi, wittingly and of deliberate mind, having
fifteen years completed in the month of January last past, contract matrimony
with the right excellent and noble Prince Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane, Heir of
Gwynedd, and take the said Prince Cinhil of Gwynedd for my husband and spouse,
all others for him forsake, during his and my lives natural, and thereto I
plight and give him my faith and troth.” Then there was a
slender band of gold in Cinhil’s hand, and he was slipping it on the finger of
this strange young girl. “In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti,
Amen.” After that, he vaguely remembered joining hands with her while the
archbishop laid the ends of his stole across their hands and pronounced a
blessing—and then Mass. He thought he
remembered receiving Communion, but for the first time in his life he could not
be sure. Because after that they bade him take the crown of holly and rosemary
from Megan’s head and remove the pins which held her coiled hair in place. It
came tumbling down in a cloud of wheaten glory, sweet-smelling, soft as
gossamer, reaching nearly to her waist—and he nearly dropped the silver circlet
they bade him place upon her head. Only when he was
safely in his chamber, and she in another, was he able to think clearly
again—and then, his thoughts did little to ease his anxiety. After a few
minutes, Joram came in to help him undress, then left him standing numbly
before the fire in a fur-lined dressing gown. He did not know
how long it would be before they came for him, and though he knelt dutifully at
the prie-dieu in the corner of the room and tried to say his evening
prayers, the words came stiff and meaningless, holding little comfort. He
trembled as he knelt there. All too soon, a
knock at the door called him from his tangled thoughts, and then a torchlit
procession escorted him to the door of the nuptial chamber. As the door opened,
he could see the archbishop sprinkling the bed with holy water. A pale, shy
face peered out above the top of the sleeping furs; it was surrounded by
all-too-familiar wheaten hair. He entered,
hesitantly, and the archbishop bowed to the occupant of the bed and then bowed
to Cinhil and blessed him with holy water as well. A reassuring touch on the
shoulder as he passed, and then archbishop and attendants and ladies and
everyone except the two of them were departing, the door closing; and they were
alone. Cinhil swallowed
heavily and studied the floor with great interest. Finally, he chanced a
cautious glance at the girl in the bed. To his surprise, she looked at least as
frightened as he felt. He wondered whether he looked the same to her. He looked
away quickly. “My—my lady,” he
whispered, his voice cracking and betraying him as he tried to speak. “I—thou
knowest what manner of man I am, that—that I know not the ways of women ...” His voice trailed
off, and he dared to raise his eyes to hers. They were deep pools of sea-blue,
eyes a man might drown in—and he could not have looked away now if he had
wanted to. “Then, we are
even, my lord,” she murmured, not quite so frightened as before, “for I know
not the ways of men. But thou art my husband”—she extended her hand
tentatively—”and I am thy wife. Wilt thou come and let us learn together the
ways of men.and women?” The bed was wide, and
she lay toward the middle. To take her hand, as he knew he must—and as he
suddenly wanted to do—he had to cross the several feet separating them and sit
on the bed. He did. And after a moment, when they had gazed into one another’s
eyes as best they could in the dim light, she brought his hand to her cheek and
rubbed it gently. He was astonished to find her cheek damp with tears,
incredibly soft lips brushing the back of his hand. Alarmed that he
might have frightened her, he shifted to peer at her more closely, and soon
found his other hand stroking her hair, wiping her tears away. Then she was
reaching up to touch his face, his beard, to run her fingers lightly along the
edge of his mustache, to brush her fingertips across his lips; and he was
responding, kissing her palm. Camber, when he
looked in on them in the early dawn hours, found them peacefully entwined in
one another’s arms, the bedclothes in disarray, Cinhil’s fur-lined robe
discarded across the foot of the bed. As he eased his way back out of the room,
a smile on his lips, he breathed a silent prayer of thanksgiving to whatever
saint watched over nuptial beds. Whoever it was, that saint had apparently done
his or her work well. chapter nineteenAnd they put
him in ward, that the mind of the Lord might be shewed them. —Leviticus
24:12 The days stretched
into weeks, and the weeks into months, until it was spring—spring, with its
promise of new beginnings. Deep in the rockbound fastness of the haven, the
exiles could not see the usual signs of spring: the flowering trees and the
leaping forth of all the new grasses and blossoms of the meadows. But there was
a greater flowering in the womb of her who was, perhaps, to be their future
queen. Archbishop Anscom himself returned to the haven long enough to celebrate
the Mass of Thanksgiving. And with the expectation of the royal birth in the
fall, they at last had a timetable toward which to work; they had not dared
risk Cinhil in a coup until the royal succession was assured. The next season’s
snow would bring with it the winter of Imre’s reign. For Cinhil,
however, this spring was not a time of rejoicing. Frightened and
conscience-stricken at what he had done, he betook himself more and more to his
academic studies after that, shunning his young bride’s bed and keeping himself
apart as much as possible. Though Rhys assured him that he had fathered a son,
and had only to wait until October to see the living proof, Cinhil pushed the
knowledge out of his mind and raised his defenses even more. They might force
him to become a prince, and even a king, but he did not have to like it. Never
again did he come as close to letting down his shields as he had in the chapel
that day at his last celebrated Mass, or on the afternoon of his wedding when
he spoke of his vocation as a priest. He refused even to address the
possibility of assuming Deryni-like powers on his own. One rather curious
gain had been made, however. Though Cinhil
still would not speak to Camber or Joram or any of the other men in the
compound about other than what was required, he did talk with Evaine sometimes.
And, oddly enough, it was not until after her marriage to Rhys on Twelfth Night
that the breakthrough began. Joram had blessed the union, with Camber and the
entire population of the haven standing proudly by. But though Cinhil had
attended, with Megan, and wished the couple well, he had retired to his own
quarters soon after the ceremony, oddly pale and quieter than even he was wont
to be. He had not felt like celebrating, he told Evaine later. But if Evaine’s
marriage shook Cinhil almost like his own, at least it placed Evaine in
another, safer relationship to him. He was not aware, and she would never have
dreamed of telling him and jeopardizing the fragile trust which was building
between them, but there had been a potential there—at least on Cinhil’s
part—for quite a different relationship than he would have approved or been
comfortable with. Whatever the potential, however, that facet was closed to him
forever when she made her marriage vows to Rhys. What Cinhil did not realize
was that the way had been opened for an even more intimate association:
he had no reference point for the union of minds. It became their
practice to meet each afternoon to talk, occasionally with Rhys or Joram in attendance,
but more often just the two of them, sitting comfortably before the fireplace
in his outer chamber. He told her of his childhood, of his father and
grandfather, and sometimes they even talked about his life in the monastery—a
thing he had never discussed with anyone before, and certainly not with a
woman. And her reaction
surprised him. He wondered at the insight she displayed when he described the
communion he felt with the Deity—not so much because she was a woman, for that
had not even occurred to him (he knew of the great female mystics of past
centuries)—but he found it difficult to comprehend that any layman could
approach the spiritual ecstasies which he had experienced in his own religious
life. He had thought such experiences a prerogative of those totally committed
to God—in a word, to those with a religious vocation. And Evaine, married to
Rhys Thuryn, had clearly had no call to a traditional religious life. For a while, he
marked it down to her association with her priest-brother, with whom she was
very close. But then he began to realize that she shared it with her father and
her husband as well, and he wondered whether it was a trait coincidentally
common to all four individuals in question, or whether it was somehow related
to their Deryniness—that otherness which sometimes set them all so far apart.
He examined his own feelings in the matter, and he found that this quality of
otherness was really not so alien at all. That, too, surprised him; but again,
he kept pushing the growing recognition out of his mind. The true turning
point in their relationship came one day late in March. He had come upon her
praying in the chapel, and had found such a look of peace upon her, such
tranquil oneness with the Universe as she knelt there, that he had almost
himself knelt in awe of it. Shortly, she became aware of his presence —or
perhaps she had known it all along—and she opened her eyes and turned to look
at him. When she did, there was a glow of such pure radiance, such sanctity,
about her, that he had not dared to speak until they had left the chapel.
Even then, he responded to her few comments mostly in monosyllables until they
were safely in his study room and he had closed the door. He felt that he must
ask her of what he had seen—felt he could ask. But he was having trouble
finding just the right words. As she seated
herself before the fireplace, he noticed a small, golden stone in her hand. She
toyed with it unconsciously, her fingertips caressing its smoothness with an
abstract contentment. Suddenly, Cinhil had to find out what it was. “What have you
there, my lady?” “This?” Evaine
glanced casually at the stone. “It’s called shiral. It comes from the
mountains of Kierney, near my father’s seat of Cor Culdi. He gave it to me last
year, after I asked an almost identical question of him.” She handed it to
him with a smile, and he turned it over in his hand, watching its surface catch
the light in liquid ripples. “Is it only a
trinket, a toy?” he asked, after a long pause. “It occurs to me that I have
seen you carry it before, though I never paid it much mind. It must mean
something very special to you.” Evaine lowered her
eyes, speculating on just how much Cinhil had seen; then she decided to venture
an experiment. “Aye, it is
special, Your Highness. Partly because my father gave it to me, of course, but
also for other reasons. Would you like me to show you what my father did with
it, when I asked your question?” His eyes flicked
to the crystal, his features tensing as his fingers clenched on it spasmodically.
Then he shook the emotion and looked back at her again. “Your words are
innocent enough, my lady. And yet, I feel a certain foreboding. Should I?” She held out her
hand, a gentle smile on her lips and in her eyes as she tried to put him at his
ease once more. She knew, as he put the crystal into her hand, that he had felt
something from it—even if he was not aware of what it was. “You must not fear
it, Your Highness—no more than one should fear to approach the Sacraments when
one is in a state of grace,” she breathed, couching her words in terms she
thought he might understand. “The crystal itself contains neither good nor
evil, though it does have power. But one must approach it with respect and
awareness of what one is doing. It can be a link—perhaps with the Deity?” She moved her
shoulders in a shrug, the crystal winking in the palm of her hand. Cinhil
leaned forward to look into her eyes intently. “Does it have
something to do with the look I saw on your face in the chapel a little while
ago?” : “It did not cause
it, though it may, perhaps, enhance it,” she replied softly. “That is but one
of its uses.” Cinhil let out a
long breath, never taking his eyes from hers. “Show me,” he
whispered. With a slight
inclination of her head, Evaine sat back and rested her elbows on the arms of
her chair, holding the stone lightly between the tips of her fingers, as she
had seen her father hold it so long before. Staring into its depths, she took a
deep breath and exhaled softly, willing her senses to extend around the
crystal. At first, only the reflection of the firelight flared in its depths;
but then it began to glow of itself. Still in light
trance, Evaine shifted her eyes to Cinhil’s, the crystal pulsating coldly
between them. “It is a focus,
and a finding,” she whispered, her face expressionless. “This is but the
beginning. From here, I could go—” She broke off and
shook her head, passing a hand before her eyes, and the light in the crystal
died. Cinhil sat forward in alarm, not comprehending what he had just seen. “Is anything
wrong?” he asked, reaching out to touch her arm in concern. Noting the touch,
but not daring to react to it, Evaine shook her head and smiled, glancing at
the crystal and then back at him. “Nothing wrong,”
she assured him. “It’s a trifle difficult to speak while maintaining the light,
though,” she lied. “I can better answer your questions in my normal state.” “Then, what you
were doing was not—normal?” “Well, it was
normal for Deryni—or rather, let us say that it was not abnormal,” she smiled.
“The shiral crystal is an aid to concentration. Anything can be used as
a focal point, but the shiral is better than most, because it shows you,
by glowing, when you’ve reached the minimum level of concentration. Anything
bright will do: a ring, a fleck of sunlight on glass. For that matter, you
don’t really need anything physical, though it does help, especially in the
beginning.” “You use it as a
focus of concentration,” Cinhil repeated. “And that is what you were doing in
the chapel?” “Well, yes, I
happened to be using it, but—” She glanced at him shrewdly, knowing that he was
about to ask the question she had been leading him to for the past five
minutes. “Your Highness, you surely aren’t thinking to try the shiral crystal
yourself? I don’t think it will work for humans.” “At least let me
try,” Cinhil pleaded, taking the bait and swallowing, without even realizing
the hook was set. Wordlessly, Evaine
laid the crystal in his hands and watched him settle back in his chair with a
triumphant glint to his eyes. Holding the crystal as he had seen her do, he
stared at it intently, tense with the effort of willing it to glow. Nothing happened. After a little
while, he clasped the crystal in his hand and looked up at her, his swallow
audible in the stilled room. It was obvious by the very line of his body that
he had not given up. “Show me how.” His harsh whisper
was a command, and with a nod Evaine moved her chair a little closer so she
could observe him from slightly to one side. “Now, you must
follow my instructions exactly,” she warned, touching his empty hand lightly
and gathering his full attention upon her. “I have never allowed a human to try
this, and I would not see you harmed. I have told you, the crystal has power.” “I will do only
what you tell me to do,” Cinhil said. His eyes were bright and intent upon her
as she turned slightly toward him. “I want you to
look at the crystal,” she said, noting that the firelight caught and flared in
the stone even as he steadied it before his eyes. “Stare at the crystal and let
all else in this room recede from your mind. Let my voice guide and guard you;
for to enter the peace of the crystal, you must let all else slip away and
recede for a time. Concentrate all of your consciousness upon the crystal, and
let my voice be your guide. Imagine all the light of your essence pouring
through your fingertips to gather in the matrix of the crystal. You see nothing
but the fire of the crystal, hear only my voice guiding you, and now your
universe is the crystal, and you are entering its domain . . .” As she spoke, her
voice low, almost a chant, his attention did focus on the stone, his breathing
deepened and slowed, the taut lines of his face relaxed. Cautiously, then, lest
she disturb the delicate balance which was forming, she extended her own senses
around him and felt the resistance melt away, felt his consciousness receding.
He was on the verge of a trance; he was in a trance. She closed her eyes and
let her senses guide her around the interstices of his outer consciousness,
felt them part before her as his shields crumbled and dissolved. Insidiously, then,
she entered and made certain adjustments, left certain instructions, forged
certain bonds of will which would be undetected when she withdrew. She found
his outer mind a place of order and beauty, as she had long suspected; but she
dared not go deeper this time, for his trance was light and she must not tax
his trust in her. Still, the seeds had been sown, and she knew that next time
she could return him to this state—and deeper—at will. Evaine withdrew
then, erasing all signs of her passage as she went, and opened her eyes slowly.
She glanced at him, his eyes unseeing, his face calm and untroubled—then felt
her gaze drawn unbelievingly to the crystal between his fingertips. It glowed!
Faintly and haltingly. But it did glow! Controlling the
impulse to make some sudden motion, to let some word of wonder escape her lips,
she softly began to speak again and lead him back to consciousness. As his eyelids
fluttered and his hands twitched a little in the coming back, the light in the
crystal died—but not before she was certain he had seen it, and had realized
that this had been his work. He blinked several times and breathed a sigh of
wonder, then carefully put the crystal on the chair arm between them, not yet
willing to meet her eyes. “Did I—did I
really see what I just thought I did?” he finally asked, when he had stared at
the crystal again for several heartbeats. “Yes, Your
Highness, you did.” He looked up at
her then, a beseeching look on his face. “I know I should not ask, but I would
like to keep the crystal, at least for a time. I—should like to examine
this feeling more closely.” “What did you
feel?” she said, not really needing to ask, but knowing he would expect such a
question. “I—don’t know. A
strange peacefulness, a—suspension of time.” He turned his gray Haldane eyes
upon her and his lips parted again. “May I keep it? Please?” “Very well. But
there is a condition: you must not try to use the crystal unless I am with
you.” “That is
understood.” “Your royal word
on it?” she insisted. “And more, your priestly word?” He picked up the
crystal again and looked at it, then nodded and gave a sigh of relief; he stood
and slipped the crystal into a small box over the fireplace. He caught himself
on the edge of the mantel and rubbed his eyes, then half turned toward her with
an ill-disguised yawn. “I’m sorry. I
don’t know why, but I’m suddenly very tired. I think I ought to rest now.” “Work with the
crystal can be very taxing,” she said, rising and taking his arm. “Come. Let me
help you to your bed.” Half an hour
later, Evaine was telling Camber and Rhys and Joram of the afternoon’s
developments, sharing the experience with them arcanely. Camber’s face beamed
with pride as she told her tale. When she had finished, Joram let out a raucous
whoop of delight and Rhys kissed her soundly. Camber sat back in his chair and
poured mulled wine for all of them. “Let us drink to
Evaine,” he said, handing cups around and lifting his in toast, “for doing what
no one else could do, for breaking through our prince’s shields without a hint
of battle. The way is clear now. We can go in and assess him, and he will never
know, until it’s time to do what must be done. To Evaine!” “To Evaine!” Rhys
and Joram echoed, and drank her salute in joy. They talked more,
then, long into the night, evaluating and assessing what she had learned in the
very shallow sampling she had made that afternoon, making plans, venturing
theories. ... The following
afternoon, after Cinhil had finished his studies for the day and taken his noon
meal, she sought him out again. He had been waiting for her; and as soon as she
was seated, he wasted no time in procuring the crystal and taking his place
beside her. “I have not touched
it since yesterday,” he told her, putting it in her hand. “When I awoke this
morning, I was initially angry at what you made me promise; but then I realized
that it was too powerful a thing to tamper with on my own, and that it were
best to go slowly. I had not thought to be so tired yesterday.” “That is a common
reaction when learning to use new abilities, even among Deryni,” she smiled.
“But, you awoke refreshed this morning, didn’t you?” “Yes, and in my
bed, my clothes removed. I”—he lowered his eyes—”I don’t even remember falling
asleep.” “You were very
tired when I left, Your Highness. I had Father Nathan come in and make you
comfortable for the night, since I suspected that you might not awaken before
morning. I hope you are not angry at the presumption.” “No, of course
not.” He folded his hands and studied them for a few seconds, obviously much
relieved by her explanation, then looked up at her again. “May—may we try it
again?” he asked. “Sit back and
relax.” She smiled, moving the crystal before his eyes. “And as I now place the
crystal in your hand, you will sleep.” His eyes closed
and his breathing changed, and he was deep asleep. With a sigh, she reached out
and touched his forehead, taking him ever deeper, securing control. Then she
rose and glided to the door to admit Camber, and resumed her place beside the
sleeping prince. She could feel her father’s reassuring presence as she
extended her senses and entered Cin-hil’s mind. She roamed its
recesses for perhaps a quarter-hour, Camber watching through her mind, never
touching Cinhil’s directly. Finally, she withdrew, shaking her head lightly to
clear away the last vestiges of her own trance, for she had been very deep.
Cinhil slept on, oblivious to what had happened, oblivious to their presence.
Camber smiled and brushed his daughter’s forehead lightly with his lips, then
quietly withdrew. After a moment, Evaine brought Cinhil back to the easy,
gentle trance he had achieved on his own the day before. As before, the stone
glowed faintly. She drew a sobering breath to steady herself. “Cinhil, hear my
voice only,” she said, “and listen to what I say. Though you are in this state
of otherness, you can still hear my voice and you can do what I tell you. Do
you wish to see the crystal glow? You may answer.” The royal lips
parted and breathed a scarcely audible “Aye.” “Then, when I
touch your hand, I want you to open your eyes. You will remain in this state of
otherness, you will still be in contact with the matrix of the crystal, but you
will be able to see it and react. It is real, and you have achieved this task.
Do you understand?” He nodded his head
slightly. “Very well, then.”
She touched his hand. “Open your eyes and tell me what you see.” He obeyed, the
long lashes rising slowly, his eyes like pools of quicksilver, tracking
dreamily to the crystal. For a moment there was no reaction, but then the ghost
of a smile tugged at the corners of his mouth and she knew that he saw. “It glows,” he
murmured, his voice flat in the trance, but tinged with a little wonder. “And I
have done this?” “Yes.” She touched
his hand again. “But now it’s time to return, remembering what you’ve seen.
Wake now, refreshed and relaxed. You’ve been successful.” As his eyelids
fluttered and he emerged from his trance, the light in the crystal died. But
this time, though he sighed at the return to the real world, a smile was on his
lips, and he closed the crystal in his hand instead of putting it down
immediately. He stared into the fire for just a moment, savoring what he had seen,
then looked at Evaine again and smiled, a genuine, relaxed smile such as she
had not seen upon his face in all the time he had been in the haven. “You remember,
don’t you?” she said. He nodded. “It was
beautiful. And I did it, didn’t I?” “You did it,” she
smiled. “This still doesn’t mean that you should try it without my presence
yet, but you’re learning. I think you can see, from the way you feel, that it
wasn’t nearly as difficult this time. Oh, Cinhil, if you will only let us help
you, we can make you such a king as the world has never seen!” He looked away at
that, as she had known he would, his face returning to its old, taut lines. But
though the shields were back, they were not nearly so high or so fast as
before. She left him to
ponder what he had seen; and though he stared long at the crystal after she had
gone, he did not try to enter it again that day. He had, after all, given his
word. They worked with
the crystal almost daily after that, until he learned to slip in and out of his
Deryni-like concentration unaided. After a time, she allowed him to use it in
his meditation; she did not tell him he no longer needed it. After that, he
seemed not quite so bitter at his lost priesthood. He still was not
eager to be king. And he still avoided intimate contact with the forlorn Megan
whenever he could, for he did not like to be reminded of this part of his
dynastic duty. But his education progressed smoothly, and in ways which he
himself did not dream. His work with the crystal, especially, was establishing
paths of discipline which would be invaluable once Camber discovered how to
unlock the potential that they now knew him to carry. It was May before
they were ready—the culmination of six long weeks of research and partial trial
and agonized planning. They argued over how much he should be told; over
whether he should be told ahead of time; over what form the unleashing of his
powers should take—for there were options available, and they must choose the
ones which would be least threatening to Cinhil and his rigid theological
orientation. They chose Rudemas
for the day of conferring power: Rudemas, called Beltane by the old reckoning.
Early that evening, before the prince’s evening meal had been brought, Camber
went with Evaine and Rhys to Cinhil’s quarters. He had been
sitting in his chair by the fire, his slippered feet propped on a footstool,
the shiral crystal in his hand, though he had not been using the stone.
He had been thinking about it, but it was more a thing to occupy his hands than
a focus for his mind just now. His stomach was telling him it was time for the
evening meal, and he wondered why they had not brought it yet. The knock at the
door was not unexpected, then, though he was a little surprised to see the
three of them instead of Father Nathan. With a slight nod, he bade them come
inside, motioning them to the chairs before the fireplace. “I thought you
might be bringing my dinner,” he said casually as he took his own chair.
“Father Nathan is usually quite prompt.” They had waited
until he was seated before sitting themselves. Evaine was in her accustomed
place to his left, Rhys on the arm of her chair away from Cinhil, Camber to
Evaine’s left. When they did not
speak, Cinhil cocked his head quizzically and shifted uneasily in his chair. “Is anything
wrong?” “No, all is as it
should be, Your Highness,” Camber replied. “It’s time we had a serious talk,
though. Of necessity, it will be brief.” “Why brief? The
evening is just begun, and I have no place to go.” “But you do,”
Camber said quietly. “That’s what we came to talk to you about.” “I’m afraid I
don’t understand.” Cinhil sat a little straighter and placed his hands
deliberately, formally, on the arms of his chair. He was not sure he liked the
tone of this conversation. He glanced at
Evaine, hoping for some clue, some hint of what was to come. Instead, he saw
her hand coming toward his forehead, knew suddenly that if he let her touch him
he would be lost. He shrank away from her, trying to avoid the hand, but it was
too late. “Sleep,” was all
she said. He felt the
swooping, slightly heady sensation he had felt before when he used the shiral
crystal—it was still in his hand, he realized dully—but this time he seemed
to have no control over it. He felt his eyes close and he sagged a little in his
chair. He could not seem to help himself, could not fight it. “Now, listen to
me,” he heard her voice say—-and her voice was the only thing in his universe.
“You will not resist us physically. You can open your eyes, but you will obey
me. Look at me, Cinhil.” His eyes opened
and he did look at her, but there was a sluggishness about his response which
he could not seem to shake. He swallowed and glanced at the others; he saw
Camber rising to walk around in front of him, to lean both hands on the arms of
his chair and stare into his eyes. He could not disengage from that gaze. “Open to me,
Cinhil,” the Deryni Master said. And Cinhil knew what they intended for him. He continued to
fight them, mentally, all the way to the chapel, but it was futile. They walked
him down the rockbound corridors, and he could not run or cry out or make one
move to thwart them. The chapel door
was guarded by a stern Michaeline knight—Cullen, Cinhil recognized with a
start—a naked greatsword resting with its quillons between his mailed fists. At
their approach, he touched a strangely glowing doorlatch, then bowed his head
in homage as they passed. The door closed behind them with a thud of finality
which made him long to wrench his head around for one last look at his
now-closed escape. But he did not.
For they had not told him he might. Instead, he went where he was bidden, stood
compliant and unresisting in the exact center of the faceted chamber, his feet
on the jewel-toned carpet where they had crowned him prince. By the light of
the Presence lamp and two tall altar candles, he watched with fogged detachment
as Joram came into view peripherally and mounted the three low steps to the
altar. The priest
genuflected and stood awhile in meditation, hair and surplice and brocaded stole
glowing in the sparse candlelight. Presently, a taper flared as Joram turned to
regard him; and then the priest was giving the taper to his sister, turning
back to the altar to spoon incense into a smoking thurible. Cinhil could not
see Camber or Rhys, though he knew they must be somewhere behind him. New beeswax
candles in free-standing brass holders had been placed at the foot of the altar
and a few paces to either side of Cinhil, and it was to the first of these that
Evaine now went. Cinhil seemed to recall that they had passed a fourth one as
they entered, in which case he was standing at the center of a circle defined
by the four new candles. He could not turn to verify that recollection—but that
was not the issue, anyway. What mattered was that the very concept of the
circle numbed him to cold panic. He told himself that there was a rational
reason for his alarm—tried to dredge that reason from his memory—but his mind
was not functioning properly. Evaine lit the
candle on the floor at the foot of the altar before him, then moved slowly
toward the one to his right, shielding the flame with her hand as she walked.
The otherness of the Deryni was like a sixth presence in the chamber, an icy
finger prodding at the base of his brain. He had the impression that the cold
he felt was not altogether the fault of the rock walls and floor. Joram set what
appeared to be a covered chalice on the floor at the base of the first
candlestick, then gave Camber something wrapped in white silk. The object was
small and delicate, from the way the Deryni lord was handling it, and Cinhil
found his attention drawn to it almost irresistibly. It was as though time hung
suspended, as though he watched through someone else’s eyes. Evaine lit the
candle to his right and began to move around behind him. “Would you please
kneel?” The voice at his
side was Rhys’s, and without hesitation Cinhil obeyed, unable to resist. He
could see now that what Camber held was a large, cabochon ruby the size of a
man’s little fingertip, set in the claws of a red-gold mounting and terminating
in a slender gold wire. “The gem is called
the Eye of Rom,” Rhys’s calm voice informed him, as the Healer’s hands did
something cold and wet to his right earlobe. “Legends say that it fell from the
stars on the night of Our Saviour’s birth, and was brought by the Magi as a
gift to the Child. Whether or not that is true, it has been in the MacRorie
family for twelve generations. We have endowed it with—ah—certain
characteristics which will be useful to you a little later tonight.” Rhys handed a
bright sliver of metal to Camber in exchange for the gem, brought the crimson
fire toward the royal head. Again, Cinhil felt the Healer’s gentle touch and
realized that Rhys must have pierced his ear. He wondered foggily how he would
look in an earring. “There. That’s
done,” Rhys said. He leaned back to inspect his work, then touched the prince
lightly on the shoulder. “You can stand up now.” Cinhil could and
did, and lost himself for the next few seconds in trying to fathom the
significance of what had just happened. The faint, musical jingle of metal
rattling against the thurible brought him back, and he saw that Evaine had
finished her circuit of the chamber and extinguished her taper, and was now
being censed by her brother. She made a slight
bow when he had finished, whether toward Joram or the altar or the first
candlestick, Cinhil could not be sure, then remained with her back to Cinhil,
her head slightly bowed. Joram, thurible swinging before him in a cloud of
sweet incense, began retracing the circle which Evaine had just trod. Cinhil
recognized the Latin Joram chanted: it was the Twenty-Third Psalm. He also, if
he squinted his eyes just so, was getting the distinct impression that the
circle glowed. He must have
drifted a bit, for the next thing he knew, Joram was censing those within the
circle. Camber stood to Cinhil’s left, Rhys to his right; and Evaine waited at
the edge of the circle with the cup in her hands, uncovered. He heard the faint
clink as Joram laid the thurible on the floor behind them, felt Joram’s passage
as he returned to Evaine and took the cup from her with a bow. He tensed as
brother and sister moved to stand before him, fearing he knew not what. The cup, he
noticed, was half filled with wine. Odd, but he could not remember having seen
this particular cup before, though he had thought he was familiar with all of
the altar furnishings in use in the haven’s chapel. “I suspect that
you’ve noticed this is not the chalice we customarily use in this chapel,” Joram
said, apparently reading his curiosity. “There are reasons for that, which will
become apparent to you in a little while. The wine is sacramental wine, but it
has not yet been consecrated. I tell you this to reassure you that there is no
desecration involved in what we do or ask you to do tonight. If that were our
intent, we would not be here, in this place. You may ask questions now, if you
wish.” The words freed
Cinhil’s tongue, and he swallowed apprehensively, a dozen questions boiling in
his mind. After consideration, he settled on a cautious approach, suspecting
that he already knew the sorts of answers he was going to get. “What were you
doing earlier?” “Warding. It is
something you will learn, in time. It is a protection from outside influences,
from forces which might otherwise interfere in what we do tonight. All within
the confines of the wards are now sealed from harm.” “Then there is
danger in what you do?” “There is always
danger,” Camber said in a low voice. “We seek to minimize that danger by
following certain carefully ordered procedures. Believe me, we would not risk
you here if we did not believe it was safe for you.” “But what are you
going to do to me?” Cinhil asked in a plaintive voice. Joram’s eyes met
his, unblinking, deadly serious. “We are going to give you the means to stand
against Imre.” “Enough, Cinhil.”
Camber touched his hand and he fell silent. “Joram, tell him what will be
expected of him.” Joram nodded
slightly. “The cup contains
wine, though it will soon be more than that. Not physically different, though
it will be bitter. But it will be changed in other ways which I cannot explain
just now. It is not unlike what occurs during the Mass, though it is not the
consecration with which you are familiar. It—” He looked to his father for
guidance, bowing gratefully at Camber’s nod. “Those details are
not important for your part,” Camber continued calmly. “In a little while,
Joram will ask you to repeat certain words after him. It doesn’t matter whether
you believe the words or not, though I think you’ll find that they’re very
familiar to you. In the right setting, following the proper sequence of
actions, they will accomplish our purpose. There should be no difficulties.” “And, after I
speak these words?” Cinhil whispered, knowing that he would obey, whatever
their answer. “Then you will
drink the wine,” Camber said. “And what will be, will be.” At that, Camber
moved a little more to Cinhil’s left, Joram taking a similar position to his
right. He felt Evaine move to stand behind him, the edge of her skirt brushing
his ankles in passage. Rhys, with a smile which Cinhil knew was intended to be
reassuring, turned to face the altar. Cinhil was
terrified, notwithstanding Rhys’s gesture, for he knew that it—whatever it
might be—was about to begin, and that he had no way to avoid it. Taking a
deep breath, he tried to calm himself, tried to let the tension wash out of him
a little—and was surprised to find that it worked. There was a moment of hush,
and then Evaine’s voice,behind him, weaving a crystal stillness around them
all. “We stand outside
time, in a place not of earth. As our ancestors before us bade, we join
together and are One.” He watched as Rhys
bowed his head, saw that Camber and Joram had done the same, inclined his own a
little in response. “By Thy Blessed
Apostles, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John; by all Thy Holy Angels; by all Powers
of Light and Shadow, we call Thee to guard and defend us from all perils, O
Most High,” she continued. “Thus it is and has ever been, thus it will be for
all times to come. Per omnia saecula saeculorum.” “Amen,” came the
joined response; and Cinhil found that he had answered the same. They made the sign
of the cross together then, and stood a while in silence. Finally, Rhys
turned to face him again, his golden eyes hooded, sun on dark waters. As Joram
passed him the cup with a bow, Rhys raised it to eye level between them, his
right hand spread flat above the rim, not touching. “I call the mighty Archangel Raphael, the Healer, Guardian of Wind and Tempest.
As the Holy Spirit didst brood upon the waters, so instill thou life into this
cup, that he who drinks thereof may justly bid the forces of the Air. Fiat,
fiat, fiat voluntas mea.” As he passed his
hand above the cup and exhaled upon it softly, a swirling mist gathered above
the wine and settled on its surface. The cup grew cold and frosted even as
Cinhil watched, bright beads of condensation sparkling as they ran down Rhys’s
hand. Rhys bowed over the cup, then passed it to Joram. The priest lifted the
cup as Rhys had done, spread his right hand over it. “I call the mighty
Archangel Michael,
the Defender, Keeper of the Gates of Eden. As thy fiery sword guards the Lord
of Heaven, so lend thy protection to this cup. That he who drinks thereof may
justly forge the might of Fire. Fiat, fiat, fiat voluntas mea.” A pass of his hand
above the cup, a murmured phrase, and cold fire burned blue around the rim and
on the surface of the wine. Cinhil closed his eyes and took another deep breath
to still his terror. Movement behind told him that Evaine now held the cup. “I call the mighty
Archangel Gabriel,
the Herald, who didst bring glad tidings to Our Blessed Lady. Send thou thy
wisdom into this cup, that he who drinks thereof may justly guide the knowledge
of the Water. Fiat, fiat, fiat voluntas mea.” Then the cup was
in Camber’s hands, the great lord grim and somber as the night. For the fourth
time, a hand was extended over the cup, Deryni forces brought into play. “I call the mighty
Archangel Uriel,
Angel of Death, who bringest all souls at last to the Nether shore. Herewith I
charge this cup, that he who drinks thereof may justly bind the forces of the
Earth. Fiat, fiat, fiat voluntas mea.” Another pass, a
dustlike rain of some white powder upon the surface of the wine, and then
Camber held it out to Cinhil. The metal ran with
moisture, glistening, cold; and about the rim played ghostly blue frost-fire.
Mist brooded on the surface of the wine—wine which was darker now, more opaque.
Cinhil felt an icy dread surge through his body, feared the words he knew would
come next. “Take the cup,
Cinhil,” Joram’s voice commanded from his right. “Hold the cup before you and
repeat the words I say.” Trembling, Cinhil
watched his hands reach out, felt the cup cold and wet and sleek within his
grasp. Almost without thinking, he found his hands lifting it as they had
lifted countless other cups, though not recently; he realized that what he had
seen, what he was about to do, was no whit less sanctified than any priestly act
he had ever performed. That thought
sobered him as all his reason had not been able to do. Precise and clear, he
echoed the familiar words which Joram bade. “Libera nos,
quaesumus, Domine, ab omnibus mails, praeteritis, praesentibus, et futuris. . .
.” Deliver us, we beseech Thee, O Lord, from every evil, past, present, and
to come. . . . “Per eumdem Dominum nostrum Jesum Christum Filium tuum, qui
tecum vivit et regnat in unitate Spiritus Sancti Dens. Per omnia saecula
saeculorum.” “Amen,” the
four responded. Then his hands
were bringing the cup toward his lips, and he knew that he would drink. Power was in the
cup now; he could feel it tingling in his hands and surging down his arms even
as he held it. The wine was cold and bitter, and he felt it hit his stomach in
an icy, leaden mass, felt fire course through his veins, a flash of brilliance
sear behind his eyes, as he drained the cup. A rushing wind
surged through his mind, rending, tearing, driving a wall of glass-green water
before it; lightning flashing; chasms opening up in the fabric of his being.
And pain—an agony so intense he could not even scream. He felt the cup
slipping from his fingers, faintly heard it ring against the muffling carpet
beneath his feet. But then he was blind, and he was deaf; and he was falling
into the abyss, his mind gripped in a soundless scream of terror. And the darkness
prevailed. chapter twentyHear us, my
lord; thou art a prince of God among us. —Genesis 23:6 He lay as one dead
for a day and a night after that, his condition watched closely by Rhys, the
others hovering anxiously nearby. When on the second morning he opened his eyes
again for the first time, they were there, peering down at him eagerly, a dozen
unspoken questions on their lips. But he did not
remember what had happened— or said he did not. And no, he did not seem to have
any new abilities or powers—why should he? They could not even go into his mind
again to see, having relinquished all control over him with the conferring of
their spells. If Cinhil had gained power, he was not telling them—perhaps never
would, if he was terribly angry at the way they had gone about their task. Or
perhaps their attempt had failed, and nothing had happened, other than to throw
their future king into a coma for a time. Until he decided to talk about what,
exactly, had happened, there was no way for them to know. They settled in to
await the birth of Cinhil’s heir, and to hope. Summer passed.
Outside the haven, Imre’s reprisals against the Michaelines ground to a halt
after his men sacked and burned a village adjoining one of the condemned
monasteries. If Imre had not stopped it, he might have faced rebellion. But if the
Michaeline furor had died down by the end of the summer, the activities of the
Willimites had not. Seizing on the by-now widespread rumors of a living Haldane
heir, small bands of Willimite executioners worked their deadly morthwork by
night, slaying a full score and more of Deryni folk whose crimes had gone
unpunished by the law. At last a Deryni princeling toppled—Termed of Rhorau,
cousin of the king himself—and Imre could ignore the Willimites no longer.
Outside of Gwynedd, the madness spread even as far north as Kheldour, where
human lords still held tenuous rule. Enraged, Imre determined to find the murderers
and make an end to the Willimites once and for all. Royalist troops,
under the leadership of Earl Santare, were more successful at rounding up
peasants than they had been at running the Michaelines to ground. (Less than a
dozen Michaelines were eventually executed, in the seven months of intensive
search for members of the ill-starred order.) By the beginning of autumn, more
than eighty Willimites, among them the key leaders of the Willimite movement,
had been captured, tortured, and horribly executed as an example. Imre,
reassured by the dwindling numbers of the enemy he could see, began to worry
less and less about one whom he could not see and whose existence, in fact, he
had begun to doubt. From not one of the Michaelines or Willimites captured had
he been able to get a shred of evidence of a Haldane pretender. As Michaelmas came
and went, still without that evidence, Imre relaxed even more. With Yuletide
approaching, it became far easier to become caught up in the gaiety of the
season than to worry about a disaster which would probably never come. Besides,
it had been nearly a year since the MacRories had disappeared into oblivion. And in hiding, the
promised saviour of his people continued in his solitude. Though he had, by
now, fully recovered from his ordeal of May—at least physically—the anticipated
manifestation of power did not occur. Cinhil continued to read and study as
required, seemingly resigned to the fate which had been chosen for him; and
after a few strained weeks, he resumed the afternoon visits with Evaine; but
there was never again the intimacy of their previous discussions. The
Michaelines continued to prepare, and life continued in the haven; but Camber
worried about the future—about what would happen when the child was born and they
must begin their plans in earnest for the coup. Nor were there any ready
answers. Cinhil’s son was
born on the Feast of Saint Luke, as they had known he would be; and with his
first lusty cry, his father’s spirits and mental attitude began to change. Cinhil
still had not displayed any evidence of arcane powers, nor volunteered any
suggestions as to why he could not use them. (Camber suspected that he would
not use them. They had gone over every step of the ritual, and there was no
chance for error, in light of the reactions Cinhil had made at the time.) But
the prince did smile more after the child’s birth. And one night, over dinner
with Rhys and Evaine, he actually made a joke. The event of his
son’s birth became a milestone of sorts. Though Cinhil tried hard not to show
it, it was soon apparent to everyone that the prince was more than a little
proud of his new heir. Quite without prompting, he suggested that it might be
appropriate if all of the residents of the haven were invited to the baby’s
christening. He even expressed an interest in planning the details with Joram. Camber conveyed
the royal invitation with relief and set the date. It would be November 6, the
Feast of Saint Illtyd. Sext, the Sixth Hour, was set for the christening
ceremony. Few had seen the
royal infant or mother in the past month, for the Princess Megan had had a
difficult birthing, despite Rhys’s best healing efforts. She walked with
Cinhil’s support at her elbow as they entered the chapel, radiant if a little
unsteady still from her recent confinement. Evaine carried the infant prince to
the baptismal font, Rhys at her left side. The look in Cinhil’s eyes was one of
dumbstruck awe, and he seemed not even to notice the heads which bent and bowed
as he passed into the chamber with his princess, so intent was he upon the
bundle of silk kicking lustily in Evaine’s arms. His gaze never left his son as
Archbishop Anscom began the form of baptism. “In nomine
Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti “Amen.” Rhys and Evaine,
the baby’s chosen godparents, stood before the baptismal font opposite Anscom
and Joram and another Michaeline whom Anscom had brought with
him from Valoret. The archbishop’s gravelly voice
reached to every corner of the faceted chapel chamber. “Exorcizo te,
creatura sails, In nomine Del . . .” As Anscom blessed
the salt which the priest at his left held forth, Cinhil craned his neck to get
a better view; in annoyance, he took Megan’s arm and eased her to a vantage
point at Rhys’s left, where they could gaze at their son. “Aidanus Alroi,
accipe sal sapiente…” Anscom intoned. Receive the salt of wisdom… The baby gurgled
and fussed a little as the salt was placed on his tongue, but Evaine cooed and
bounced him a bit and he settled down. Anscom, well used to the protestations
of salt-tongued infants, went blithely on with the ceremony, laying the end of
his stole across the baby’s body. “Aidanus Alroi,
ingredere in templum Del . . .” Enter into the temple of God ... When the
archbishop had anointed the baby with oil on the breast and between the
shoulder blades, he turned his attention on Rhys. “Aidanus Alroi,
credis in Deum, Patrem omnipotentum, Creatorem caeli et terra?” “Credo,” replied
Rhys, answering for his godson. I believe. “Credis in
Jesum Christum Filium ejus unicum, Dominum nostrum?” “Credo.” “Credis in
Spiritum Sanctum et sanctam Ecclesiam?” “Credo.” “Aidanus Alroi,
vis baptizari?” “Volo.” I
do. Smiling slightly,
Anscom picked up the silver ewer containing the water for baptism. He could
scarcely contain his delight as he turned and offered the ewer to the prince. “Would Your
Highness care to perform this office for his son?” Cinhil’s jaw
dropped and his eyes went round. “I, Your Grace?” “Even a layman may
baptize in necessity, Cinhil,” Anscom said, his smile broadening as he watched
the beginning of Cinhil’s comprehension. “I believe you more than qualify.” Cinhil stared at
the archbishop as though unable to believe his ears, joy transfiguring his face
as it had not for many, many months. “Can this be
true?” he whispered. “I am to be permitted this?” Anscom nodded
gently and put the ewer into the prince’s hands. “Fiat, Frater,”
he murmured. Bowing his head in
humility, Cinhil took the ewer to his chest and bowed thanks, then turned back
to where his son awaited him. The infant had quieted in Evaine’s arms, and as
Cinhil motioned her to move closer, the baby yawned and appeared to doze.
Evaine shifted so that she could hold the baby over the font, and Rhys laid his
right hand on the child’s shoulder. “Aidanus Alroi
Camberus,” Cinhil whispered, beginning to pour the water over the crown of
the baby’s head the requisite three times. Camber’s eyes
flashed to Cinhil in surprise as the prince continued, for he had not known
that his name was to be given to the royal child. “Ego te baptizo
in nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti. Amen.” But as Cinhil
returned the ewer to its place and reached for the towel which Joram held, Rhys
froze, then laid both hands on the baby’s head. The infant whimpered once,
coughed and gave a little sigh; then it was still. As Rhys’s jaw dropped in
shock, Cinhil’s eyes darted to the child. “Sweet Jesus,
what’s wrong with him? Why isn’t he moving? He’s not breathing!” Rhys stared
numbly, not daring to speak the icy horror which lay beneath his hands, and
Evaine raised stunned eyes to the prince. “He—he’s dead,
Cinhil,” she said in a small voice. There was no sound
in the chapel for perhaps five heartbeats, and then Princess Megan gave a
little cry and fainted. Guaire of Arliss caught her as she crumpled, his
stricken “My Lady!” breaking the still tableau; but even as Cinhil turned
shocked eyes toward her, he clutched at his chest in pain and started to
collapse. He caught himself
on the edge of the baptismal font, clung to it unsteadily, drunkenly, clamped
his eyes shut and shook his head as though to break free of some binding force
which would crush him. White-knuckled, he bent over the rim of the font, a
long, almost animal cry escaping his lips as he stared into the water. Then he
jerked upright to look wildly about him, a terrible expression lighting his
eyes. “They have killed
my son!” he cried, his glance striking each of them as though with physical
blows. “They have killed my son, and now they seek to destroy me!” “Who is trying to
destroy you, Cinhil?” Camber retorted. “Name your attackers! Tell us what you
feel!” His eyes sought some clue around the room, yet were drawn back to fasten
on Cinhil in dread fascination. He could detect no attack, no hostile threat at
all. If Cinhil was under attack, his assailant was very skilled. “No, not they—he!”
Cinhil gasped. “He is in this room! He is one whom we trusted. Do
not touch me!” he added, as Rhys moved as though to restrain him. Whirling about
abruptly, he snatched the body of the dead baby from Evaine and clutched it
protectively as he backed against the altar. “We will find him,
my Aidan,” he whispered savagely. “I will avenge you!” “Cinhil!” Camber’s
voice cut through the rising horror as though he had shouted, though he had
scarcely raised his voice. “Cinhil, there is nothing you can do. Let Rhys take
the baby. Perhaps he can—” “No. He is dead.”
The voice was flat, leaden. “I know it, Camber, with the sure certainty which
you yourself tried to teach me.” He swept his hard gaze around the room again.
“One of you has betrayed me!” “Has he gone mad?”
Joram whispered to Rhys. Rhys shook his
head. “No. The baby was poisoned —in the salt, I think. I—” The prince had
been scanning everyone in the room, and now he whirled and strode to the center
of the chapel, there to glare in outrage at a man in the habit of a Michaeline
priest—the same priest who had been assisting Anscom with the baptism. The
man’s eyes were calm, unreadable, until Cinhil took a single step closer and
whispered, “You!” As all eyes locked
on the priest, and those closest shrank away, a change came upon the man. His
eyes came alive, the body stood straighter—and then the arms were upraised in
the beginnings of a spell, fingers moving in a certain pattern of attack and
defense. Instinctively,
Cinhil threw up one arm in a warding-off gesture, a faint corona of pinkish
fire partially veiling his face. He gaped at the man unabashedly as everyone
else crowded against the walls. “You, a priest,
would dare raise hand against brother?” Cinhil murmured, unaware of what he had
just done. The Michaeline
said nothing; only stood and stared across at the Haldane heir, his eyes
smoldering. Power was building
in the center of the room. But if Cinhil’s attacker was a trained Deryni,
Cinhil himself was at least untested, and neither had yet paused to cast a
protective circle around the battle area. Camber, fearing for the humans among
them, signed for his kin to shield the noncombatants. It was just in time, for
Cinhil’s next words shook the very air, the ancient, awesome phrases echoing
from arch and joist and mosaicked panels. Cinhil’s words
brought crimson fire to encircle him —a dancing, living flame which was not so
much seen as felt and experienced, by those on the outside. It was a fire which
was sensed, if at all, out of the corner of the eye—which disappeared when
sought head-on, but which was no less deadly should it come within reach of the
unprotected. Cinhil stood straight and terrible, his dead son clasped close
against his breast. The Michaeline
moved toward him in a haze of gold, until only a few meters of sparkling air
separated them. The air glittered
with power, visible lightning arcing across from one man to the other, only to
be dashed ineffectually against the other’s shields. The air was sharp and
acrid, like the charged, moist stillness before a thunderstorm. The candles
guttered wildly in the growing flux of energy. Energy howled and echoed in the
rockbound chamber, coruscating around the heads of the two combatants like mad,
misshapen haloes. A greater surge now blew out all the candles, and for a
moment the wind moaned on in near-darkness. Then the roaring
of the wind increased in pitch, until the watchers could discern two
voices—wordless, mighty, contending darkly in the abyss which had been opened
by the forces locked in mortal combat. The pressure grew, and the watchers
tried to cover their ears, their eyes, their minds, against the not-sounds,
not-sights, not-thoughts which barraged the senses from every angle. Finally, the Michaeline
staggered and let out a low, desperate cry, his eyes at last clearing from
their trancelike stare as he reached out in desperate supplication and fell.
Abruptly, all sound ceased, and the room was plunged into blackness. Silence. Velvet
darkness, save for the fading aura, felt rather than seen, of the victorious
Cinhil, wrapped in the living light of his now-realized powers, living arms
still locked protectively around the dead form of his infant son. It was Camber who
finally had the presence of mind to break the tension, by stepping from his
place against the wall to flare the candles back to light. Anscom was not far
behind, walking slowly to the side of the motionless Michaeline priest,
kneeling to cradle the man’s head wordlessly in his lap. Rhys came and laid a
hand on the man’s forehead, but the priest was dead. Together with Anscom,
then, Rhys entered the dead man’s mind, clearing the way for Anscom to read
what little still remained. When Anscom raised
his head, it was to turn shocked eyes upon Cinhil. He did not rise, but bowed
his head in shame. “Forgive me, My
Prince. I fear that I am partially to blame for all of this. I should not have
brought him here. He told me, before, that Imre’s men had tried to capture him
last spring—that was one reason I took him in. But he could not tell me that,
in fact, they had succeeded. He—is not responsible. Please forgive him.” “The king had done
this?” Cinhil asked, his voice low, dangerous. “Yes, My Prince,”
Anscom whispered. “And he can warp a
man’s mind to do such a thing against his own will?” Anscom nodded, not
daring to speak, and Cinhil turned his terrible gaze on Camber, then on the
rest of them gathered still around the edges of the chapel, sweeping with his
glance but not really seeing any of them. Then he moved purposefully to where
Anscom and Rhys knelt by the fallen priest and stooped to lay his hand gingerly
on the dead man’s shoulder. “For that you were
vanquished by another stronger than yourself, and yourself wished me no harm,
nor harm to my son”—his voice started to break, but he controlled it—”I forgive
you.” He rose quickly to
his feet, his face terrible in the candlelight. “But for him who
has done this thing to you and me and mine, there can be no forgiveness in this
world or the next. Woe be unto thee, Imre of Festil, and to all thy base and
cowardly line, who would strike down helpless infants and break good men to the
yoke of evil. I will avenge them and all whom thou hast made to suffer by thy
might. This I swear—I, Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane—by my faith, by the Crown of
Gwy-nedd, which my forefathers wore and which I shall surely wear again, if
only to destroy thee, and by the body of my murdered son. There shall be an
end!” And as the Prince
of Gwynedd stood straight and tall beneath the eyes of God and men, the raw
power dying around his head as he became only slightly more than mortal once
more, every knee bent in fealty, and every head bowed in homage. Camber,
kneeling with the others, tried to push his own apprehensions to the back of
his mind. chapter twenty-oneFor out of
prison he comes to reign; whereas also he that is born in his kingdom becomes
poor. —Ecclesiastes
4:14 They buried the
infant Prince Aidan in a tiny tomb beneath the floor of the chapel where he had
died, on the Feast of the Four Crowned Ones, who had also been martyrs to royal
tyranny centuries before. Cinhil, terrible in his grief, would not permit
anyone else to touch the body at first, keeping watch alone in the cold little
chapel for a night and a day and a night, taking no food and sleeping not at
all. Only on the morning of the second day did he permit them to enter and seal
the baby in its tiny casket and consign it to the grave. He would not speak of
the incident after the burial. The slain priest,
too, was buried in the chapel a day later, though it was only the Michaelines
and Camber who came to mourn him. Alister Cullen performed the simple rites.
Later, much later, there would be a carved stone set into the wall where he
lay, but the words would be brief, as they had always been for every Michaeline
who died in the Faith: Here lieth Humphrey of Gallareaux, a priest of Saint
Michael. Only that and the dates. Beyond that, they could do nothing for
him. Cinhil was much
changed after this. If he had been withdrawn and subdued before, now he was
cold, ruthless, machine-like in his dealings even with his allies. No longer
the quiet, guilt-ridden priest-cum-prince who had wrestled with his
conscience to reconcile his new calling, now Cinhil was coldly interested in
every facet of the planning which was being carried out at fever pitch—for all
that his interest was darkly colored by vengeance and shrouded by aloofness. He
must know their military strength, and from where each group of men would
attack when the order came, and who would command, and what provisions had been
made for each detail of the infiltration plan. Most of all, he would know when.
Delay now made him restless. The information
was his for the asking, though Camber continued to harbor some concern about
his motives. The Michaeline knights, he was told, were gathering even now, the
original fifty in the vicinity of the haven, and another century and a half at
Dhassa. The Culdi levies were also preparing, secretly raised by Camber on one
of his infrequent trips outside the haven, five hundred of them prepared to
stand the city of Valoret to siege if the Michaeline assault should fail. They planned their
move for the first of December, the night of the opening of Imre’s Yule Court,
when everyone of any importance in the kingdom would be within Valoret’s walls
and, more importantly, within the confines of Imre’s castle. Judging from past
Yule Courts, it would be a night of drunkenness and debauchery—in all, a
perfect night for invaders to infiltrate, overpower less-than-wary guards, and
topple a dynasty. They learned more,
too, of the man who had been responsible for Prince Aidan’s death. There had
been no deliberate betrayal; and Imre’s actions regarding Humphrey had resulted
in a mere fluke. When captured, Humphrey had not even known for certain of the
Haldane’s existence, and had no idea of the location of the haven; even Imre
had recognized this as soon as Humphrey’s will was broken. But just in case
Humphrey should happen upon word of such a man, the king had taken pains to
plant the seeds of treachery and destruction. Humphrey was released with the
memory that he had not been captured at all, though he had come close.
Naturally, he had flown to Archbishop Anscom for refuge; and Anscom, unwittingly,
had taken Humphrey in. When Anscom returned to the haven to baptize Cinhil’s
heir, it was the most natural thing in the world for Humphrey to accompany him.
After all, were not the Michaelines his brethren? This information was
dutifully passed on to Cinhil, along with all of the other intelligence they
were gathering; and it did soften his heart a little toward the man whose
physical body had been responsible for his son’s death. But though Cinhil
continued to show an astounding grasp of the military tactics and planning with
which he was being bombarded, an aloofness continued to surround him, couching
an ever-deeper resentment for the Deryni despite the circumstances of
Humphrey’s betrayal. Camber became increasingly aware of it, as his earlier
fears were reinforced by Cinhil’s actions; and he discussed this with the
others more than once. But there was really nothing that anyone could do, other
than to be aware of the potential problem— and to hope and pray that they would
not have to deal with it in any major way. Cinhil’s princess
probably suffered most directly in the weeks that followed. Though she was soon
with child again, Cinhil having been impressed with the necessity of another
heir as soon as possible, she was a wraith-like shadow of the spirited,
sensitive girl who had come less than a year before to be the bride of Haldane.
A little genuine attention from her lord husband could have eased her
heartsickness considerably, but Cinhil was too busy, too preoccupied, to notice
her need. He was gently courteous to her in public, as was fitting the mother
of his future heirs, and it could not be said that he abused her or even
ignored her, but there was a cool superficiality to their relationship, as
though living the role of prince and future saviour of Gwynedd had sapped him
of all ability to love or be loved. Though he now seemed to have accepted his
role as prince, he had an increasing otherworldliness about him—not purely of
religious fervor, though that continued to be an integral part of his personality,
but more a clinical detachment, an emotional divorce from the feeling of what
had happened, and what must happen in the future, if all of them were to
survive. Camber observed
all of this in
sadness—doubly so, because he loved Megan like a father, and saw how she
was grieving and alone when she most needed the love and support of her
husband. Camber understood what it was to lose a child. He had paid the price
of a son, and knew that he would pay the price of other children, and his own
life, if need be, if there were no other way to save their cause. But to lose a
child in battle with the enemy was one thing; to have one pine away for lack of
loving was quite another. He and Evaine and Rhys made special efforts to try to
comfort Megan, but it was poor substitute for what Megan really needed. He
could only hope that Cinhil would realize, after a time, what he was doing to
her. The evening of the
first of December found their preparations complete, the first steps set
irreversibly into motion. Late in the afternoon, the fifty Michaeline knights
who would be leading the assault through a Portal in the castle itself had
attended a Mass of special intention for the prince’s cause, reconsecrating
their swords to the holy fight in which some of them were certain to perish.
The other century and a half of Michaelines, under command of Lord Jebediah of
Alcara and Jamie Drummond, was already at the Portal in Dhassa, awaiting
Transfer to the archbishop’s apartments in Valoret. They would secure the city itself,
overpowering the city garrison and making certain that none but Haldane
supporters passed the city gates. The final
blessings given, all that remained in the chapel were the principals: Cinhil;
Camber and his kin; and the noncombatants, who would remain behind. The men
wore mail and helms and bright swords girded at their sides, surcoats and
coronets proclaiming the ranking among them. Only Cinhil was not clad as all
the rest—and that, in itself, was a victory of a sort. Cinhil had not
wanted to go armed at all. He had wanted to wear only a long, belted robe of
white, to show the purity of his intentions. He was not a warrior. He had not
thought it appropriate that a priest-king should go forth armed with mere
mortal steel to battle the archenemy. After all, it would not be steel which
would defeat Imre of Festil. But the women had
maintained otherwise, and had taken steps to ensure that their prince should go
forth as a king ought. Megan, Evaine, and Elinor had labored for weeks, not
showing him what they wrought. When, on the afternoon before battle, he had
gone to his chamber to meditate before appearing for Mass, he had found a
king’s attire awaiting him. He never learned
where they had gotten the gold-washed mail, though the stuff had a cold, unearthly
glow about it which he somehow did not care to think about. This was to go over
an undergarment of white silk, a doublet of softest leather cushioning the
metal links from his skin. Greaves of gold-chased steel buckled over leather
breeches and boots; matching vambraces guarded his forearms. Scarlet gauntlets,
rich-embroidered with his Haldane crest on the cuff, were the gift of the slain
Cathan’s Elinor. Over all would go the knee-length surcoat of crimson silk,
with the golden lion of Gwynedd blazoned bold on chest and back in gold-bullion
thread. Cinhil was speechless. He put on the
undergarment, the padded doublet and breeches, the boots. He stood a long time
looking into the mirror, studying the regal warrior’s face which stared back at
him with level gaze. Then he called for the women to attend him; he could do
nothing else. Gravely, he received them and thanked each one. After, he asked
them to help him arm. It was fitting, he said, that a man who had never borne
steel should be armed for his maiden battle by the women who had made it
possible for him to go at all. They armed him
then, though many a finger fumbled with straps and clasps as eyes blurred with
joyful tears. When they had finished, Evaine buckled a plain, cross-hilted
sword over his surcoat—the white belt for purity, she told him as she brushed
his cheek with her lips. Then she was stepping back to make a low curtsey, and
it was Megan’s turn. The princess had
saved her gift for last, watching shyly in the background as her lord assumed
more and more the appearance of a king. Scarcely breathing, with her
nervousness, she produced a coronet from behind her skirts—not the simple,
silver circlet with which he had been crowned Prince of Gwynedd on their
wedding night, but a band of gold and silver intertwined, surmounted by four
bold crosses. Her hands began to
tremble as she looked into his eyes. Cinhil, deeply moved, laid his fingertips
on hers, so that the coronet was held between them. She swallowed and started
to draw away, but he shook his head gently and closed his hands around hers. “Please forgive
me, my lady. I have ill-used you when I should instead have thanked you—for my
son, for your support when I needed it.” He glanced down at her body, then met
her eyes again with a strained smile. “And for our sons who are to be. There
will be two of them this time, you know. Twin boys.” Her eyes widened,
for though Rhys had told her that she was with child, and that there would be a
boy, there was as yet no sign of it upon her. And how could he know that there
would be two? “You—know, my
lord?” “I know,” he
smiled. “I know.” She lowered her
eyes and blushed prettily at that, and Cinhil thought that he had never seen
her look so lovely. He could sense Evaine and Elinor watching in the background,
and the thought crossed his mind that he was probably making them uncomfortable
with this moment of apparent tenderness, but he didn’t care. It had suddenly
occurred to him that he might well die tonight, despite his powers; and if he
did, he should never again see this lovely, unspoiled child who was his wife.
Strange, but he found that the term came easily now, no longer carrying the
mental qualms it once had borne. Abruptly, he regretted the weeks of neglect,
spent in brooding on vengeance, and in a flash of inspiration realized what he
could do to make at least a partial mending. He raised the
coronet slightly and took it from her hands. “I shall wear this
token of my lady’s favor on one condition,” he said, looking down into those
incredibly turquoise eyes. “That my lady shall wear it first.” He lowered it
briefly to crown her wheaten hair. “Let this be a symbol of the sovereignty we
share, and the regency I leave with her on behalf of my sons that are to be. If
I should not survive this night, my lady, you are Queen of Gwynedd, as the
mother of my sons.” Her eyes misted
with tears as he removed the coronet and placed it firmly on his own head. Then
he kissed her lightly on the lips and led her and the other women into the
chapel for Mass. It was well after
midnight when the Great Lords of Gwynedd finally lit King Imre to bed in his
tower chambers. It was nearly half an hour after that before Archbishop Anscom
could slip away from the others and make his way to the castle’s chapel. The evening had
been tense and interminable for Anscom, harboring, as he did, the knowledge of
how the night must end. He had found it far more difficult than usual to be
civil to the numerous toadying hangers-on at Court; he had been curt and
snappish more than once during the course of the feast and revelling. The lord
chamberlain had even asked whether he would rather not be excused, since he
obviously was feeling so out of sorts. Anscom had assured him that it was but a
momentary touch of indigestion, and that it would pass. The chamberlain had
thoughtfully brought him a cup of goat’s milk, for the archbishop’s touchy
stomach was well known at Court. He had made a
great effort at least to seem to be enjoying himself, after that. But it had
been an odd Court, full of strains and undercurrents not usually present at one
of Imre’s gatherings—and especially not at the opening of the Yule Court, one
of the most festive occasions of the year. Anscom wondered whether Imre
suspected that something was brewing, or whether his frenetic gaiety was only
symptomatic of the general malaise which had been growing at Court for the last
year. He also noted that Imre had decreed a green court this year—not the
disastrous white of the previous Christmas Court. Perhaps that, and the
memories of that last Yule, accounted for Imre’s nervousness. Anscom could not
say he blamed the king. Princess Ariella
was not in attendance, either— though no one had really expected her to be. She
was seldom seen in public of late, and rumor had it that she had been quite ill
for several months. More vicious castle gossip insisted that Ariella’s
“illness” was nothing which would not be alleviated by the loss of a
nine-month’s accumulation of weight, but such theories were never discussed
where they might reach the king’s ears. Anscom himself had
no opinion on the matter, though if Ariella were with child, it might be the
result of an incestuous relationship with her brother. If true, the child could
become a serious threat to the throne, should it live; but that was a problem
to be dealt with when the time came. It was entirely possible that Ariella was
quite innocent—though Anscom doubted it. And so the Yule
Court fared as Yule Courts will, when one is forced to be present at an affair
where one has no wish to be. The meal was passable, if somewhat tasteless to
Anscom’s nerve-dulled palate; and the entertainment was of an enforced gaiety
which only occasionally bordered on the genuinely amusing. Still, when the
Great Lords finally took up torches and conveyed the more than slightly tipsy
king to his chambers—to the tune of drunken songs and lewd jokes—it was all
Anscom could do to curb his impatience and pronounce the final blessing. When
he finally reached the refuge of the chapel and slipped inside, he leaned his
forehead against the cool bronze doors for several heart-pounding minutes until
he could collect his wits. Then he made his
way to the sacristy door and fitted his key to the lock, stepping into total
darkness as he closed the door behind him. A candle flared to light in the
center of the room, and there stood Camber, Joram, Evaine, Rhys, and a few
others, waiting for him, flanking the crowned Prince Cinhil. “Stand not on
ceremony, Archbishop,” Cinhil admonished, when Anscom started to kneel. “How
stands the situation without? Is the tyrant abed?” Raising an eyebrow
at the new title which Cinhil had apparently bestowed upon his rival, Anscom
straightened his cassock and nodded. “I accompanied the Great Lords to his
chambers but half an hour past, Your Highness. With the quantity of wine which
he consumed, he will be stuporous by now. The guard is in little better shape.
It is as we had hoped.” “Excellent,”
Cinhil nodded. “The outside strike force has already begun infiltrating the key
defense points throughout the city. We but await your word to bring our smaller
force of knights here.” Anscom sighed and
nodded his head. “Then, begin, Your Highness. There is much work for us here
tonight.” Two hours later,
the castle was essentially Cinhil’s, though sporadic fighting still continued
in the corridors and in the castle yard. Guaire and a handful of Michaelines
had slipped around and barricaded the doors to the guardroom and barracks where
the main castle garrison slept, so that the rest of their force had only to contend
with the guards actually on duty. Joram and Cullen led half a dozen knights and
the royal party in a sweep up the main corridor to the foot of Irnre’s own
tower, where they fought a quick but bloody battle to gain the spiral stair.
Though four of their Michaeline brethren fell to enemy swords, it was a matter
of only minutes before the rebels were making their way up the stairs to Imre’s
own door. There was no guard
outside, and no sound came from within. Joram wondered whether Imre had merely
slept through the sounds of battle, or whether he waited, even now, to unleash
a full arcane defense as soon as they should breach the door. Lowering his
sword, Joram wiped a blood-stained gauntlet across his brow and silenced a sigh
as he reached the top of the stairs. Behind him, Cullen and Rhys and the two
remaining Michaelines waited with their weapons still drawn, Camber sheathing
his and standing escort beside a dark-visaged Cinhil, shielding Evaine. Joram caught
Camber’s slightly nodded signal and turned back to the door, then raised the
hilt of his sword to pound heavily on the polished oak, one, two, three, four
times. The sound echoed down the spiral staircase which they had just ascended
at such cost. “What is it?” a sleepy and slightly wine-blurred voice
grunted, nearly inaudible. Cinhil tensed at
the sound and turned to glance at Camber. As his lips mouthed the single word, Imre?,
Camber nodded and Joram knocked again. “Who’s there?” the
voice said again, louder this time. “I told you, I didn’t want to be disturbed.
Go away.” “Officer of the
guard, Sire,” Joram said, disguising his voice slightly. “I have a message for
Your Highness.” “Can’t it wait
until morning, man?” the voice whined irritably. “I just got to bed. You know
that.” “The gate warder
said it was important, Sire,” Joram replied. “Perhaps Your Highness should take
a look at it.” “Perhaps My
Highness should have you whipped for your impertinence,” the voice snapped.
“Oh, very well. Slip it under the door and I’ll look at it later.” Joram glanced at
the others in annoyance, then let a slender smile flick across his lips. “I’m afraid it
won’t fit, Sire. It’s a sealed scroll,” he said, keeping the edge of smugness
out of his voice, if not his expression. They heard an
exasperated sigh and a shuffle of movement from far behind the door, and then
the nearly silent slap of bare feet approaching, the royal voice muttering
incomprehensibly. As the bolt was shot, Joram and Cullen hit the door together.
There was a whoof of surprise as the door struck the person on the other
side. They surged into
the room, sweeping an astonished and indignant Imre before them, and Rhys
slammed the door and shot the bolt all in one motion. Imre had been taken
totally by surprise, and he paled to find himself confronted by the glint of
steel. “Treason!” he
gasped. “Steel in my presence! Guards! Where are my guards? Who?—Camber!” His
eyes went wide as he recognized the man with the earl’s coronet. “How dare
you?! What treachery is this?” Camber said
nothing; he turned instead and, with a slight nod of deference, bade Cinhil
step forward. Imre blanched as the probable identity of the other man
registered, and he backed slowly away from them until his bare legs collided
with a bench. Nervous fingers plucked at the neckline of his nightshirt as he
whispered, “The Haldane! He does exist!” “The Tyrant of
Festil,” Cinhil countered, his voice low and deadly. “He, too, exists—at least
for the moment.” Imre, drink-fogged
though he was, shook his head as though he had not heard aright, starting as he
caught the movement of the two Michaeline knights circling to cut him off from
the sleeping chamber. In panic, he made a dash for freedom, screaming in terror
as the knights tackled him and flung him to the floor. “Ari!” he
shrieked, as he struggled to escape them. “Ari, run!” “Stop her!” Camber
shouted, as the others scrambled past Imre and crowded through the doorway.
“Don’t let her get away! She carries his child!” They almost caught
her. But even as they poured into the room, the curtained bed seemed to explode
in a flurry of pillows and sleeping furs and flashing white limbs. Ariella, a
night-maned wraith with murder in her eyes, streaked toward the fireplace to
disappear through an opening which had not been there an instant earlier. Joram
and Cullen were only a few paces behind her, but it was far enough for them to
rebound painfully from solid rock where, a few seconds before, a doorway had
stood. They battered at
the rock, trying to find the opening, but by the time they could locate and
force the triggering mechanism there was no sign of the fleeing princess.
Cullen, with a resigned glance at Camber, disappeared through the opening to
search, anyway, Joram following at his back. Imre, standing now
in the firm grasp of the two Michaeline knights, glanced uneasily around him,
sobering fast. Escape at this time was not likely. Even if the two Michaelines
had not held his arms, it was doubtful whether he could get past his other four
captors. Rhys and Evaine blocked the doorway leading to the inner chamber, and
Camber himself barred access to the passageway which Ariella had used. Cinhil
stood near Camber, his eyes never leaving the face of his enemy. Not that the
so-called Haldane really represented a threat himself, Imre reasoned. For that
matter, now that he was thinking more clearly, there were remedies even to the
hold the two knights kept on him. A lightning thought, and his personal shields
flared silver-bright, flinging his two captors’ hands from his person. Of
course, the knights were Deryni, too; and Michaeline shields surged in
response, to ring the captive in a less visible but more constricting net—but
that, too, was to be expected. At least he was fighting on his own ground now. Disdainfully, Imre
drew himself to his full height—still almost a head shorter than his Michaeline
guardians—and gathered the shreds of his kingly dignity. “You are
ill-advised to lay hands upon an anointed king,” he said, addressing Cinhil.
“And the traitor Earl of Culdi breaks his sworn oath of fealty to aid you.” He
glanced haughtily at Camber, then back at Cinhil, annoyed that the Deryni
earl’s gaze did not waver. “A real man would not fear to face me on his own,
Haldane! But, then, they tell me that you are really an apostate priest named
Nicholas Draper, so I suppose that I cannot expect either manly or honorable
behavior from you.” “I am not afraid
to meet you on your own terms, tyrant,” Cinhil said carefully, signalling the
Michaeline knights to withdraw and guard the two balcony doors. “I am prepared
to meet any challenge which you care to name—including the duel arcane.” “Oh?” said Imre.
“You’re bluffing, of course. You are human, if you’re who you say you are. And
without your Deryni traitors, your armed men, you and all your steel are
nothing.” “I shall slay you
without raising steel against you,” Cinhil said, unbuckling his sword and
letting it fall to the floor. “In truth, I should slay you with salt, if that
were possible. It were a fitting end for the fiend who slew my son.” “Your son? I? Come,
now, Haldane. And even if it were true, what magistrate in the land would hold
me to answer for the slaying of a priest’s bastard?” “I have been
released from my priestly vows,” Cinhil said evenly, though Camber could tell
he was only just controlling his temper, “and my lady wife is of gentle birth.
But I will not grace your crude remarks with further answer. You are
responsible for my son’s death, whether or not it was your hand which did the
deed.” “How so?” “Do you deny that
you captured a Michaeline priest, one Humphrey of Gallareaux, and tortured him
until you warped him to your intentions? He learned his poison well, tyrant. My
first-born died of the sacred salt placed upon his tongue at his baptism. It
was your minion who did the bloody deed!” Imre, astonished
at the tale Cinhil had woven, clapped his hands in glee. “Humphrey did that?
Oh, splendid! What subtle irony! I set him to slay the last Haldane heir.
And that was your son, not you. So it wasn’t a futile exercise after all. And
now, you plan to slay me in retribution?” “Yes.” “I see.” Imre’s
face went coldly serious. “Tell me, do you intend to have your traitorous
cohorts cut me into collops? Or am I to be permitted the dignity of fair combat
with my accuser?” “Fair?” Cinhil
mocked. “What is fair about poisoning baptismal salt? What is fair about
executing fifty peasants for a murder in which they had no part? What is fair
about striking down a friend in cold blood, on suspicion only, without even
ascertaining the facts? Do not speak to
me of ‘fair,’ tyrant! At this moment, I hold you in the deepest contempt!” He stood there,
glaring at Imre across the few meters which separated them, and for a moment
the room seemed frozen in time and space, no movement or sound disturbing the
tension which bound them there. Then Imre
shrugged, a maddening, insolent lifting of his shoulders, his hands, and one
proud Deryni eyebrow. The gesture was
too much—the final insult which Cinhil could not endure. Raising his arms, he
cast not only a crimson shield around himself, but a bolt of scarlet fire which
Imre only barely managed to deflect in time. Imre, recovering
from his initial surprise, moved his fingers automatically in the
counter-spell, throwing up his own shields and instinctively marking off a
protective circle for battle. His manner was thoughtful, curious, as he moved a
little to the right to give himself more working room. It was obvious from his
very movements that he had not expected this, and was casting frantically for
an alternative to the battle which now had become not quite so sure a victory. “They said you
were human,” he said tentatively. “I see they were mistaken. If so, then you
are no true Haldane—but you are Deryni, aren’t you?” His teeth flashed
white in the semi-darkness. “But, come. Deryni need have no quarrel with
Deryni. Give this up, and I will reward you with a place in my kingdom, with
riches beyond your wildest imaginings.” “Can you give me
back my son?” Cinhil whispered, his voice hollow within the shields. “Can you
restore to Earl Camber his son, revive the Willimite martyrs who, but for your
want of enforcing the just laws of this land, would never have dreamed of
rising against their anointed king? Can you resurrect the peasants of Earl
Camber’s village whom you slew?—victims of an injustice so great I cannot bear
to speak of it. Is there anything which could make you care for those people
whose welfare was placed in your hands? I did not want your crown, Imre of
Festil. But I am bound to take it from you now. I have no choice.” “That man betrayed
me!” Imre shouted, stabbing a finger at Camber. “That is why I slew his son.
You do not know what Cathan’s death cost me. I loved him!” Camber bowed his
head, compassion welling in his heart for this weak, misguided king. “But Camber’s complicity
in this treason is proof that I was right,” Imre continued, hysteria
edging his voice despite his best efforts. “Coel knew. I was a fool not to
listen to him sooner. I should have destroyed the whole MacRorie brood while
there was yet time!” With that, he
lashed out, silver flame lancing molten and searing against the crimson nimbus
surrounding Cinhil. The prince’s defenses held, and for a moment he merely let
the ravening tide of Imre’s anger spill and course around him harmlessly. The
fire flared and spat and crackled between them for a timeless while, neither
man touching or touched, until Imre, in rage, abruptly changed his tactics. Dread and hideous
shapes began to condense and solidify out of the mists, then—grotesque
creatures of night and unfathomed dark sea-slime, with gaping jaws and
tentacles, and claws and teeth and mottled leather wings. The stench of rotten
carrion and brimstone filled the air even beyond the shields; the screams of
grisly slithering things pierced the air and hinted at forms guessed only in
blackest nightmare. Poisoned fangs
clashed on prey which was no longer there; twisted talons grated on slate
fouled with sodden, slime-sogged fur, touched shudderingly on barely shielded
mind. Each one Cinhil managed to reflect back upon its creator, terror held in
abeyance so that vengeance might prevail. At length Imre stood, sweat-drenched
and breathless, to face Cinhil across only the flicker of their shields. The king raised a
shaking hand in interruption, nodded truce as Cinhil cocked his head to peer in
question. “I do not
understand,” Imre whispered, all swagger if gone from his voice now. “I am
nearly spent, and you—you stand still, hardly touched, strong, though only God
knows how!” He breathed
deeply, hugging his arms close to his body as the chill of the room settled
around him. Cinhil stood regarding him, unruffled, composed, scarcely a hair
out of place on the darkly silvered head, the pale hands relaxed at his sides. “Do you concede?”
Cinhil asked quietly. “Concede? You know
I cannot.” Imre shook his head. “I will not accept defeat from you. I have yet
one escape. Not the way I would have chosen, but never mind.” A wry smile
contorted his face as he staggered against a table, his breath catching in his
throat. “I am master still of mine own body,” he gasped, “and that I shall
never concede. I choose where and when I die. And I choose here and now,
and by mine own—mind!” With that, he
collapsed against the table and slowly sagged to the floor, his face going
ashen as his eyes closed and his shields melted away. Cinhil instantly dropped
his own defenses and darted toward him, a look of shocked amazement on his
face. Camber started to
raise a hand in warning, for it could be a trick. But then he saw that Cinhil
was very much aware and on guard, despite his swift approach; he watched as
Cinhil bent to touch the side of Imre’s neck for a pulse. The prince’s
disgust was apparent as he turned away from the cooling body. “He’s dead,” he
said, thin-lipped with anger. “He willed his own death rather than bear defeat
at my hand.” “He was Deryni,
Sire,” Camber said quietly. “You will learn, in time, that he truly had no
other option. Remember, I knew his father, and his grandfather before that.” Cinhil did not
answer, but stood for some seconds looking steadily across at Camber. Outside,
there was an uproar in the courtyard, the sound of fighting men, and Cinhil
flicked his gaze toward the balcony doors in mild annoyance. Gesturing for Rhys
and the knights to look outside, Camber reached the paling Cinhil’s side just
in time to catch him as he crumpled to his knees and swayed in aftershock. It was some time
before Cinhil could raise his head. For several minutes, he simply shook in
Camber’s arms and fought the churning in his stomach, as the realization of the
past hour’s work stabilized in his mind. Finally, he raised his head and passed
a shaking hand across his forehead, looked into the eyes of his mentor with a
strange and distant gaze. “I—am King of
Gwynedd now, am I not?” “You are, My
Prince.” Cinhil bowed his
head and took a deep, sobering breath, then glanced to where Imre’s body had
lain but a few minutes before—startled to see that it was gone. But in that
same instant, he saw that the two Michaeline knights had taken the body, had
lifted it under the arms as though it lived, and dragged it through the balcony
doors. As the body became visible to the soldiers battling in the yard below,
the sounds of conflict ceased, the voices died down. Cinhil started to
call out to the two knights, to ask what they were about; but Camber stayed his
arm and shook his head. Numbly, Cinhil watched as the knights brought the body
to the edge of the balcony railing and held it poised there, as though standing
on its own. For a still,
heart-stopped instant, the body seemed to stand of its own accord before the
silent soldiers. Then it toppled slowly, gently, over the edge. An instant more
of silence, until it hit the unyielding cobblestones of the yard below, and
then an ear-splitting roar of approbation from a hundred throats, and the
growing chant of, “Cin-hil! Cin-hil! Cin-hil!” With the chant
assailing his ears even within the chamber, Camber helped the new king to his
feet and gestured toward the open doors. “Your knights are
victorious and call for their king, Sire. Will you show yourself to them?” Wordlessly, Cinhil
let himself be led to the balcony, and at his approach the others drew back to
make him way. His appearance brought renewed cheering from the men below—a
deep, joyful shouting punctuated by the clash of swords on shields and the
rattle of spears on helms. As Cinhil rested trembling hands on the stone
balustrade, he noticed that only a few dozen of the cheering soldiers wore the
surcoats and mantles of the Michaeline Order. The rest were of the castle
garrison, who had fought his men minutes before and now flung down their
weapons and acclaimed him with one voice. The cheering broke
off abruptly, and as he turned to glance behind him for Camber, he knew the
reason why. In the Deryni earl’s hands lay the State Crown of Gwynedd, brought
from within by a gently smiling Evaine. Rhys was at her side, his face oddly
solemn beneath the familiar shock of reddish hair. Joram and Cullen had
returned sometime in the last few minutes, grim warrior eyes telling Cinhil all
he needed to know about their attempt to capture Ariella. He swallowed
nervously as the two Michaeline knights removed their helmets and knelt, swords
resting with cross-hilts uppermost as they gazed up confidently at him. He knew
what Camber was about to say, and had no way to stop him. “Sire,” said
Camber, “will you exchange your princely coronet for the Crown of Gwynedd?” There was a
tightness in Cinhil’s chest as he gazed at the crown, and for just a moment he
swayed in an infinity of indecision. It was still not
too late, was it? Though he had toppled the tyrant, Imre, he could yet refuse
the Crown. No man was really indispensable, despite their indoctrination
to the contrary. Perhaps they would permit him to retire to his monastery now,
his part in the struggle completed. Surely they could find another man to rule
Gwynedd. But he realized,
even as he thought it, that the notion was absurd. He could no more walk away
now than he could blaspheme the Name of God, or tread the sacred Host beneath
his heel. With or without his consent, he had been bound to this people, to
this throne which he had never sought; led thence by the might of men who
called themselves by the name Deryni, the same as the fallen tyrant—and he
shared power with them now, was practically the same as they. The thought
crossed his mind that the Deryni who had broken one king could easily bring
down another, if he did not suit their fancy—but he immediately forced himself
to dismiss it as unworthy. These Deryni
were honorable men and women, dedicated to the same high purposes which he,
himself, had so long espoused in theory; they had paid their own high prices to
ensure that the tyrant, Imre, should not harm the people anymore. He must
not—he would not—permit his own loss, his thwarted ambitions, to color his
dealings with an entire people. And yet, despite
his awesome powers, he was human still, and must recall the evil done his own
people during the interregnum of the Deryni. Now was the time for renewal and
appraisal, for righting the injustices of the old masters. And if there were
those, even among his apparent Deryni allies, who tried to thwart him— Well,
they, themselves, had taught him ruthlessness. Balance would not be an easy
thing, but it must be maintained. Shuddering, then,
in the cold, pre-dawn air, he gazed down at the hands which had called forth
such slaying power but a short time ago. He glanced at the men standing
expectantly in the courtyard below, at Camber and his children ranged beside
him, at the Michaeline knights kneeling before him, their cross-hilted blades
upheld to sanctify this moment. Then he reached up
and slowly removed his coronet, gave it over to Evaine with a slight
inclination of his head. As he did, the men in the courtyard knelt and Camber
raised the crown so that it caught the torchlight from the yard below. Cinhil clasped his hands and glanced up at
the brightening sky. His destiny approached; he could not but accept it. “Cinhil Donal Ifor
Haldane, thine ancient line is restored, to the great joy of thy people,”
Camber said, gazing at Cinhil with the eyes of a father and loyal servant,
both. “Be crowned with strength and wisdom for all thy days.” The, crown was
placed upon his head. “And may the Almighty grant thee a long and prosperous
reign, in justice and honor for all thy people of Gwynedd.” “Fiat voluntas
tua,” Cinhil whispered, so that only Camber could hear. Let it be done
according to thy will.... APPENDIX IINDEX OF
CHARACTERS AIDAN, Prince—only
child of King Ifor Haldane to survive the coup of 822; royal name of Daniel
Draper, grandfather of Prince Cinhil. AIDAN Alroy Camber
Haldane, Prince—infant son of Prince Cinhil and Princess Megan; killed by
poisoned salt .at his baptism, aged one month. ALROY,
Prince—royal name of Royston Draper, father of Prince Cinhil; son of Prince
Aidan (Daniel Draper). ANDREW, son of
James—the second “Benedict”; at Saint Piran’s Priory. ANSCOM of Trevas,
Archbishop—Deryni Primate of Gwynedd; Archbishop of Valoret. ANSEL MacRorie,JLord—younger
son of Cathan Mac-Rorie; age three. Ariella of Festil,
Princess—elder sister of Imre; age twenty-eight. ARMAGH,
Master—arms master to Imre. BEARAND, King and
Saint—great-great grandfather of Cinhil. BLAINE, King—fourth Festillic king of Gwynedd,
reigned 885-900; father of Imre. BORS—soldier under
command of Coel Howell; followed Joram to Saint John’s Church. CAMBER MacRorie,
Lord—Earl of Culdi; canonized as Saint Camber in 906; patron of Deryni magic. CAMERON—family
name of Princess Megan. CARLE—one of Earl
Maldred’s men. CATHAN MacRorie, Lord—Camber’s elder son and
heir; member of Imre’s council; killed by Imre for suspected treason. CIERAN,
Brother—lay brother at Saint Piran’s Priory. CINHIL Donal Ifor
Haldane, Prince—royal name of Nicholas Draper, alias Brother Benedict; first
post-Interregnum king of Gwynedd; reigned 904-917. COEL Howell,
Lord—brother to Elinor, Cathan’s wife; member of Imre’s council. CRINAN—Cathan’s
squire; doubled for Rhys under a shape-changing spell. CULLEN, Father
Alister—Vicar General of the Order of Saint Michael, and Joram’s superior. DANIEL Draper—as
Prince Aidan Haldane, only surviving son of King Ifor; grandfather of Cinhil. DAVIN MacRorie,
Lord—elder son of Cathan; age five. DERYNI—(Der-in-ee)—racial
group gifted with supernatural powers and abilities. DOMINIC,
Father—priest at Saint Liam’s Abbey; former teacher of Joram and Rhys. DRAPER—surname
used by the Haldanes during the Interregnum; see Daniel, Royston, and
Nicholas. DRUMMOND—see
James. EDULF—ostler to
Camber; one of fifty peasants executed at Imre’s command, for the death of Lord
Rannulf. EDWARD,
Father—priest who baptized Nicholas Draper. egbert, Brother—monk at Saint
Jarlath’s Monastery. ELINOR Howell
MacRorie, Lady—wife to Cathan; mother of Davin and Ansel. EVAINE MacRorie,
Lady—daughter of Camber; later, wife to Rhys Thuryn. FARNHAM, Lord and Lady—parents of Megan de Cameron. Festil I, king—first festillic king of gwynedd,
reigned 822-839; engineer of the coup of 822. Festil II,
king—second festillic king of gwynedd, reigned 839-851. Festil III,
king—third festillic king of gwynedd, reigned 851-885. Fulk—soldier under
command of Coel Howell; followed Rhys to the royal archives. Gabrilites—priests
of the Order of’saint Gabriel, an all-Deryni esoteric order based at Saint
Neot’s, in the south Lendour Mountains. Gifford—manservant
to Rhys. Gregory of Arden,
Father—Abbot of Saint Jarlath’s Monastery. Guaire of Arliss,
Lord—young officer at Imre’s Court; friend of Cathan; attached to Earl
Maldred’s command. Haldane—surname of
the ancient royal family of Gwynedd. Howell—see
Coel. Howiccan,
Pargan—classic Deryni lyric poet. Humphrey of
Gallareaux, Father—Michaeline priest captured by Imre’s men and interrogated;
later, attached to Archbishop Anscom’s staff; responsible for the death of the
infant Prince Aidan. Ifor, King—last
pre-Interregnum king of Gwynedd, reigned 794-822; father of Prince Aidan
(Daniel Draper). Imre, King—fifth
Festillic king of Gwynedd, reigned 900-904. James Drummond,
Lord—grand-nephew of Camber. Jarlath, Saint—sixth-century
Bishop of Meara and abbot; founder of the Ordo Verbi Dei. Jason Brown—apprentice
to Daniel Draper; inherited business. Jasper Miller, Father—noncombatant Michaeline
priest. Jebediah of
Alcara, Lord—Michaeline knight; Grand Master of military arm of Order of Saint
Michael, after the Vicar General. John, son of
Daniel—the first “Benedict”; at Saint Piran’s Priory. Joram macrorie,
Lord—younger son of Camber; priest of the Order of Saint Michael. Joseph—one of
Maldred’s men. Jubal, Brother—monk
at Saint Foillan’s Abbey. Leviticus,
Brother—vestiarian at Saint Foillan’s Abbey. Macrorie—surname
of Camber’s family. Maldred, Earl—one
of Imre’s warlords; assassinated by Coel Howell’s hireling. Maris—maidservant
to Princess Ariella. Megan de Cameron,
Lady—Camber’s ward; later, wife to Cinhil and Queen of Gwynedd. Melissa Howell, Lady—sister of Coel Howell; brought
to Court to tempt Imre. Michaelines—priests
and knights of the Order of Saint Michael, a militant teaching and righting
order, predominantly Deryni, headquartered at the Commanderie in Cheltham, in
the central Lendour highlands. Nathan,
Father—Michaeline priest; provisioner for the exiles in the haven. Nicholas Gabriel Draper—the third “Benedict”;
grandson of Daniel; see Cinhil. Patrick, Brother—Prior of Saint Foillan’s Abbey;
subordinate to Abbot Zephram of Lorda. Paul, Brother—monk
at Saint Foillan’s Abbey. Phineas, Brother—gate warder at Saint Foillan’s
Abbey. Rannulf,
Lord—Deryni lord drawn and quartered by Willimite terrorists. Revan—carpenter’s
apprentice saved by Cathan. Reynald, Brother—infirmarian at Saint Foillan’s
Abbey. Rhys Thuryn,
Lord—Deryni physician and Healer; discoverer of the Thuryn technique of
concentration; later, son-in-law to Camber, by marriage to his daughter,
Evaine. Robert Oriss,
Father—Vicar General of the Order of Saint Jarlath, Ordo Verbi Dei. Roland, Bishop—auxiliary Bishop of Valoret, and
Anscom’s subordinate. Royston John
Draper—see Alroy. Sam’l—loyal
retainer of Camber at Caerrorie. Santare, Earl of
Grand-Tellie—one of Imre’s warlords. Selkirk,
Master—arms master to Imre. Sellar, Wat and
Tim—among the fifty peasants executed at Imre’s command for the murder of Lord
Rannulf. Stephen,
Father—Prior of Saint Piran’s Priory. Termod of Rhorau,
Lord—Deryni princeling, cousin of Imre; executed by Willimite terrorists. Thuryn—surname of
Rhys. Index of
characters UMPHRED-^-bailiff to Camber at Caerrorie. Wat—servant to
Rhys. Weaver, Mary, and
brother Will, and cousin Tom— among the fifty peasants executed at Imre’s
command for the murder of Lord Rannulf. Willim,
Saint—child martyr to Deryni ill-use; patron saint of the Willimite movement. Willimites—terrorist
group sworn to punish Deryni who escape justice through normal channels. Wulpher,
Master—Cathan’s steward at Tal Traeth; doubled for Joram under a shape-changing
spell. Zephram of Lorda,
Father—Abbot of Saint Foillan’s Abbey. APPENDIX IIINDEX TO PLACE
NAMES All saints’
cathedral—Valoret’s cathedral; seat of the Primate of Gwynedd. Barwicke—site of
Saint Jarlath’s Monastery, a few hours’ ride north of Saint Liam’s Abbey. Caerrorie,
Tor—Camber’s principal residence, a few hours’ ride east of Valoret. Carbury—coastal
town north of Valoret, where Elinor macrorie’s parents live. Cheltham—site of
the Michaeline Commanderie (military headquarters). Cor culdi—hereditary
ancestral seat and fortress of the Culdi earls, near the city of Culdi, on the
Gwynedd-Meara border. Culdi—central city
of the Honor of Culdi, on the Gwynedd—Meara border. Dhassa—free holy
city in the Lendour Mountains; seat of the Bishop of Dhassa. Farnham—Honor of
the family of Megan de Came-ron; a Crown holding after the accession of King
Cinhil. Fianna—area across
the Southern Sea, famous for its wines. Grecotha—university
city on the north Gwynedd border, where Camber and Archbishop Anscom attended
school. Gwynedd—central of
the Eleven Kingdoms; seat of the Festillic Dynasty since 822. Kheldour—small
kingdom north of Gwynedd, famous for textiles and carpets; under human rule. Marley—Crown
earldom in northern Eastmarch. Marywell—town in
northern Gwynedd where a Festillic garrison ran amok. Meara—kingdom to
the west of Gwynedd; under human rule. Mooryn—kingdom to
the southeast of
Gwynedd. Nyford—site of the
new capital being built by Imre, formerly nought but a sleepy river town; in
central Gwynedd, near Saint Illtyd’s Monastery. Rengarth—town in
southern Eastmarch. Rhemuth—ancient
capital of Gwynedd under the Haldanes. Rhorau—seat of
Lord Termed, cousin of King Imre. Saint foillan’s
abbey—establishment of the Ordo Verbi Dei, about three days’ ride
southeast of Valoret, in the mountains, where Camber and Rhys found Prince
Cinhil Haldane. Saint illtyd’s monastery—establishment of the Ordo
Verbi Dei, on the river near Nyford. Index to place names
309 Saint Jarlath’s
monastery—mother house of the Ordo Verbi Dei, two hours’ ride north of
Saint Liam’s Abbey. Saint John’s
church—parish church near Fullers’ Alley in Valoret, where the Draper family
records were kept. Saint Liam’s
abbey—Michaeline-staffed abbey school, four hours’ ride northeast of Valoret. Saint Neot’s
monastery—stronghold of the Order of Saint Gabriel, an esoteric, primarily
Deryni religious order; in the Lendour highlands. Saint Piran’s priory—establishment of the Ordo
Verbi Dei, a day’s ride north of Saint Jarlath’s; Joram and Rhys
interviewed the first two “Benedicts” there. Saint Ultan’s
priory—establishment of the Ordo Verbi Dei, on the southwestern coast of
Mooryn. Tal Traeth—Cathan macrorie’s
manor house in Valoret. Torenth—kingdom to
the east of Gwynedd, ruled by Deryni. Valoret—Festfflic
capital of Gwynedd, 822-905. APPENDIX III (feel
free to clean this up yourself–ed.) PARTIAL LINEAGE OF
THE HALDANE KINGS Haldanes BEARAND HALDANE
(Saint) 720-794 9736 IFOR HALDANE
-]-—Nnala 778-822 I 790-823 *794 JASHAN [ MAIRB AJDAN. 807^22 ALROY
812-822 DONAL (Daniel 809-822 \/j. 818-822 > 820-S03 -A* I YSABEAU 825-875 MtCHAELA. 822 821-822 (2mo.) ALROY- (Royston Draper) 843-878 -Jfellwya 843-860 IFOR (Nicholas Draper) 860-917 *904 •Megan &
Cameron 888-S07 AIDANALROY ALROY
JAVAN RHYS- CAMBER (twin)
(twin) 906-928 904 905-921
905-922 »922 (Imo.) »917 *921 -Michaela ALISTER Drummond 907 908-989 (3mo.) OWAIN UTHTR 924-948 929-980 *928 *948 I I I NYGEL- JASHER
CLUIM 948-983 951-985
953-994 •980 *983 *985 * An asterisk
indicates the date of the beginning of each king’s reigo. 311 974-102S *994 CINHIL AIDAN MALCOLM 989-1023 999-1020 J008-1074 *1025 DONALBLAINB
1030-1095 •1074 _____I i n BRTON DONAL-|-Jehana NIGEL CLUIM-r- C1NH1L URIEN 1081-1120 »1095 1088- GWYDION RHYS 1087- 1090- 1 KELSON CTNHII, CONALL RORY PAYNB
RHYS ANTHONY 1107- 1110- 1115- 1106-•1120 312 APPENDIX IVTHE FESTILLIC
KINGS OF GWYNEDD AND THEIR DESCENDANTS EESTILJ 780-839 *822 I . I f fESTILH lm» 800-851 805-839 •839 SESTILIU 818-885
*851 I I I f 3FESTIL IMRE
CORINNE BLAINB 837-838 839-872
841-854 842-900 FESTtt.
ARIELLA—,—— JMRE 869-874. .
875-905 | 881-904-*900 I—|—— ? mark 905-981 T HOGAN GWERNACB “TheMarluk”
1060-110S CHARISSA, Duchess of Tolas 1094-1120 * An asterisk
indicates tbe date of the beginning of each ling’s reiga. 313 APPENDIX VPARTIAL LINEAGE OF
THE MacRORIES MacRORIES rArdisDrammoni
811-882 808-871 - - \& E40-91S j/ J/ 846-90S I I I I
I ELSPETH ADRIAN
ANGUS CAMBER, -,— Jocelyndo Abbess of 842-856
844-863 7th Earl St. Hilda’s I /,
\/f ofCuldi laMarcha
851-918 Earl S48-S9S I of \7 Kiemey 832-89S m (1”\ m
n^ I . I
I I « James Drummona-—^-U Elinor-—r-1-CATHAN, JERUSHA BALLARD JORAM EVAINE 876-918 Howell 880-957 MasteroJ 876-88S 877-888
878-948 882-918 |
877-917 Caldi 873-903 I I JUiysHaldans-—Michaela Cathan BAVIN, ANSEt. 906-928 Prummand Cinhil 8th Bad
900-948 *S22 908-989 Crummond ofCuldi 910-957 898-917 -p 1 MacATHAS * An
asterisk indicates the date of the beginning ot each king’s reign, THE FORBIDDEN SPELL“But how are you
going to explain our absence if we leave now?” Joram asked. “I don’t plan to
explain it,” Camber said. “As far as the guards are concerned, you’ll still be
here.” Joram froze. “Sir,
if you have in mind what I think you do—” “Hear me,” Camber
interrupted. “There are times when such things cannot be avoided. We’ve gone
too far to stop now. No matter what the risk, I’ll have to use black magic.
Shape-changing is the only way. You and Rhys must have other bodies— or you
will never return alive . . .” By Katherine KurtzThe Legends of
Camber of Culdi Volume I: Camber
of Culdi (1976) Volume II: Saint
Camber (1978) Volume III: Camber
The Heretic (1981) The Heirs of Saint Camber The Harrowing of
Gwynedd (1989) King Javan’s Year
(1992) The Bastard Prince
(1994) The Chronicles
of the Deryni Volume I: Deryni
Rising (1970) Volume II: Deryni
Checkmate (1972) Volume III: High
Deryni (1973) The Histories
of King Kelson Volume I: The
Bishop’s Heir (1984) Volume II: The
King’s Justice (1985) Volume III: The
Quest For Saint Camber (1986) Volume IV: King
Kelson’s Bride (1997) The Deryni
Archives (1986) Deryni Magic
(1991) http://www.sfsite.com/isfdb-bin/exact_author.cgi?Katherine_Kurtz Title PageVolume I in The
Legends of Camber of Culdi Katherine Kurtz A Del Rey Book
BALLANTINE BOOKS • NEW YORK A Del Rey Book Published by
Ballantine Books Copyright © 1976
by Katherine Kurtz All rights
reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published
in the United States by Ballantine Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New
York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Library of
Congress Catalog Card Number: 76-6977 ISBN 0-345-33594-5 Manufactured in
the United States of America First Edition:
July 1976 Thirteenth Printing: December 1985 Cover art by
Darrell K. Sweet For Frederick
Harry Kurt? and for The good folk of
the Society for Creative Anachronism, without whom this book would have been
finished far sooner, but far less well. Author doth not live by typewriter
alone! CONTENTSprologue Now go, write it
before them on a tablet, and inscribe it in a book, that it may be for the time
to come for ever and ever. —Isaiah 30:8 xv I In the
multitude of people is the king’s
honour; but in the want of the people is the destruction of the prince.
1 —Proverbs 14:28 II He
shall go to
the generation of
his fathers ... 10 —Psalms 49:19 III Then give place to the physician, for
the Lord hath created him: let him not
go from thee, for thou hast need of him.
20 —Ecclesiasticus
38:12 IV Hear counsel and receive instruction,
that thou mayest be wise in thy latter
end. 37 —Proverbs 19:20 V Now the king sat in the winterhouse in the
ninth month . . . 50 —Jeremiah 36:22 VI O that my head were waters, and mine
eyes a fountain, that I might weep day and night for the slain ... 66 —Jeremiah 9:1 VII The
skill of the physician shall lift up his
head: and in the sight of great men he shall be in admiration. 78 —Ecclesiasticus
38:3 VIII Wrath
is cruel, and anger is outrageous; but who is able to stand before envy? 92 —Proverbs 11-A IX When he
speaketh fair, believe him not: for there are seven abominations in his
heart. 109 —Proverbs 26:2? X Wine is a
mocker, strong drink is raging: and whosoever is deceived thereby is not
wise. 119 —Proverbs 20:1’ XI The
just shall be in everlasting remembrance.
140 —Psalms 112:6 XII For by
wise counsel thou shalt make thy war.
157 —Proverbs 24:6 XIII For
your hands are defiled with blood. 169 —Isaiah 59:3 XIV
Blessed shall they be that shall be in those days,/He bringeth back His
anointed. 178 —Psalms of
Solomon 18:6 XV I have
forsaken mine house, I have left mine heritage. 189 —Jeremiah 12:7 XVI There
is one alone, and there is not a second; yea, he hath neither child nor
brother; yet is there no end to all his labour; neither is his eye satisfied
with riches. 205 —Ecclesiastes 4:8 XVII
But he shall take a virgin of his own people to wife. 220 —Leviticus 21:14 XVIII
The Lord said to my lord, “You are my
son. This day I have begotten you!” 233 —Psalms 2:7 XIX And
they put him in ward, that the mind of
the Lord might be shewed them. 249 —Leviticus 24:12 XX Hear
us, my lord; thou art a prince of God
among us. 269 —Genesis 23:6 XXI
For out of prison he comes to reign; whereas also he that is born in his kingdom becomes poor. 279 —Ecclesiastes 4:14 Appendix I: Index of Characters 299 Appendix II: Index to Place Names 307 Appendix III:
Partial Lineage of the Haldane Kings 311 Appendix IV: The
Festillic Kings of Gwynedd and 313 Their Descendants Appendix V: Partial
Lineage of the MacRories 314 Now, these are the
Names of the Eleven Kingdoms, sung rightly well of old: Howicce, and
Llannedd, and fierce Connait; mountainous Meara, the Land Beyond the River; and
Kheldour, the windswept; and pastoral Eastmarch; Tolan, and Torenth, and
myth-ridden Mooryn; and lost Caeriesse, which sank beneath the sea; and
far-reaching Gwynedd, seat of the Haldane Kings. —lay of the lord
llewellyn, Troubadour to the High King of Mooryn Maps
PrologueNow go, write it before them on a tablet, and
inscribe in it a book, that it may be for the time to come for ever and ever. —Isaiah 30:8 Saint Camber. Camber of Culdi. Noble-born Deryni
earl. Gifted scholar and
legalist. Patron of Deryni
Magic. Defensor
Hominum. Camber. By the reign of
Kelson I, he had been a legend for more than two hundred years, in turn
respected, venerated, and feared. But who was the
man, Camber of Culdi? What was the man before he became the saint—and the
demon? Was he, as later
legends insist, the sole perpetrator of the atrocities and terrors associated
with the Deryni Interregnum? The apotheosis of Evil Incarnate? Or was there
another side to this man who became a legend in his own lifetime, saint after
his death, and curse word for generations to come? Just who was Camber
of Culdi? The scant Deryni
sources which survived by the reign of Kelson tell us that Camber MacRorie,
more than any other single man, was responsible for breaking the hold of the
ninth-century Festillic dynasty; he and his children who discovered, during
those chaotic times, that the awesome Deryni powers and abilities could
sometimes be bestowed upon certain, select humans. The old House of Haldane was
restored to the Throne of Gwynedd in 904, and for more than a decade humans and
Deryni lived in comparative harmony. Less than a year
after his death, Camber was canonized for his daring contributions. This we
also know is true. To humans and Deryni alike, he became Saint Camber, Patron
of Deryni Magic, and Defensor Hominum—Defender of Humankind. For a time,
a grateful people could not find high-enough praise for the man who had
delivered them from the hated Fes-tillic yoke. Churches and monastic schools
were named for him in the decade after his death. The mental techniques perfected
by Camber and the Healer Rhys Thuryn were taught in Deryni institutions of
learning throughout the Eleven Kingdoms. His family and followers continued to
assist the restored Haldane king and consolidate the new regime, and eventually
founded the Camberian Council, a form of which still existed by the time of
King Kelson. But human
gratitude is short and selective, and the gratitude of kings more capricious
still. It was difficult to put aside completely the reminders of Deryni
dominance, especially when many Deryni still occupied positions of authority
and prominence. It seemed almost disloyal to the memory of those humans who had
suffered so under Festillic rule to ignore the injustices which had marked the
eighty-plus years of the reigns just past. A bitter people soon forgot that
salvation, as well as slavery, had come from the powerful hands of the Deryni;
and the result was a rising tide of anti-Deryni feeling, culminating, on King
Cinhil’s death in 917, in a purge which annihilated fully two-thirds of the
Deryni population of Gwynedd. Thousands perished
by the sword, in fire, at the end of a rope—brutal sacrifices in retribution
for the evils done or imagined done under the Festils. Those few who survived
were forced to go into hiding, eking out an uncertain existence in fearful
exile, denying their once-proud heritage and awesome powers. Only a privileged
few found refuge and still retained their identities, and even these were
forced to live out their lives in semi-confinement, begging the tenuous and sometimes
careless protection of the few human lords who remembered how it had really
.been. As late as the Gwynedd-Torenth War of 1121, to be a known Deryni was
neither an easy nor an easily admitted thing. Needless to say,
Camber’s sainthood was one of the first casualties of the persecutions. In 917,
the Bishops’ Council of Ramos, acting on the demands of King Cinhil’s son and
heir, Alroy, repudiated Camber’s sainthood and forbade even the mention of his
name. The Church Militant, spurred by the backlash of quasi-religious movements
such as the Willimites, proclaimed anathema all use of magic, for whatever
purpose; declared Deryni sorcery to be among the chiefest of her heresies;
barred men of Deryni descent from any and all participation in the hierarchy of
the Church. On the secular side, Deryni were forbidden to own property except
under the most stringent of supervision; were denied the right to hold public
office or appointment; could not marry or inherit without the leave of their
liege lord. The policies set forth in the decade which followed were to
persist, almost without change, for nearly two centuries. But even
repudiated saints were human once-—or Deryni, in the case of Camber. Written
records may be lost or destroyed, and oral traditions garbled in the telling,
and the passage of years may leave a larger-than-life composite of fact and
myth and outright lie. Yet there is a truth about Camber of Culdi; and the man
is far more and far less than his many legends. Camber’s world
was, in many respects, a land less graceful and less refined than the world of
Kelson Haldane and Alaric Morgan; but it was a study in contrasts and, perhaps,
contradictions. It was a land two centuries closer to the ancient gods and
their arcane traditions, and yet the awesome powers of the Deryni were more a
science and less of magic than they had become by the reign of Kelson. It was a time when
some few, gifted Deryni had learned to heal most physical injuries, and were
learning about the causes of disease—knowledge lost for many, many years in the
dark times following the persecutions; when Transfer Portals, though
still costly in terms of time and strength and power to establish and
operate, were used as an ecclesiastical communication network over most of the
Eleven Kingdoms; when Mind-Seeing was an openly acknowledged practice among
many Deryni. It was but a
century since Pargan Howiccan, the great Deryni lyric poet, had set the known
world afire with his epic sagas of the old gods; but half a century since the
death of the Lord Llewellyn, the greatest bard and troubadour the world had
ever seen. Castles and palaces.and churches soared, using building techniques
which would not be rediscovered until late in Kelson’s reign. Ecclesiastical
scholarship flourished at half a dozen growing universities and cathedral
schools, learning becoming available to laymen as well as religious. Yet, it
was the twilight of the Deryni Festillic dynasty, though none knew it yet. Into this world
had come, fifty-seven years before, the Lord Camber MacRorie, third son of the
Sixth Earl of Culdi and later the Seventh Earl. A brilliant scholar and
legalist, as tradition tells, a devoted husband and father, which legends
generally do not mention, he was the loyal servant of two Festillic kings— though
not the new-crowned Imre. For Camber had seen the trends developing under the
young king’s father, Blaine, and knew he could not serve the king Imre was to
become. Retiring to his
castle at Tor Caerrorie, near the Valoret capital, Camber settled in to resume
his studies, to become reacquainted with his children and grandchildren, and to
watch further developments of the new reign. He was disapproving, but not
surprised, when the vain young Imre issued his first great tariff act, shortly
after his accession: We, Imre, son
of Blaine, son of the House of Festil, by the Grace of God King of Gwynedd and
Lord of Meara and Mooryn, do command that, no later than Mid-Summer next, all
male subjects of Our Realm, who shall have attained , the age of fourteen
years, shall pay into Our Royal Treasury at Valoret the money-worth of
one-sixth of all their possessions and land holdings, the monies thus raised to
be used in the erection of Our New Capital at Nyford. There shall be no
exceptions to this tariff, whether highborn or freedman, clergy or layman, save
as the Crown may deign to grant. We further
decree that those men having a worth below a minimum to be determined by Our
Financial Advisors, shall have the option of indenturing themselves and all
their dependents to the Crown for a period not to exceed one year, in lieu of
payment in silver, their services to be used in the construction of Our City of
Nyford. Default, whether in coinage or in service, shall be punishable by
forfeiture of all property, imprisonment for a term to be determined by a Court
of Crown Commissioners to be created for that purpose, and may, in duly
designated cases, be construed as treason, punishable by death. Wherefore do We
appoint to Our Royal Commission Our Well-Beloved Ministers: Lord Jo-werth
Leslie, the Honourable the Earl of Grand-Tullie, Lord Coel Howell, Lord
Torcuill de la Marche, ... PATENT ROLLS, 2 Imre
I The MacRorie lands
were extensive and rich, and Camber was able to pay the tax for himself and his
tenants; but many were not so fortunate. Nor would the Great Tariff, as it came
to be called, be the last rash measure promulgated by Imre. Unrest which had
been low-pitched and mostly token became more blatant. Semi-terrorist groups
began to arise, whose sole purpose was to harass Imre’s escheators and to
punish Deryni who used their status and powers to excuse unlawful indulgences.
Camber sat secure in his manor house at Caerrorie and watched, not yet tempted
to consider open resistance, but aware of the rise of anti-Deryni feeling. Camber MacRorie.
Seventh Earl of Culdi. Gifted scholar and legalist. Retired civil servant.
Sometime practitioner of Deryni magic. In 903, he had not
yet earned the title of Saint. CAMBER OF CULDI
Volume I in The
Legends of Camber of Culdi Katherine Kurtz chapter oneIn the
multitude of people is the kings honour; but in the want of the people is the
destruction of the prince. —Proverbs 14:28 Though it was but
late September, a wintry wind howled and battered at the ramparts of Tor
Caerrorie, rattling the narrow, glazed windows in their frames and snapping to
tatters the gules/azure MacRorie standard atop the tower keep. Inside, the only
daughter of the Earl of Culdi sat huddled over the manorial accounts beside a
crackling hearth, wrapped in a fur-lined mantle against the chill of the
deserted great hall, a brindle wolfhound asleep at her feet. Torches guttered
on the wall behind her, though it was not yet mid-afternoon, besmirching the
stone walls with soot. Smoke mingled with the scent of mutton roasting in the
nearby kitchens, and a rushlight cast a yellow glow across the table where she
worked. It was with some relief that she finally marked the last entry with her
cipher and laid down her quill. Umphred, her father’s bailiff, heard her sigh
and came to collect the rolls with a bow. “That completes
the accounts for last quarter, mistress. Is all in order?” Evaine MacRorie,
chatelaine of Tor Caerrorie since her mother’s death seven years before,
favored Umphred with a gentle smile. The wolfhound raised his great head to
look at the bailiff, then went back to sleep. “You knew it would
be,” Evaine smiled. She touched the old man’s hand in affection as he curled
the membranes into their storage tubes and gathered them into his arms. “Would
you please ask one of the squires to saddle a horse and come to me?” she added.
“I have a letter to go to Cathan in Valoret.” As Umphred bowed
and turned to go, Evaine pushed a strand of flaxen hair from her forehead, then
began nibbling at an inkstain on her thumb as she glanced at the letter on the
table. She wondered what Cathan would say when he got the letter. For that
matter, she wondered how her other brother, Joram, would react when the news
reached him. Actually, Cathan’s
reaction was not difficult to predict. He would be shocked, dismayed, outraged,
in turn; but then the double bond of friendship to his king and duty to his
father’s people would move him to plead the king’s mercy, to urge the tempering
of royal wrath with princely pardon. Though the MacRories themselves were not
implicated in what had happened, the incident had taken place on
Camber’s hereditary lands. She wondered whether Imre would be in one of his
difficult moods. Joram, on the other hand, was not so bound by the
cautious duty which ruled his elder brother. An avowed priest of the militant
Order of Saint Michael, Joram was apt to explode in one of the grandiloquent
tirades for which the Michaelines were so justly famous, when he heard the
news. However, it was not the possibility of Joram’s eloquent and caustic
rhetoric which made Evaine apprehensive; it was the fact that the priests of
Saint Michael were just as likely to follow verbal pyrotechnics with physical
action, if prudence did not take the upper hand. The Michaelines were a
fighting as well as a teaching order. More than once, their intervention in
secular affairs had touched off incidents best forgotten by their more contemplative
brethren. She consoled
herself with the probability that Joram would not receive the news until he got
home for Michaelmas two days hence, then stood and stretched and fished for a
missing slipper in the rushes with one stockinged toe, bidding the hound remain
in the hall. Perhaps, by
Michaelmas, the situation would have resolved itself—though Evaine doubted it.
But whatever the outcome, the MacRories’ Michaelmas would be a bit more sober
than usual this year. Joram would be home, of course, bringing her beloved Rhys
with him; but Cathan and his wife and sons must remain in Valoret with the
Court. The young king was demanding, and no more than on the time and attention
of his favorites, like Cathan. Evaine remembered the long months her father had
spent at Court, when he had been in the old king’s service. A squire came and
bent his knee to her, and she bantered with him briefly before handing over the
missive he was to deliver to her brother. Then she pulled her mantle close and
crossed the rush-strewn hall, to make her way up the narrow, newel staircase to
her father’s study. She and Camber had been translating the classic sagas of
Pargan Howiccan, the Deryni lyric poet, and this afternoon Camber had promised
to go over a particularly difficult passage with her. She marvelled again at
the many facets of the man who was her father, fond memories accompanying her
up the spiral stair. Camber’s secular
successes had never been quite anticipated, nor were they by design. In his
youth, he had been preparing for the clergy and had earned impressive academic
credentials at the new university in Grecotha, under some of the greatest minds
of the century. There would have been no limit to his rise in the Church. But when plague
took two elder brothers and left him heir to the MacRorie lands and name—and he
not yet under his final vows—he had found himself quite rudely plucked from the
religious life by his father and thrust into the secular world—and found he
liked it. Further honing of his abilities as an educated layman, and an earl’s
son at that, had been accomplished, earning him wide academic notoriety long
before he was first called to the Court at Valoret. When the old king’s father,
Festil III, had sought the most brilliant men in the land to advise him, Camber
had had little competition. The next quarter-century was spent mostly in the
royal service. But that was past.
Now in his late fifties, Camber had retired three years ago, on the death of
King Blaine, to his beloved Caerrorie, birthplace of himself and his five
children. It was not the principal seat of the Culdi earls; that was reserved
to the great fortress tower of Cor Culdi, on the Kierney border, which Camber
still visited several times a year to preside over the feudal court. But here,
near to the capital and his children’s active lives, he was free at last to
resume the academic pursuits which he had abandoned for the Court so many years
before—this time in the company of a fair, witty, and insatiably curious
daughter whose depths he had but lately begun to discover. If confronted, he
would have vigorously denied that he favored any one of his children above the
others, for he loved all of them fiercely; but Evaine unquestionably occupied a
special place in his life and his heart—Evaine, youngest of his living children
and the last to remain at home. Evaine accepted this facet of her father as she
accepted all the others, without consciously stopping to analyze it—and without
needing to. She reached her
father’s door and knocked lightly before slipping the latch and going inside. Camber was seated
behind a curved hunt table, the leather surface littered with rolls of
parchment and ink-stained quills and other accoutrements of the academic mind.
Her cousin, James Drummond, was with him, and both of them stopped speaking as
she entered the room. Cousin James
looked decidedly angry, though he tried to conceal it. Camber’s face was
inscrutable. “I beg your
pardon, Father. I didn’t know Jamie was with you. I can come back later.” “There’s no need,
child.” Camber stood, both hands resting lightly on the table. “James was just
leaving, weren’t you, James?” James, a blurred,
darker copy of the silver-blond man behind the table, hitched at his belt in
annoyance and controlled a scowl. “Very well, sir, but I’m still not satisfied
with your analysis. I’d like to return tomorrow and discuss it further, if you
don’t mind.” “Certainly I don’t
mind, James,” the older man said easily. “I am always willing to listen to
well-reasoned arguments different from my own. In fact, stay and share
Michaelmas with us, if you can. Cathan won’t be here, but Joram is coming, and
Rhys. We’d love to have you join us.” Disarmed by
Camber’s reply, James murmured his thanks and something about having things to
do, then bowed stiffly and made his exit. With raised
eyebrows, Evaine turned to face her father, leaning thoughtfully against the
closed door. “Goodness, what
was that about? Or shouldn’t I ask?” Camber crossed to
the stone fireplace—a rare luxury in so small a room—and pulled two chairs
closer, gesturing for her to sit. “A slight difference of opinion, that’s all.
James looks to me for guidance, now that his father is dead. I fear he didn’t
get the answer he wanted to hear.” He yanked on a
bell cord, then busied himself with poking at the fire until a liveried servant
appeared at the door with refreshment. Evaine watched curiously as her father
took the tray and bade the servant go. Then, cupping a goblet of mulled wine
between her palms, she gazed across at him. Despite the fire and the tapestried
walls, it was chill in the old room. “You’re very quiet
this afternoon, Father. What is it? Did Jamie tell you about the murder in the
village last night?” Camber tensed for
just an instant, then relaxed. He did not look up. “You know about that?” She spoke
carefully. “When a Deryni is killed, practically, under one’s window, one
learns of it. They say that the king’s men have taken fifty human hostages, and
that the king intends to invoke the Law of Festil if the murderer is not
found.” Camber drank
deeply of his wine and stared into the fire. “A barbarous custom—to hold an
entire village to blame for the death of one man—even if the-man was a
Deryni.” “Aye. Maybe it was
a necessary barbarism in the early days,” Evaine mused. “How else for a conquering
race, few in numbers, to secure its hold over the conquered? But you know how
much Rannulf was disliked, even among our own people. Why, I remember that
Cathan practically had to evict him bodily from Caerrorie one day, when you
were still at Court. If gentle Cathan would do that, I can imagine how boorish
the man must have been.” “If we execute
every boor in Gwynedd, I think there will be few folk left.” Camber smiled
wryly. “However you feel about Rannulf as a person, he did not deserve
death—and certainly not the sort of death he met.” He paused. “I assume, since
you know of the incident, that you also know the details of the murder?” “Only that it was
not a pretty sight.” “And it was not
the work of our peasants, though the king’s agents would have it so,”
Camber retorted. He stood and leaned his arm against the mantelpiece, his thumb
tracing the wood graining on the goblet in his hand. “Rannulf was hanged,
drawn, and quartered, Evaine, in as professional a manner as I have ever seen.
The peasants of this village aren’t capable of such finesse. Besides, the
king’s Truth-Readers have already probed the hostages and learned nothing. Some
of the villagers think—mind you, they think— that it may have been the
work of the Willimites. But no one really knows, or can supply any names.” Evaine snorted
derisively. “The Willimites! Yes, I suppose Rannulf would have been a
likely target. There’s been talk that a child was molested last week in one of
Rannulf’s villages a few miles from here. Did you know that?” “Are you implying
that Rannulf was responsible?” Evaine arched an
eyebrow at him. “The villagers think so. And it’s well known that Rannulf kept
a catamite at his castle in Eastmarch. He was nearly excommunicated last year,
until he bought off his local bishop. The Willimites may have decided that the
time had come to take matters into their own hands. Saint Willim was a
martyr from Deryni ill-use, you know.” “You hardly need
remind me of my history, daughter,” Camber smiled. “You’ve been talking to Joram
again, haven’t you?” “May I not speak
with my own brother?” “Nay, don’t ruffle
your feathers, child.” Camber chuckled. “I shouldn’t want to be accused of
fostering ill-will between brother and sister. Only, be a little prudent with
Joram. He’s young yet, and a bit impulsive sometimes. If he and his Michaelines
aren’t careful, they’re liable to have young Imre breathing down their necks
with an inquisition, Deryni or not.” “I know Joram’s
weaknesses, Father—just as I know yours.” She glanced at him
coyly and caught his indulgent expression, then smiled and stood, relieved by
the chance to change the subject. “May we translate
now, Father? I’ve prepared the next two cantos.” “Have you, now?”
he asked. “Very well, bring the manuscript.” With a pleased
sigh, Evaine darted to the table and began searching among the rolls. She
located the scroll she was looking for, but before she could turn away her eye
was caught by a small, pale golden stone lying beside one of the inkwells. She
picked it up. “What is this?” “What?” “This curious
golden stone. Is it a gem?” Camber smiled and
shook his head. “Not really. The mountain folk in Kierney call it shiral. It
comes out of the river that way, already polished. Bring it here and I’ll show
you something peculiar about it.” Evaine returned to
her chair and sat, settling the forgotten scroll in her lap as she held the
stone to the firelight. It glittered, slightly translucent, strangely
compelling. She passed it to her father without a word as he set aside his wine
goblet. “Now,” said
Camber, gesturing expansively with the stone in his hand, “you’re familiar with
the spell Rhys uses to extend perception before he heals—the one he taught you
and Joram as an aid to meditation?” Rhys’s image
flashed before her for just an instant and she blushed. “Of course.” “Well, on my last
trip to Culdi, I found this. I happened to have it in my hand one night while I
said my evening devotions, and it— Well, watch. It’s easiest to show you.” Holding the object
lightly in the fingers of his two hands, Camber inhaled, exhaled, his eyes
narrowing slightly as he passed into the earliest stages of a Deryni trance.
His breathing slowed, the handsome face relaxed—and then the stone began to
glow faintly. Camber brought his eyes back to focus and extended his hands
toward Evaine, still in trance, the stone still glowing. Evaine’s lips
formed a silent O. “How do you do
it?” she breathed. “I’m not exactly
sure.” Camber blinked and
broke the spell, and the stone-light died. He cupped it between his hands for a
mere heartbeat, then held it out to her with a shake of his head. “You try it.” “Very well.” Taking the stone
in one hand, Evaine passed her other hand over it and bowed her head, mentally
reciting the words which would bring Rhys’s trance. The stone did nothing for
several seconds as she explored its several avenues of approach; then it began
to glow. With a sigh, Evaine returned to the world, held the stone closer as
the light was extinguished. “Strange. It
hardly takes any effort at all, once you know what you’re doing. What is it
for?” Camber shrugged.
“I don’t know. I haven’t been able to find a single use for it yet—other than
to fascinate gullible daughters, that is. You may keep it, if you like.” “May I, really?” “Of course. But
don’t think it’s going to help you with Pargan Howiccan. Two cantos, indeed! If
you make it through more than two pages, I shall be very surprised.
Pleased, but surprised.” “Is that a
challenge, sir?” Evaine grinned delightedly, opening the scroll and leaning
closer to her father. “Canto Four, being the Rise of the Lleassi and Johanan’s
Quest. “ ‘Now, in
those days, the Lords of the Dark Places were exceedingly powerful, and their
sphere was the orb of the Earth. “ ‘And the
Deryni Lord Johanan said unto the Servant of the High Gods, “Send me, Lord, to
cast out the Lleassi. For Thou hast seen their iniquities, and their sins are
great.” “ ‘And the eyes
of Makurias-in-Glory were inclined with favour upon the Lord Johanan, and His
hands He laid upon the head of His servant in the blessing of the Lord of
Hosts. “ ‘And the Lord
Johanan gathered to him his hosts of liegemen, and laid siege to the Lords of
the Dark Places. And great was their strength. . . .’ “ chapter twoHe shall go to
the generation of his fathers . . . —Psalms 49:19 Hurrying through
the crowds and morning mist, Rhys Thuryn spied the old woolen merchant’s house
up ahead, its thatched upper story thrust rudely among the more imposing
facades of stone and brick. Despite the early
hour, Fullers’ Alley was alive with sound and motion, wily merchants opening
their shops and market stalls, traders unloading precious silks and brocades
and velvets from protesting beasts of burden, wandering peddlers hawking their
wares with raucous calls. Beggars and street urchins also roamed the narrow
thoroughfare—and undoubtedly cutpurses, too, Rhys thought ruefully—but they
gave his Healer’s green a wide berth as he passed, some of them even tugging at
forelocks in respect. He supposed it was a bit unusual to see a Deryni
in this street these days, and a Healer, at that. But even had the
denizens of Fullers’ Alley not been disposed to give him way, that could not
have kept Rhys from his appointment this morning. Old Daniel Draper had been
one of Rhys’s first patients, and a valued friend long before that. And
Fullers’ Alley had not always been a den of merchants and thieves. Conditions
had deteriorated since the beginning of the current regime. Rhys gained the
relative shelter of one of the brick-and-timber buildings and glanced ahead to
get his bearings; then he lifted the edge of his mantle to avoid a dungheap and
slipped back into the street. Daniel’s door was the next one down, and already
Gifford, Rhys’s manservant, was battering at the door with his staff, his
master’s medical pouch slung from his shoulder by a stout leather strap. Rhys started to
take the pouch as he reached Gifford’s side, but then he stayed his hand.
Neither medicines nor the special healing craft practiced by men like Rhys
could cure old Dan Draper now. When a man lived to the age of eighty-three (or
so Dan said), even a Deryni Healer could not hope to do more than ease that
soul’s passage to the next world. And Dan had been dying for a long time. He thought about
Dan as he and Gifford waited for the door to open. The old man had been a
remarkable part of Rhys’s growing up—a veritable treasure trove of tales about
the years immediately after the change of royal house. Dan claimed to remember
the early years of Festil I, who had deposed the last Haldane king. And Dan had
lived through the reigns of three other Festillic monarchs—though he would not
live through the fifth: the current representative of the new dynasty was a
young man of twenty-two, king since the death of his father Blaine three years
before, and in excellent health. No, the old man would not see a sixth
Festillic king on the Throne of Gwynedd. They were admitted
by one of the maids, who burst into tears as she recognized Rhys and stepped
aside to let them pass. Several more servants were huddled together in the shop
itself, some of them making halfhearted attempts to perform their customary
duties, but all stopped what they were doing as the Healer moved among them.
Rhys tried to appear reassuring as he crossed the beaten-earth floor and
mounted the stairway to the living quarters, but he knew he was not succeeding.
He bounded up the stairs three at a time, reaching the upper landing only a
little out of breath. He ran a hand through unruly red hair in a nervous
gesture. Rhys did not need
to be shown the master’s door; he had been
there many times before. He
eased the door open to find the
room in dimness, the draperies pulled across the windows; and the air was
stifling with incense and the odor of
impending death. A priest he did not know was aspersing the bed with holy water
and murmuring a prayer, and for a moment Rhys was afraid he had come too late.
He waited by the door until the priest had finished his prayer, then moved
closer to the foot of the bed. “I’m Lord Rhys,
Father,” he said, his green mantle proclaiming his calling. “Is he—?” The priest shook
his head. “Not yet, my lord. He’s received the last rites and is in a state of
grace, but he keeps asking for you. I’m afraid he’s beyond even your healing
powers—with all due respect, sir.” “I’m aware of
that, Father.” Rhys gestured apologetically toward the door. “Do you mind
leaving us for a few minutes? He said he wanted some time alone with me, before
the end.” “Very well, my
lord.” As the priest
closed the door behind him, Rhys moved to the left of the bed and gazed down at
the face of the dying man. The gray eyes stared at the ceiling—Rhys could not
be certain at first glance whether they saw or not—and the man’s breathing was
very shallow. Rhys reached to the drapes and pushed them aside to admit light
and air, then touched the gnarled wrist and found a pulse. Gently, he bent
beside the old man’s ear. “It’s Rhys, Dan.
Can you hear me? I came as soon as I could.” The eyes flickered
and the lips moved, and then the gray head turned slowly toward the young
Deryni. A thin hand was feebly raised, and Rhys took it in his own with a
smile. “Are you in pain?
Is there anything I can do?” “Just don’t be so
impatient,” the old man breathed. “I’m not ready to die yet. Overanxious
priests!” His voice was
stronger than Rhys had expected, and Rhys squeezed the old hand affectionately. “Do you mean to
tell me you’ve let all those servants and apprentices get teary-eyed for
nothing?” The old man gave a
dry chuckle and shook his head. “No, I’m not
gaming this time. The Dark Angel is nearby. I can hear the rustle of His wings
sometimes. But I wanted to tell you something before I go. I couldn’t let it
die with me, and you—you’re something special to me, Rhys. You could almost be
the son I lost—or my grandson.” Pause. “I wonder where he is now?” “Your grandson? I
never knew you had one.” “ ‘Twas safer they
thought him dead, like his father. Besides, the Church has him now, if he still
lives. He went when he was nineteen, right after we lost his father. It was the
plague that year, you know. But you were only a lad then, if you were even
born. You probably don’t remember.” Rhys laughed
softly. “How old do you think I am, old one?” “Old enough to
know better than to listen to the rantings of a dying old man,” Dan smiled.
“But you will listen, won’t you, Rhys? It’s important.” “You know I will.” The old man sighed
deeply and let his gaze wander the room absently. “Who am I?” he
asked in a low voice. Rhys raised a
skeptical eyebrow and frowned. “Now, don’t go senile on me, after all these
years. Even if you are a cantankerous old rascal, I’m very fond of you.” Dan closed his
eyes and smiled, then looked up at the ceiling again. “Rhys, what ever happened
to the Haldanes, after your Deryni Festil led the coup that toppled the throne?
Did you ever wonder?” “Not really,” Rhys
replied. “I was taught that Ifor and all his family were executed during the
revolt.” “Not precisely
true. There was one survivor, one of the younger princes—he was only three or
four at the time. He was smuggled out of the castle by a servant and raised as
the man’s own bastard son. But he was never allowed to forget his true
parentage. His foster father hoped that one day he might overthrow the House of
Festil and restore human rule to Gwynedd—but of course, he never did. Nor did
the prince’s son. That prince would be very old by now, if he were alive.” “If he were . . .”
Rhys started to repeat the old man’s words, then trailed to a halt, suddenly
suspecting what the old man was going to say next. Dan coughed and
took a deep breath. “Go ahead, ask. I
know you won’t believe me, but it’s true. I was known as Prince Aidan in those
days; and in the normal order of things, I probably would have been content to
rule a distant barony or earldom in my royal brother’s name, for there were
three before me for the throne. But with the execution of all my kin, I became
the sole Haldane heir.” He paused. “I never had the chance even to try to win
back my throne. Nor did my son: he died too young, and the time was not right.
But my grandson—” “Now, wait a
minute, Dan.” Rhys’s brow was furrowed in disbelief. “You’re telling me that
you’re really Prince Aidan, the rightful Haldane heir, and that your grandson
is still alive?” “His royal name is
Cinhil—Prince Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane,” Dan murmured. “He would be, oh, forty
or so by now—I can’t remember exactly. It’s been over twenty years since I last
saw him. He entered a contemplative order, walled away from the world. He is
safe there, the knowledge of his true identity locked deep in his earliest
memories. I thought, at the time, that it was better that way.” His voice
trailed off, and Rhys blinked at him in amazement, his stomach doing queasy
flip-flops. “Why are you
telling me this?” Rhys breathed, after nearly a full minute of silence. “I trust you.” “But, I— Dan, I’m Deryni,
a member of the conquering race. You can’t have forgotten that. How long do
you think your grandson would be permitted to live, if anyone even suspected
his existence? Besides, you yourself said that it’s been twenty years. He may
be dead already.” Daniel tried to
shrug, but the movement brought on a coughing fit which wracked the frail old
body. Rhys helped him to sit, trying to ease his discomfort, then lowered him
gently to the pillows when the spell had passed. Daniel swallowed noisily,
gestured with a veined, translucent hand. “You may be right.
Perhaps I am the last living Haldane, and have spent my years of hoping for
nought. If so, my telling you can do no harm. But if I am not the last.. .” His voice trailed
off in speculation, and Rhys shook his head again. “Too many ifs, Dan. For all
I know, what you’ve told me could just be the demented death rattlings of a
foolish old man. Besides, what could I do?” Dan stared up into
Rhys’s face, aged gray eyes meeting young golden ones. “Am I a foolish old man,
Rhys? I think you know better. Come, you’re Deryni. Your race can probe men’s
souls. Probe mine, then, and read the truth. I am not afraid.” “I—am not
accustomed to touching the minds of humans in that way.” Rhys hesitated,
lowering his eyes uncomfortably. “Don’t be silly. I
have felt your healing touch before. If you cannot heal age, that is not your
fault. But you can touch my mind, Rhys. You can read the truth of
what I say.” Rhys glanced
behind him at the closed door, then back at the quiet form of Daniel
Draper—perhaps Prince Aidan Haldane. He looked down at the old man’s hand still
twined in his and touched the pulse spot, then slowly raised his eyes once
more. “You’re very weak.
I should not intrude so near the end. It’s your priest who should be beside you
now, not I.” “But I have
finished with the priest, and besides, these words were not his to know,”
Daniel whispered. “Please, Rhys. Humor a dying man.” “The strain could
kill you,” Rhys insisted. “Then I will be
dead. I am dying, anyway. The truth is more important than a few minutes or a
few hours more. Hurry, Rhys. There’s very little time.” With a sigh, Rhys
eased himself to sit on the edge of the bed beside the old man. Surrounding the
hand he still held between his two hands, he gazed down into the calm gray eyes
and willed the eyes to close. The sere lids fluttered and obeyed as Rhys
extended his senses, secured control, and entered. Swirling grayness
engulfed him, broken intermittently by hazy snatches of color and sound—almost
as though he were making his way through patchy, rolling fog. Only, this was
the fog of Death, as the Darkness encroached already on parts of the old man’s
mind. The images were flashing past with no discernible order. He must keep
moving, lest he, too, be snared by them. There. A fleeting
ghost-image of a young man— he somehow knew it was Dan’s son—with a young child
in his arms. Was the child Cinhil? Then that same man, older now, laid out on a
bier with candles all around, his fair face mottled by the plague signs. A
young, dark-haired man and an old gray one standing fearfully in the doorway,
drawn by their love yet afraid to come closer. The young man bore the glossy
black hair and gray eyes of the Haldanes. Then the picture was gone. More
darkness—thick, gray-black stuff which was stifling, almost impassable. But
then there was more: a tension building in the shadows, a mindless fear, and
sounds—the sounds of slaughter. He was a tiny boy,
cowering and sobbing beneath a shattered stair, and there were people screaming
and running past him, fire licking at the castle ramparts, blazing on the
thatching of the castle’s outbuildings. Soldiers seized
two older boys whom he knew to be his brothers and dragged them into the
already bloody courtyard, then slew them with swords which hacked and stabbed
and were raised up dripping again and again. An infant sister was dashed
against the stones of the courtyard paving, another tossed aloft and spitted on
a laughing soldier’s lance. And then his
father, tall and gray-eyed, gory in blood-soaked nightclothes, unarmed but for
a bright blade in his hand, roaring defiance as he tried to cut a path to his
anguished queen. The rain of arrows falling on the king and cutting him down
like a trapped animal—because the butchers feared to come within reach of his
blade. And his mother’s
shrieks as they pinned her limbs and ripped the living child from her belly.... Rhys drew back
with a gasp and severed the contact, unable to endure the visions any longer.
Stunned wordless by what he had seen, he forced himself to focus on his hands
and was shocked to find that they were trembling. Willing them to
calm, his pounding heart to slow, he breathed deeply several times, relaxing as
the world settled into its customary order. Gently, he chafed the old man’s
hand to bring him back to consciousness. He was hardly aware of the tears
welling in his eyes. “Dan?” he
whispered. “Dan? Prince Aidan?” The gray eyes
opened weakly and the old lips parted. “You saw.” Rhys nodded
slowly, his golden eyes wide with wonder and a little horror still. “Then, you know I
spoke the truth,” Dan said. “Will you guard that truth, against the time when
the throne may be restored to a Haldane?” “A Deryni king is
on the throne now, Dan. Would you have me betray him to restore your kin?” “Watch and pray,
Rhys. And then ask yourself if the man on the throne is worthy of the golden
circlet. Ask if this is the sort of rule you wish for your children and your
children’s children. Then you decide. And when the time comes, and you reach
the decision which I think you must, at least consider my grandson. Once I am
gone, only you will know, Rhys.” “You speak
treason, old friend,” Rhys murmured, lowering his eyes as he remembered what he
had seen. “But, if the time comes, I—I will consider what you have told
me.” “God bless you, my
son.” The old man smiled. He reached up with his free hand to wipe a tear from
Rhys’s cheek with his thumb. “And I, who thought ever to curse the Deryni . .
.” He paused, and a flicker of pain crossed his face. “Around my neck you will
find a silver coin on a cord. I do not read, but I am told that it was struck
at the abbey where Cinhil, my grandson, took his vows. His name in religion is—
is—” The old man gasped
for breath, and Rhys had to lean forward to catch his next words. “Go on, Dan. His
name?” “His name—his name
is—Benedict. Benedictus. He ... is ... a Haldane . . . and . . . King.” Rhys bowed his
head and closed his eyes in sorrow, automatically searching for a pulse but
knowing that this time there would be none. He slipped to his knees and knelt
there for several minutes, then shook his head and let the old man’s hand go.
Folding the wrinkled old hands on the silent breast and closing the dulling
eyes, he then crossed himself numbly and turned away. He was nearly to the door
before he remembered the coin, and he returned quickly to take it from around
the dead man’s neck. But though Rhys
could read the words inscribed in the silver, they meant nothing to him. And
with a sudden, sinking feeling, he realized that Daniel had given him only the
religious name of his grandson— Benedictus—and not his secular one. If he ever
did want to locate the man, it was going to be very difficult. With a troubled mind,
he slipped the coin into the pouch at his belt and moved toward the door. There
he paused to collect his wits, to resume his professional demeanor, to steel
himself for the servants and the waiting priest. A last glance at the old man,
and then he opened the door. “It is finished,
my lord?” the priest asked. Rhys nodded. “The
end was easy. He did not suffer much.” The priest bowed,
then slipped past Rhys to begin chanting the final prayers, the servants slowly
sinking to their knees around the doorway, some of them weeping softly. As the
words drifted out of the room, Rhys, suddenly very tired, picked his way slowly
down the stairs to where Gifford awaited him. Gifford stood as
his master approached, clutching Rhys’s medical pouch to his chest. “Is it over,
master?” Rhys nodded, then
gestured for Gifford to open the door and proceed. Yes, it’s over,
he thought to himself, as they stepped into the street again. Or, is it only
just beginning? chapter threeThen give place
to the physician, for the Lord hath created him: let him not go from thee, for
thou hast need of him. —Ecclesiasticus
38:12 It was raining
steadily by the next morning, when Rhys Thuryn drew rein before the Abbey of
Saint Liam. Unaccompanied by any servant or attendant, he had ridden most of
the night to reach the abbey, for the coin Daniel had given him would not let
him sleep. He dismounted and led his horse beneath the eaves extending around
the courtyard, then waited until a young novice came to take charge of the
animal. His leather cloak was nearly soaked through, his fur leggings spattered
with mud. Rain dripped from his cap and the ends of his hair as he strode into
the shelter of the cloister walk and scanned the area. He had been to
Saint Liam’s many times before, of course—had studied here with Joram, years
ago, before he had discovered his talents in the healing arts. The memories
were happy ones, of more carefree days. But the reason for
his visit today was not mere nostalgia. For, of the men Rhys knew he could
trust, there was but one who might know the origin of the worn silver coin now
lying in the pouch at his waist. Joram MacRorie, Rhys’s boyhood companion and
probably his closest friend, was currently a master here at the abbey school.
If Rhys’s information proved to be correct, and the man Benedict in the unknown
monastery really was the Haldane heir, then it was also Joram who would know
how best to use that knowledge for the good of all concerned. With a sigh, Rhys
swept off his sodden cap and began to make his way along the roofed cloister
walk toward the Chapter House, ruffling his gloved fingers through wet, unruly
hair. Joram would not be in the Chapter House at this hour, of course. Chapter would have
been concluded hours ago, before most folk were even rising for the day. But the
schoolrooms and the quarters of the schoolmasters lay through the passage just
ahead. If he could not himself locate Joram, there was a good chance of finding
someone who did know where the young priest was. He stood aside as
a double line of schoolboys marched past with their master, solemn in their
blue school cloaks with the badge of Saint Liam blazoned on the breast. Then he
was moving through the passage to the central hall, into which the schoolrooms
opened. Across the hall he spied a priest he knew, and he approached with a
respectful bow. “Good morning,
Father Dominic. Do you know where I might find Father MacRorie?” The old priest
peered at him myopically, then beamed as recognition came. “Why, it’s young
Rhys Thuryn, isn’t it? Were you not one of my pupils some years ago?” Rhys smiled and
bowed again. “I’m flattered that you remember after so long, Father.” The priest’s
rheumy eyes had flicked to the Healer’s insignia on Rhys’s tunic, and this time
it was his turn to bow. “How could I
forget, my lord? Your sacred calling was apparent to me even in those early
days.” He glanced around as though to reorient himself, then turned back to
Rhys with a smile. “You’re looking for Father Joram, are you? As I recall, he’s
reading in the library this morning. It’s fortunate you came when you did,
however, for I believe he said he was leaving later today to go home for
Michaelmas.” “Yes, I know. I’m
invited to spend Michaelmas with the MacRorie household myself this year, so I
thought to lure him away a few hours early and save him the ride alone.” “Well, then, don’t
let me keep you, lad. God go wi’ ye.” “Thank you,
Father.” Retracing his
steps, Rhys made his way back through the covered passageway, past the Chapter
House, then mounted the wide day stair toward the library. True to Father
Dominic’s directions, he found Joram in the third carrel chamber into which he
peered. Joram had his feet
up, the manuscript in his lap tilted to catch the light which filtered through
the rain-washed window above his head. He looked up with a pleased grin as Rhys
entered and perched himself on the edge of the table. “Rhys, brother!
Why, you look like the proverbial drowned cat himself. What brings you here in
this weather? I would have seen you at home tomorrow.” With silence for
answer, Rhys reached into his pouch and produced the silver coin, gave it a
perfunctory glance, dropped it into Joram’s outstretched hand. “Ever seen one of
these?” he asked. Joram bent his
head and studied the object closely for several minutes. Father Joram
MacRorie was lean and fit, blond like his father, and with the uncanny ability
to appear perfectly garbed and unruffled whether serving High Mass with the
Archbishop or gutting out a deer after a long afternoon’s chase. Just now he
was clad in the simple cassock and cowled surcoat of his order, the hood pushed
back casually from tonsured yellow hair. The sandalled feet had not moved from
their resting place on the table edge. The slender fingers were still as they
read the silver coin. The outward aplomb
of the man was not inappropriate. Ordained at age twenty by the Archbishop of
Valoret himself, it had been clear from the outset that young Joram MacRorie
was slated for high Church preferment. As younger son of an extremely
well-connected house, such would have been his due even had he not been so
brilliant a scholar or so shrewd a judge of men. He was his father’s son in
every way. The fact that he would probably deserve every future honor bestowed
upon him spoke well of the man, was an unexpected nicety in a world
characterized by nepotism and the purchase of office and political influence. Indeed, even in
the religious life it was difficult to be anything but political,
especially if one moved in the upper circles of Deryni society. In the past
century, religious establishments had gained an unenviable reputation for being
corrupt, most of the corruption blamed, directly or indirectly, on the Deryni
regime. Joram’s Michaeline Order was thought to be spiritually and
intellectually sound, with better attention than most to the Rule of their
order. But they were also a militant brotherhood, whose knights had more than
once taken sides in a controversy which should, by rights, have remained in
secular hands. Such was the way of the Church in Gwynedd. Nor had Joram
himself been entirely able to avoid political entanglements, for all his
protestations and honest calling. Sought out by his fellow priests whenever
royal crisis threatened, he was not often permitted to forget that his father,
Camber, had once been a high-ranking minister of the Crown. After all, it was
no great secret, among those acquainted with the situation, just why Camber
had resigned. Though the official explanation had mentioned something about
Camber wishing to retire from government service “while still young enough to
enjoy his academic pursuits,” it was widely known that Camber had not approved
of young Imre’s policies as prince, while his father lived; and still less did
he approve, once the young man became king. Camber MacRorie was not a man who
could continue to serve a crown whose wearer he did not respect. Adding to the
complication was the fact that Joram’s older brother Cathan was a friend of
Imre, and had, at the new king’s request, stepped in to fill the place left
vacant by Camber’s departure. There was no enmity between father and son:
Camber well realized that a younger, more flexible man might be better able to
temper the king’s rash boldness with reason. In Cathan’s abilities and judgment
he had no doubt. But Cathan’s entry
into the political arena continued the difficulties Joram faced, as the priest
must constantly try to curb the natural gift for politicking which he had
inherited in full measure from his father. Joram and Rhys had discussed the
quandary more than once over a glass of Fianna wine, when the wind howled
outside through the long Gwyneddan winter nights. For himself, Rhys
believed that a physician, like a cleric, should try to remain neutral, despite
the temptation to become politically involved. Only now that neutrality was
being shaken as never before, by the simple expedient of a dying man’s words
and the flash of a silver coin in a priest’s long fingers. “Where did you get
this?” Joram asked. There was no trace of suspicion in his question—only,
perhaps, a certain wistful curiosity. “Never mind that
for now,” Rhys said. “What is it?” “It’s a dower
coin. They were sometimes given as mementoes to the next of kin of postulants
entering the old religious orders. They aren’t made anymore.” “Can you tell
where it’s from?” Rhys tried to keep the impatience from his voice. “I mean,
can you tell which monastery?” “Hmm. I have an
idea, but I fancy you want something more definite than that. Come on, we’ll
look it up.” Without a word,
Rhys got up and followed Joram into the main portion of the library, past the
reading brothers with heads bowed over parchment membranes, past the scrivener
monks painstakingly copying texts in their fine majuscule hands. A very aged
monk sat atop a high stool behind a reading desk, guardian of a polished oak
door barred with a stout beam. Joram murmured a
few words to the monk, then bowed and raised the bar on the door and opened it.
Taking a rushlight from a stand by the monk’s desk, he motioned for Rhys to
follow him into the next room. It was a small,
dark chamber lined with row upon row of open shelves holding rolls of parchment
and a few bound volumes. The volumes were massive and ragged-looking, since
they had originally been assembled from roll entries cut to fit, and. they were
secured to the shelves by chains which allowed them to be moved only as far as
a small reading stand. Handing the
rushlight to Rhys to hold aloft, Joram roamed the row in front of them, then
pulled down a dusty volume and inspected the cover. With a grunt, he replaced
the book and moved farther down the row, where he removed another volume. This
one he opened and began scanning, opening his hand to glance at the coin again
as Rhys peered over his shoulder. “Hmm. I suspected
as much. It was struck at Saint Jarlath’s, which is the mother house of the Ordo
Verbi Dei. They’re a cloistered order based at Barwicke, not far from here.
Saint Jarlath himself was a sixth-century bishop of Meara—an abbot, too, if I’m
not mistaken.” Rhys lowered his
eyes and was silent for a moment. Then: “Barwicke—you said that’s not far from
here. How far?” “Oh, a few hours’
ride. Why are you so interested in Saint Jarlath’s?” “I—” Rhys paused,
then went on cautiously. “An old man died yesterday, Joram. A patient of mine.
His grandson may have taken vows at Saint Jarlath’s about twenty years ago.
It’s important that I find him.” “To tell the monk
his grandfather is dead?” “Yes.” Joram replaced the
volume on the shelf and turned to eye Rhys curiously. “And then what?”
Joram asked softly. “Rhys, you’re not making much sense. If the man took vows
at Saint Jarlath’s twenty years ago, he may not even be alive by now. Even if
he is, he’ll be a cloistered monk. You couldn’t see him. The most you could
hope from him would be prayers for his kinsman’s repose— which, if he’s any
kind of monk at all, he’ll have been giving all these years, regardless of
whether his grandsire was alive or dead. Did the old man leave him an
inheritance or something?” “In a way,” Rhys
murmured. He took the coin from Joram and glanced at it distractedly, but would
not meet the priest’s eyes. Joram frowned and
folded his arms across his chest. “What do you mean,
‘in a way’? If the old man left him anything, it belongs to his order now. You
know that monks haven’t any property of their own.” Rhys smiled in
spite of himself. “Not this inheritance, my friend. This is not for monks.” “Will you stop
dissembling and get to the point? You know about cloistered orders; you know
about community property; and you know what would be involved to find this man
after twenty years. Who is this monk?” Rhys paused, then
wet his lips nervously. “All that you have said is true, or would be true in
ordinary circumstances,” he whispered, looking up. “But this is no ordinary
monk, Joram. We must find him. God help us, and him, but we must! His father is
long dead, and his grandfather also, now. But his grandfather claimed to be
Aidan Haldane, last living son of King Ifor. Your so-called cloistered monk may
well be the rightful Haldane King of Gwynedd!” Joram’s jaw
dropped, and he stared at the Healer in disbelief. “The rightful Haldane heir?” At Rhys’s guarded
nod, Joram reached blindly for the bench he remembered being somewhere behind
him, eased himself down upon it gently. “Rhys, do you
realize what you’re saying?” Rhys shifted
uncomfortably. “I’m trying to avoid thinking about the political ramifications
just yet, if that’s what you mean. Can’t we simply say that we’re looking for a
monk whose grandfather died? Besides,
the man himself may be dead by now, for all we know.” “But, what if he’s
not?” Joram replied softly. “Rhys, you may not want to think about it, but I’m
not sure you can afford that luxury. If what you say is true...” With a defeated
sigh, Rhys sank down on the bench beside the priest. “I know,” he murmured,
after a long silence. “But the illusion of innocence gives me a semblance of
comfort. God knows, I’m not a political creature, Joram, but I ...” He bowed
his head. “I had a friend,” he said. “I gave him my hand and comfort in his
final hour, and he gave me his most precious possession: the identity of his
only grandson. He showed me an ancient and noble heritage, and a potential for
something different from what we know. And then he said, ‘Ask yourself if the
man on the throne is worthy of the golden circlet,’ Joram. He said, ‘Ask if
this is the sort of rule you wish for your children and your children’s
children. Then you decide.’ “ “And, have you
decided?” Rhys shook his
head. “Not yet. I don’t think I, or you, or any one man can make a decision
like that alone.” He looked up wistfully. “But I have considered what
old Daniel told me, Joram. And now— well, I think we must try to find his
grandson.” “To tell him his
grandfather is dead?” Joram asked. Rhys glanced
quickly at his companion, fearing to find some hint of mockery in the other’s
expression. But there was none—only a gentle, indulgent wisp of a smile
flicking across the other’s mouth. “Thank you for
knowing when not to push,” he said simply, his own lips curving in response.
“I’m afraid I’ve not been honed for this sort of thing the way you Michaelines
have. It may take me a while to adjust.” Joram chuckled as
he stood, clasping a hand to the other’s shoulder. “You’re doing fine,” he
said, picking up the rushlight again. “For now, let’s just worry about that
monk that wants finding, who will doubtless wish to offer prayers for his
grandfather’s repose.” Within half an
hour, Rhys and Joram were gone from Saint Liam’s, riding pell-mell through
driving rain toward the tiny village of Barwicke, where Saint Jarlath’s lay.
Once the full implications of Rhys’s news had sunk in, Joram had moved quickly
to secure fresh horses for the two of them and obtain leave to depart early.
More details of the previous day’s events had been imparted to Joram as he
changed to riding attire in his chamber—boots and cloak and sleek, fur-lined
riding leathers. Then they were mounting up on two of the abbey’s sleek,
blooded horses, clattering hellbent out through the abbey yard. By the time they
reached Barwicke, both men were half frozen and soaked to the skin. It was also
quite dark. “Where is the
monastery?” Rhys croaked, as the two drew rein under a tree at the edge of the
village square. Joram wiped
silver-gilt hair out of his eyes and turned in the saddle, standing in the
stirrups to get his bearings. “That way, I
think.” He gestured north with a wetly gloved hand. “I only hope they’ll let us
in this late. We may have to pull rank on them. Come on.” With a sigh, Rhys
hunched down further in the saddle and followed the priest, trying
unsuccessfully to keep the rain from running down his neck. He was beginning to
wonder whether they would ever be dry and warm again, and whether the whole
thing was worth it, when he saw the monastery looming ahead in the driving
rain. Thankfully, he reined in before the monastery gate, stifling a cough as
Joram reached up and gave the gate bell a hefty yank. When there was no
response, Joram yanked the bell again, then dismounted preparatory to pounding
on the gate with his fist. Before he had to resort to that measure, a small
shutter was opened in the gate and an annoyed-looking face was thrust through
the opening. “All right, all
right, don’t pull the building down,” the man said, scowling against the rain. “Why
don’t you go back to the village? There’s lodging to be had there for the
night.” “I wish to speak
to your Father Superior,” Joram said quietly. “And while you’re thinking about
it, my companion and I should like some Christian charity from the rain.” Joram’s cultured
tone took the man aback for a moment, but then he shook his head. “Sorry, sir.
We don’t open the gates after dark. Marauders and thieves, you know. Besides,
you couldn’t see the Reverend Father tonight, anyway. He’s in bed with a bad
cold. Come back in the morning.” “My good man, my
name is Father Joram MacRorie, of the Order of Saint Michael. My companion is
the Lord Rhys Thuryn. Now, we would not have ridden all this way in this
weather if it were not important. Are you going to open this gate, or must I
report your rudeness to your superiors in the morning?” The man’s eyes had
gotten progressively wider as Joram spoke, and abruptly he bobbed his head in a
bow and closed the shutter. When the gate opened seconds later, he was still
bowing nervously. A lay brother in
coarse brown robes and hood was waiting to take their horses, and another monk
in deep gray nodded greeting and indicated that they should follow him. No word
was spoken as they strode down the corridor with the silent monk. They passed
several others, but the men seemed not even to notice them. They were shown
into a small room strewn with sweet-smelling rushes and herbs, and with a
modest fire burning well back on the stone hearth. The man who had been their
escort pointed out a stack of dry blankets and indicated that they should warm
themselves before the fire, then withdrew behind a heavy, carved door, which
closed softly behind him. Joram immediately
began stripping off sodden cap and gloves, spreading his dripping cloak on the
rushes to dry. “They’ll bring us
dry clothes in a few minutes,” he said, unlacing his leggings and discarding
those, then beginning on his tunic. “Meanwhile, we’d best get out of these wet
things before we catch our deaths.” Rhys sneezed for
reply, then began following Joram’s example. Wrapping himself, cocoon-like, in
one of the scratchy abbey blankets, he huddled shivering by the fire, damp hair
beginning to steam from the heat. Beside him, Joram was typically unruffled,
looking every inch the noble’s son he was, even in his currently bedraggled
state. It figures, Rhys thought, and decided that he would probably
never see Joram look anything less than impeccable. The door opened
silently, and the two of them stood as two men entered the room. The first was
obviously the abbot of the place, silver gleaming on hand and breast against
the burgundy richness of his habit. The man’s cowl was pushed back to reveal a
shaven head, and he was holding a swatch of grayish linen to his nose and
sniffling audibly. The monk who had escorted them to the room bore a pair of
gray woolen robes across his arms. Joram crossed immediately to the abbot,
blanket clutched around himself like a royal mantle, and bowed to kiss the
abbot’s ring. “Thank you for
seeing us, Reverend Father. I am Father MacRorie, and this is the Lord Rhys
Thuryn, a Healer.” Rhys bent to kiss the ring also. “We are most grateful for
your hospitality.” The abbot bowed in
acknowledgment. “Be at ease, Father, and please to accept the dry clothing
which Brother Egbert has brought. I am Gregory of Arden, Abbot of Saint
Jarlath’s.” He paused to sneeze, then held the handkerchief to his nose once
more as Brother Egbert assisted the two visitors into their robes. .When the
men had been decently clad and the monk had withdrawn, Abbot Gregory moved
closer to the hearth and warmed thin hands before the fire. “I am told that
you are of the Order of Saint Michael, Father,” he said, his voice croaking
hoarsely. “How may I assist you?” Joram smiled
disarmingly and gave the cord at his waist a final tug. “We wish to inspect the
records of postulants in this order for the past few years, Father Abbot.” “Ah, is this an
official inquiry of some sort, Father?” “Oh, no. It’s
personal. A matter of conscience, Father Abbot.” “I see.” The abbot
shrugged, obviously relieved. “Well, certainly it can be arranged. But if
you’re looking for a particular postulant, you must surely be aware that he has
likely taken his final vows by now and, hence, could not receive you.” Rhys glanced sidelong
at his companion, then cleared his throat. “Forgive me,
Reverend Father, but perhaps Father Joram has not made himself clear. He makes
the request in my behalf. The grandfather of the man we are looking for was in
my care until his recent death, and begged me on his deathbed to find his
grandson and inform him of his grandsire’s demise. Surely, you would not refuse
the dying wish of a man whose only fault was in wishing his holy grandson to
say prayers for his soul.” The abbot raised
an eyebrow, then shrugged apologetically. “Well, the news could be taken to him
by his superior, I suppose. Certainly, a man is entitled to mourn his
grandsire, even if the rest of the world has been renounced. What is the man’s
name? Perhaps I can tell you his whereabouts.” “Benedict, now.
Before that—ah, it was the grandfather’s wish that we not reveal his grandson’s
identity, Reverend Father,” Joram replied. “Might we see those records now?” “Now,
Father?” The abbot looked at Joram a little strangely. “Can it not wait until
morning?” “The grandfather
felt himself much in need of prayer, Reverend Father,” Joram lied, “and we
promised to find his grandson as soon as possible. Also, we would not disturb
the routine of your house any more than necessary. If one of your brothers
could show us to your archives and provide us with light, we would be most
grateful.” “I understand, of
course.” The abbot shrugged and bowed, his manner declaring that he did not
understand at all. “Very well. Brother Egbert will show you the pertinent
records and see to your needs. Perhaps you will at least join us at Mass in the
morning and then break your fast with us?” “We would be most
honored.” Joram bowed. “Our thanks to you, Reverend Father.” With a last,
disbelieving look at them, the abbot dabbed at his reddened nose and took his
leave, disappearing down the corridor in one direction while Brother Egbert led
them along another way. Rushlights were
procured and lit outside a heavy wooden door which Brother Egbert unlocked with
a large iron key. In a far corner of the library, Egbert indicated a shelf of
neatly rolled scrolls—the induction records of the Ordo Verbi Dei—then
bowed silently and turned to go. When the sound of
the closing door had confirmed his departure, Joram set a rushlight on the
reading desk and pulled out a scroll at random. Spreading it open on the desk,
he scanned the legend at the top. “Decimus
Blainus—the tenth year of the reign of King Blaine. That’s too recent.
Daniel said the boy entered the order about twenty years ago?” Rhys nodded. “He
said more than twenty, but I think we’d better check five or ten years to
either side of that. Dan said the boy was nineteen when he took his
vows, and that he’d be about forty now, but Dan was eighty-three, by his
reckoning. He may be hazy on the dates.” “All right. Twenty
years—that would be 833, just toward the end of Festil III. We’ll go back to,
oh, 22 Festil III, through, uh—3 Blaine ought to be far enough. That’s ten
years back and five forward. Too bad we don’t know his secular name—even Draper
won’t help us, since ecclesiastical records generally fail to show commoners’
surnames. But there can’t be that many men in a fifteen-year spread who took
the religious name of Benedict. See if you can locate some writing materials
while I start looking.” Joram’s optimism
proved to be unfounded. By the time Rhys had returned with some scraps of
parchment and a quill and ink, the priest had already found four Benedicts. “And that’s only
through 25 Festilus III,” Joram lamented, as Rhys put down the writing
materials and looked over his shoulder. “Look at this. 22 Festilus III: ‘Rolf
the son of Carrolan was received into the Ordo Verbi Dei and took the
name Benedictus, and was cloistered at the Priory of Saint Piran.’ “23 Festilus III: ‘Abel
the son of John the Goldsmith was received into the Ordo Verbi Dei on
Candlemas and took the name Benedictus, and was sent forthwith to the Monastery
of Saint Illtyd.’ “25 Festilus III: ‘Henricus,
youngest son of the Earl of Legain—’ Well, I guess we can eliminate him, at
least. Definitely the wrong father for our man. “25 Festilus III: ‘Josephus
the son of Master Galiardi the Merchant . . . name of Benedictus . . . sent to
Saint Ultan’s.’ And we’ve still got eleven years to go!” Rhys sighed and
sat down at the desk, dipping quill to ink. “Well, let’s get on with it, then.
A lot of those earlier ones will be dead by now—he may even be dead, for
all we know. If you’ll find them, I’ll copy them down.” “All right,” Joram
sighed. “Here’s one in 26 Festilus III, when you get those three. It’s going to
be a long night.” Three hours later,
they had compiled a list of sixteen names, three of which they were able to
eliminate immediately as belonging to identifiable noble houses. Unfortunately,
they did not know the father’s full name, and there was no reference to
grandparents in the records. So the two were
left with a list of thirteen. Further winnowing with regard to age from other
records cut the list to ten. But next they must search out all the death
records for the ten Benedicts and discover which ones, if any, were still
alive. The eastern windows of the library were graying with approaching dawn
when the last scroll was replaced on its shelf and the two sat back to relax. “Five still alive
and of the right age,” Joram murmured, stretching his arms over his head and
indulging in a tremendous yawn. “It’s a good thing we insisted on coming here
tonight. Can you imagine the whole abbey breathing down our necks in the
daytime, wondering what in the world we were up to?” Rhys laid aside
his quill and shook his fingers, then picked up the list. His eyes felt
gravelly from lack of sleep, but the list was in his hands. 26 F III
Andrew, son of James, age 45—Saint Piron’s Priory 28 F III
Nicholas, son of Royston, age 43—Saint Foillan’s Abbey 31 F III John,
son of Daniel, age 42—Saint Piran’s Priory 32 F III
Robert, son of Peter, age 39—Saint Ultan’s Priory 2 Bl.
Matthew, son of
Carlus, age 46— Saint Illtyd’s Monastery He scanned the
list once more, then handed it across to Joram. “Well, what now?
I’ve never even heard of half these places. Where are Saint Ultan’s and Saint
Foillan’s?” Joram looked at
the list also, then folded it and tucked it into his robe. “Saint Ultan’s is
down in Mooryn, near the coast. Saint Foillan’s is in the Lendour highlands,
about three days’ ride southeast of here. I think we’d be better off to try
Saint Piran’s first, though. That’s only a day’s ride north, and two of our
candidates are there. Also, it’s too much to hope for, but this second one at
Saint Piran’s, this John son of Daniel, is an awfully close name to be
associated with the Haldane line. The name John is close to Ifor, who would
have been our Benedict’s great-grandfather, the last Haldane king. And of
course, your man’s name was Daniel. He might have named his son the same.” “And if neither of the Benedicts at Saint
Piran’s is the one, what then?” “Then we’ll try
Saint Foillan’s, and Saint Ultan’s, and even Saint Illtyd’s, if we have
to—though I don’t relish heading down toward Nyford with the building going on.
I hope your riding muscles are in better shape than mine.” He rubbed his
backside and gave a droll grin, and Rhys had to chuckle. Gathering up the extra
parchment they had been using as working notes, Rhys started to wad it up, but
Joram reached across and took it from him, held each piece to the rushlight
flame, and watched it burn to ash. Rhys said nothing during the operation, but
as they rose to go he glanced across at Joram. “You know, you
just destroyed my last illusion of innocence,” he said in a low voice. “We can
still say, for now, that we’re only interested in finding Brother Benedict. As
long as no one makes any other connection, we’re safe enough. But, once we find
him, then what? What do you do with a lost heir except depose the current
monarch and restore the old line?” Joram had picked
up the two rushlights as Rhys spoke, and now he turned to face his companion
once more, his face lit eerily from below by the flickering yellow light. “Yes, it’s high
treason, quite clearly. It’s treason even to be searching for him—never mind
whether we plan to put him on the throne or not. On the other hand, the whole
thing could end very shortly. We may find that our Brother Benedict, even if
he’s still alive, is so entirely unsuitable for the Crown, after twenty years
in seclusion, that even Imre would be preferable.” “My God, I hadn’t
even considered that possibility.” “Again, just a
matter of perspective,” Joram smiled. “Think about this, though: Even if he
should be willing to forsake his vows and reclaim his birthright— which is by
no means certain—that’s only the beginning. A man may be born to be king, but
if he hasn’t also been trained to be king, chances are he’ll have a rough time
of it. Even we Michaelines, critical as we are of Imre and his policies,
haven’t yet preached his overthrow.” He glanced down at
the rushlights, his lips a firm line of shadow. “Not that we
haven’t considered it, I’ll grant you,” he added. “When Imre proclaimed the
tariff for the new capital at Nvford, there was nearly a mutiny in the ranks. A
military order like the Michaelines— Well, you know our reputation. But
deposing an anointed king is serious business, even with due cause. Thank God,
even our hotheads realized that.” Rhys stared at
Joram silently for several heartbeats, then averted his eyes. “Your
Michaelines—they could make much of the information we’ve gathered tonight,
couldn’t they?” “I suspect they
could,” Joram murmured, “if they had it.” Rhys looked up.
“And do you intend to tell them?” “I don’t think
that decision is entirely mine to make, do you?” Joram countered. “Perhaps some
of your native caution has rubbed off on me, Rhys, or perhaps I’m just
remembering the thin edge my order rides just now. In any event, any action we
take if we do find Cinhil, and he is suitable, will involve a lot
of other people. I’d like to tell Father about him first, if you have no
objections.” “Camber? Aye,”
Rhys breathed. “If he thinks a Restoration is the only answer, I’d feel
a lot better about the whole thing.” “Come on, then,”
Joram yawned. “We’d best get what sleep we can before they roust this place for
morning prayers.” chapter fourHear counsel
and receive instruction, that thou mayest be wise in thy latter end. —Proverbs 19:20 They got little
sleep in what remained of the night, though neither counted that amiss in light
of the information they had gleaned. No sooner had they staggered back to the
receiving room and rolled up in blankets by the fire than it was time to rise
for morning devotions. Far earlier than they had hoped, in these days of
slackening ecclesiastical discipline, they were roused by one of the abbey’s
lay brethren, who stood vigilant watch in the doorway until both men were on
their feet and pulling on still-damp clothes, however groggily. Rhys thought the
brother’s behavior a little odd, and said as much when they were finally left
alone to finish dressing. But Joram merely laughed at that and reminded his
friend that this was, after all. a monastery. The brother had obviously taken
them for ordinary travellers, who had prevailed upon the abbey for shelter from
the night. In the brother’s estimation, if said travellers could be induced to
reclaim their undoubtedly lapsed souls in exchange for the night’s lodging, so
much the better. Rhys had to agree
that the logic of the argument was probably sound—a warm, dry place to sleep
ought surely to be worth a Mass—but unlike Joram, Rhvs’s brain did not tend to
function at its best so early in the morning, especially after little or no
sleep. It was with some
reluctance, then, that he followed Joram into the abbey church a few minutes
later, trying to assume an air of piety which he simply did not feel at an hour
he tended to regard as ungodly. The morning was
half spent before they could break away. After Mass, the abbot had insisted
upon a leisurely breaking of the night’s fast with them, and had been full of
questions about the capital and what was happening there these days. When, at
last, they were able to take their leave, it was to face a sunless, leaden sky
which promised still more rain to come. The horses were
frisky and eager to be off, their hooves striking sparks off the cobbles of the
windswept abbey yard. But the clatter turned to splash all too soon, as they reached
the muddy road; rain was already beginning to mist again in the sharp, cold
air. Before they had ridden two miles, both men were once more soaked to the
skin. The rain continued
for most of the afternoon, though it had subsided to a mere annoying drizzle
by the time they reached the outskirts of the MacRorie manorial estates. As
they topped the last rise before the descent through the village, their eyes
were drawn to the high hill beyond, to jewel-like Tor Caerrorie, Camber’s seat,
green-gray slate roofs glimmering in their wash of recent rain. The two halted
at the top of the rise and glanced at one another conspiratorially, a roguish
gleam coming into Joram’s priestly eye. Then they rode laughing down the slope
and into the village, whooping like a pair of schoolboys as they splashed along
the road. They would have
thundered on through, sending chickens and dogs and children scurrying for
safety, had they not spied a MacRorie man-at-arms standing with two horses
outside the little village church. One of the horses evoked only passing
interest, for it was of no particular breeding or caparisoning; but the other
was a little sorrel mare which both men recognized instantly. As they drew
rein, the man-at-arms peered at them and then waved enthusiastically, his face
lighting with pleasure. “Father Joram!” Joram grinned as
he jumped from the saddle and embraced the man warmly. “Sam’1, old
friend, how have you been? Is that my sister’s horse I see?” “Aye, Father, you
know it is,” the man chuckled. “Her Ladyship’s just teaching the village lads
their catechism. She’ll be out in a minute. Can ye wait and ride back to the
castle with us?” “Just try to make
me leave!” Joram said. He turned to grin at Rhys, who had dismounted in a more
leisurely fashion. “Rhys, you remember Sam’1, don’t you?” “Of course. How is
everything, Sam’1?” Rhys replied, shaking the older man’s hand. Sam’1 bowed,
pleased at the gesture, then became guarded, lowered his eyes
uncomfortably. “I, ah— Ye won’t have heard about the murder, or
ye would not ask that question.” “Murder?” Rhys glanced at
Joram, and the priest laid his hand on the old retainer’s shoulder. “What’s
happened, Sam’1? Who was killed?” Sam’1 chewed his lower lip for several
seconds, then raised cautious eyes to meet Joram’s. “ ‘Twas a Deryni, Father,
here in the village a few days ago. He was none such as any of us would give a
care about—you knew the upstart, that Lord Rannulf—” “A Deryni!” Joram
breathed. “Aye, and the King
is invoking the Law of Festil. He’s taken fifty hostages, and threatens to hang
two each day until the murderer comes forth, since the Truth-Readers canna
learn the names of the guilty. The killings begin tomorrow.” Rhys whistled low
under his breath. “That explains a lot. It didn’t seem important at the time,
but I wondered why the messengers were going back and forth from Valoret
yesterday. I must have passed three or four on my way to Saint Liam’s.” Joram grunted.
“Haven’t they any clues to the real murderer, Sam’1?” “Not yet, Father.
Not any one person, at any rate. There be those who think it was the
Willimites, but we have no proof. The Lord Camber has had men out asking
questions for the past two days, and his own Truth-Readers among them,
but—nothing. What with the general uneasiness about the tariff and all, and now
this, he’s worried that other Deryni may be threatened. It was he who asked me
to ride along with the young mistress today. He was afraid she might be
harmed.” “Sam’1, I love you
dearly, but you’re an alarmist,” came a light, musical voice behind them. They
turned to see a cloaked Evaine sweeping down the church steps, bright hair
escaping from her hood. “Father knows I
can take care of myself,” she continued. “Besides, who would try to harm me?
I’ve done nothing to offend the Willimites, if they’re the ones to blame. And I
certainly have nothing to fear from these good people.” She gestured
toward the village with a nod of her head and smiled, slipping her arm around
her brother’s waist in warm greeting as her eyes met Rhys’s. Rhys took her hand
and kissed it, trying to control the momentary confusion which a first reunion
with Evaine seemed to bring lately—and was pleasantly startled when she pulled
him closer and kissed him lightly on the cheek, slipping her arm around him,
too. Sam’1 was also feeling the charm which Evaine could exude when she chose
to, and he could not seem to find his tongue. “Very pretty,
Sister dear,” Joram murmured indulgently. “But you’re going to have to do
better than that. Is it true that Father thinks you’re in danger?” “Of course not.”
She touched her forehead playfully to his and made a face. “It’s our loyal
servants like Sam’1 who were concerned about my safety. I’ll be perfectly all
right, really.” “Well, I want to
hear more about this,” Joram said. He disengaged himself from his sister’s
embrace and signed for Sam’1 to bring her horse. “We’d better get back to the
castle, if you’re through here. Rhys, you can go starry-eyed later. I want to
find out what really happened.” “So, that’s as
much as anyone knows,” Camber concluded, when the story had been told around
the fire that evening. “Rannulf was found at dawn by old Widow Claret, and she
went into hysterics because the body was on her land. Or I should say, part of
the body was on her land. The head and one quarter. The rest— Well, let us just
say that several other families in the village got similarly shocking
awakenings that morning. The bailiff reported it to me shortly after dawn.” Rhys and Joram
nodded knowingly as Camber refilled their glasses, imagining the activity which
would have been precipitated by such an event; and no word was spoken for
several minutes. The last of the servants had been sent to bed an hour ago, and
now only the three men and Evaine remained by the fireplace in the Great Hall. Rhys, sitting near
Evaine, sipped distractedly at the mulled wine in his cup and glanced at Joram,
catching his slight nod. Gathering his resolve, he turned to address Camber. “Sir, there is
something which Joram and I think you ought to know about. It may or may not
have a bearing on what we’ve just been discussing.” There was
something in his voice which bespoke more urgency than his mere words, and all
eyes turned toward Rhys. The young man bowed his head and searched for the
proper way to begin, appreciating the gentle hand which Evaine laid on his.
Especially, he could feel Camber’s gaze upon him. “You all know that
I am a Healer, that my calling brings me into contact with many people.” He
cleared his throat nervously and took another swallow of wine before
continuing. “Two days ago, an
old man died. He was not an important man—at least not to outward appearances.
But the story he told me on his deathbed has caused me a great deal of
soul-searching.” He raised golden eyes to meet Camber’s squarely. “Sir, he
claimed to be Prince Aidan Haldane, a younger son of the last Haldane king.” No word was spoken
in response, but the listeners exchanged cautious glances, Camber shifting to
Joram’s face to read in his son’s eyes that what Rhys said Was true. Wordlessly,
he signed for Rhys to continue. Rhys lowered his
gaze once more. “I did something then that I have rarely done,” he said slowly.
“At the old man’s request—nay, almost his command—I went deeply into his mind
to confirm what he had told me; and it was so. He was Prince
Aidan. What is more important, he had a legitimate son, and his son had a son.
The son is long dead—of plague, twenty years ago. But we have reason to believe
that the grandson still lives.” He looked up, directly into Camber’s eyes again.
“The grandson would be Prince Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane, lawful heir to the
Throne of Gwynedd.” There was silence
for a dozen heartbeats, a soft sigh of wonder from Evaine, her blue eyes wide
with the implications of the statement—and then all attention turned to Camber.
The Deryni lord had said nothing yet: he was still weighing and evaluating,
reading the thoughts in Rhys’s eyes. But then he broke the spell and let his
gaze pass over them all. As he scanned them, each unconsciously deferred to
him, respectful yet unafraid. Even the usually ebullient Joram was silent under
his father’s scrutiny. “You say you have
reason to believe this grandson still lives, Rhys. Have you any idea of his
whereabouts?” Rhys shook his
head. “Not exactly, sir. But we think we have the possibilities narrowed down
to five. You see, he’s a contemplative monk of the Ordo Verbi Dei—or he
was some twenty years ago, when he took his vows. That’s the last his
grandfather heard from him. Also, we don’t know Cinhil’s secular name— only the
religious name he took when he was ordained: Benedictus. And we don’t know his
father’s secular name, either—only his royal one, Alroy. There are five
Benedicts of the right age in the order right now. Prince Cinhil, if he’s still
alive, should be one of them.” “I see.” Camber sighed and
leaned back in his chair, carefully setting his wineglass on the hearth beside
him. “This Cinhil, or Benedict, as he is known now, is a cloistered monk, then?
Assuming that you could find him, what do you propose to do with him?” This time it was
Joram’s turn to answer. “We’re not certain, Father. We think that we can
discover which one of the five is the man we’re looking for, without arousing
undue suspicion in the meantime. We have even talked about what might be involved
in smuggling him out of his monastery, if it comes to that. Naturally, we would
have to evaluate his potential first. After that,” he shrugged, “it remains to
be seen.” “Well said,
Joram.” Camber nodded. “Your training has enabled you to talk around treason
quite glibly. But, what is it that you wish me to do? To condone your search,
your possible treason? I resigned from Imre’s council because I do not like the
man personally. And you know my feelings about the laws he has proclaimed since
his accession. But I have never advocated his overthrow. Would you have me
commit myself to such an endeavor, for a man I have never even met?—whom
neither of you has ever met? Even your Michaelines would not be so bold, I
think. Have you told your vicar general about this?” Joram shifted in
his chair and glanced at Rhys, lacing his fingers together uneasily. “No, sir,
I haven’t. And I—we’re certainly not asking for such a commitment from you at
this time. But surely you understand why we must at least investigate, why we
must find out more about this Haldane heir. Then— Well, you’re the one who
knows best among us how the present regime is functioning or not functioning.
We were hoping you might lend us your wise counsel in deciding what must be
done next.” “My wise
counsel, not that of the Michaelines?” Camber asked gently. “Father, I know
you don’t approve of—” “Nay, my approval
or disapproval has nothing to do with it, Son,” Camber interjected. “I shan’t
try to make you choose between your family and your order. In truth, if this
endeavor should go the way you obviously wish it to, I would be the first to
suggest that you seek their assistance. A Restoration needs zealous soldiers,
and the Michaelines are of the finest. You could not succeed without them, were
your Cinhil the Lord God Himself—which I fancy he is not.” Joram nodded
cautiously, taken aback by his father’s unaccustomed support of the
Michaelines, however qualified. “But, back to your
missing Haldane,” Camber continued. “Suppose he’s an imbecile? Or suppose he
doesn’t want to be king?—which is likely, if he has any sense at all. Suppose
he holds his religious vows stronger than a mere accident of birth? Or suppose
that he knows who he is, and wants no part of his royal heritage? Did it
occur to either of you that he may have entered holy orders for that very
reason, to seal himself off forever from the temptation to bring about his own
destruction? I hardly need remind you that the Church frowns upon suicide.” “You’re assuming
that we would fail,” Joram said, resentment edging his voice. “No, I’m simply
asking you to weigh as many of the possibilities as you can. This is not a
game, or an academic exercise. Once you commit yourselves, there will be lives
in jeopardy—and not only your own.” Joram exchanged an
imploring glance with Rhys, and the Healer sat forward in his chair. “Sir,”
said Rhys, “we’ve considered most of what you’ve said, believe me. But for our
own integrity, we must at least talk to the man. If he is who his grandfather
said he is, and if he has any potential at all, then we’ll decide what to do
next. But we’ll need your help, once we reach that stage.” He glanced down at
his feet as he continued. “We can find Cinhil, we can read him, we can know his
soul better than it would be possible for almost any other man. But we’re not
sure we’re competent—at least I don’t think that I am—to make the final
evaluation, that final reckoning as to whether or not the man should be king.
Of course, we won’t let him know anything other than the fact that his
grandfather has died, until we’re sure that he won’t go screaming off to his
abbot. We only want your permission to seek him out at this point. Will you
give us your blessing, sir?” “Would you give
this up if I said no?” Camber countered. Both men stared at
Camber long and hard; then, in unison, they shook their heads, neither needing
to ask the other’s feeling. Camber flicked his glance from Rhys to Joram, and
then to Evaine. His daughter’s face gave no clue as to her stand on the issue. “Well, Daughter,
your brother and Rhys appear intent upon making this a family endeavor,” he
said lightly. “Is this why you drew me into political discussion the other day,
or was that mere coincidence? How far have you been drawn into this thing?” “Why, I knew
nothing of this before tonight,” Evaine began defensively, then realized that
her father was teasing her—and why. “But I’m glad that we did talk,” she went
on, looking at him sidelong, “because I think that Rhys and Joram have some
very valid arguments.” “Very well,”
Camber smiled. “I will play Devil’s advocate and you will defend. Now, what
think you of our would-be King of Gwynedd?” “I think you
cannot expect me to have any opinion, since I have not met the man, Father. But
I agree that Rhys and Joram must investigate further, to discover whether their
Benedict is Cinhil Haldane.” “Why?” “That is more
difficult,” Evaine conceded. “It is not so much this man as it is any
Haldane claimant to the throne.” “You would
overthrow the present king?” Evaine controlled
a smile. “Come, now, Father. We all know your true reasons for resigning from
Imre’s court. I think we must agree that there are few redeeming features about
having such a man on the throne, other than the fact that there have been no
real alternatives up until now. “But, if there is
the possibility of a legitimate heir, a logical successor, a chance for the
restoration of an old and noble line which ruled Gwynedd successfully and well
for several centuries…After all, it was not for ill governing that the Haldanes
were overthrown, however much our Deryni-written histories would like to
justify the coup. To my mind, the Festillic line, in their greed, have broken
trust beyond repair. If a better claimant has come to light, he should be
considered.” Camber had listened
to his daughter’s speech with a slight smile on his face, hands folded before
him, forefingers tapping lightly against pursed lips. As she finished, he gave
a wan chuckle and glanced at Rhys and Joram. “You see what
happens when you educate a daughter? Your words come back to haunt you. Joram,
never educate your daughters.” “I hardly think it
likely that the opportunity will arise,” Joram grinned. “No, I suppose
not. Rhys, you mind what I say, at any rate.” Rhys could not
resist a sidelong glance at Evaine. “I suspect that my lady wife will have
something to say about that, sir.” “Hmm, I dare say.
Evaine, answer me this. If their Benedict is Cinhil Haldane, do you
propose to place an untried, uneducated—” Joram cleared his
throat insistently. “Sir, I suspect he’s very well educated. The O.V.D. places
great emphasis on scholarly pursuits.” Camber raised a
hand in resignation. “Granted. But he’s not been educated for kingship, and
there’s a difference. Don’t interrupt. Evaine, do you propose to place such a
man on the Throne of Gwynedd?” “Did a royal
education help Imre?” she countered. “And, given his background and the record
of his past actions, can we not anticipate the kind of king he will continue to
be? On the other hand, our Cinhil may have the potential to be a very good
king. And if he has the potential, never mind the actual knowledge of kingship;
he can be taught, can’t he? And what better teacher than you, who have served
under two kings and had enough sense to resign when you could not serve the
third?” “Touchй!” Camber
exclaimed, emphasizing both syllables and slapping his hand against
his thigh in delight. “Rhys, did I not tell you she was a paragon of logic? And
now she’s trapped me in my own arguments. But I suppose that I have only myself
to blame. Tell me, Daughter, do I understand rightly that you would be in favor
of a coup, if this Cinhil proves himself worthy of rule?” “Do we really have
a choice?” she retorted. “Even so, we cannot do it without your counsel and
assistance.” “We?” He gave a
slight smile. “Very well. But there are conditions.” “That is
understood.” Joram nodded, relieved. “In that case, I
shall make you the following pledge: Joram, Rhys, if we can find this
Haldane heir; and if he’s not an imbecile or worse; and if he
agrees to let us work with him; and if we adjudge him to be more worthy
than the present man who occupies the Throne of Gwynedd—then perhaps we
can begin to think of ways in which such a change might be accomplished. But
you must, as you promised, keep me apprised of your progress at all times. You
should also keep in mind that your brother Cathan is under constant scrutiny,
and may eventually be endangered by anything we do. So you must not go beyond a
mere search unless all of us agree that such action would be best for Gwynedd.” Joram and Rhys
exchanged glances, and then Joram turned back to his father. “Your terms are
more than reasonable, sir. And we had already agreed between us that Cathan
would be safest if he knows nothing of this for now. If you have no objections,
we thought to ride to Saint Piran’s Priory later this week. Two of our
candidates are there, and perhaps we can eliminate one or both of them at the
outset.” “You’ll not reveal
anything at this time?” Camber queried. “No, sir. We’ll
only deliver the news to the proper one that his grandfather is dead and asked
to be remembered in his prayers. Does this meet with your approval?” “I have no
objections. When will you be back?” “Within three
days, if all goes well. It’s a day’s ride each way, and—” There was a great
baying and barking in the yard outside, and then a muffled pounding at the
outer gate. Shortly, the inner door swung open to reveal one of the household
servants, with another man behind him, the wolfhounds rubbing happily against
his legs. “My lord, it’s
young Jamie Drummond to see you,” the servant said, barring the way with an arm
across the doorway. “Jamie, lad, come
in and join us,” Camber said, standing and extending an arm toward the
newcomer. “Pull up a chair and share a glass of wine. I thought you’d forgotten
your promise to toast Michaelmas with us.” “I hadn’t
forgotten,” he said, striding across to kneel and kiss Camber’s hand formally,
the dogs at his heels. “I was attending to a matter of some urgency. I’ve
brought news from the capital, from your son.” He pulled out a
sealed packet and handed it over to the older man, then hooked a stool with his
toe and pulled it closer to the fire, nodding greeting to the others. “You’d
best read it,” he said, as Camber stared at him curiously. “Cathan sent me with
all haste.” Without further
delay, Camber broke the seal and scanned the contents of the letter. His face
was grim and solemn as he passed the parchment to Joram. “Cathan has been
unable to stay the execution of the first two hostages tomorrow,” he said,
snapping his fingers for the dogs to lie down. “He will continue to press Imre
for a reprieve, but he does not hold out much hope. Coel Howell, the kinsman of
Cathan’s wife, is urging reprisals against the Willimites, and is convinced
that Rannulf’s murderers were part of a Willimite plot. He will not hear of a
reprieve, nor will he permit Imre to consider it.” “Father, couldn’t you
plead the peasants’ cause to Imre?” Evaine whispered. Camber shook his
head wearily. “Nay, child. If Cathan, whom Imre loves, cannot persuade the
king’s favor, what chance have I, who rejected Imre when he gained his crown?
No, it must be Cathan’s work, if our peasants are to be saved.” He glanced at all
of them, then crossed his arms carefully and stared at one slippered toe
protruding beneath his robe. “But this is not
totally unexpected news, I fear: Cathan also wishes us a joyful Michaelmas and
drinks to our health. I think it only fitting that we should drink to his.” With that, he
reached slowly to his goblet and raised it in the air, nodding as his children
stood and did the same. The toast was drunk in silence—a silence which
persisted for several thoughtful minutes until conversation once more resumed,
this time on more neutral topics. chapter fiveHow the king
sat in the winterhouse in the ninth month . . . —Jeremiah
36:22 But neither
neutrality nor sobriety were common at Court in Valoret, and certainly not on
the night of Michaelmas. The young King Imre had done his reluctant duty by his
people by day, had attended Mass and held formal Court and shown himself at the
Lantern Gate, as was customary at that season. But the night
belonged to Imre and his courtiers and friends. No solemnities at the Court of
Valoret after the sun had set. Feasting past, the king had retired to change to
even more resplendent garb for the dancing and revelling to come. Even now, the
royal musicians were tuning shaum and sackbutt and tambour, trilling snatches
of jaunty airs and stately pavanes in the music gallery. Imre’s favorites
strutted peacock-proud in the now-cleared feasting hall where their master
loved to entertain, exchanging small talk and gossip and awaiting the return of
their gay young liege lord. Amid that gaiety, the dour Cathan seemed doubly out
of place. Cathan MacRorie
was well known at Court. Son of the famous Earl of Culdi and heir one day to
all the MacRorie lands and titles, Cathan was a member of Imre’s council and a
royal commissioner for the Tariff Court as well. He was also, as his father
before him, a trusted personal friend of the king. Tonight, standing with one
of Imre’s young officers toward the left of the Great Hall, many saw his father
Camber in him, though the famous gilt features were distorted a bit in the
great man’s eldest son. He was not so tall
as Camber, and a little darker of hair and eye and skin than his illustrious
sire, yet he was still unmistakably a MacRorie; and it was to Cathan that many
now looked as a voice of reason to the headstrong young king. Even the privileged
Deryni did not always approve of Imre’s excesses and his occasional fits of
cruel humor. That Cathan alone had sometimes managed to temper the king’s wrath
remained a source of constant wonderment. Whether he could be as successful
tonight remained to be seen. Cathan glanced
toward the doors through which Imre would shortly emerge, then returned his
attention to his companion, Guaire of Arliss. D’Arliss was one
of Cathan’s closest friends at Court, aide to the notorious Earl Maldred, who
would be in charge of executing the fifty hostages, beginning tomorrow. Just
now, Guaire was ticking off on his fingers the many virtues of his present
employer, Maldred, compared to his previous master, Earl Santare. The latter
gentle was glaring at both of them from across the hall, and obviously mouthing
insulting comments to one of the junior officers at his side. So far, Coel
Howell had not yet made an appearance, for which Cathan was distinctly
grateful. His unctuous brother-in-law would be certain to be in league with
Maldred and Santare when he did arrive. “So, though I’ll
give you that Maldred may be cruel, too,” Guaire was saying, “he does reward
faithful service, and a man can keep his personal integrity. Tanadas knows, I
like a tumble in the hay with a wench as well as the next man—but with a wench,
mind you! Do you think that’s asking too much?” Cathan shook his
head slightly and controlled a smile. “No, but apparently Santare does, or he
wouldn’t have dismissed you. Besides, it’s Maldred I’m concerned about tonight.
Do you think he personally supports the king’s policy on this matter?” “Maldred supports
the king, whatever his policies.” Guaire frowned. “I
don’t think you have much of a chance, Cathan.” “It’s the hostages
who don’t have a chance. And it’s not as if they’ve even done something wrong.
They just happen to live in the wrong village. The Truth-Readers know that
they’re innocent.” Guaire snorted
derisively. “You don’t have to convince me. I’m on your side. But you know the
answer to that argument as well as I—probably better. What does a Deryni king
care for the lives of a few dozen peasants, when a fellow Deryni has been
killed? Especially when the peasants are human, and the Deryni was of the
nobility.” “He was a rotten
man, Guaire, and you know it.” “Granted, he was a
rotten man. But he was still Deryni, and of the nobility, and his murderer has
not come forth or been found. Imre is simply following the law set down by his
grandfather. Fifty human hostages against the life of one Deryni—it’s about even,
as far as Imre is concerned. Back in the days of the original coup, it was the
price one had to pay for conquest. Today— Well, apparently it’s the price Imre
feels he has to pay to hold the conquest for his descendants.” Guaire
snickered, a lewd glint in his eyes. “At least, that’s the theory. He’s not
likely to have any descendants, at his rate.” Cathan looked at
Guaire sharply and was about to probe further on the meaning of that last
comment, when the trumpeters raised their instruments and blew a preliminary
fanfare. From the opposite end of the hall, a double line of guardsmen in
formal brown and gold cleared a swath through the center of the room and took
up their stations behind the twin thrones. Then the trumpets were raised once
more, the golden notes reverberating across the hall as the door fanned apart
to disclose the king: Imre of Festil, by the Grace of God King of Gwynedd and
Lord of Mooryn and Meara. At his side stood his sister, Ariella, six years his
senior and yet unwed. The two posed in
the doorway for effect until the fanfare had died away, light glowing around
their heads in arcane splendor, as High Deryni were wont to appear on formal
occasions. Then, with a nod of acknowledgment, they began to pass slowly toward
the thrones at the opposite end of the hall, courtiers and their ladies bending
like wheat in the breeze of the royal couple’s passage. Whatever might be their
other faults, no one could say that the scions of the Deryni House of Festil
did not know how to maximize an entrance. Imre himself was a
striking young man, for all that he was of small stature and relatively few
years. Shorter by half a head than most of the men in the room, yet he still
cut a regal figure as he and his sister traversed the hall. On his head was a
tall crown of gold filigree set with rubies, cunningly wrought to add
unobtrusive inches to his height and blazing in the glow of his nimbus of
power. His hair was of a deep chestnut hue, cropped shoulder length,
surrounding lively brown eyes which bulged slightly in a pleasant, albeit
somewhat vacant, face. A short, skin-tight tunic of brown velvet revealed every
line of the hard, young body and emphasized a pair of well-turned legs encased
in brown silken hose; he wore leather dancing slippers on his feet. A gold-and-amber
cloak lined with red fox brushed the floor behind him as he mounted the two
steps of the dais, and bright gems winked on slender fingers and at throat and
ears. On his arm walked
his sister, Ariella, every inch his match and more in beauty and sheer visual
splendor. Gowned in dark brown velvet stamped with gold, the perfection of her
form was captured in a supple flow of color from neck to wrist to slippered
toe, save where the neckline made a plunging V to caress the curve of her
breasts. A tawny jewel lay a-tremble in the hollow of the cleft; a tumble of
chestnut curls cascaded negligently over one shoulder where they had escaped
from beneath her coronet and veil. Her quick hazel
eyes missed nothing as she and her royal brother took their places on the two
thrones atop the dais. With a smile, she leaned back in her chair to bask in
the admiration of the Court, then reached to touch Imre’s arm in a gesture
which Cathan somehow found disquieting. “My gentle
friends.” It was Imre who spoke, his young tenor carrying to the furthest
recesses of the smoky, torchlit hall. “My sister and I bid you welcome, and
pray that you will long remember this Michaelmas festivity. “But you have not
come to listen to your king speak, rather to make merry with him. Therefore, we
give you leave to enjoy yourselves—in fact, we command you to enjoy
yourselves.” There was a murmur of polite laughter. “My Lord Music
Master.” He stood and held out his hand to his sister, who rose and placed her
hand on his. “We shall lead the Bren Tigan.” A murmur of
approval sounded as the royal couple descended the dais and took their
positions in the center of the cleared floor, bowing first to one another and
then to the spectators as the musicians droned the opening bars. Then, as the
strains of the old Deryni melody floated through the hall, Imre and his sister
trod the opening pattern of the. ancient dance, moving alone for the first few
measures. Only when they had completed the first set of figures did other
couples begin to join them in the dance. Cathan watched
moodily for several minutes, then turned to take a goblet of wine from a
servant and exchange greetings with another of the king’s courtiers. When he
returned his attention to the floor, Guaire had disappeared to dance with a
lady he had been eyeing all evening, and Imre was nowhere to be seen. Cathan sipped at
his wine as the music shifted to a gavotte cadence, and slowly eased himself to
a relatively quiet corner where he could observe without being disturbed—or so
he thought. He was leaning against one of the main support pillars, nursing his
wine and his conscience, when he felt a light touch on his shoulder. He turned
to find the Princess Ariella standing beside him, a coy smile on her face and a
filled goblet in her hand. Quickly, he collected himself and made a courtly
bow. “Your Highness
honors me with her presence,” he murmured. Ariella smiled and extended her hand to be
kissed. Her Deryni nimbus had been put aside with her coronet, which now rested
on her empty throne. The chestnut hair nearly glowed of its own accord, though.
Ariella of Festil did not need Deryni sorcery to make her alluring. “Why so glum,
Cathan?” she purred, clinging to his hand just an instant longer than
necessary, once the salute had been performed. “I thought to claim you as a
dancing partner, and instead find you moping in the shadows. Where is your
charming lady? Not ill, I trust?” Her eyes danced
teasingly above smiling lips, and Cathan felt his gaze being drawn almost
unwittingly toward the deep cleft of her breasts. He swallowed uneasily,
knowing full well where the conversation might lead if he were not careful. He
had no particular desire to bed Imre’s sister as ransom for the imprisoned
peasants—though he knew that he would, if there were no other way. “My lady sends her
regrets, Your Highness,” he said carefully. “She had not seen her parents since
the birth of our second son, so she has gone to visit them in Carbury. I should
likely be there myself, were it not for the current crisis.” “Crisis?” Ariella
repeated brightly. “I was not aware of any crisis.” Cathan found
himself becoming annoyed at her coy fagade; he lowered his eyes to disguise his
true emotion. “Your Highness will surely have heard of the fifty hostages taken
at Caerrorie. Your royal brother means to have them slain.” “Hostages? Oh,
yes, I remember. The ones who were taken for the murder of Lord Rannulf. How
does that concern you?” Cathan blinked
rapidly, unable to believe she could be so ill-informed, then realized she was
toying with him. “Your Highness cannot have forgotten that Caerrorie is my
father’s estate,” he said coolly. “The hostages are my father’s
tenants—and mine. I must find a way to spare them.” Ariella raised one
eyebrow and touched his arm lightly. “Why, then, find the murderer, Cathan. You
know the law. If the people of the village will not come forth and name his
killer, then the village is amerced for the value of the man. In this case,
considering that Rannulf was both Deryni and of the nobility, I think that
fifty lives is quite a reasonable fine, don’t you?” “I—” Cathan
lowered his eyes, controlling the urge to twist the stem of his goblet out of
all recognition. “I must contradict Your Highness. The villagers have been
Truth-Read. His Grace knows they were not responsible for Rannulf’s
death. We’re almost certain it was the Willimites.” “Then, bring us
some Willimites.” The princess smiled sweetly. “Surely you cannot expect my
brother to release his hostages without some retribution. The law is the law.” “Yes, the law is
the law,” Imre’s clear tenor echoed, as he glided in to slip his arm
through his sister’s. “Maldred, I thought you said he’d given up this insane
idea of saving peasants.” Maldred, a tall,
florid man with the beginnings of a paunch, bowed unctuously. “Indeed, he gave
me the impression he had, Sire.” Imre humphed, then
turned back to Cathan. “Why are you being so stubborn, my friend? It’s not as
if they’re Deryni—they’re peasants. You’re making an issue out of nothing.” “Sire, I beseech
you,” Cathan said dully. “If you do this, the weight of it will be upon your
conscience. Amerce the villagers in coin, if you must. My father will be
willing to pay. But do not take out your wrath in innocent human lives. The
peasants of Caerrorie did not slay Rannulf. You know that.” Imre looked around
at his growing following of courtiers in wry amusement, though it was apparent
that he was beginning to be a little annoyed. “Cathan, you’re making me out to
be a bully,” he said under his breath. “You know I don’t like that.” “Please, Sire,”
Cathan repeated, dropping to his knees and lifting one empty hand in entreaty.
“For the sake of our friendship, have mercy. Will you condone the taking of
innocent human lives?” “Oh, come now, get
up from there! Ariella, why is he doing this to me?” Ariella started to
shrug, then looked at Cathan carefully as he got to his feet, her mouth curving
in a strange smile. “I have a thought, Brother. Why don’t you give him what he
wants? Give him one of those lives he finds so precious. For the sake of your
friendship.” Cathan’s head
snapped around to stare at her aghast, and the room suddenly became silent.
Imre glared at her owl-eyed, then glanced at Cathan uncomfortably. His
annoyance had changed to uncertainty. “One life?” Ariella nodded.
“If Cathan is indeed your friend, dear brother, you could hardly refuse him
this. Forty-nine peasants are enough for the life of Rannulf. He was a
dreadful bore.” “One life . . .”
Imre repeated, savoring the sound of the words on his tongue and wetting his
lips beneath the tiny smudge of mustache. He looked at
Maldred and Santare, at the courtiers watching expectantly, at the growing
horror on Cathan’s face as he realized that the king was considering the
suggestion seriously—then folded his arms across his chest with a sly grin. “It would be
novel.” “And merciful,”
Ariella crooned, clinging to his arm and gazing up at him adoringly. Imre glanced
sidelong at her, his mouth curling in a pleased expression, then returned his
gaze to Cathan. The royal lips parted. “Very well. Done.
One life. Granted.” He glanced at Maldred and gave a curt nod. “Maldred, take
Lord Cathan to the keep and let him choose a prisoner.” “Yes, Sire.” “And it’s not to
be by lot or anything, either, Maldred,” Ariella added, smiling sweetly as
Cathan stared at her in astonishment. “Our Lord Cathan has been granted the
power of life and death—if only over a single person. If he’s to save a life,
he should experience the exquisite torture of having to choose which one it is.” As Maldred bowed,
Cathan fidgeted in disbelief and started to turn to Imre. “Did you have
something to say, Cathan?” Ariella snapped, before he could speak. “Your Highness,
I—” “Before you speak,
let me remind you that His Grace can retract the boon,” Ariella warned, hazel
eyes flashing. “It can be all fifty dead, you know— or more, if you press the
issue. Now, do you still have something to say?” Cathan swallowed
heavily and bowed his head. “No, Your Highness. I—thank you, Sire.” He bowed.
“If Your Highness will excuse me, I—will attend to your command.” “You are excused,
of course,” Ariella purred. “And, Cathan . . .” He stopped, but did not turn to
face her. “You will be riding to the hunt with us in the morning, won’t
you?” she continued. “You promised.” Cathan turned
beseechingly. “Aye, I did promise, Your Highness. But if I might prevail upon
you to relieve me of—” “Nonsense. If you
stay home, you’ll simply brood about those peasants and become even duller than
you’ve been these past few days. Imre, make him keep his promise. You know it
will be good for him.” Imre glanced at
his sister, then at Cathan. “She’s right, you know. You have been almost
boorish lately.” He touched Cathan’s shoulder in a comradely gesture. “Come,
Cathan. You mustn’t take things so seriously. After a week or so in the
country, you’ll forget all about this peasant thing.” Cathan knew the
tone of Imre’s voice, and knew better than to argue—especially when Ariella was
nearby. With a defeated sigh, he nodded in acquiescence and bowed once more,
then turned to follow Maldred from the hall. Just now, he had more important
things on his mind than royal hunting expeditions. Unexpectedly,
victory of a sort had been won—but it was dark, indeed. For out of fifty
prisoners, he must choose one to live. Life for one; death for forty-nine. He
shuddered at the power he now held in his choosing. Ten minutes later,
he was standing with Maldred before a heavy door, watching numbly as a guard
raised the iron bar and swung the door back on groaning hinges. Maldred bowed,
and gestured toward the open doorway with a lazy wave of his hand. “When you’ve made
up your mind, come to the door and call,” Maldred said, not bothering to
disguise a yawn. “I’ll await you here. I find prisons quite depressing.” Cathan nodded, not
daring to trust himself to speak, then slipped past Maldred and onto the
landing. A torch blazed in a cresset on the wall to his left, and a long flight
of stone steps descended into murky darkness before him. Shielding his eyes
against the glare, he took the torch and began descending the staircase. The
brand gave off a greasy smoke that made his nose itch and his eyes water. Eight steps. The
steps turned. Then a narrower progression down eight more steps, another turn,
and he was at the bottom. A corridor stretched off into a brighter area, and
there were roughly forged iron bars along one side of the passage. On the other
side of the bars was a series of interconnected cells, each with eight or ten
human forms lying huddled together in the straw for warmth. A few of the forms
stirred as he began moving down the corridor, and shortly there were soft
murmurs. “Lord Cathan, it’s Lord Cathan!” The prisoners roused themselves and
shuffled to the bars to peer at him. He noticed with a shock that there were at
least five women among the prisoners, and several young males who were scarcely
more than children. “Lord Cathan?” A familiar voice
called from the end of the row of cells, and he approached to find old Edulf
the Ostler clutching at the bars in amazement. Edulf had been one of his first
riding instructors when he was a boy, the keeper of his father’s stables for as
long as he could remember. He found his vision blurring, and he had to look
down. He knew it was not caused by the smoke from the torch. “Lord Cathan?” the
old familiar voice called again. “Yes, Edulf, it’s
Cathan,” he said. He looked up at
the old man, then let himself scan the others briefly. He found that he could
not meet their eyes, and focused instead on their feet. “I’ve come from
the king,” he finally said. It was all he could do to keep his voice from
choking, but he managed to control it. “I—I’ve tried, from the instant I knew,
to gain your release, but I’m afraid the news I bring is not good.
The—executions will proceed tomorrow, as planned—with one exception.” He took a deep
breath and dared to look up at them again, forcing himself to search their
eyes. “I can save one of you. Only one.” There was silence
as the words sank in, and then a few gasps, a muffled sob from one of the
women. Old Edulf shuffled his feet in the straw and glanced at the others, then
looked back at Cathan carefully. “Ye—ye can only
save one, lad?” Cathan nodded
miserably. “My Michaelmas ‘gift’ from Imre. Whom I choose shall live; the
others die. I—don’t know how to make a choice.” A murmuring broke
out among the prisoners, and then dead silence as all eyes turned to him. Faced
with the anguished knowledge that only one of them could live, and that the
choosing lay in the gift of this one man, whom many of them had known from
boyhood, they looked instinctively to him, blindly trusting, each of them, that
he would be the one Cathan would save. The thought that all forty-nine others
would die was pushed to the recesses, as something which could not be comprehended.
The MacRories had always taken care of them in the past. Surely this was all
some kind of terrible jest. And yet, they could not conceive of Lord Cathan
being the perpetrator of so grim a charade. Dazedly, they watched as Cathan
turned away to jam his torch into an empty cresset and bury his face in his
hands. Cathan was no less
affected. How could he choose? How dared he be the arbiter of life and death,
and for his own people—some of them folk he had grown up with? Justice called
for a cool, analytical, unemotional evaluation of the prisoners, with life
given to the one best suited for survival and positive contributions for the
future. But there were
women, and young men scarcely into manhood. His chivalry cried out for the
weak, the helpless. How could he possibly decide? He raised his head
and inhaled deeply, forcing himself to hold the breath for a moment and then
exhale slowly, the while reciting the words of the Deryni charm which would
mask his fatigue. He must have a clear head to make so grave a decision.
Another deep breath, and he felt his pulse steadying, the flat taste in his
mouth receding. Squaring his
shoulders, he turned slowly to face his people. Edulf was
standing, hopefully, near the bars of his cell, two older men behind him, a
young woman and two boys to their right. He recognized one of the boys as a
herdsman from the village, and reasoned that the other was probably his
brother, the girl possibly a sister or cousin. He did not know the two with
Edulf. “Edulf?” he said
softly. “Aye, m’lord.” The
old voice was low, scared. “Much as I regret
it, only one of these fine people will be able to leave with me tonight.” He
swallowed to regain his composure. “And since I shall not have the opportunity
to meet the others again, would you be so kind as to introduce the rest to me?
I’m sure you know them all.” The old man
blinked. “Aye, m’lord. Ye mean— ye want to meet each one by name, sir?” Cathan nodded. Edulf shuffled his
feet uncomfortably and looked at the floor, then turned slightly toward the two
men standing behind him. “Well, sir, if that’s what ye want. These are the
Sellar brothers, Wat and Tun.” Cathan bowed
acknowledgment and the brothers tugged their forelocks in embarrassment. “An’ this is Mary
Weaver, an’ her brother Will an’ a cousin, Tom ...” The introductions
went on, Cathan often recognizing a name, or a face, or remembering that he had
heard of this man or that as being particularly skilled at his trade, or a
troublemaker, or reliable. He saw a young
couple whose wedding he remembered Joram celebrating a year or so ago, the girl
big with child, huddling in the protective circle of her husband’s arm;
another, older man whose house Cathan had always seen teeming with happy,
laughing children—children who would now have no father, unless Cathan
intervened. A young man whose name Cathan recognized as having been one of
Evaine’s brightest pupils in the village school—he was perhaps thirteen by now,
and an apprentice carpenter by trade; another boy, the son of the manor bailiff,
whom Camber had been thinking of sending off to Saint Liam’s for proper
schooling as a clerk, so quick was the boy’s wit, and he but eleven, at that. And the list went
on, each human soul unique in its own way, each properly entitled to life in
its fullest; each, save one, condemned to die—and he must decide. When the last one
had been presented, Cathan scanned them all again, his eyes touching briefly on
Edulf, the pregnant girl and her husband, the young apprentice. Then he turned
away and bowed his head. When he moved again, it was to walk briskly to the
stone steps and vault up them two at a time. There was a grillework in the door
at eye level, and it opened as he reached the landing. “Made up your
mind, Cathan?” Maldred’s cruel voice said. Cathan leaned a
forearm against the door and peered at the vague outline of Maldred’s head on
the other side of the grille. “Maldred, you’ve
got a pregnant woman down there.” “That’s right,”
the voice responded. “Do you want her or the child?” “Her or—” Cathan
cut off his retort in mid-sentence. “You mean that if I choose her, I could
have only her? Not the child as well?” “His Grace said
one, not two, Cathan,” the voice replied. “And you’d better make up your mind
before he changes his. The guards will be here any minute to take the first two
out.” Any minute! Cathan
glanced at Maldred’s shadow, then at the floor, as he tried to calm his
thoughts. “Then, by the same
token,” Cathan continued, “if the woman should have her child before her turn
comes for execution, you’d have to let another one go, wouldn’t you? I mean, a
living child would make the number fifty instead of forty-nine. He’d have to
release another one besides the one I take tonight, wouldn’t he?” There was an
appreciative chortle from behind the grille. “That’s what I admire about you,
Cathan. Always thinking. As a matter of fact, I suppose he might let another
one go, if that were the case. Of course, that assumes that the woman survives
that long, and isn’t chosen before her time comes to deliver.” Cathan glanced
down the steps again, his lip between his teeth, then stood clear of the door. “All right, then,
I’m ready to make my choice. Come down and let’s get on with it.” The door opened,
and Maldred and two guards came through and followed Cathan down the dark
stairs as two more guards closed the door behind them. They reached the bottom
of the stairs and Maldred swept his gaze over the prisoners. “Well, which one
is it to be, Cathan? I haven’t all night.” Cathan gestured
for one of the guards to open the bars, then stepped through the opening to
stand among his people. As he did, several went to their knees, and one of the
women began sobbing softly. His hand brushed her bent head as he passed, and
then he was moving among them, touching a hand here, a face there, this time
extending his Deryni senses to the fullest, delving deep into the emotion
rilling the room, searching for the best of them to save. There—he had
caught it!—the spark for which he searched. Now, to localize. It was coming
from the right, from one of three young— He heard the sound
of the door being opened at the top of the stairs, and he froze. “They’re coming to
take the first two,” Maldred said behind him. “You’d best make up your mind.” He could hear
footsteps descending the stair, the measured tread of well-trained soldiers
coming to do their duty, however grim, and he cast a last, lingering look
across the people gathered around him. Some of the younger men—boys,
really—were trying to hold back sniffles, and two of the women were weeping
openly. As the footsteps reached the bottom of the stairs, Cathan took two
quick steps across the straw and held out his hand. “Revan, come with
me,” he said, mentally flinching a little as the boy looked up at him in blank
amazement. It was the carpenter’s
apprentice, who walked with a slight limp, and from whom Cathan had read the
thoughts worthy of salvation. “M—me, m’lord?” The boy’s eyes
were wide, frightened, awed, and he stood frozen there, unable to reach out his
hand to Cathan’s. The footsteps were approaching the cell now, the door being
swung back to admit three of the soldiers, who were heading in his direction. “Take my hand,
Revan,” Cathan commanded, his eyes boring into the boy’s. “Come out of this
place of death, and live.” The guards took
one of the women out of the cell, and she began moaning softly as the shackles
were fastened to her wrists. As the guards re-entered the cell, the boy slowly
reached out his hand. It touched Cathan’s just as the guards were about to take
him, and they hesitated but a moment before fastening, instead, on Revan’s
young companion, the bailiff’s son, who wailed as they carried him, kicking and
crying, from the cell and shackled him as well. His cries sent the trembling
Revan sobbing to his knees at Cathan’s feet, his hand still linked with the
young lord’s. Maldred observed
the scene with amused distaste. “Well, if that’s
your choice, let’s get him out of here,” the Earl finally said, motioning out
of the cell as the guards took the two prisoners back up the stairs. As Maldred
withdrew, taking the torch from the wall cresset, Cathan drew the boy to his
feet and hugged him close for a moment, letting the boy’s tears relieve his
anguish, then brushed the boy’s head with his palm, forcing calm into the boy’s
mind. After a moment, the sobbing stopped and Revan stood on his own. With a
weary sigh, Cathan put his arm around the boy’s shoulder and guided him out of
the cell. When the guard had locked the bars, Cathan turned to look at them
once more. “Good night, my friends,”
he said quietly. “I dare not hope that I shall see you again in this world.” He
lowered his eyes. “I pray that the next will give you more justice. My prayers
will go with you.” As he turned to
go, there was a faint rustling in the cells, and then all within were on their
knees. “God go wi’ ye,
young master,” Edulf called gently. “Keep the lad
well,” another called. “We thank ye.” chapter SixO that my head
were waters, and mine eyes a fountain, that I might weep day and night for the
slain ... —Jeremiah 9:1 Later, Cathan was
unable to remember leaving the keep. Somehow, he got the boy home safely and
had him fed and put to bed by the servants. He remembered the hour he had spent
writing to his father about the night’s failure (for so he viewed it), which
missive was dispatched straightaway by messenger when Cathan had signed and
sealed it. But of the rest of
that evening’s aftermath, he remembered not a thing, from the time he put his
head down on his arms at the desk, intending only to rest his eyes for a
moment, until he felt a hand on his shoulder, shaking him to wakefulness, and
heard the voice of his steward, Master Wulpher, quietly informing him that it
was near dawn and his bath drawn. Cramped muscles
protesting, he allowed himself to be led into his chamber to bathe and don
fresh clothes, fidgeting in irritation as his body servant tried to shave him.
But he could not stomach the morning ale which Wulpher brought him. The mere
thought made him queasy. After giving Wulpher instructions to cover his absence
with the royal hunt, he looked in once more on the sleeping Revan before making
his reluctant way down to the courtyard where Crinan, his squire, waited with
the horses. Half an hour
later, he was elbowing his way through the throng gathered in the yard of the
Chapel Royal, his head—though not his heart—much cleared by his ride. Cathan
looked neither left nor right as he crossed the yard toward the chapel,
hunching down in the fur collar of his cloak and hoping to avoid conversation
about the night before. But anonymity was
not to be his that morning. Confrontation in the form of his wife’s kinsman,
Coel Howell, was looming unavoidably in his path. Coel had apparently been
watching from the instant Cathan and Crinan rode into the yard. The older man’s
thin lips contorted in a smug, strained little smile as he nodded greeting to
his brother-by-marriage. “Good morning.” He
moved closer so that there was no way Cathan could gracefully avoid him. “Did
you sleep well last night, brother mine? You look a little tired.” Cathan bristled
mentally, but managed to keep any outward sign of his anger from showing. “Well
enough, thank you. And you?” “I generally
have little trouble
sleeping,” Coel drawled,
watching hawklike for any sign of weakness or regret. “But then, I have no
reason to be anxious.” He toyed idly with his riding crop, glancing up at the
watery sun, then returned his attention to Cathan. “I hear that you have a new
page,” was his next remark. “A new page?” “Yes, recruited
from among your peasants.” Cathan felt his jaw muscles tighten, and wondered
how the man had known. Maldred must have told the entire Court, after he and
Cathan left the keep. “That’s true,” he
finally said. “I bring several to Tal Traeth for training each year. Why do you
ask?” Coel shrugged. “No
special reason. I was just curious, I suppose. Surely you will have guessed
that you were a topic of merry conversation after Maldred returned last night?” “How fortunate
that I could provide such amusement for His Grace’s Court, even in my absence,”
Cathan said, in as droll a tone as he could manage. “Now, if you’ll
excuse me, I have things to attend to, as I am sure you must.” He started to push
past Coel and flee into the chapel, but Coel put a gloved hand on his shoulder
and restrained him. “His Grace is in
very good spirits this morning, Cathan,” he said pointedly. “He has asked me to
ride at his side in the hunt today.” “Should I offer my
congratulations?” “That is your
concern. However, if you were to say or do something which distressed him, so
that he became irritable and nasty, as is sometimes his wont, I would not look
upon it as a kindness. In fact, I would be greatly annoyed, kinsman or not.” “You need not
worry on my account,” Cathan said evenly. “I have no intention of speaking with
His Grace unless he himself requests it. Now, if you will permit me to pass, I
should like to pray in private before Mass. Innocent peasant folk are to die
today.” “Innocent?” Coel
arched a skeptical eyebrow as Cathan pressed past him. “Why, Cathan, I’m
surprised. I shouldn’t think that peasants ever qualify as innocent. But then,
you MacRories always were an odd lot.” When Mass was over
and Cathan had received the Sacrament, he was able to make his way back to his
horse and mount up without having to converse with anyone. Mercifully, Crinan
had made a place for them near the rear of the procession of huntsmen, away
from anyone to whom his master might have felt obliged to speak. It was an
awkward moment when the Princess Ariella rode past with several of her ladies
and blew him a lighthearted kiss from the tips of her gloved fingers; but she
did not stop, for which Cathan gave great thanks. He was not certain he could
have faced her just then. It was well that
Crinan had made such provisions; for as they rode out the city gates a little
while later, the huntsmen winding their hunting horns and whipping the hounds
into order, two bodies were swinging from gibbets a little way above the wall,
one of them, by size, hardly more than a child. Cathan’s vision
swam at that, and for a long time he rode in total silence, head bowed, one arm
clutched lightly across his aching, throbbing chest. He tried not to think
about the identities of the two victims, much less of the others who would join
them over the next twenty-four days. But try as he might, he could not resolve
the guilt he was feeling, the sorrow which ate like a canker at his heart and
mind. He could have saved them, if he had tried harder—surely he could have. He could find no
comfort, nor would he for a long time. Most of October
passed, and with it the executions of the hostages. True to his word, Imre did
not relent in the slayings; nor, on the other hand, did he threaten any further
reprisals against the village whose people had failed to come forth with the
killers of his vassal, Lord Rannulf. The peasants mourned their dead, but at
least there were no more deaths. But besides the
kinfolk of the people who died, it was probably Cathan who suffered most from
the tragedy—Cathan who, for twenty-five days, anguished anew with each rising
of the sun, each dawn portending the deaths of two more of his people; each of
whom, but for his choice, might have lived if he had chosen that one instead of
the boy Revan. Somehow he
retained his sanity, possibly because of the special tenacity which has always
been a characteristic of the Deryni race. Through the enforced merriment of the
hunt with King and Court, he tried hard—and successfully—to mask the loathing
he found himself feeling for Imre’s stubbornness, so unlike the Imre he had
known and loved in times past. The hunting
expedition lasted not one week or even two, but nearly three, in the end. And
by the time the royal party returned to Valoret, it was all Cathan could do to
contain his rage and frustration at not being able to get through to Imre and
make him stop the slayings. Imre was likewise
provoked at Cathan’s dogged obstinacy, and began snubbing him at Court. Cathan,
not trusting himself to remain in the capital with the recalcitrant king,
betook himself and the boy Revan to Saint Liam’s and the comfort of his
priest-brother. There he went into retreat for the duration of the appointed
days, sinking into ever deeper depression with each new sunrise. Toward the last,
he took to staying more and more in the room they had assigned him, speaking
little, eating hardly at all, unable even to look at Revan, whose salvation had
been bought at the cost of the other lives. When, on the final day, he received
word of the last death—the pregnant girl, her child born dead the week before,
on the day her husband died— Cathan could no longer contain his grief. Joram’s
frantic message brought both Camber and Rhys hurrying to the retreat at Saint
Liam’s; and it took many hours of talk and prayer and gentle reasoning before
Cathan began to come out of his depression. Even then, Rhys’s healing gifts had
to be applied more than once, before the old Cathan began to re-emerge. A week later, on
All Souls’ Eve, Cathan kept vigil alone in the cold abbey church, all through
the long and lonely night. He never spoke of the preceding month again, nor
would he discuss what must have gone through his mind during his private vigil.
But after Mass the following morning, he and Camber and Joram and Rhys set out
at last for the MacRorie manse at Caerrorie. It was a very quiet homecoming. Understandably,
then, it was some time before Rhys and Joram were able to resume their search
for the Haldane heir. During the executions, they had felt their places to be
with Camber and his people; and Cathan’s breakdown had delayed them further.
Thus it was not until the Feast of Saint Illtyd, in the first week of November,
that they found themselves at last on the road to Saint Piran’s. Anticipation was
high as they covered the few remaining miles. The first snow was
on the ground. It had fallen during the night while they slept, covering the
ground with a fluffy blanket of white which dazzled the eye and made the
horizon blend in with the blank, featureless sky. The damp air chilled them to
the bone, and the horses frisked and pranced at the new sensation, frost
coating the tiny whiskers on their muzzles and making them snort in annoyance.
The two riders sat straight in the saddle, watching the road for hidden
potholes and other hazards; they were the first to come this way this morning.
The horses’ hooves broke the virgin snow in a spray of fine, feathery wake. “Are we nearly
there?” Rhys asked, after they had ridden in silence for nearly an hour. Joram blew on a
gloved hand and held it to his face to warm it. “It’s just ahead. Those are
some of the outbuildings off to the left. Actually, we could have made it last
night, but it would have been late. We stand a much better chance of getting
what we want by showing up at a decent hour.” They topped a
rise, then drew rein to gaze down into a wide valley. Less snow was on the
ground here, and the outbuildings of the monastic compound could be seen spread
across the whole valley floor. At the other end of the valley, the priory
proper stood atop a slight promontory, a gilded cross glinting from the church
tower. In between, the neatly ordered fields were spread in early-morning
tranquillity, the high-piled haystacks and barns covered lightly with the
season’s first snow. To the right, brothers in heavy brown habits and
tabard-aprons were turning the cows out to pasture, the morning milking done. A
thin curl of smoke drifted from the top of the refectory hall, adjacent to the
main monastic buildings. “They must have
hundreds of hides of land here,” Rhys remarked, as they made their way toward
the main gate. “I thought that the Ordo Verbi Dei was fairly small.” Joram nodded.
“There are some younger sons of a cadet branch of the royal family in holy
orders, though–the current royal family, that is. I think the gift of land
dates from the time of Festil I.” Their reception
was far different from the last time they had ridden together through monastic
gates. The gate warder, a layman in gray working tunic, bowed from the waist
and swept off his cap, clutching it to his chest as they passed. No sooner had
they reined in than their horses’ bridles were taken by a pair of black-robed
novices. The novices bowed respectfully as the two men dismounted, though they
appeared to regard the Michaeline badge on Joram’s mantle with some
trepidation. A gray-clad lay
brother hurried across the courtyard to meet them, bowing nervous greeting
first to his fellow religious, then to the Healer’s green. “Good morning,
Father, my lord. God’s blessings be upon you. My name is Brother Cieran. How
may I serve you?” Joram returned the
man’s bow politely, maintaining a cool and slightly aloof air. “Good morning,
Brother. I am Lord Joram MacRorie, of the Order of Saint Michael. This is Lord
Rhys Thuryn. We should like to speak with your prior.” “Certainly, noble
sirs.” The man bowed again. “If you will come this way, please, I shall ask His
Excellency to attend you.” As the man turned
away, Joram cast a sidelong glance of reassurance at Rhys, then fell into step
behind Brother Cieran. They were led
across the courtyard and through a long passageway, then along one side of a
cloister garden, snow-dotted now, and into a rather large presence chamber.
There they were left to wait, surrounded by four wainscotted walls and an
assortment of religious paintings—no chairs or benches—until an elderly man in
a white habit entered from the opposite end of the room. He had pure white hair
and rather startled-looking brown eyes, and wore a plain silver cross on a
braided leather thong around his neck. “I am Father
Stephen, Prior of Saint Piran’s,” he said, bowing slightly. “How may I serve
you, Father, my lord?” Very soon, the two
were being shown by Brother Cieran into a small, close room with a wooden bench
along the wall opposite the door. There was an opening at about waist level, no
more than a handspan in diameter, filled in with a grille made of tightly woven
rushes or strips of bark—Joram could not be certain in the dim light. Brother Cieran
indicated that they should be seated, then bowed and gently closed the door
behind him. Air and some light
came through a tiny skylight in the ceiling, but otherwise the room was very
gloomy. A brighter light came from beyond the grille, but the light source was
apparently the open doorway of a room similar to the one they now occupied. A
shadow momentarily blocked the light as someone entered, and then the door
closed. They could hear someone breathing noisily through his nose—a someone
who then drew near the grille and sat. There was short
silence, during which no one said anything. Abruptly, Joram sat down to the
left of the grille, motioning Rhys to sit opposite him. “Brother
Benedict?” The man cleared
his throat. “I am Brother Benedict. You must forgive me, but I am
ill-accustomed to speaking anymore.” “I understand,”
Joram replied, glancing at Rhys and steeling himself before continuing. “Ah,
Brother Benedict, our mission is a rather delicate one. I am a priest of Saint
Michael, and my companion is a Healer. Recently we had occasion to attend upon
a dying man who claimed to have a grandson called Benedict in your order. Could
you be that man?” They heard a gasp
on the other side, a pause, and then, in a low voice: “What was his name,
Father?” “Ah, we would
really prefer to have you tell us, Brother Benedict,” Joram replied. “I
can tell you that he lived in Valoret.” A low-breathed
sigh followed, and the man cleared his throat. “Praise be to God, my
grandfather lives in Rengarth, and always has. He is a poor cobbler, and would
have no business in the capital that I know of. His name is Dunstan.” Dunstan. Not
Aidan, or even Dan. This, at least, was not their lost Benedict. Joram sighed,
glanced at Rhys, who had lowered his forehead weakly against his hand. “Dunstan,” Joram
repeated. “No, this was not the name of the man we attended. Perhaps the other
Brother Benedict is the man we seek. Would you ask him to come to us, Brother?” “Of course,
Father.” “And may your
grandfather Dunstan live many happy years to come.” “Thank you,
Father.” There was the
shuffling sound of the other rising, the glint of light as the door was opened,
then silence on the far side of the grille. Joram glanced at
Rhys, who was raising his head and looking very frayed around the edges. “What’s the
matter? Too much pressure?” Joram murmured, with a slight smile. Rhys sighed and
shook his head, worrying his lower lip with his teeth. “I don’t think I’m cut
out for a life of intrigue, Joram. I was a simple Healer before you came along.
I moved openly, in high circles. This stealth—” The light on the
other side of the grille was blocked again as someone entered, and Rhys broke
off quickly. Whoever had
entered walked with a pronounced limp, dragging one foot behind him. He was
shaken with a coughing fit before he could cross to the other side; and when
the coughing finally stopped, the effort of lowering himself to the bench was
almost a physical thing. Rhys reached out a mental probe to read the man’s
soundness, but recoiled almost instantly. If this was their Benedict, their
quest would end very shortly; even in finding him, they would soon lose: the
man’s lungs were nearly eaten away by disease. Rhys swallowed
with difficulty, then signalled Joram to go ahead. “Good morning,
Brother Benedict,” Joram said easily. “We thank you for coming to us.” “I try to be
compliant,” the man murmured. “It would do little good to complain at this late
date. If I could but fly— But, no matter, I’ll elude them yet. There is more
than one way to breach these walls.” Rhys glanced
sharply at Joram. “You wish to leave, Brother?” The man coughed
again. “It matters little anymore. If, twenty years ago, my enemies had been
less cruel . . . Still, there are worse ways to be locked away. How may I
assist you, my sons? You did not come to hear my problems.” Joram glanced at
Rhys, certain that the same questions were probably going through the Healer’s
mind. What had happened to this man twenty years ago? He knew what the man was
implying: unprincipled men had been known to place their enemies into enforced
monastic seclusion before. And twenty years ago . . . But if this was their
Benedict, a diseased and dying man... “Ah, I am a priest
of the Order of Saint Michael, Brother Benedict. My colleague is a Healer.
Recently we had occasion to attend upon the death of an old man who may have
been your grandfather.” A sharp intake of
breath was audible on the other side, which brought on another coughing fit.
When it had ceased, there was a long silence, and then: “May he rot in Hell!” “I beg your
pardon?” Rhys stammered. “I said, may he rot in Hell, that miserable man! He
and his friends were the ones who put me here, who stole my youth, my dreams—” “A moment!” Joram
interjected. “What was his name?” “His name?” the
monk repeated. “His name was one hated by me, though it was the same as that of
my blessed father. His name was James.” James. Not Daniel.
Praised be, Joram thought, that this bitter man is not the prince we
have come to seek. It meant that
their search must continue to the remaining three Benedicts, but at least there
was still hope. He stood easily,
beckoning Rhys to do the same, suspecting that the other was as eager as
himself to move on, now that this possibility had proven false. He cleared his
throat to gain the attention of the man on the other side of the grille. “We thank you for
your trouble, Brother Benedict. However, the man we attended was apparently not
the man of whom you speak. I—cannot, in conscience, wish you the vengeance you
seek, but I shall pray that your escape will be quick and merciful.” The man cleared
his throat again, his tone almost meek. “You—you won’t tell the Father Prior
what I said, will you, Father? I— Forgive me. Perhaps this is why we are
allowed so few visitors, why enclosure is so strictly enforced. I thought I had
mastered my hatred, but with death approaching— Forgive me.” “Of course,” Joram
replied. They took their
leave of him then, and were soon emerging into the main courtyard once again,
beckoning to the novices for their horses to be brought. Brother Cieran, who
had greeted them before, accompanied them now, and ran an approving hand along
the neck of Rhys’s horse as the Healer mounted up. “A beautiful
animal, m’lord. Before my profession, I too owned horses such as these.” He
shrugged. “But that is past. I hope that you were not too disappointed. I
gather that you did not find the man you are seeking.” Rhys shook his
head. “That second Benedict to whom we spoke—has he seen a Healer recently?” Cieran gave a deep
sigh. “I fear not, noble lord. He does not wish it.” “He has only a little
time left,” Rhys replied. “Does he know how little?” “I think he does,
nor does he care,” Cieran said. “He has been a bitter man from the first time I
met him, and that is ten years ago and more. He is entitled to his own kind of
peace, I think. All of us enter these walls for different reasons.” “Even against your
will?” Joram asked quietly. “Oh, did he say
that? I’m afraid his mind has slipped in the past few years. He’s mentioned
that several times, but of course it couldn’t be true. No one is here who does
not wish to be.” “Of course not,”
Joram said, keeping all hint of sarcasm out of his voice. “Thank you for your
help, Brother Cieran. God keep you well.” “And you, my
lords,” Cieran replied, lifting his hand in blessing. He watched
wistfully as the two rode out the priory gates and back up the road they had
come. In the distance, another storm was brewing. chapter sevenThe skill of
the physician shall lift up his head: and
in the sight of great men he shall be in admiration. —Ecclesiasticus
38:3 It was a few days
before the search could be resumed; and this time it was not Joram who rode at
Rhys Thuryn’s side, but Camber himself, disguised as a Gabrilite monk. Joram had wanted
to accompany them, had begged his father to delay until he could secure leave
from his duties at Saint Liam’s. But they could not wait, and dared not permit
Joram to arouse suspicion by an unsanctioned absence. Time was of the essence
now, the need for action intensified by a series of new scandals perpetrated by
the brash young king. After the first
snows at Nyford, where Imre’s new capital was under construction, more than one
hundred serfs and indentured workers had died of exposure because Imre had
failed to provide adequate winter clothing and shelter. Another thirty-two
perished when an earthwork collapsed for want of sufficient shoring. At
Rhemuth, the old Gwyneddan capital, two score and ten peasants were bound over
to serfdom and a half-dozen lesser nobles hanged for refusing either to pay the
building tariff or submit to voluntary servitude. At Marywell in the north, a
royal garrison ran amuck one night and destroyed most of the town without being
punished, though the Archbishop of Valoret himself appealed to Imre to avenge
the innocents who had perished there. Camber had all but
flown into a rage as the news of Imre’s actions assumed greater proportions,
for such wanton disregard by a king for his subjects’ welfare was inexcusable.
Before a week had passed, he and a nervous Rhys Thuryn were making their ascent
into the Lendour highlands toward Saint Foillan’s Abbey. They had been
travelling for nearly three days, on a road which daily became more devoid of
fellow travellers, before they began the final, snow-swept approach. Now, riding alone
between the vast, terraced fields of the abbey’s holdings, they could see coils
of smoke rising from the abbatial kitchens, the only signs of life against the
frozen landscape. The great granaries were sealed tight against the winter
blizzards, the last crops harvested weeks before. Even the enormous dairy
herds, which roamed the mountainsides in milder seasons, were nowhere to be
seen. The two riders
huddled in fur-lined clothes, their horses blanketed and hooded against the
icy, needling wind, as they waited for admittance outside the abbey precincts. “Who seeks
entrance at the gate of Saint Foillan’s?” an ancient voice cried from a window
high in the stone gatehouse. The wind whipped
his words away, and Camber edged his horse a few paces closer to the wall. “Pray, open your
gate to a pair of fair-frozen travellers,” Camber shouted. “I come from the
Archbishop. I’m Brother Kyriell, and this is Lord Rhys Thuryn. We have been
riding long to reach you.” “You’re a monk?” A
hooded head was poked through the window and appeared to stare down at them,
but the expression was lost in the shadows. “Yes, of the Order
of Saint Gabriel. Lord Rhys is a Healer. May we be admitted, please? We have
business with your abbot.” No answer came,
but the head withdrew, the window closed, and shortly a postern door opened in
the main gate. Camber dismounted and led his horse through, followed by Rhys,
and a monk closed the door behind them before taking their horses. Another monk
bowed wordlessly and indicated that they should follow him across the snow-covered
Great Court. The stone towers
and walls of the abbey church loomed gray and forbidding against the snow, but
they were dwarfed and completely overshadowed by the sheer rock face of the
neighboring mountain, which formed the abbey’s north and eastern limits. That
slope was wind-scoured and bare of snow. Near the monastic church itself was an
artificial facade on the mountainside, with a large, timbered door set into its
face. The horses were led through that door just before Camber and Rhys and
their escort reached the shelter of the abbot’s gate. It must be a stable, Camber
mused. If so, it is probably where Saint Foillan’s dairy herds go
during the winter. Five minutes
later, Camber and Rhys were sharing a bench before a roaring fire in the
abbot’s parlor, each with a tankard of mulled cider in his hands and a cushion
beneath his feet. The abbot had not yet made an appearance, but their
monk-escort was bustling around the room, lighting candles in sconces and
generally tidying up. Camber cast a
sidelong glance at Rhys as though to suggest keeping an eye open, then loosened
the collar of his fur-lined mantle and let it slip back from his shoulders.
Rhys, too, was beginning to warm up, and as he stood to move farther from the
fire, a door opened into the room and the abbot entered. Immediately, Camber
was on his feet as well, setting down his tankard on the bench as he rose. “Good morrow,
Father Abbot,” he said, moving to kiss the cleric’s ring. “I am Brother
Kyriell, in the service of His Grace, the Archbishop. This is my colleague,
Lord Rhys, a Healer.” Rhys set down his
tankard and came to kiss the ring. The abbot, when the duties had been done,
raised a bony hand and shook his head. “Nay, Brother
Kyriell, my lord, stand not on ceremony. You have ridden far, and in hostile
weather, and Brother Jubal tells me that your coming is not by chance. How may
I assist you?” He gestured for
the monk to move his chair before the fire, then signed for the two to resume
their seats as he took his. When they were settled and the abbot held a tankard
of cider in his hand, Camber folded his hands before him and cleared his
throat. “Father Abbott,
this is a matter of some delicacy, especially in light of your hospitality.” He
glanced at his tankard. “But we have come to speak with one of your claustral
brothers. It is rather important.” The abbot studied
both of them over the rim of his tankard, then warmed his hands on its sides.
“So one might gather,” he finally replied, his eyes sweeping their
snow-bedraggled condition. “Might one ask why, however? My compliance with your
request would involve a considerable relaxing of our Rule. If I am to do that
for you, or for His Grace, the Archbishop, I should like to know why.” Camber inclined
his head in agreement. “A few months ago, an old man died. He had been under
the care of Lord Rhys, and on his deathbed asked Rhys to inform his grandson of
his death. Unfortunately, he could only tell us that his grandson was a monk of
your order, and that his name in religion was Benedictus. Rhys asked my help in
locating this monk, and our search has led us here.” “I see.” The abbot
glanced down at his cider. “This grandfather—was he an important man?” “Only to me—and to
his grandson,” Rhys answered. “He was in a greatly agitated state about his
past life, and hoped that his grandson might be induced to pray for his soul. I
promised that I would try to find his grandson—and so I believe I have. Might
we speak with him, Father Abbot?” “This is highly
irregular—” the abbot began. “We can appreciate
your position, Father Abbot,” Camber said. “But surely it could do no great
harm. The old man felt he had much to atone for, and that his grandson’s
prayers might substantially ease his way to Heaven, if only the grandson knew.
I have spoken with His Grace, the Archbishop, in the matter, and while it is
not his general practice to interfere in the local governance of the
establishments under his jurisdiction, he did indicate that he felt this a
reasonable relaxation of your Rule. We would require but a few minutes.” “Hmm,” the abbot
grunted. It was obvious
that Camber’s invocation of the archbishop’s name carried considerable weight
with him, and also that he resented that invocation. “What was the
grandson’s name again?” he asked grudgingly. “We know him only
as Brother Benedict, Father Abbot.” The abbot rose and
began pacing the chamber, hands clasped in the sleeves of his white robe. His
thin face mirrored his annoyance. “You place me in
an awkward position, Brother. You must understand that Brother Benedict has
taken a vow of silence. He has not spoken, other than in his Divine Office and
to me, his Confessor, in more than twelve years. His vocation is certain. He is
a most holy man. I do not know if he will wish to see anyone from the outside
world.” Camber stood in
the abbot’s path, and the abbot stopped his pacing. “I am a monk, Father Abbot.
Lord Rhys is a Healer, which is also a divine calling. Though we live and work
in the world, I think our vocations as certain and as holy as any cloistered priest’s,
if in different ways. If your Brother Benedict is as upright and holy a man as
you say, I think his compassion for his grandsire will compel him to see us.
But, let us not take such a decision upon ourselves. Brother Benedict is the
one who should decide.” The abbot searched
Camber’s face carefully, looking for he knew not what; then he switched his
gaze to Rhys. “And you, my
lord—do you concur with Brother Kyriell’s estimation of Brother Benedict, whom
you have never seen? Do you deem yourself worthy to speak with so holy a man?” Rhys bowed his
head, guilt at their charade playing at the corners of his mind, then looked
the abbot in the eye. They had played no sham. All that they had said so far
was true, even if it was not all the truth. Why should he be ashamed? “Who among us is
truly worthy of anything, Father Abbot?” he said softly. “Do we not say in the
liturgy, ‘Domini, non sum dignus’—’Lord, I am not worthy’? But in the
next breath we add, ‘Speak but the word and my soul shall be healed.’ As a Healer,
I daily feel His healing power working through me, and I know it is a gift of
God. If Brother Benedict will see us, I shall strive to continue to be worthy,
in my own way.” The abbot smiled
wanly and bowed. “Touchй, my lord. Your training as a Healer has not
overshadowed your theology.” He became sober again. “Very well, I shall ask
Brother Benedict if he wishes to see you. I cannot promise anything, but I will
ask.” With that, the
abbot walked slowly out of the room. Ten minutes later,
after being led through the abbot’s hall and cloister yard, Camber and Rhys
were shown into a small, wainscotted chamber with a brass grillework in the
wall at one end. The room was warm enough, opening off an annex of the abbot’s
hall, but it was very dim. A single candle in a sconce beside the door was the
only illumination except for a faint light coming through the grillework from
the other side. A padded kneeler lay against the wall beneath the grille, just
wide enough for two people. Camber stood
easily in the center of the chamber, inspecting it carefully as the outer door
was closed behind them. Rhys regarded the grille suspiciously. “Apparently he’s
agreed,” the Healer murmured. “Aye. Now pray God
he may be the right one,” Camber replied. He moved closer to Rhys and laid his
hand on the other’s arm, his voice dropping to an almost inaudible whisper.
“Stay close, my friend. I have a strange premonition, and I’m not certain I
like it.” Rhys nodded
agreement, knowing that the closeness of which Camber spoke was not physical
proximity; then he knelt beside the grille as a rustle of movement on the other
side caught his attention. Camber immediately eased down beside him, his hand
resting lightly on the other’s arm as he signed for Rhys to speak. “Brother
Benedict?” Rhys murmured. The rustling
ceased. Rhys could
sense the newcomer’s face behind
the grille and caught a whiff of his breath, clean and fresh. It was impossible
to see anything. “Brother
Benedict?” Rhys repeated softly. There was a slight sound from the other side—
not quite a cough. “I am Brother
Benedict,” a low voice said. “How may I serve you?” Healer and
pseudo-monk exchanged tense glances, each abundantly aware of the anxiety in
the other. Camber leaned closer to the grille. “We beg your
pardon for this intrusion, Brother Benedict, but we hope you may be the man we
seek. My name is Brother Kyriell. The man with me is Lord Rhys Thuryn, a
Healer. We believe he may have attended your grandfather in his last hours.” A gasp of
surprise. “My grandfather? Dear Jesus and all the Saints, I thought him dead
these ten or fifteen years!” “Dead?” Camber
said. “I’m afraid I don’t understand. What was your grandfather’s name?” “His name? Why, it
was Daniel. I tried to reach him some ten years ago, before I took my solemn
vows. When I did not hear, I assumed— But you said —forgive me, you said that
Lord Rhys attended him in his last hours. Then, he is dead—now.” “I fear that he
is,” Camber answered lamely. “He—” His voice failed him momentarily, so
overcome was he by the growing knowledge of the man’s true identity, and Rhys’s grip on his arm was like a vise as he
leaned closer to the grille. “Brother Benedict, this is Lord Rhys. You said
your grandfather’s name was Daniel. What was his last name? If you are the man
I seek, I have a message for you from him, but I must be sure. Tell me what you
remember of your grandfather.” A pause. Total
silence from the other side. Then, quietly: “His full name was Daniel Draper,
and he was a merchant in woolen cloth when I left him to join the order. My
father, Royston, had died in the plague the year before .. .” At the mention of
the name, Rhys had a flash of the same picture he had seen in Daniel’s mind: of
the father, Royston, laid out for burial, old Daniel and the boy Cinhil looking
on fearfully. He suddenly knew what the man on the other side of the grille
would look like, grown to middle age: the glossy black hair, silvered at the
temples with the passing years; the clear, gray Haldane eyes, sage and serene
in the lean, handsome face; the slender hands, smooth through years of prayer,
but strong, capable of whatever the man should will... He shared the
image with Camber and felt the older man wince with the intensity. But in that
instant he was aware of another impression coming from Camber himself: the
knowledge that Cinhil—no, Benedict, for now, for it was safer that way—was not
alone! No malice was
inherent in that realization; Benedict himself had probably requested a
witness. In fact, it was the abbot who stood so quietly beside the door on the
other side. But now they would have to be very careful what they said to their
quarry. And how were they to find out more about him, without arousing
suspicion? “. . . but I
prattle on in a most unseemly fashion,” Benedict was saying. “You must pardon
me, my lords, but my heart is so overjoyed at learning that my dear grandsire
lived these many years, that I find myself quite addled. Pray, tell me. did his
later years go well. with him? Did he die a good death?” “He was a good
man,” Rhys said gently, raising an eyebrow to Camber as though to ask what
next. “I was privileged to attend him from the time I first began to practice
my healing craft. He asked on his deathbed that I find you and entreat you to
pray for his soul.” “Oh, that poor,
gentle soul,” the other breathed. “Your pardon, my lord, but I must pray a
moment.” There was a rustle
of movement on the other side, and Rhys looked at Camber. What now? He
spoke mind to mind. I’m not
certain. We must find out more, but we dare not arouse the abbot’s suspicion. That won’t be
easy. He— I have an idea,
Camber’s thought broke in. Rhys, could you make him ill? What?.’ No, listen to
me. Use your healing powers to simulate illness. Make him pass out or
something. That may enable us to get inside and see him face-to-face. I doubt
they have a Healer of their own. But, to—to use
my powers to harm instead of heal . . . Not to harm. To
help, in the long run. There would be no lasting effect unless you make it so.
Rhys, we must get closer to him. We must find out whether it’s worth the risk
to get him out of here! “I beg your
pardon, my lords,” the Haldane’s voice broke in. “I was momentarily overcome,
and…” Do it! Camber
urged. He’s disoriented, confused. You can easily bring on a fainting spell.
Do it! “. . . you will
forgive me. What was it you wished to tell me about my grandfather?” Camber cleared his
throat, nodding to Rhys: “I wonder if there might be anything of which you know
that could account for your grandfather’s fear of the afterlife, Brother
Benedict? Daniel felt that he had sinned terribly. I spoke with his confessor,
and the good father assured me that he had made a proper contrition, but ...” Rhys steeled
himself and calmed his mind, letting Camber’s words run over his head unheard,
willing himself to the state of tranquillity which was necessary to reach out
and tamper with another’s body. Closing his eyes, he blocked out all input from
the external world, mentally articulating the words which would bring him into
his full healing trance. He felt the tingle
of heightened awareness in his fingertips, in his lips, behind his eyes; he
sensed the nearness of the man Benedict on the other side of the grille,
listening carefully to what Camber was saying, though Rhys himself heard not a
word. Gently, he brought his right hand up to the brass of the grillework,
rested his fingertips against the metal, warm to the touch. Slitting his eyes
open, bringing them close to the grille, he could see the outline of Benedict’s
head against it, see the skin of his face pressed against the metal as he
leaned close to hear the words which Camber spoke but Rhys did not hear. He
marshalled his strength for a leap across the short space separating him from
the man on the other side, letting his hand go flat against the grille, only
millimeters of brass separating hand from other’s head. Then he was
extending himself across the greater void of mind to mind, slipping undetected
through the other’s consciousness, which was so intent on words, mere words,
while the real meaning wrapped itself around his mind. Then Rhys was in the
other’s mind, questing gently for the proper spots to touch, probing
relentlessly, but undetected, for the contact which would bring temporary
oblivion. He found it. He
steadied his healing hold around the cause of consciousness, exerted pressure,
and felt the other’s growing dizziness, the buzz of blurred responsiveness as
Camber’s words ceased to make sense. Then the other was slumping against the
wall, sliding to the floor unconscious, and another was rushing to his side,
amazement and fear radiating from him. Rhys gave a final
touch to the other’s mind, to be certain that consciousness would be gone a
sufficient length of time, then withdrew abruptly. He found that he was
drenched with sweat, his left hand gripped tightly on Camber’s arm, the older
man staring at him with respect and a little discomfort. He let go of Camber’s
arm, reverting to spoken speech with a tremulous voice. “What’s happened?” “He’s fainted,”
Camber murmured, a faint smile playing across his lips. “Brother Benedict!” he
called. “Brother Benedict, are you all right?” “He’s passed out.
I think he’s ill,” came the voice of the abbot from the other side. “Brother
Paul, Brother Phineas, attend us!” A sound of running
feet. “Benedict, speak
to us! Phineas, send for the infirmarian. He’s had a shock and passed out.
Benedict, are you all right?” Rhys tried to peer
through the grille, but Camber merely continued to kneel, his head cocked
slightly as he listened. Offer to help, he
mouthed silently. Rhys pressed
closer to the grille. “Father Abbot, is
there anything I can do to help? It’s Lord Rhys.” Again they were
ignored. There was the sound of more running feet, a low murmur of voices, and
then a new voice saying, “I don’t understand why he doesn’t come around, Father
Abbot. If he’s just fainted, he should have come around by now.” “He’s been bled
too much, if you ask me,” another voice said. “I told him that twice in the
same month was too much.” “Perhaps it isn’t
just a fainting spell,” said a third. “Maybe it’s the plague!” “The plague?”
someone whispered. “Heaven preserve us!” “Nonsense. Do you
want to start a panic?” It was the voice of the abbot. “Lord Rhys, are you
still there?” “Yes, Father
Abbot. I heard what happened. Is there anything I can do to help?” He looked at
Camber, and Camber nodded in hopeful anticipation. “I’m not certain,
my lord. Brother Benedict seems to have fainted, and our infirmarian is unable
to revive him. Would you be willing to see him?” “Please, Father
Abbot, I would be most honored to lend whatever assistance I can. I feel
somewhat responsible.” Camber rolled his eyes, smothering a chuckle, and Rhys
flashed him a nervous glance. “I had no idea he would become so overwrought at
the news of his grandfather’s death,” he added hastily. “You are not to
blame, my lord. Brother Phineas, please bring Lord Rhys inside. The rest of
you, help me to take Brother Benedict to his cell.” As sounds faded
from the adjoining room, Camber stood stiffly and gave a great sigh. “How long?” he
whispered. “Perhaps fifteen
or twenty minutes.” Rhys hauled himself to his feet while trying to peer again
through the brass grille. “I had a devil of a time putting him out, though. I
should try to read him properly before I bring him around. It may be our only
chance.” “At least we’ll
get a look at the inside, of the compound,” Camber agreed. “If we—” He broke off and
coughed just before the door opened, and was straightening his robe as Brother
Phineas peered into the chamber. “Lord Rhys?” “May I bring
Brother Kyriell with me? We’ve worked together before.” “Well—” “Please, Brother.
I am a monk,” Camber reminded him. “Come, there isn’t time to
waste.” That night, in
their room at a distant inn, Camber and Rhys sat on either side of a small
table, a lighted candle between them, their hands linked loosely to either
side. On arriving, they had eaten a hasty meal in the common room downstairs,
again thawing out from their wintry ride, then had hied themselves to their
chamber. The past half-hour had been spent in deep trance, as Rhys imparted to
Camber the little he had learned in his brief exploration of Cinhil’s mind; the
impressions were more easily conveyed from mind to mind than in spoken words. Cinhil. Now
they were free to voice the name. Camber was the
first to stir, and he sat back in his chair with a sigh as he broke off
contact, shaking his fingertips to restore the circulation. Rhys’s eyelids
fluttered, and then he too was taking one deep breath, two, three, clearing
away the residual effects of the trance from his mind. Camber suppressed a yawn
as he poured mulled ale for the two of them. “Your reading was
only superficial, of course— and had to be, under the circumstances. But
offhand, I will have to say that I’m impressed.” Rhys rubbed his
eyes and forced them to focus on the older man. “Aye. He’s brilliant, if
undeveloped. But—” He sighed, a weary, frustrated sound. “Damn it, why does the
man have to have a true vocation for the priesthood? That’s going to complicate
things.” “The man must be
true to himself, else he would not be a true Haldane,” Camber smiled. “Cinhil
is a priest, he feels that he was called to be that, and he is a good one. He
could be no other, given his present circumstances.” “Joram would
understand that; I don’t,” Rhys said testily. “The question is, will he forsake
that vocation for a crown? I think it’s clear that, with proper training, he
has the ability to rule. But will he? Which will come first for
him? The duty of his birth, or the duty of his vows? He’s going to have to make
one hell of a choice. For that matter, can we even afford to let him make that
choice?” “To forsake his
vows and wear the Crown.” Camber sighed. “To take a wife, produce heirs,
re-establish a dynasty—things which, for most men, would be a joyous task. But
it will never be so for Cinhil. He is a priest forever, I fear. And
though we may force him to put aside his monkish robes, and walk the world
again, and take a wife, and wear the crown of his ancestors—and we must do
that, I know that now—I suspect he will nevermore be a truly happy man. We dare
not even let him make the decision for himself, if there is any chance he will
refuse us. Cinhil Haldane must be King.” “Aye ...” Rhys rested his
elbows on the table and let his hands support his head, strangely melancholy. Camber was silent
for a long time. Then: “You’re not certain, are you?” Rhys shook his
head wearily. “We know so little about him, Camber. What if we’re wrong?” “That’s supposed
to be my line.” Camber chuckled. “You and Joram are the ones who were
going to be the crusaders against tyranny, and oust the evil king, and restore
the true heir.” Rhys smiled
despite his fatigue, but his expression was solemn as he looked again at
Camber. “I know. And you’re right, of course. Cinhil has too much potential for
us not to attempt a Restoration. But the price...” “It will be high
for all of us,” Camber nodded. “The peasants’ deaths will not be the last we
shall have to pay. And Cinhil— Even if we bring him out of Saint Foillan’s,
there’s still the matter of convincing him that he and only he can make the
coup successful. I hesitate even to contemplate what that will cost the inner
man.” Rhys could only
nod agreement as he readied himself for bed. But sleep did not come easily that
night, for all his bone-weariness and mental fog from the day’s exertions. Long
after Camber’s deep breathing told him that the other slept, Rhys lay staring
at the dark ceiling of the chamber, listening to the night sounds of the inn,
the winter wind whistling outside the shutters. He kept thinking
of the parts of Cinhil which he nad not been able to read, which lay behind
close-guarded shields that he had not expected to find in a human, and which he
had not dared to probe, for fear of discovery. He wondered how
much Cinhil really knew of his true identity. And he wondered if the thought
had ever crossed Cinhil’s mind that he might one day be called upon to assume
his Haldane heritage and the Crown of Gwynedd. chapter eightWrath is cruel,
and anger is outrageous; but who is able to stand before envy? —Proverbs
27:4 In the practice
yard of the royal armory at Valoret, Imre of Festil was hacking at a pell with
a blunted blade, under the sharp-eyed scrutiny of a master of arms. A score of
his retainers watched from the perimeter of the yard and occasionally shouted
out words of encouragement and advice. But all other arms play had ceased when
the king took the field. The caprice of Imre’s favor being what it was of late,
few men were anxious to risk a misunderstanding of their intent. Imre was
exceedingly nervous of unsheathed steel in his presence, even when it was borne
by men known to be loyal to the Crown. Some few men he permitted this
liberty—Armagh and Selkirk, his chief weapons masters, and a handful of others.
But to raise steel against the king at any time could be construed as treason,
if the king chose to view it that way-even if the alleged traitor believed
himself to have acted in sport. Would-be sparring partners risked contending
with the king’s bodyguards, two of whom were lounging even now, with deceptive
casualness, near the entrance to the armory proper, within easy hearing of the
royal voice. It made the session less than relaxed. Imre’s own martial
abilities were not outstanding, which partly accounted for his attitude. His
slight stature and indulgent upbringing had not been conducive to the molding
of a master swordsman, nor was this really in Imre’s area of interest. He was
judged by his fighting masters to be merely competent with broadsword and
shield, and they had long ago despaired of teaching him to wield a greatsword
or couch a lance with any degree of proficiency. However, this did not mean
that the king’s skill should be taken lightly. His apparent level of competence
was often deceiving. More than one adversary had made a mistake, only to have
Imre’s blade slip suddenly home beneath a careless guard. Though his bodyguards
were always nearby, it was clear—to those who knew—that Imre did not always
have to rely on others’ steel to save him from would-be assassins. Indeed, Imre’s
favored weapon was not the sword at all, but the more subtle dagger. At this
deadly game, even his instructors had to concede that the king had few peers.
Armagh, the master now scrutinizing Imre’s swordwork with the pells, bore a
long, raised scar across one forearm to this day—lasting reminder of a practice
bout in which he had allowed himself to become careless. Imre, his pell
work completed, turned and saluted the instructor in question, then strode into
the center of the yard and began readjusting a vambrace that had begun to slip. Master Selkirk,
who had been arming on the sidelines, took this as his signal and moved onto
the field, ponderous in heavy padding, mail, and great barrel helm. Bending
knee before the king, he offered up his blunted sword, hilt first, as was
customary when requesting permission to cross blades with the Crown. Imre laughed
inside his helmet and touched Selkirk’s helm lightly with his own sword in
acceptance, then saluted his retainers with a flourish as they burst into
scattered applause. Soon he and Selkirk were circling warily, each looking for
the best opening blow. The retainers resumed their low conversation as Selkirk
and the king began sparring. Cathan MacRorie
was among the circle of intimates waiting upon the king this morning. Indeed,
it was Cathan’s first appearance at an inner Court function in many a week.
Though he had dutifully appeared at Court each day since his return after the
executions, he had not been summoned to the royal presence until this very day.
In fact, Imre had made pointed detours to avoid any encounter with his former
favorite. But today had been
different. Cathan had presented himself at the Chapel Royal for the morning
devotions of the Court as usual, fully expecting to be royally snubbed as he
had been for the past three weeks. But instead, when the king had emerged from
his session with his confessor, he had headed straight for Cathan and embraced
him warmly, declaring his unhappiness at having shunned his friend for these
many weeks. He had realized, he said, that Cathan’s behavior regarding the
executed hostages was out of filial duty to his father, and not out of defiance
of his king and friend. And he, Imre, had been wrong to exclude his good and
faithful Cathan from his presence for doing only what he ought, as a dutiful
son. Could Cathan ever forgive him? Cathan could. Much
taken aback, and flattered by the king’s public show of reconciliation, Cathan
was only too willing to renew the royal friendship: despite Imre’s faults,
Cathan was still devoted to the king. The invitation to watch Imre at the
armoury was further proof that all was forgiven. Now Cathan stood
in the place of honor beside Imre’s
squire, the king’s tankard and towel in his hands. He smiled and nodded
approval as Imre completed a particularly difficult combination move against Selkirk and glanced in his
direction. Behind him, Jamie Drummond and Guaire of Arliss applauded politely,
their faces betraying none of the misgivings they felt about the entire
morning’s events. Cathan, in his happiness, had already decided to ignore the
glares which were coming this way from the other side of the yard. The source of the
majority of these glares was Coel Howell, standing sullenly beside the two
warrior-earls, Maldred and Santare. It was Coel who had supplanted Cathan with
Imre during the past few weeks, and who now faced possible exclusion if Cathan
should be restored to the royal favor. After a few
minutes, Coel called his squire and began pulling on gauntlets, coif, and helm.
He made an inaudible remark which set his companions to sniggering as they
glanced in Cathan’s direction. The sparring slowed to a halt as Coel took up
sword and shield and strode onto the field. “Sire, I mean no
offense to Master Selkirk, but ‘tis apparent that he is weary today, and cannot
give Your Grace the challenge you desire. I am hardly a match for Your
Highness, but I would be honored to provide you more energetic sport.” “Aye, friend
Coel,” the king grinned, dismissing Selkirk with a wave of his sword. “Come and
have to!” Coel bowed in
formal request to approach with steel, and then the two began to spar. Cathan’s mouth
tightened as he watched, not certain what to make of his kinsman’s move. Coel
was more than ten years the king’s senior, and outweighed Imre by a
considerable amount—a fact which made for a distinct advantage against the
small and lightweight king. Imre was
fast—there was no doubt about that. And his form was basically sound: the
finest swordsmen in the land had been his mentors at one time or another. In
fact, Cathan had never seen him in better form than he was today. But Coel was
the better swordsman, though he rarely made a public spectacle of this talent.
And he was pulling his blows whenever he could get away with it. Cathan’s lips
compressed in a hard, tight line as he realized what Coel was doing. It was a typical
Coel maneuver. By slowing his speed just a fraction, by deliberately misjudging
openings, responding to feints, he could make Imre appear to be the master,
pandering to the royal ego, which so needed bolstering. Cathan watched as Imre
slipped and recovered on the beaten earth, backed off to straighten his helm
with a gauntleted sword hand, and resumed his stance. As the fighters closed
once again Cathan saw that Coel was playing with his opponent, maneuvering him
around so that the sun shone in his eyes and made his blows even less sure.
Cathan frowned, for he did not recognize this as part of Coel’s apparent plan. But it was part
and parcel of a larger plan A seemingly chance
parry raised a little to the right brought a flash of sunlight lancing into
Coel’s helm-not Imre’s–reflecting blindingly off a leaded window behind the
king. Coel missed his step and
faltered, dropping his shield just a fraction, and Imre used the opening to
advantage. His blunted sword came swooping from behind his head in a solid blow
to the side of Coel’s helm, connecting with a sound which echoed across the
yard and made Coel stagger. Playing the game
to its proper conclusion–for, with proper weapons, he would have been dead–Coel
reeled and let fall his sword, then toppled slowly and noisily to the ground.
Imre’s courtiers applauded politely as the king doffed his helmet and extended
a hand to help Coel up. “Well fought!” the
king laughed, clenching the older man’s wrist in his fist as Coel scrambled to
his feet. “I’ll swear you nearly had me there. Bad luck for the sun to flash in
your eyes that way!” “Nay, ‘twas your
skill, Sire,” Coel replied, smiling as he gave his shield to a waiting squire.
“I fought well enough today, but you are improving. The best man won–that is
all.” He pulled of his helm and gauntlets, as well, and gave them to a
waiting page. Imre grinned
delightedly, raising a hand to summon Cathan. As Cathan approached, he forced
himself to ignore the indulgent look which Coel was giving him behind the
king’s back. Imre took the towel and mopped it across his sweat-begrimed face.
Then, handing it to Coel to use, he took up the tankard and raised it to
Cathan. “To your most
excellent kinsman,” he said, tipping back his head to drink thirstily. What was
left was passed to Coel, who tossed off the remainder with casual ease. Then the king was
turning to go, his hand outstretched to bid Coel attend him. He did not see the
expression on Coel’s face as he handed Cathan the empty tankard and dropped the
soiled towel across his arm, or hear the laughter of Coel’s friends as Cathan’s
face went crimson at the affront. Cathan watched
until the two had disappeared from view, then shoved the towel into the tankard
in hurt disgust and gave it to Imre’s page, stalking off in the opposite
direction to nurse his pride. Apparently Coel had made greater inroads with
Imre than he had dreamed. Nor had the king totally forgiven him. Later, in the
royal bath, Imre lounged tranquilly in a steaming pool sunk several feet into
the bathhouse floor. The water was scented with fine herbs and spices, the
steam rising from the surface and swirling lazily in the cold air above. Imre
lay back in the pool with his head resting on the edge, eyes closed, the rest
of his body totally submerged. Coel had doffed
his armor and washed perfunctorily before dismissing the bath attendants, and
now he brought a fresh towel from a cupboard on the other side of the room,
dropped to his haunches beside the dozing king. His face betrayed no emotion,
but the tension showed in his voice. “Are you
comfortable, Sire?” Imre opened one
languid eye and peered at Coel. “What is it?
You’ve been bustling around like a hen who’s lost her chicks.” Coel pulled a
stool closer to the pool and sat on it, cradling Imre’s towel in his lap.
“Sire, this may be none of my business—and if that is the case, you have only
to say it and I shall withdraw the question —but I wonder whether, as it
appears, you intend to take Cathan back into your confidence.” “You think I
shouldn’t?” Coel raised an
elegant eyebrow. “Well, perhaps I oughtn’t to say this of my own kinsman, but
I’m not at all certain he’s stable anymore, Sire. He’s changed since he came
back after the executions last month. he’s grown moody, a bit secretive. And
then, there’s the talk about him and Rannulf.” “What talk?” came
the bored query. “Well, that he may
know more than he’s indicated about Rannulf s murder—that he may know
who did it.” “What?” Imre sat
bolt upright in his bath, then immediately hunched back down into the warm
water. “Who told you that? That’s preposterous.” Coel assumed an
injured expression. “Is it, Sire? Cathan has never liked Rannulf. He
disapproved of his life-style, his methods of handling the peasants of his
demesne. I understand he even threw Rannulf off his father’s manor once, during
your Lord Father’s reign, while Camber was here in the capital.” Imre thrust out
his lower lip in a petulant expression. “That doesn’t mean he murdered
Rannulf.” “I didn’t say he
did, Sire,” Coel rejoined quickly. “I simply said that there’s been talk that
he knows who did, and that he may be protecting the real murderers. We’re
fairly certain that it was the Willimites who actually did it.” “Then, Cathan
knows the Willimites? He knows who they are?” Coel shrugged. “I
cannot say, Sire. I merely relate what I have heard. However, until you are
convinced of Cathan’s innocence in this matter, I should keep my counsel to
myself, if I were you. You know how Cathan’s father feels about you. And his
brother, Joram, is a priest of Saint Michael, which order is also not your
friend. If those elements were to come together to oppose you…” He let his voice
trail off suggestively, and Imre’s eyes narrowed. It was obvious to Coel that
Imre had taken the bait, and that his mind was churning in exactly the
direction Coel intended. Abruptly, Imre sat up in his pool, then lurched to his
feet. “Mind you, I’m not
saying I believe what you say,” the king told him, wrapping the towel around
himself and stepping from the bath, “but one can’t be too careful. Send my
dressers in, and then bring Earl Maldred to my study. If there is anything
amiss, I want to know about it, and I don’t want to arouse Cathan’s suspicions.
Hurry, it’s cold standing here.” It was later that
same afternoon when Joram and Rhys arrived in Valoret, heading immediately for
Cathan’s town house of Tal Traeth. Since Camber and Rhys had made their visit
to Saint Foillan’s and gained confirmation of Prince Cinhil’s presence there,
Camber had spent the past two weeks exploring possible approaches to the
situation with Joram and Rhys and Evaine, making preliminary plans. In a
strained meeting with Joram’s Vicar General Cullen at Cheltham, the Michaelines
had been tentatively committed to the endeavor; Camber and Cullen were even now
mapping out the Michaeline strategy in the overall plan. It now fell to Joram and Rhys to determine Cathan’s circumstances, and to decide how much,
if anything, he might or must be told in advance of their move, now planned for
the week before Christmas. If Cathan was still reliable, after the traumas of
the months before, there was a chance he could be of real help to them. But if
they had any doubts, they would simply have to work around him, trusting that
events would permit them to pull him to a place of safety after Cinhil was in
their hands. For now, their greatest strength lay in surprise, in not allowing
any hint of their plans to reach the royal ears. There was no room for error,
for they would have no second chance. If Cinhil died without issue, there would
never be another Haldane heir. They were met in
the loggia by Wulpher, the stew-ard, who informed them that Lord Cathan would
join them presently in the solar. The November day was brisk, and the solar
chill; but the sunshine was warm n the roof beyond. There it was that Cathan
found them a few minutes later, leather riding cloaks thrown back on their
shoulders. They turned and
smiled as Cathan stepped onto the roof. As on the last
time they had seen him, when he rode out of Caerrorie a month before, Cathan
was pale and drawn-looking, though his cheeks were flushed as though from
recent exertion. A child’s ball was clutched in one hand, and he glanced at it
and shrugged apologetically. “I’ve been playing
with the children in the garden,” he said uneasily. “I’m afraid I’d been
neglecting them.” “It’s a good day
for such things,” Joram smiled. “How are my two hellion nephews?” “They’re well.”
Cathan returned the smile automatically, then tossed the ball into a corner and
gestured nervously for them to be seated. He pulled a wooden stool closer to
their bench and straddled it, a shadow of pain flitting across his face as he
added, “Revan’s been playing with them, too. He’s very good with young
children, you know.” As he glanced at
the floor to compose himself, Joram and Rhys exchanged worried glances. “Don’t you think
it might be better if you sent Revan back to Father?” Joram asked softly. “If
every sight or thought of him reminds you of the pain…” “No,” Cathan
whispered. “Revan stays with me. He is the one good thing to survive those
awful weeks, and I need to be reminded of that—that something good did come of
it. Otherwise, I think I should go mad.” “But—” “The subject is
closed!” He pivoted on his
stool to turn his back to them, fighting for control, then slowly returned to
face them once more, his eyes not meeting theirs. “But you didn’t
come to hear me speak of that. What brings you to Valoret this close to
Yuletide? I wasn’t expecting to see you until I got to Caerrorie for
Christmas.” “Ah, I had some
business to attend to for the order,” Joram lied easily, “and thought I would
pay a visit to our future brother-in-law here.” He gestured toward Rhys. “So we
decided to see how you were doing. How are things at Court?” Cathan glanced up,
panic-stricken for just an instant, then concentrated on his hands, folded
between his knees. “Strained, unpredictable, exasperating, fragile.” “If you would
rather not talk about it...” “No, I suppose I
should. Actually, it has been fairly constant up until today—constantly dismal,
that is. Imre has been ignoring me, acting as though I wasn’t even there. Then
this morning, before chapel, he came out of Confession and embraced me like a
brother. He said that he had been wrong to be angry with me, that I had only
been doing, my filial duty by pleading for the villagers. I thought he had
forgiven me. He even invited me to watch his weapons play in the armory yard.” “Isn’t that what
you wanted, to be forgiven?” Joram asked carefully. Cathan signed. “I
don’t know. I suppose so. But once we got there, everything started going wrong
again. Coel started to play up to Imre, as he always does, and then let him win
in a practice bout—though you know what a poor swordsman Imre is, compared with
Coel. But Coel managed to make it look like an honest defeat—or at least, he
convinced Imre. When Imre left, it was Coel who was asked to attend him in the
bath—not I. And Coel left me holding Imre’s empty tankard and dirty towel, with
the Court snickering behind my back.” “Isn’t that
getting rather blatant, even for Coel?” Rhys finally said. Cathan raised his
hands in a helpless gesture, then slumped back on his stool. “What am I to do,
Rhys? I’m beginning to think he actually hates me. It’s gone far beyond
mere rivalry. God knows, we were never what you would call friends, even before
I married his sister, Elinor, but lately ...” He sighed. “I keep telling myself
that if he’s Elinor’s brother, there must be something good to the man. But if
he cares for her—and I sometimes even wonder about that—his fondness certainly
doesn’t extend to the rest of her family. He’s ambitious, Joram. He wants to
rule. And if he can’t rule, he at least wants to be the power behind the
throne. Do you know that he’s even brought Elinor’s half sister to Court? I
wouldn’t be surprised if he tried to get Imre to marry her.” “Is that likely?”
Joram asked. “Who knows? She’s
beautiful, well connected, God knows! Imre will probably never even notice how
deeply she’s in thrall to her brother.” He smiled sardonically. “On the other
hand, Princess Ariella has hated Melissa Howell from the moment she set eyes on
her. Too much competition. I’m sure she realizes that Imre will have to marry
eventually—if only for dynastic reasons—but in the meantime, she wants
to be the one to influence him. In fact, that could be part of what turned Imre
against me. I—ah—haven’t been terribly receptive to Her Highness’s advances.” “I had heard Court
gossip to that effect.” Rhys grinned wickedly. “A very vindictive lady. Serves
you right for being a happily married man!” “Which reminds me,
how is Elinor?” Joram asked. “After our sister, I’ll swear your Elinor is the
fairest damsel in the kingdom—enough to make a man consider forsaking his vows,
I’ll warrant. Is she well?” Pleased at the
compliment despite his depression, Cathan managed a smile. “Aye, she’s well
enough, though she doesn’t deserve the black moods I’ve been showing her
lately. I wish I could shake this—this notion of impending doom, but— Damn it,
Joram, what am I going to do? This constant tension, the indecision—it’s
ripping me apart!” “I know,” Joram
replied with a sigh. He gazed off at
the city lying spread against the horizon, inclining his head slightly at
Rhys’s silent query. When he finally spoke, his voice was very low. “Cathan, do you
remember, when you were ill, how we talked about Imre?” “Yes.” “How do you feel
about the situation now, after the past month, after today?” Cathan-lowered his
eyes, and the words came slowly, haltingly, each word dragged from deep within
him, his voice recalling prior pain. He did not seem to notice when Rhys’s hand
crept to rest lightly on his wrist—ostensibly to gauge his pulse, should Cathan
ask, but also better to read his overall condition, both mental and physical.
Or if he noticed it, he did not show it. His voice was scarcely more than a
whisper. “I—don’t know
anymore. Before, there would have been no doubt. I loved him like a brother, as
I love either of you. We were very close. When he did— what he did—last month,
it nearly killed me, Joram —both to see what he caused to happen to those
people, and to see what his act did to us. But you don’t desert your brother
just because he’s made a mistake, do you?—even if it’s a terrible one.” He
looked up defiantly, first at one of them, then the other. “I still love him,
Joram. God help me, but I do. The past month—even today’s humiliation—they
don’t change that. I suppose I—I’ll just have to learn to live with the
situation.” Joram sighed, the
sound telling Rhys all he needed to know of Joram’s assessment, and the
physician let his hand fall away. They could expect no help from Cathan. Rhys
rose as Joram also stood. “I’m sorry,
Cathan,” Joram murmured, clasping his brother’s shoulders in sympathy. “But at
least you seem to be looking at the situation realistically. I don’t have to
tell you to be wary of the caprices of kings.” Cathan shook his
head, and Joram nodded. “Aye. Well, I wish
we could stay longer, but Rhys has patients to see, and I have a lot to
accomplish before I head back to Saint Liam’s. Take care.” Cathan stood,
feeling suddenly alien and alone. “When will I see you again?” “For Christmas, I
suspect. Imre will let you come home, won’t he?” “I suppose so,
once he’s opened the Yule Court. He likes to have everyone at the formal
ceremonies, but after that I have no particular reason to stay. Elinor and the
boys will be there, at any rate.” He clasped the hands
that were offered and exchanged good-byes, then raised hesitant fingers in
farewell as the two, suddenly strangers to him now, made their way back into
the solar and out the door. He sat alone on the roof for a long time, until the
chiller wind of approaching evening reminded him that it was time to go inside. The two who
descended the stairs at Tal Traeth had planned their next move even before
letting themselves out through the courtyard gate. They had discussed with
Camber the possibility that Cathan would be incapable of assisting them, so
confirmation of that eventuality did not delay their plans. Making arrangements
to meet at Rhys’s house by dusk, they mounted up and went their separate ways.
They did not notice the men-at-arms who watched from across the square, nor
were they aware that they were followed, each by a single rider. The man following
Joram had a short ride, for the priest went only as far as the parish church of
Saint John’s, not far from Fullers’ Alley and the former abode of a deceased
textile merchant—though the man could not know of the latter. There he watched
the priest dismount and enter the parish house, emerging nearly an hour later
with a new briskness to his stride. Joram saw the
guardsman across the way, fiddling with a harness buckle and checking his
horse’s hooves, but he did not make a connection: he had not seen the man
across the square from Cathan’s. Nor did he note that the man followed, at a
discreet distance, all the way back to Rhys’s house. It simply had not occurred
to him that he might be watched so soon. The other man had
a more difficult time of it. He was able to follow Rhys to the castle without
mishap, and observed the Healer enter the royal archives there. But from his
hastily gained vantage point outside the window, he could not see what his
subject did with the several bound volumes which he pulled from the shelves
after the attendant had left the room. Mentally, he marked the places of the
volumes on the shelves and, when Rhys returned them and left a while later, he
went into the room and took the books down again to flip through their pages,
another guardsman being sent to follow the subject from the archives. But the volumes
were very old, and the man’s limited schooling did not enable him to read them.
Furrowing his brow in annoyance, he returned the books to their places and left
to report to his master. He found his colleague already there, and the master
waiting. The priest had
gone to Saint John’s Church in the textile district, the first man reported,
where he had entered the parish house and then left a short while later. He had
then been followed to the house of one Lord Rhys Thuryn, a Healer. No, he had
no idea what the priest had been doing at Saint John’s. There had been no one
with him, so he had not dared linger to investigate, for fear of losing his
quarry. The second man
told his story, then, and added that he had discovered his subject to be that
same Rhys Thuryn to whose house his colleague had trailed the priest; he had
asked the attendant in the archives. Yes, he could identify the volumes which
the young lord had consulted. No, he had no idea what the man had been looking
for. A second pair of men were now guarding the house where the two were holed
up. Did his lordship wish the two brought in? His lordship did
not. Turning the
information over in his mind, Coel Howell considered what his agents had told
him, then gestured for one of them to bring his cloak. This was .working out
just fine. He had no idea what Rhys Thuryn and Joram MacRorie were up to; but
it certainly looked suspicious, and it might well fit in with what he was
already planning. He picked up his riding gloves and began pulling them on. “Bors, I want you
to go back to Saint John’s and find out what your man wanted there. From your
description and the fact that he ended up at Rhys Thuryn’s he has to be
Lord Cathan’s brother, Father Joram-—a Michaeline, I might add, so be careful.” “Aye, m’lord. I’ll
see to it right away.” “Do that. It would
be interesting to learn whether Father Joram also asked to see written records
at Saint John’s. Fulk?” The second agent,
who was adjusting his master’s cloak around his shoulders, inclined his head as
he closed the clasp. “Aye, m’lord?” “I want you to
come with me and show me the books that Thuryn took off the shelves. I want to
know what they were looking for.” And in another
part of the city, unaware that their afternoon’s actions were even then being
pondered and analyzed, Rhys and Joram were spreading the results of their
labors upon a small table in Rhys’s chamber, the room warded against hostile
influence, the high windows sealed from light. Rhys unrolled his
discovery, a painting of a man crowned with gold, a coat of arms embroidered on
the arras behind him. The man was slender and dark, black hair and beard and
mustache silvered with middle age, gray eyes direct, clear, but unable to
foresee the fate which had awaited him but a few years after he sat for the
portrait. The shield on the arras showed the royal arms of the Haldanes of Gwynedd:
gules, a lion rampant guardant or. The name inscribed at the bottom of
the painting read: Iforus, Rex Gwyneddis. “The blood does
run true,” Rhys whispered, holding the painting closer to the light and
appraising it with a critical eye. “Camber will be pleased. Put a beard and
mustache on our Cinhil, grow out his tonsure, take him out of that monk’s robe,
and it could almost be the same man. It’s amazing that no one has ever noticed
the resemblance before.” “Not really,”
Joram replied. “Who would make the connection? Everyone thinks all the Haldanes
died in the coup, and most of the people who could remember what Ifor looked
like, first-hand, are long dead. Besides, who looks closely beyond a monk’s
habit and tonsure, or would have reason to?” “You’re right. I
hadn’t thought of that.” “You’re not a
priest.” Joram grinned. “Are there any other paintings?” “A few. I tried to
take the one least likely to be missed. How did you do?” “Pretty well.” Joram pulled a
packet of parchment from his cassock and began unfolding it into two separate
pieces. He spread the first one on the table. “Here we are: the
third entry for December 28, Anno Domini 843, being 5 Festilus II, under
baptisms. ‘On the Feast of the Holy Innocents was baptized one Royston John,
son of Daniel the Draper and Avis his wife.’ Which makes our prince’s
father legitimately born. “And here”—he
spread the other page—”under baptisms for the 27th of April, Anno Domini 860,
being 10 Festilus III, the Feast of Saint Maccul: ‘Father Edward did baptize
one Nicholas Gabriel, son of Royston the Draper and Nellwyn his wife, who died
in his birth.’ “And with those,
our prince is legitimate, his descent unbroken, and we have written proof to
show to Father and my vicar general. I wanted to pull the pages registering the
marriages of both sets of parents as well, but one of them must have taken
place in another parish—at least it wasn’t in Saint John’s records— and the
other spread onto a second page. These are sufficient, though. And I doubt
they’ll be missed, unless someone is looking for a specific entry that got
pulled with these.” “That should do
it, then.” Rhys nodded, stifling a yawn as he scanned the two pages and handed
them back to Joram. “By the way, I’ve left word for Gifford to wake us just
after Lauds, so we can be away by first light. Wat will have the horses saddled
and ready.” Joram, with the
contented smile of a man with a job well done, nodded and indulged in a
luxurious stretch, then refolded the two pages and slipped them into the
medical pouch which Rhys brought, next to the rolled portrait. Unless total
disaster befell them, the documents would be safe there, for the medical pouch
of a Healer was nearly as sacrosanct as a priest’s person, and arcanely guarded
as well. As Joram spread
his hands to neutralize the wards and Rhys leaned to blow out the candle on the
table, however, they could not know that their abode was being watched. Nor
would they guess that they would be followed the next morning when they rode
out of Valoret. chapter nine“When he
speaketh, fair, believe him not: for there are seven abominations in his heart. —Proverbs
26:25 True to their
plan, Joram and Rhys were among the first travellers to ride out of Valoret
when the Watch opened the city gates the next morning. There was not yet
any snow on the ground. Valoret, lying in the lowlands at the foot of the
Lendour range, was usually among the last to feel the brunt of winter. But a
heavy frost had silvered everything during the night, banishing the previous
day’s warmth with portents of colder weather to come. That, plus the copious
amounts of rain they had already had in the weeks before, had left the road
muddy, slick, and sometimes partially submerged. Hidden holes and stones were a
constant hazard to the horses, and once, after a particularly nasty near-spill,
Rhys even had to dismount to check his horse’s legs for injuries. The animal
had been favoring one foot for several minutes. It was after this
stop, when he and Joram were starting off again, that Joram first noticed the
three men following them. They had been aware, for several hours, that there
were other travellers on the road behind them. That was to be expected, for
this was a major track into the Lendours. The men wore livery; they were
probably in the service of one of the local barons. It was probably
coincidence—and the basic paranoia of the two conspirators, now that
incriminating evidence was secreted in their belongings. But when the three
men dropped back after the stop, Joram’s suspicions were kindled. There was no
benign reason for anyone to be following them; and for whatever reason, the men
represented a potential threat to their mission. Joram had gotten a good look
at the men when they had come their closest, and one of them was familiar from
somewhere. When the connection came, the priest swore softly under his breath,
drew his horse alongside Rhys’s with an annoyed tug on the reins. “We are being
followed!” he said in a low voice. “One of those men was outside Saint John’s
yesterday when I left. He probably picked us up at Cathan’s.” “At Cathan’s?”
Rhys forced himself to keep his eyes straight ahead, resisting the impulse, to
look over his shoulder. “My God, do you suppose I was followed, too? What if
they’ve found out we took the pages?” Joram shook his
head. “I don’t think they have. And if they have, they can’t have discovered
why yet. Imre’s not that astute.” “Don’t
underestimate him,” Rhys said doubtfully. He took several
deep breaths to steady himself, swallowed with a throat that was suddenly dry.
Joram controlled a smile. “Relax, Rhys. If
they’d wanted to take us, they could have done it last night at your house, or
this morning when we left, or just now when we stopped and they almost caught
up with us.” “Then why are they
following us?” Joram shrugged.
“To find out where we’re going, I suppose. Imre may be keeping track of
everyone who contacts Cathan these days. Or he may be watching Michaelines this
week, and it’s just coincidence. We have to assume that someone is asking
questions at Saint John’s and the archives, too, though. I wonder...” “You wonder what?” “I wonder if we
should force their hands, let them know that we know they’re following us, and
confront them.” He glanced sidelong at Rhys, noting the other’s growing
discomfort. “Or, we could try to lose them.” “And risk
confirming that we have something to hide?” Rhys retorted, almost without
thinking. “Innocent people don’t generally have any reason to suspect that
someone is following them.” Joram laughed out
loud. “Very good. You’re learning.” He glanced over his shoulder, but their
pursuers were out of sight behind a bend. Rhys breathed a
mental sigh of relief. “Then, we’re not going to do anything?” “Just ride on to
Caerrorie, as we’d planned,” Joram said. He touched spurs to his horse and
speeded up the pace, then laughed again as the mud flew up behind them. “And if
they want to sit and watch Caerrorie all through Yuletide, they’re certainly
welcome. They’ll do it in the snow, though, if I’m any judge.” He glanced at
the sky. “I’ll bet one of them will be riding back to report to Imre as soon as
we’ve arrived.” Joram was not far
wrong in his last surmise, though it was to Coel Howell, not Imre, that the man
reported. The man arrived at
noon the next day to relate that Joram and Rhys were apparently planning to
stay at Caerrorie for some time. Questioning of the peasants in the adjoining
village had revealed that it was the custom of Clan MacRorie to spend most of
the Yule season at the castle, though Father Joram would probably split his
time between his family and his duties at Saint Liam’s. Lord Cathan and his
family were expected to arrive within the week. Coel received the
news with thoughtful interest, adding it to the rest of the storehouse of
knowledge he was accumulating about the MacRories and their associates. He had
not yet been able to ascertain what part Joram and Rhys had in all of this. In
attempting to oust his rival, Cathan, he had not dared to hope that Cathan’s
own kin might supply corroborative evidence for his ruin; nor was this in any
way certain even now. But he did know
that Joram MacRorie had apparently taken several pages from the parish register
at Saint John’s—perhaps as many as four or five— though it was possible that
some of the missing pages had been removed before Joram came. The priest at
Saint John’s had been able to recall which volumes Father Joram had asked to
see, and had, for a price, been quite cooperative about furnishing an index by
which the missing pages might be reconstructed. Coel had several clerks working
on that already. He further
suspected that more pages would be found missing from the volumes which Rhys
Thuryn had inspected in the archives—and more of his men were checking on that.
So far, however, Coel could see no real connection with Cathan—not that that
meant there was none, or that he could not make it appear that there
was. Thanking the
messenger for the information, Coel gave orders for him to continue the
surveillance at Caerrorie, then dismissed the man and returned to his immediate
plans. Tonight, if all
went well, he would set into motion the wheels which would destroy his rival
once and for all. As for the information on Joram and Rhys, it was not
necessary for his other plan at all—though it might be added fuel for the fire
by morning. He would see how Imre reacted after tonight. That would tell him a
great deal about what he would do next. . . . Early evening
found Coel hunched over a pint of good dark ale with Earl Maldred, whose men
had been assisting in the investigation. The inn where they
had met was not far from Cathan’s Tal Traeth, which was ostensibly why Coel had
asked Maldred to join him here this evening— to discuss what he had learned of
Cathan’s alleged actions so far, and to inspect the area for themselves. Maldred,
who did not often have the opportunity to indulge in personal investigations
anymore, had leaped at the chance to get involved again. For the past hour, he
and Coel had been trading tales of their younger days. Maldred even had stories
told him by his grandfather, who had fought at the side of the first Festillic
king some eighty years before. Coel drained off
the rest of his ale with a hearty swallow as the Watch cried the second hour of
the night, then slapped the tabletop lightly and pushed back his chair. “We’d best take
our positions, my lord,” he said, standing and tugging his swordbelt in place.
“My informant said that a man came shortly after Curfew last night. If he comes
again, we ought to be there.” Maldred grunted
and tossed off the rest of his tankard as well, then wiped his beard across his
sleeve and lurched to his feet. With Maldred’s height and build, it would have
been foolish to think that Maldred was drunk, or even a touch fuddled. An old
military man like himself would have learned to hold his drink long ago in
order to have reached his present station. Nonetheless, Coel suspected that the
ale had taken the edge off Maldred’s alertness—and that was precisely what Coel
intended. Controlling a self-indulgent smile, he led the way out of the inn. It was dark and
cold outside—it would likely snow before midnight—and the grooms waiting beside
the horses were huddled around a torch stuck in the ground, hunched down in
their warm winter cloaks. They snapped to attention as Maldred approached and
gave them some low-voiced orders, then melted into the black beyond the circle
of torchlight. Maldred took up
the torch and strode back to Coel, His manner quite matter-of-fact. “I’ve sent Carle
and Joseph around the side to join your men. Where do we go from here?” “This way,” Coel
murmured, leading down a dark, narrow side street. Coel’s shadow was
harsh before him as he walked; Maldred’s footsteps echoed close behind. A few
turns, and they were moving along an ever darker alleyway, the glow of other
torches at the far end making a beckoning haven a few hundred yards away.
Senses attuned, Coel forced himself to move briskly, confidently, with Maldred
unsuspecting at his heels—for who would attack two armed men? The slightest
scuff of boot on gritted stone, and it was begun! As the torch fell
from Maldred’s fingers, Coel whirled, cloak swirling to conceal the dagger he
now clutched in his hand, the blade tucked close along his forearm. Maldred
made no outcry—could make none. His assailant was a dark shadow close against
his back, sinewy arms pinioning struggles as Maldred clawed frantically,
futilely, at the fine cord biting into bis neck. But Maldred’s
silent struggle was for naught, and quickly finished. In seconds, the assassin
was lowering his lifeless body to the ground, knotting the cord, which had
disappeared into a thin, bloody crease in bis victim’s neck. Coel reached to
his belt with his empty hand and withdrew a small, weighty pouch, which he
tossed to the ground with a golden clink as he stepped closer to the torch
guttering on the ground. “Let’s be quick
about it,” he whispered, drawing his sword and laying it quietly beside the
torch. “Finish up and get out of here. I haven’t got all night.” Quickly,
stealthily, the assassin glided to the pouch and stooped to pick it up, never
seeing or even sensing the dagger which spun from Coel’s hand to bury itself in
his heart. As the man toppled
soundlessly to the ground, Coel darted forward and seized the pouch, jamming it
into his tunic and withdrawing instead a piece of parchment, burned across the
top, a pendant seal attached below. This he placed very near the torch beside
the slain assassin. Then he drew the assassin’s dagger and laid the blade
against his own thigh, steeling himself before plunging it deep into the
muscles of his left leg. As the pain swept over him, he screamed. To the Watch’s
credit, they were not long in coming. But they were too late to save the
illustrious Earl Maldred from the assassin’s garrotte, or to get any
information out of the assassin himself. They found Lord Coel half fainting in
a pool of his own blood, trying to beat out the smouldering edges of a piece of
parchment which was signed and sealed with an all-too-familiar name. Lord Coel, as they
stanched his wound, was able to tell them how he and Maldred had been beset
while they walked through the alley, and that the assailant had tried to burn
the piece of parchment as he died. But Coel urged them not to let news of
Maldred’s death or the parchment become known until he had a chance to tell the
king in the morning. And then he passed out. The Watch,
well-trained men that they were, obeyed his orders without question, conveying
him swiftly to his working quarters at the castle, where his own body squire
tended to his wound and bandaged him. It was not too serious a wound, the
squire assured them— not even serious enough to warrant a Healer’s efforts
—though his lordship had lost a great deal of blood, and would surely be
walking with the aid of a stick for a week or so. Shooing them all
out of his master’s chamber, the squire gave orders for the two bodies to be
held at a nearby abbey, then assured the men that Lord Coel would give further
orders when he awoke in the morning. Coel, when he was certain he was alone,
opened his eyes and glanced around the room triumphantly, then closed them and
promptly went to sleep. It was still very
early the next morning, when Coel made his way, with the help of a staff and
leaning on the arm of a servant, to the entrance to Imre’s suite. He was
dressed soberly but tastefully in gray velvet lined with fur, his thigh heavily
bandaged under its thick woolen hose. One of the watchmen who had shared the
previous night’s misadventure was hovering anxiously at his elbow, clutching
the piece of parchment which Coel had rescued from the torch. A guard challenged
them at the door, but there was something about Coel this morning which forbade
resistance. “I must speak with
His Grace,” Coel said. “His Grace is
still abed, my lord. I shouldn’t disturb him, if I were you.” “I’ll be the judge
of that,” Coel said, and with a weary sigh reached past the guard and opened
the door. The guard stood
aside in confusion, not daring to stop him, and Coel and the watchman passed
into the room. Imre’s sleeping chamber lay beyond another door on the other
side of the room, and one of the king’s body servants ran to announce him as
Coel limped across the polished floor. “Sire, Lord Coel
is here to see you.” “What?” A rustling of
bedclothes and muffled protests sounded from within the room, emphatic but
unintelligible, and then: “Coel? What’s he doing here at this hour?” Coel stepped into
the doorway and addressed the closed curtains of the royal bed. “A thousand
pardons, Sire, but it was unavoidable.” He hobbled into the
room, his staff echoing hollowly on the lozenged tiles. Abruptly, the
royal head was thrust through an opening in the bed curtains, the brown hair
disheveled. “Coel, what the
devil?” As Imre’s eyes
took in the staff, the limp, the bandaged thigh, then flicked beyond to the
watchman standing guard at the door, Coel bowed deeply from the waist,
spreading his empty hands in an apologetic gesture. “I fear I suffered
a mishap during the night, Sire. Fortunately, I was not badly injured. The
wound appears far more serious than it actually is.” “But what
happened?” Imre nearly shouted. He threw back the curtains of his bed and
started to leap out, then thought better of it as he realized how cold it was,
and pulled the bedclothes around himself instead. “By God, Coel, don’t just
stand there. Bring a stool and tell me what happened. You mustn’t fatigue your
leg.” Coel did as he was
bidden, settling painfully with his leg outstretched before him, cradling
his staff against his knee. “We were beset by
an assassin, Sire,” he said, letting a hint of real pain touch his voice. “Earl
Maldred is dead. I’m sorry.” “Maldred dead!”
Imre drew the bedclothes more closely around himself and huddled down, stunned
at the news. “How?” “Garrotted,” Coel
said in a low voice. “We were cutting through an alley, and the man came at him
from behind, got him before I could even turn around. I drew my sword, but the
man was fast—cursed fast. He got me in the leg with his dagger before I could
more than clear the scabbard. When he tried to rob my money pouch, I stopped
him with my throwing knife. I’m afraid I killed him.” “You’re afraid—”
Imre was at once delighted and horrified. “Well, my God, Coel, he was trying to
kill you!” Coel lowered his
eyes. “True, Sire. But now we can never be absolutely certain who hired him to
make the attempt.” “What?” Imre
scrambled to the edge of the bed and leaned toward Coel eagerly, the long hair
falling in his eyes. He pushed it behind his ears with an impatient gesture,
clutching the bedclothes around himself with his other hand. “You mean, you
think he was a hired assassin? Do you have any idea who hired him?” “Unfortunately, I
do,” Coel murmured. He gestured to the
watchman, who approached and bowed, keeping his eyes averted. Imre stared at
him, then at Coel, sensing that he was about to learn more than he had
bargained for. “Watchman, please
tell the King’s Grace what you saw.” The man swallowed and nodded his head. “An’ it
please Your Grace, I was the Watch of the Guard in the sou’western sector of
the city last night. It was nearly Curfew, and I and my partner was walking our
rounds, when we hears this scream from one of the alleys. We runs toward the
scream as fast as we can and finds His Lordship wounded, with the two bodies
beside him. He was trying to stop this from burning in the torchfire.” The man held out
the piece of parchment, and Coel took it from him and extended it toward Imre.
The king started to reach for it, then withdrew Ms hand and sat up straighter,
a sudden foreboding flashing across his mind. “What is it?” the
king asked. Coel swallowed.
“Your Grace will not be pleased to see this, but justice must be done. I myself
do not even remember doing what the watchman just described.” “What is it?” Imre
repeated, bis voice edged with impatience and a little apprehension. Coel signalled the
watchman to leave, then moved bis stool closer to the royal bedside.
“Apparently the assassin was trying to destroy this as he died, to keep it from
being discovered. I can only conclude that he was trying to protect whomever
had hired him to attempt the assassination. He nearly succeeded.” “Who do you think
it was?” Imre asked, his eyes wide. “You won’t like
it, Sire.” “Damn you, Coel, I
already don’t like it!” Imre shouted, slamming his fist into the bed beside
him. “Who was it?” Coel held the
parchment down where Imre could read it. “Cathan MacRorie,”
he said in a low voice. There was no
mistaking the signature or the seal. chapter tenWine is a
mocker, strong drink is raging: and whosoever
is deceived thereby is not wise. —Proverbs 20:1 “Cathan!” Imre
whispered, after he had resumed breathing. “But, that’s not possible. There
must be some mistake. He would never ...” Coel nodded
slowly, closed his eyes as though unwilling to believe it himself. “I know, Sure.
Now you will understand my reluctance to tell you. In light of the rumors
concerning Cathan and the Willimites— Well, the apparent connection is rather
incriminating.” “A connection . .
.” Imre repeated, lying back on the pillows and staring up at the canopy for a
long moment. “How—how do you see this connection?” Coel cleared his
throat uncomfortably. “Well, it was Maldred who was responsible for the
execution of Cathan’s villagers. If Cathan is in league with the
Willimites, as they say, then Maldred would have been an extremely likely next
target.” “But, Maldred was
acting on my orders. I ordered the executions,” Imre said
plaintively. “If Cathan wanted revenge for the villagers, he should have struck
at m— Oh, my God!” He broke off
suddenly, realizing what he had almost said, then brought a clenched fist to
his mouth in horror, turned his face to the wall. For a full minute he remained
that way, Coel longing to know what he was thinking but not daring to attempt
to touch the royal mind. Finally, Imre
turned his face upward again, studying the ceiling of the canopy with eyes that
were cold and dry. His voice, when he spoke, was a deadly monotone. “Bring me my
robe.” Coel, not daring
to disobey, did as he was bidden, holding the fur-lined robe until Imre climbed
mechanically out of the bed, shrugged bare shoulders into it, and knotted the
cord around his waist. The king strode to the fireplace and stood there staring
into the flames for a long time, the firelight reflecting redly off his tousled
hair. Then he turned his face slightly toward Coel. The older man had not moved
from his place near the curtained bed. “If Cathan has
done this thing, he will be punished. Do you understand?” Coel nodded, not
trusting himself to speak. “But I will not
have any official action taken against him. Is that also understood?” Coel looked across
at Imre carefully, trying to discern the reason behind the statement. “No
official action, Sire?” “None,” Imre
replied. He turned back to the fire. “If Cathan is guilty of the crimes which
you have suggested, he is clearly a traitor and shall meet a traitor’s fate.
But I will not have him come to public trial, do you understand that? Cathan
MacRorie will never bow before the headsman’s ax.” “Then, how—?” “That is not your
concern!” Imre snapped. “I shall deal with this myself. Where is the
parchment?” Coel glanced at
the writing in his hand, then brought it to Imre. Without the batting of a
royal eye, Imre consigned it to the flames, watching until there was nothing
left but ash. He poked the ash to powder with a piece of kindling, then threw
that into the fire. “That no longer
exists,” Imre whispered, as the flames leaped up again. “Who else knew of it?” “Only the watchman
and his fellow, Sire. I was apparently clearheaded enough to order them to keep
it secret.” “Very well. You
will obliterate their memories of it. Use whatever means you must, though I
would have you spare their lives, if at all possible. It was not their fault
they saw what they ought not.” “I shall execute
your orders myself, Sire,” Coel replied with a slight bow, glad that Imre could
not see his face. “And you are to
mention this to no one.” “My lips are
sealed, Sire.” “You may go.” “Your Grace,” Coel
murmured, bowing against his staff and turning to leave. “And one last
thing,” the king’s voice added, when Coel had nearly reached the door. “My Liege?” “I wish you to
send a messenger requesting Cathan’s presence here in my chambers before the
feast tonight.” Coel turned as
fast as his wounded leg would permit. “Here, Sire?” “You have heard my
command. Now, go!” Imre choked. As Coel slipped
through the doorway and closed the door behind him, he could hear faint sobs
coming from within. The summons was
relayed to Cathan. Obedient to the king’s command, he presented himself at the
castle at the appointed time, garbed in the prescribed tunic, robe, and cloak
of winter white. It was dark
outside already, and had been snowing steadily since mid-afternoon. Looking up
at the bleak facade of the castle keep, Cathan found himself wishing he were
somewhere else—anywhere but here. He could not explain the feeling; he had
never felt it about Imre before. He put it from his mind as the door was opened
and he climbed from his litter. He was given
admittance by an under-steward, who took his outer cloak and cap without
ceremony and then entrusted him to a young page bearing a torch. The page lighted
him through a series of narrow passageways and vaulted chambers, finally
leading him up the steep, spiral staircase to the royal apartments. The lad’s
knock brought one of Imre’s own white-liveried squires to the door, and the
young man bowed correct welcome before ushering Cathan into an austere presence
chamber. There was no word of explanation. As soon as Cathan
was alone, he turned to survey the room. He had been here many times before,
but that had always been in summertime, at the intimate little supper
gatherings Imre loved—his closest friends and advisors, and perhaps a few
musicians or bards. But Cathan had never been here alone before, and never in
winter. The room—floored, walled, and ceiled in white marble and alabaster—was
cold and drafty, despite the fire burning on the hearth—and it was darker than
he remembered it, though there were lighted candle sconces spaced around the walls.
He supposed it seemed so because the room was empty. He started toward
the fire, but then his eye was caught by a door standing slightly ajar, a gleam
of brighter light streaming from within the adjoining room. Drawn by the light,
he wandered over to it and peered in. It was a tiny,
private chantry, hardly more than a closet, also totally lined in white marble
and ablaze with candles. Even the kneeling cushion before the tiny altar was
covered in pale, silvery damask. The place reminded Cathan of nothing so much
as a tomb. Now, why had he thought that? he wondered, as he folded his arms
across his chest against the chill. In summer, this chamber had always been a
cool refuge from the noonday heat, banked with flowers and rushlights, the
scent of sweet spices and rosemary mingling on the air. How else should it be
in whiter, except cold and bleak, especially when its master— No, he would not
dwell on that. He knew what made the room so bleak, what laid the weight of
winter on his soul. Imre would come—else, why had he called him here? But it
would never be the way it was in the old days, before the murder of a corrupt
and debauched Deryni had rent their friendship for the sake of human lives.
Accept it, Cathan: the world is not what it was. He bowed his head
and breathed a silent prayer at that, then crossed himself and turned to go
back to the fire in the presence chambers but was startled to discover Imre
standing beside the closed outer door, leaning against it with his hands behind
him. Cathan froze and stared. He had not heard the king enter. “So solemn for
Yule Court?” Imre said, slowly crossing the distance separating them. He was garbed from
chin to toes in a sweep of ice-white velvet, furred at hem and sleeves and
throat with bands of white fox. A belt of gem-set silver plaques bound the
fullness of the robe into deep folds which scarcely stirred as he walked. A
heavy silver chain encircled his neck and hung almost to his waist. His head
was bare, the chestnut hair spread shining and loose on his shoulders. His face
was still, guarded, as he gazed across at Cathan. Cathan dropped to
his knees and kissed the hand which was extended. “Pardon, Sire. I was not
certain of the reception I should receive.” “Have you any
reason to be fearful?” Imre inquired, clasping his hands behind him once more
and moving to the chantry doorway. Cathan blinked and
scrambled to his feet, to stand awkwardly a few feet behind his king. “I know of no
reason, Sire. If I have offended in some way of which I am not aware, I pray you
to tell me how, so that I may make amends. Surely the King knows me to be his
good and faithful servant. At one time, he did me the honor to call me friend.” Imre glanced at
the floor at that, then leaned his hands along either side of the chantry doorjamb
with a sigh. A sheathed, silver-chased dagger was thrust through the back of
his belt; it had not been apparent before beneath the wide, fur-lined sleeves.
He did not turn his head as he spoke again. “Aye, you are that, Cathan,” he said quietly. “You must
forgive me if I am but poor company tonight. I have just learned of the death
of a friend.” Cathan controlled
the urge to breathe a sigh of relief. Perhaps he was not the source of Imre’s
moodiness after all. “I’m sorry, Sire.” “Don’t you even
want to know who it was?” Imre said, half turning to gauge Cathan’s reaction.
“It was Earl Maldred.” Cathan’s lips made
a silent O of surprise. “He was struck
down by a hired assassin,” Imre added, watching Cathan’s face change to an
expression of shock. “Garrotted. In fact, I thought you might be praying for
him when I came in—but of course, you couldn’t have known.” “No, I...” Cathan turned his
face away and tried to compose himself, aware of Imre’s eyes on him, searching
out his reaction. Maldred dead! And
struck down by a hired assassin! But there must be more to it than that. There
was a tension in Imre, an anticipation. Imre was waiting for him to say
something. But what? That he was sorry? He dared not he. He had never lied to
Imre— never, in all their years. “If you mourn,
then I am sorry,” Cathan said carefully. “You’re sorry
because I mourn—but not because Maldred is dead.” Imre laughed bitterly. “Well,
I suppose that’s sufficient. I know you had no great love for him. He killed
your peasants, after all. By your reckoning, he deserved his fate.” Cathan glanced at
the floor in confusion, not understanding the direction the conversation was
taking— then fearing that he did. “Sire, if you
suggest that I would have wished this upon Earl Maldred, I beg you to put it
from your mind. Perhaps Maldred did carry out his orders with more zeal than
was necessary. In fact, I am almost certain he did,” he added, almost under his
breath. “But I cannot fault him for doing his duty.” “But you fault me,
don’t you?” Imre snapped, whirling on Cathan to look him in the eye. “I gave
the orders for the executions, Cathan. I am the king. The law is the law. Do
you dare rebuke me for carrying out that law?” “Sire, I never
said—” “Of course, you
never said!” Imre shouted. “Even you would not have dared to presume
upon our friendship to that extent. But you thought it, didn’t you? Ah, Cathan,
I had thought to be better served than this from you, of all people!” Cathan shook his
head in disbelief, no longer certain he was following Imre’s logic. Or that
there was logic. “I never blamed you personally. Sire. I swear it! If
there was bitterness in my heart, it was for your office, your crown, not the
man who must stand and sometimes bend under the weight of it.” As he raised his
gaze to meet Imre’s, there were tears in his eyes. Imre saw and, looked away,
into the chantry, his arms clasped tightly against his chest. “You never, in
thought or deed, held me to blame for the deaths of those peasants?” Cathan dropped to
both knees, lifting his hands in supplication. “As God is my witness, I swear
it, Imre,” he whispered. A long silence
followed, broken only by the sounds of their breathing, and then Imre reached
slowly to the chantry door and pulled it closed. He stood in the presence
chamber with his back to Cathan for a long time, hands resting loosely on the
latch, then turned and leaned against the door once more. “Well, perhaps the
Willimites killed Maldred, then,” he said calmly. “That’s who they say killed
Rannulf, you know. Get up, get up.” Cathan obeyed, standing awkwardly before the now
subdued Imre, but the king would not look him in the eye. He seemed as ill at
ease as Cathan felt, and Cathan had the feeling that he should say
something—anything—but the words would not come. Silently, he watched as Imre
wandered idly over to one of the candle sconces and gazed up at the candle
flames, touched his finger to a rivulet of hot wax. What could he say? What
could Imre say? “There are other
rumors afoot about Rannulf s murder, Cathan. Did you know that?” “Other—rumors,
Sire?” Cathan said, swallowing uneasily. “There are those
who would like to implicate you in some way.” “Me?” “Yes.
Preposterous, isn’t it?” Imre said. The lips were smiling as Imre turned, but
the eyes were cold as flint. “They postulate that the reason you were so
distressed at the executions is that you could have saved those people, that
you were a Willimite sympathizer, and countenanced Rannulf s murder. That’s
specious, of course, but you and he did have words more than once, didn’t you?” “Sire, he was a
cruel, sadistic man,” Cathan said defensively. “Deryni or no, I did not permit
him on our lands, nor did my father. Everyone knew that. I did not countenance
his murder—but I cannot, in conscience, say that I was sorry to hear of it.” “Even when you
learned that he died a common traitor’s death? He was noble, Cathan, noble.” “His murderers
apparently thought he deserved it,” Cathan said enigmatically. Imre started at
that, turning his head away and closing his eyes in pain, though Cathan could
not see that. “Noble traitors
face the headsman’s ax or the sword, not the gibbet and knives, the horrible
agonies which Rannulf suffered.” “And nobility is
not necessarily a thing conferred by birth, Sire,” Cathan said softly. “If a
man be without it, all the laurels and diadems and crowns in the world cannot
make him so.” “No,” Imre
breathed. “Nor can the meanest death take it away,” He stared down at
his hands, turning them front and back dazedly, as though he did not really see
them, then schooled his face to a gentler mien. “But, we digress,”
he said, turning to walk slowly toward Cathan, his hand outstretched. “And the
hour of Court draws near. Come, my friend. We must seem to be merry, though in
our hearts we mourn.” He reached out as though
to embrace Cathan, his lips smiling even as his heart twisted itself in his
breast. But as his arm encircled Cathan’s shoulder, and Cathan smiled with
relief, Imre’s other hand was moving to the hilt of the dagger he wore in the
hollow of his back. A deft shift of weight, a flick of the wrist, and it was
done, the dagger driving upward beneath the ribs, piercing arteries and nerves
and pounding heart in one fatal stab. Cathan died as he
collapsed in Imre’s arms, his handsome face guileless, astonished, as innocent
as a child’s. Imre, when he saw
what he had done, sank slowly to the floor with the dead Cathan in his arms;
cradled his beloved friend wordlessly, mindlessly, Cathan’s blood clotting on
the bold robe of winter white and silver which he wore. It was thus that
Coel Howell found them a quarter-hour later, after repeated inquiries of Imre’s
squires had revealed only that the king was still alone with Lord Cathan and
did not wish to be disturbed. Coel accepted that
excuse at first, toying with the head of his staff in annoyance as the minutes
dragged on. Finally, when he could stand it no longer, he limped to the door
and knocked—then knocked again, louder. When there was no response, he eased
the door open a crack and peered in, froze, then slipped inside and closed the
door securely behind him, his breath catching in his throat. Imre, his back to
the door, was slouched motionless over a still, white-garbed form, a dark smear
of blood staining the tiled floor beside him. The king did not move as Coel
made his way haltingly across the polished marble, and for just an instant Coel
wondered if all the blood was Cathan’s. “Sire? Your Grace,
are you all right?” Imre still did
not respond, though by now Coel could see that he was breathing. The king held
Cathan’s lifeless body loosely in his arms, the tawny head laid close against
his chest, Imre’s dark, hair tumbling down to hide his face. There was blood on
Imre’s hands and on a silver-chased dagger lying by his knee. Carefully, Coel
knelt beside the pair, wincing as he eased his bandaged leg. “Your Grace, are
you injured? What happened?” Imre flinched at
the voice, but he did not look up. “I killed him,
Coel. I had to,” he whispered, so softly that Coel missed the first few words.
“What you said, it was true. He lied to me, but—but— Oh, God, what am I going
to do? I’ve killed him!” He raised a
tear-streaked face to stare miserably at Coel, his eyes puffy and red from
weeping. Then he looked down at Cathan and slowly relaxed his grip, let the
body sag from his arms to lie across his lap. The face was startled still, even
in death, the eyes half open and staring. Imre shuddered as he saw them, but
when Coel tried to reach across and close them, Imre struck his hand away and
closed the eyes himself. Then he eased the body to the floor, shaking his head
as though on the verge of tears again, stifling a sob. Coel swallowed
nervously and wiped damp palms against his thighs, acutely aware that he must
end this scene before Imre broke down completely. He had not expected this. He
had caught Imre’s meaning clearly enough this morning—that Cathan would not die
by the headman’s ax or other public execution—but he had not anticipated that
Imre would do the deed himself. A calculated accident, perhaps, or even an assassination—but
not this bloodying of the royal hands. Still, he must not
falter now. Imre believed himself to have been betrayed by Cathan; and he must
continue to believe that, if Cathan’s death were to do Coel any good. He must
plant the seeds of confirmation now, while Imre was still vulnerable. Besides,
with the investigation proceeding on the activities of Joram MacRorie and Rhys
Thuryn, perhaps soon he would not have to manufacture evidence. “Come away, Sire,”
he said gently. “There is nothing you can do. The past is past forever. You did
as you must do.” Imre sniffed
noisily several times, shook his head from side to side. “He lied to me, Coel,”
he whispered. “I gave him trust and love, and he returned betrayal.” “Yet, even in
that, you showed your love through mercy, Sire. Not every king would let a
traitor die so well.” “Not precisely
traitor,” Imre breathed. “No, this was private treachery we settled. I could
not let him face the ax for that.” “Then, best to die
the way he did, before ought else could be discovered, Sire,” Coel murmured,
casting the new seed and hoping it would grow. There was a short
pause, and then Imre looked up at Coel in dull dismay. “What?” “I am sorry, Sire.
There are indications that he may have been involved in something more. Pray,
do not trouble yourself with it now. The man is dead.” “What else?” Imre
insisted. “I want to know.” “I don’t know
myself, exactly,” Coel said, feigning reluctance. “Something involving his
family, his brother Joram and a Healer named Rhys Thuryn, probably his father
as well. I have no certain proof as yet, only suspicions. But all of them bear
watching. Shall I see to it?” The king blinked
and swallowed hard, his eyes glazed with his grief, then nodded once, curtly.
He raised his arm as though to wipe his sleeve across his face, but there was
blood on his hand and spattered down the fur cuff, as well as the great stain
across his chest where he had held the dying Cathan close. He froze, as though
seeing the blood for the first time, then looked up at Coel with eyes that were
suddenly frightened, like a small, lost boy’s. “My God, he’s
dead. What will his father say?” “What does it
matter?” Coel replied archly. “Though you choose to view him otherwise, Camber
MacRorie is a subject like any other. You need not justify your actions to him.
Besides, he himself is suspect.” “But—” “So far as the
outside world need know, Cathan MacRorie simply collapsed and died while
speaking with his king before the opening of the Yule Court,”“ Coel said
sternly, his eyes catching and holding Imre’s. “You are the king. Who will dare
to gainsay you?” “But, the wound—” “If you do not
acknowledge its existence, then it does not exist,” Coel said firmly. “Come,
Sire.” He held out his hand. “The Court is waiting, and you must change your
clothes. While you do that, I will make arrangements for the body to be
returned to Caerrorie.” Dazedly but
compliantly, Imre gazed down once more at the still form of Cathan and touched
his shoulder a final time in farewell. Then he sighed deeply and climbed to his
feet. But he did not
take the hand which Coel offered, nor would he meet the older man’s eyes. And
when Coel left the king in the hands of his dressers to wash and change, the
nobleman was both thoughtful and uneasy. Coel’s words, as he penned his orders
to the guards, were studied, cautious. Half an hour
later, armed with the orders he had written, Coel knocked on the door to Imre’s
inner chambers and then opened it, not waiting for the servants to admit him. A crash of
breaking glass rang out in the next room, followed by the emergence of a
red-faced squire who was trying to mop a purple stain off his white winter
livery. Almost immediately, Imre could be heard calling for more wine. By the
sound, he had already had more than was wise. “My Liege,” Coel
called, stepping cautiously into the sleeping room, “it’s getting very late.” With a clatter of
wooden rings, the curtain of a dressing alcove was pulled back to reveal a
flushed and wild-eyed Imre clutching at the fabric with one bejewelled hand, a
silver goblet in the other. Hair awry, he was wearing a court tunic of scarlet
velvet, almost indecently short, which was richly encrusted across the front
and at throat and wrists with threads of gold bullion. Two body servants,
clad in white velvet and fur as Imre had been earlier, were looking very
uncomfortable, one of them holding Imre’s crown in nervous, gloved fingers, the
other clutching an ivory comb. Beyond them, in the next room, Coel could see
the ruin of what had been Imre’s dressing chamber, chests of clothes dumped in
disarray, a mound of crimson-stained white velvet lying in a heap in the middle
of the floor. It took little imagination to picture the royal mayhem which must
have taken place once Imre was alone with his servants and had a copious amount
of wine in his otherwise empty stomach. The servant with
the comb shifted uneasily and started to bring it toward his master’s head,
then thought better of it and glanced warily at Coel. “His Grace has
decided to wear scarlet tonight, my lord,” he announced, his tone clearly
indicating his disapproval and that he hoped for the older man’s support. “Whatever His
Grace wishes,” Coel replied. He sketched a short bow in Imre’s direction and
tucked the parchment he was holding into his tunic. “Sire, your appearance will
dazzle all the Court. However, if you will permit, I would be honored to assist
you to finish dressing, so that these gentle lads can be about their other
duties.” Imre looked at him
closely, swaying slightly on his feet, then stifled a slight, uncontrollable
giggle. “Of course, my dear man. Send the louts away.” Snatching the
comb, he made an energetic attempt to tame his hair, nearly sloshing wine down
the front of his new tunic with the vigor of his attack; then he stood meekly
as Coel rescued the goblet and set it on a side table. Coel ushered the
servants to the door of the dressing chamber and gestured toward the
bloodstained robe, mouthing the order to burn it, then closed the door behind
them and returned to where Imre was cheerfully tangling his hair worse than it
had been before. With a bow and a
smile, Coel prised the comb out of Imre’s hand and began working the tangles
out of the long chestnut locks. When he had finished, he turned away to pick up
the crown which the squires had left, and returned his attention just in time
to keep Imre from draining the goblet again. Luckily, Imre was
still at the pliable stage, so he did not resist when Coel took the cup from
him. But God knew, the king had had enough to drink for a while. Whether Imre
came out of the Great Hall under his own power was his own business; and if he
had to be carried out, that would not be the first time. But he must at least
be able to maneuver his way into the hall, or the Princess Ariella would be
even more furious than she was certain to be at their late arrival. Coel put
the cup out of reach and hoped that Imre would not make a scene. Imre, drunk,
could. be a very difficult young man. But Imre did not
resist. He let himself be drawn up to attention, and the crown put on his head,
then stood still while Coel fastened the short, ermine-lined mantle over one
shoulder, the fur contrasting vividly against the blood red of tunic, hose, and
shoes. Only when they were heading for the door, Imre leaning heavily on his
arm, did Coel remember the orders stuck inside his tunic. Abruptly, he turned
the king around and marched him back to a writing desk, pulling the parchment
out. “Just one last
thing, Sire,” he said, spreading the parchment on the writing table, “and then
we’ll go into the hall and get you some more wine.” As he dipped a
quill in ink and extended it to Imre, the king’s eyes grew cold, like agate,
and Coel suddenly realized that much, if not all, of the drunkenness was a
facade. “The orders concerning
Camber?” Imre asked, enunciating each syllable with great care. Coel nodded, an
instant of uncertainty racing through his mind, though no trace of it showed on
his face. Imre studied him
for a long moment, then snatched the pen from him and scrawled his name at the
bottom of the page. Half in apprehension and half in amazement, Coel watched as
Imre thrust the quill back into its holder, ruining the point in the process,
and turned away. Imre had not even read the orders, had not glanced at the contents. “Do you not wish
to read it first, Sire?” “No.” Imre took a few
steps away and bowed his head, and Coel looked down at the page, at the drying
ink, at the words he himself had inscribed—innocuous, this time, at least—then
decided to risk further inquiry. “I could have
written anything, you know, Sire. It could be death warrants for all of them.” “Not even you would
dare that,” Imre replied in a low voice, not looking back at him. “I have
signed it; most men would take that as a sign of trust. Do you question the
judgment of your king?” Coel contained a
smile, then picked up the parchment and inspected the signature—dry now—before
creasing the orders sharply. “Certainly not, Sire. Do you wish to seal it, or
shall I?” “The seal is in
the box,” Imre said softly. “Once, it was his province. Now it is yours,
to tell of his foul murder.” “His sad demise,
Sire,” Coel corrected, in a similar tone but with growing confidence.
“Unfortunate”—he paused for emphasis, plucking the seal from its box—”but
necessary.” “Necessary,” Imre
repeated in a strained whisper. He did not hear
the wax as it hissed and spat, falling on the parchment and receiving the
imprint of the royal seal. And shortly after that, they were striding down the
corridor toward the Great Hall, Imre with a cup in his hand once more—Coel had
not dared to refuse it to him—and the orders on their way to the guards who
would escort Cathan’s body home to Camber. The feast that
night went even more badly than Coel had feared, given Imre’s initial state of
inebriation. Ariella,
predictably annoyed at her brother’s failure to appear at the appointed hour,
had waited a reasonable amount of time, the guests milling restlessly in the
hall, then had made her own entrance and ordered the company seated—though even
she did not dare to begin the feast without Imre. But the musicians played and
the wine flowed freely, and the conversation sparkled at the Yule Court of Imre
of Festil, as did his guests. Seated at the high
table beside her brother’s empty chair, Ariella laughed and drank and flirted
with the great lords and gentlemen seated near her, her vivid beauty glowing
from its setting of velvet and satin and snow-white fur. Diamonds blazed at
throat and wrists and around the hem of her gown; more trembled seductively on
her forehead beneath the silky fur hood which confined her hair and framed her
face like some strange whiter flower. All the company
was garbed in white tonight, out of deference to Imre’s wishes for a true
winter court, and thus it was with a breath of surprise that the assembled
gentles greeted the appearance of their monarch in the doorway of the Great
Hall, clothed from head to toe in scarlet, except for the lining of the mantle
he wore. From his demeanor and the cup in his hand, it was simple to deduce
what had delayed the King’s Grace—or so they thought. Without pausing
for ceremony, Imre wove his way down the hall, Coel limping in a little
embarrassment at his right elbow. The surprised guests knocked over benches and
stools to get to their feet and bow as he passed, though Imre would not have
known the difference if they had not moved. Ariella, better accustomed than
most to her brother’s idiosyncrasies when he had been drinking, picked up a new
goblet of wine as he approached and offered it to him with a curtsey as he
reached the dais and staggered to his seat. “You’re drunk and
you’re late,” she whispered, sotto voce, as he took the cup and drained
it to the dregs. “Where on earth have you been?” “In Hell, madame,
in Hell.” Imre burped, then
waved the Court to their seats and bade the musicians play. As music and
conversation resumed, Coel slipped to his accustomed seat near the high table
and sat, watching apprehensively, as Imre drank a second goblet, ignored
Ariella’s further attempts to question him, then paused while a page refilled
his cup and drained that, too. The stewards had not even been able to get the
first course served before the king lurched to his feet, his face flushed from
the wine, the cup unsteady in his hand. “Why do you laugh and
sport among yourselves?” he shouted. The room was
quickly hushed, and the musicians broke off with a few discordant notes. “Why do you make
merry?” the king repeated, indignation coarsening his voice, his eyes
glittering dangerously. “You, Selkirk, why such merriment on this night, of all
nights?” The weapons
master, seated at a table partway down the hall with a number of his fellows,
jumped hastily to his feet and bowed, his face as white as the tunic he wore. “By your leave,
Your Grace, but you did command it.” “I?” Imre paused
to take a deep draught from his goblet. “I did command it,” he repeated
incredulously, as though he had never heard of anything so preposterous. “Damn
you, Selkirk, do you not know that a man is dead?” He hurled the
goblet toward the shrinking weapons master, where it narrowly missed a page’s
ducking head, then swept his arm across the table, sending silver ewers and
platters crashing to the floor. “Damn you, get
out! All of you, get out!” He picked up
another ewer—this one of glass— and dashed it to the floor with an oath, then
lurched backward and overturned his chair as he stumbled from the hall. His sister,
stunned and outraged at his actions, murmured instructions to the head steward
to clear the hall, then followed in the direction Imre had gone. A wide-eyed
guard pointed out the chamber into which the king had disappeared, but all of
Ariella’s cajoling and pleading could not induce him to come out. Finally, in a
fit of temper herself, Ariella stalked back to the hall to see that her orders
had been obeyed, before retiring to her chambers to sleep. Imre also slept,
after a time, sprawled facedown on the floor of his refuge chamber, a cup of
wine staining the carpet beside his head. But guilt and an urgent bladder
awakened him before many hours had passed, and it was with extreme care that he
staggered, still quite drunk, into the room’s garderobe to relieve himself. His
head was reeling from the wine, and he poured himself another cup with shaking
hands before venturing to the chamber door and raising the bar. Outside, the
torches in the cressets were nearly burned down, the corridors silent. A lone
guard snapped to attention and gave a royal salute as the king made his way
down the narrow passage, fending himself off from the walls with his empty
hand. Faintly, from the direction he had come, Imre could hear the sounds of
servants clearing away the disaster in the Great Hall, and abruptly the reason
for his drinking came back to him. With that, he was
taken by a fit of shaking, and it was all he could do to bring the cup to his
lips and drink again. Then he was climbing the winding stairs toward his
chambers, halting to rest halfway up, then turning and descending again,
shuffling uncertainly down another passageway to another winding stair. He would go to
Ariella. She would understand— though he thought he remembered her shouting at
him through the door as he fell asleep earlier. She would know what to do. She
who had soothed his childhood hurts and held him close against the terrors of
the dark—she would find the words to comfort him now. She would not fail him,
though Cathan and all others did. Within minutes, he
was standing hesitantly outside her chambers, swaying uncertainly on his feet,
staring into the depths of his nearly empty cup. Abruptly, he drained off the
contents and then knocked thunderously on the door. “Ar—Ari?” he
called, his voice cracking on the first attempt. “Ari, open-the door—please?” “Who—who is it?”
came a timorous voice on the other side of the door. One of the servants, no
doubt. “I want to see
Ari. It’s me, Imre.” There was a gasp,
an unintelligible command from farther away, and then the door was open and a
maid was making a deep curtsey. Ignoring her, Imre stumbled past and headed for
the doorway of the inner chamber. Candles were being lit by another servant
within, and as he entered he was aware of the shadowy form of his sister
pulling on a robe over her sleeping shift near the great, curtained and
canopied bed. The glare of the candles hurt his eyes, and he could not seem to
see her clearly. “My cup is empty,
Ari,” he whispered plaintively, turning the cup upside down and giving it a
shake to demonstrate that it was indeed so. His sister’s voice
came from the shadows, soothing, reassuring. “Maris, pour some wine for His
Grace and then leave us.” The girl by the
candles came to him then, dipping in a quick curtsey before filling his cup.
But when she started to go, he caught her sleeve and held her fast while he
drained the cup and extended it again. With a glance at her mistress, the girl
filled the cup a second time, then left the flagon on a table and went out.
Imre began to drink again, but something blocked his light and he looked up.
His sister was standing between him and the candles, her reddish hair tumbling
down around her shoulders. He could not see her face, but the flames touched
her hair with fire. “Ari?” he said in
a small voice. A slim white hand
was extended toward him, resting on his where he held the cup. “Don’t you think
you’ve had enough for one night?” “Never enough to
wash this away,” he mumbled, starting to raise the cup again and
frowning as she did not release his hand. “You don’t
understand, Ari. He’s dead. I killed him.” The hand on his
did not move. “Who is dead,
Imre? Whom did you kill?” His hand jerked
spasmodically at that, and he lost his grip on the cup; he would have dropped
it had she not caught it. His sob stuck in his throat and shook his body as he
buried his face in his hands. “Cathan. I’ve
killed Cathan. He was a traitor, and I had to do it, but— Oh, God, Ari, I’ve
killed him. And I—loved—him.” Ariella closed her
eyes briefly, remembering the solemn, determined Deryni lord, whose price she
and Imre had never found, and slowly raised Imre’s cup to her lips and drank
deeply in ironic salute. Then she let the empty cup fall to the carpet beside
her and took her brother in her arms as she had done when they were children. “It will be all
right, Imre,” she murmured, as he clung to her shoulders and the tears stung
his eyes. “You are the king, and must do what you must do. But you are also a
man, and a man may mourn a friend.” With that, Imre’s grief came pouring over him and he
sank, sobbing, to his knees, to bury his face against her waist. So he remained
for a long time, sobbing bitterly. She stroked his hair, rubbed the tension
from his shoulders, and brushed the top of his head with her lips. At length
the anguish faded, to be replaced by a growing tingling in every part of his
body—and in hers. And as he raised his tear-streaked face and read the passion
in her eyes, he was suddenly aware of the soft promise of her body locked in
the circle of his arms. In one dazzling
flash of revelation, he knew that both of them had been moving toward this
moment for a long time. As he struggled to
his feet, her mouth sought his, as hungry as his own need. He was aware of her
pressing hard against him as they clung to one another, the exquisite softness
as his lips moved down her throat, as he crushed his face against her flawless breasts. Then they were being drawn, one by the other, toward
the shadowed recesses of the great, curtained bed, and his blood was roaring in
his head, and he lost himself in the urgency of sweet oblivion. chapter elevenThe just shall
be in everlasting remembrance. —Psalms
112:6 It was a stunned
and hushed contingent which met the royal escort that next day bore Cathan
MacRorie home. The cortege from
Valoret arrived amid light snowfall near noon, bearing Cathan’s body on a
two-horse litter, the horses plumed and caparisoned in black, the body covered
with a velvet pall, snow-frosted. The king’s men, a score of them, carried
their spears reversed in their stirrups. A pair of monks walked to either side
of the bier, swinging censers and chanting prayers for the soul of the
departed. After the royal escort, another litter bore the dead man’s widow and
children, young Revan following behind on horseback with Wulpher and a handful
of the loyal Tal Traeth servants. None of them were misled by the royal
pageantry, for they had seen the blood-stained body before it was washed and
dressed and laid out in state for the short journey home. They knew the king’s
hypocrisy for what it was, though even they did not dream of the extent. Word had flown
from the capital as only news of tragedy can fly, reaching Tor Caerrorie in the
small hours of the night. The man who brought the news was Crinan, Cathan’s
devoted body squire. He had been at Tal Traeth when the soldiers brought his
master home; he had watched, mindless in his grief, as the king’s lieutenant
barked orders for the preparation of the body; and he had bristled with pride
as old Wulpher, the steward, pushed the man aside and himself performed this
last service for their slain young lord. Torn at first
between his wish to stay at his master’s side and the necessity to warn the
rest of the family of what had happened, Crinan held his peace until the king’s
men had bedded down in the Great Hall for the night—for they would be
accompanying the body to Caerrorie the next morning. Then, spurred by the fear
that the king might make retribution against all the MacRories, Crinan left his
grieving vigil and took horse for Caerrorie. Three hours later, he was pounding
up the approach to the outer gate. The sound of his
horse’s hooves shattered the night silence of the castle and set the hounds to
baying, and soon the entire household was awake and shivering in the cold,
ill-lit Great Hall. At first Crinan
could not tell them—he was physically unable, after his long and breathless ride
in the cold and snow. But he was sure that Camber knew before he spoke, in that
uncanny way which only Deryni seemed to have. Camber had received his words
with wooden silence, had turned his face away for a mere instant before
tonelessly asking Sam’1 to ride on to Saint Liam’s and pass the word to Joram.
Rhys Thuryn was already in the house, had been working late on documents in the
MacRorie library, and he, too, came into the Great Hall at the commotion, to
hear the news in shock and hold the weeping Evaine close in helpless comfort.
After a few more low-voiced commands to the servants regarding necessary
preparations for the morrow, Camber had requested them all to return to their
respective chambers to try to rest. There was little further sleep for anyone
at Caerrorie that night. Next morning,
under a cold, sapphire sky, Camber’s household gathered in Caerrorie’s village
church to pray for the soul of Cathan MacRorie and wait for his body to come
home. Joram arrived before dawn, and young James Drummond an hour later. Evaine
and Rhys knelt together at Camber’s side, with Crinan and Sam’l and a dozen of
the closest household servants, as Joram led the prayers for the dead. Outside, the
people of the village gathered, and Camber permitted as many of them to enter
the church as could be accommodated, the rest of them kneeling quietly in the
outer yard. When, at last, word came that the cortege was approaching, the
villagers still outside went and lined the road in silence, each one making a
deep obeisance as the bier passed. The king’s
lieutenant was visibly annoyed at this sign of devotion—which, to his mind,
should have been reserved for their sovereign—but he dared do nothing. For
there was a grim, proud man waiting on the steps of the church to receive his
son—a High Deryni Lord capable of unspeakable vengeance if he chose to wreak
it. The lieutenant was Deryni himself, and not unskilled in the use of his
powers, but he did not relish an arcane confrontation with Camber of Culdi. The
lieutenant ordered his men to stand quiet, and silently prayed that the Earl of
Culdi would not defy the king’s commands. The lieutenant’s
fears were unjustified. He should have known that violence was not Camber’s
way, even in extreme grief. Camber stood straight and calm—deadly calm—as the
cortege drew to a halt, fixing the soldiers coldly with his gaze as Joram,
Rhys, and the faithful Crinan and Sam’l removed the bier from the horse-litter
and bore it into the church. He embraced Elinor and his grandsons before
sending them inside. Then Camber stood watch until Wulpher and Revan and the
other servants from Cathan’s household were permitted to come forward, to kneel
weeping at his feet until he raised them up and, with low and gentle voice,
bade them also go inside. Slowly and
deliberately, he himself followed them and closed the doors, making it clear to
the most hardened of them that the king’s men were not welcome in this hour of
grief. The Lieutenant wisely chose not to challenge that statement, but bade
his aide command the men to stand at ease. Inside, Joram MacRorie began the
Requiem Mass for his slain brother. When the Mass had
ended, Camber remained kneeling for a long time beside the body of his son,
pondering his next move. Burial would not be until that evening, for the grave
was not ready, so most of the villagers had gone into the courtyard after Mass,
leaving only members of the immediate family and household to keep silent
vigil. But the guards
were still outside, and Camber wondered about that, wondered why they were
staying, what orders they had received besides the command to escort Cathan’s
body home. Though the king’s lieutenant had said nothing to him—indeed, he had
not given the man a chance—Camber considered whether their mission might entail
more than they had done thus far. (Or was this his own guilt projecting
suspicion?) What if they were holding arrest warrants for the entire family,
and awaited only the conclusion of the burial rite tonight to serve those
warrants? There had been some reason for Cathan’s murder. Suppose Imre had
somehow gotten wind of their quest for Prince Cinhil? He let his eyes
search those remaining: Rhys at his side; Evaine, comforting the grieving
Elinor; James Drummond, kneeling sullen and alone far to the right of the nave;
the family servants of his and Cathan’s households. Sam’l had taken the
children back to the castle minutes before—no need for them to stay in the
church for the rest of the afternoon, grief-strained and frightened. What he
now planned would be difficult, but it must be done. With a slight
sigh, Camber crossed himself and got to his feet, shaking his head when Rhys
looked up and made as though to accompany him. Moving alone toward the back of
the church, he stopped beside one of the young pages still kneeling there and
spoke with him quietly for some minutes, the boy nodding vigorously from time
to time. Then Camber was tousling the boy’s head in affection, a slight smile
crossing his face as he turned and moved back up the aisle. Just before Camber
reached his former place by Rhys, the page glanced around nonchalantly, got to
his feet, and slipped away through a side door. Now, what was
all of that about? Rhys wondered, and started to ask as Camber knelt beside
him once more. But the proud old
Deryni shook his head and held a finger to his lips, his head bowed as though
in prayer once more. Puzzled, Rhys watched as Camber reached out and caught the
edge of the pall shrouding Cathan’s body, to bring the silk-fringed velvet
gently to his lips. It was not the pall
which Imre had sent, Rhys knew. That had been removed as soon as the body was
safely inside the church and the doors closed, to be replaced by another one
bearing the MacRorie arms, Cathan’s label of cadency stitched to it lovingly in
the pre-dawn hours by his sister Evaine. Rhys watched with
compassion as Camber let the velvet fall, sharing the older man’s grief as few
men could. As he laid his hand on Camber’s arm in a spontaneous gesture of
comfort, Camber looked up, his gray eyes sage, serene beyond all expectation. “Gentle Rhys, dear
to me as any son,” he murmured. “Will you come with me and help me?” Rhys nodded, not
trusting himself to speak, and Camber smiled fleetingly, covering Rhys’s hand
briefly with his own as the two of them stood. Walking quietly behind the altar
rail and out of the sanctuary, they went to the sacristy chamber, where Joram
had retired after Mass. Joram was kneeling at a prie-dieu, devoid of
vestments save for the black stole over his cassock, head cradled in his arms.
He looked up as his father and Rhys came into the room, hastily wiping a sleeve
across his eyes. The pale hair was dishevelled, and he smoothed it in an
automatic gesture. “Is anything
wrong?” “Nothing else,”
Camber said gently. He closed the door behind him and leaned against it,
warding the chamber from interference with a casual wave of his hand. “We have to talk,
Joram,” he said then. “Imre’s guards are still outside, and they don’t appear
to be leaving. Did you tell Cathan what we have been trying to do?” “No, sir, we
decided against it.” Joram removed his stole, touched it to his lips, and
paused before putting it away in the vestment press. “My God, you don’t suppose
Imre suspects, do you? He couldn’t! There’s no way he could know!” Camber raised an
eyebrow. “You were followed from Valoret two days ago, weren’t you? He
obviously suspects something, though I agree that it seems unlikely he could
have put all the pieces together so soon. But he apparently thought that Cathan
was involved in something treasonous. Or what happened—wouldn’t have happened.”
He glanced at the floor. “At any rate, and for whatever reason, Imre is taking
a hard look at us. I’m not sure we can stand the scrutiny.” Joram sat
carefully on the edge of the vestment press. “Are you saying we should give it
up?” “Good God, no! I’m
asking you to ride with Rhys to Saint Foillan’s now, today! If we don’t
get Cinhil out now, we may not get another chance.” “Now?” Joram
whirled on Rhys. “Did you know about this?” As surprised as
Joram, Rhys shook his head. “Sir, I mean no disrespect, but what makes you
think we have the chance now? You yourself said that Imre’s soldiers are still
outside. We can’t even use the Transfer Portal in the castle. It’s three weeks
before we’re expected in Dhassa.” Dhassa was the free, holy city in the Lendour
Mountains—a place where Imre’s power could not touch them. “You’ll have to
ride the entire way, then,” Camber said. “There’s an underground passage
leading out of this very room; Joram knows where it is. I’ve already sent a
page to secure horses and the other things you’ll need. He’ll be waiting at the
edge of the north woods within the hour.” “You’ve obviously
thought this out,” Joram said slowly. “But how are you going to explain our
absence, if we leave now?” “I don’t plan to
explain it,” Camber said, folding his arms across his chest and studying the
floor. “As far as the guards are concerned, you’ll still be here.” “We’ll still—
But—” Rhys broke off uncertainly and glanced at Joram, who had frozen at his
father’s words and now drew himself up stiffly. “Joram, what is
it?” Rhys whispered. Ignoring Rhys,
Joram stared steadily at his father. “Sir, if you have
in mind what I think you do—” “Hear me,” Camber
interrupted. His voice was low, but it suddenly crackled with authority. Rhys,
who had been about to ask what Camber was talking about, shut his mouth in
surprise. Joram was bristling with hostility, though he had not continued
speaking, and Rhys could feel the tension suddenly generated between the two.
Meekly, he backed off a pace, wanting no part of the clash of wills which he
sensed was about to unfold. “Father—” Joram
began again. “No. Hear me out.
I understand your reluctance. But, believe me, I have pondered the moral
aspects long and carefully. To be sure, there is deceit, but there are times
when such things cannot be avoided.” “They can be
avoided! Father, I don’t think—” “You don’t think?
Then, you admit that your view is only opinion!” Camber snapped. “You don’t
know that it’s morally wrong.” He glanced at Rhys briefly, his voice
still low, controlled, coolly logical. “Joram, if there
were any other way, you know I would take it. And if you can offer me another
option that will not endanger more lives than my way, I shall be delighted to
concede. But if we ever hope to see our Haldane on the throne, we must act now.
Imre’s soldiers are without. Someone suspects something, or they would not
still be here, and Cathan would not be dead. Even if Cathan was innocent of
conspiracy, we most assuredly are not. We’ve gone too far to stop now.” Joram, his eyes
blazing defiance, had stood stiffly, fists clenched at his sides, throughout
Camber’s argument, but now he turned his face away and let his shoulders sag.
Rhys, mystified at not knowing what the two were arguing about, sensed only
that Joram had lost and Camber had won. Wordlessly, he turned to Camber,
watching as the older man moved slowly to the side of his son—though he did not
touch him. “I’m sorry, Joram.
I understand, believe me. You know that I would never subject you to this if it
were not absolutely necessary. Oh, I admit that at first I thought your plan
the rash enthusiasm of youth. The arguments I gave you and Rhys nearly two
months ago are still valid, logically. But that was before I met Cinhil, and before
Cathan was murdered by that man who sits on the throne at Valoret. We have no
option but to proceed.” There was a long
silence, a period of several heartbeats in which no one moved. Then Joram bowed
his head. “Concede,” he
murmured. Muffling a sigh of
relief, Camber turned his attention back to Rhys. Before he could speak,
however, Joram pulled himself together and laid a restraining hand on his
father’s arm. “Rhys, have you
understood any of what we’ve been talking about?” the priest asked. “Well, frankly,
no. I gather that you—don’t approve of something on moral grounds, but I ...”
His voice trailed off lamely, and Camber sighed again, rubbing a weary hand
across his eyes. “Rhys, we’re
talking about shape-changing. Do you know what that is?” Rhys’s lips made
an awed O and he blinked in astonishment. “Well, I’ve read a little about it,
of course, but I thought it was only theory. And the sources that say anything
about it at all, claim that it’s—bl—” “Black magic,”
Camber said softly, speaking the words which Rhys only mouthed in awful
fascination. The older man cleared his throat, searching for the right words.
“Actually, it’s considered to be a gray area—a shade more dark than light,
perhaps, because it is deception; and deception is rarely used except for
personal gain. At the risk of sounding hypocritical, I’ll maintain that this is
a fair example of the end justifying the means. The escape of innocents from
danger not of their own doing is a generally accepted defense by all but the
most rigid purists,” Joram raised an
eyebrow at that and folded his arms across his chest. “I suppose that will
suffice for a logical argument for now, though we hardly qualify as innocents.” “But Imre doesn’t know
that yet—he only suspects.” Rhys, nagged by
the suspicion that he had just missed something crucial, cleared his throat
uneasily. “Just what is it you plan to do, sir?” “Um, sorry. I
assumed you realized. I intend to place your shapes on two of the servants
whose presence won’t be missed. I’ll use Crinan for you, Rhys, and Master
Wulpher, the steward, for Joram. Both of them have been loyal retainers of the
family from early boyhood, and I know they can be trusted. Also, they’re
somewhat used to magic, after having been around us for these many years.” “They’re not used
to this kind of magic,” Joram said sullenly. “And another thing: I was
to read the final rites for burial tonight. Wulpher is not a priest.” “No, but he’s a
well-read, God-fearing man who loved Cathan very much, and we can give him the
knowledge he needs to get by. I know you would rather be the one to do this
last thing for your brother, but it’s more important that you and Rhys be on
your way. You’ve already performed the essential rites. Besides, there will be
other priests here.” “But—” “I know, son,”
Camber said gently. And with a sigh, he placed a hand on the shoulder of each
man. “Rhys, would you
please find Crinan and Wulpher and bring them here? Don’t tell them why I want
to see them, just ask them to accompany you. But give me a few minutes with
Joram first, will you?” “Yes, sir.” Rhys
spoke with difficulty. Still stunned by
what he had heard, and sensing how Joram must be churning inside, judging from
his outward lack of composure, Rhys slipped from the sacristy and, outside,
leaned his forehead against the door, hands on the latch. He took several deep
breaths to calm his racing heart, but his mind refused to approach the topic of
shape-changing, ancient fears nibbling around the edges of his soul without
discipline until he, at length, applied one of his own charms for calmness and
willed his thoughts to order. He felt tranquillity wash over him like a gentle
wave. Only then was he able to approach the forbidden area with any degree of
rationality. Shape-changing. .
. . He remembered a passing mention of it in an old volume of conjury, of how
the conjuror superimposed the image of one person over that of another. The
book had mentioned pentagrams and blood circles, and charges to keep evil
influences out of the spell, but had not gone into any specifics as to how it
was actually done. Another source—now he found himself able to scan his
memories like a written index, ferreting out the information he needed—another
source had mentioned animal sacrifices and the assistance of demons. He counted
that as spurious. Still another text had insisted that shape-changing was not
possible at all—though that was obviously false in light of what Camber had
just said. Searching through his memory, Rhys found that he could not pin down
a single fact about shape-changing. He concluded that he was probably about to
learn far more about it than he really wanted to know. With a sigh, he
raised his head and went back into the church. Enough time had passed that
Camber and Joram should have resolved any remaining differences. He found the
servants easily enough, and managed to get them to the sacristy door without
too many questions. He paused only long enough to knock lightly before opening
the door and ushering them inside. The room was aglow
with candles, several dozen of them placed about the perimeter and dispelling
all sense of gloom or prescience of what was to come. Camber was standing
motionless before the vesting altar in one corner of the room, the candles
turning his hair to ruddy gold. Joram had his back to them, leaning with both
hands on the lid of the vestment press. His shoulders tensed as he heard the
door open, but he did not move. As the door closed and the wards were
re-established, Camber turned and came to greet the servants. “Thank you for
coming, my friends,” he said, extending his hand to each of them in turn. Crinan clasped the
hand nervously, eyes downcast, but Wulpher took it and, kneeling, kissed it,
tears welling in his eyes. “Forgive me for
bringing the young master back to you thus, m’lord,” the old man croaked, his
voice husky with grief. “I promised I would look after him for ye, and I—” “You are not to
blame, old friend,” Camber said, tenderly raising the old man up. “I know how
you loved my son. Your devotion shall not go unrewarded.” Wulpher could not
speak, but nodded gratefully. Crinan, too, swallowed hard and bowed his head. “But, I did not
ask you here for further grieving,” Camber said then, glancing at Rhys and
signalling with his eyes that he should go to Joram. “I wished to ask if you
would be willing to undertake a great risk for the sake of your master’s
memory. I cannot tell you in detail why I ask what I do, but it would be a
final service which you could render. Will you do this for him?” As the two nodded,
eyes wide and awed, Rhys moved silently behind them to touch Joram’s arm. The
priest nodded, then turned to face them. His expression was calm, composed, his
hair silver-pale in the candlelight. His eyes, like Rhys’s and the two
servants’, turned toward his father. “Very well,”
Camber said lightly. “It is necessary, I cannot tell you why, for Father Joram
and Lord Rhys to leave here now, before the burial tonight and without being
seen. This, in itself, presents no problem. Horses and supplies are being
prepared even now. However, their presence will be expected at the burial
tonight, as well as to be seen casually here on the grounds for the rest of the
afternoon, so that the king’s soldiers do not become suspicious. Your
assistance will give us the time we need.” The two servants
looked at one another, then back at Camber. Crinan wet his lips apprehensively. “You need someone
to play their parts, m’lord?” “Yes.” Crinan looked at
Joram and Rhys, at Wulpher, at himself, then back at Camber. “Begging your
pardon, m’lord, but I don’t think we look very much like Father Joram and Lord
Rhys. Oh, I could maybe pass for Lord Rhys in the dark, but—” Wulpher, too, had
finally found his tongue, and could not contain his skepticism any longer. “That’s right,
m’lord. We don’t look anything like the young lords.” “I can make you
look like them, if you will permit it,” Camber said. His tone was such
that both men froze, suddenly suspecting what he was talking about. Wulpher
gulped, and when he spoke, his voice was very small. “By—magic, m’lord?” Camber nodded, and
Crinan, too, swallowed nervously. “Isn’t
that—dangerous, sir?” “Not to you. A
little to me, to Joram and Rhys. You would remember nothing of it, once the
shape-changing was past. I would restore you to your own forms this evening, after
the household has retired for the night.” Crinan coughed
nervously, trying to formulate his question. “Ah, what if something goes wrong,
sir?” “With the spell?” “No, I mean,
suppose we’re recognized by the king’s men?” Camber smiled,
relieved. “You will not be recognized by anyone—not even my daughter, unless I
tell her. To all outward appearances, all voice and movement, you will be Joram
and Rhys. But I would rather not go into details which might alarm you
needlessly. Trust that I will not allow you to come to harm, and that I can do
what I say. Will you permit this?” There was a long
silence as each man thought about it, and then Wulpher dropped to his knees and
bowed his head with a sob. “I am your man, my
lord, and the Lord Cathan’s, as I have been since I swore you fealty many years
ago. If I can perform this last service for the young master, then I will do
it.” “Thank you,
Wulpher,” Camber murmured, clapping the man on the shoulder and looking across
at Crinan. “And you, Crinan? I would not rush your decision, but we haven’t
much time.” Crinan bowed his
head. “This—task that the young lords will undertake— They do not ride to slay
the king?” “They seek no
vengeance, Crinan. They ride not to Valoret or to Imre.” “Very well, then,
sir. I am also your man. What must we do?” With a slight
smile, Camber offered his hand, then signalled Wulpher to rise. “Wulpher, I’ll ask
you to wait outside with Joram for a few minutes. Rhys, please exchange clothes
with Crinan.” As the four moved
to do Camber’s bidding, the Deryni went back to the vesting altar and took up a
single candle, staring into its flame for a long time to prepare himself for
what was to come. When he was ready, he turned to inspect the room. Rhys was
helping a fumbling Crinan with the clasp of the physician’s mantle around his
shoulders, the physician now wearing the simple riding garb of Cathan’s former
squire. “The green of the Healer becomes you, Crinan,” Camber said, walking leisurely to stand before
Crinan and trying to put the young man at ease. Crinan swallowed
awkwardly, then squared his shoulders and stood a little taller as Camber put
the candle in his hands. . Four more candles
were placed on the floor, forming a five-foot square inside of which Camber
bade Crinan stand. Another candle was procured for Rhys, this one unlighted;
and then the two Deryni, Healer and Sage, joined Crinan within the square, Rhys
standing to Crinan’s right and Camber facing them. Casually, Camber laid his
hands on Crinan’s where they held the first candle. Crinan flinched. “Be not afraid,”
Camber smiled, his voice already lulling his subject to obey. “Thou hast but to
gaze into the flame and let thy thoughts go slack. Relax and watch the flame,
which blocks out thine awareness of ought else within these walls. I shall not
leave thee; thou art safe with me.” Unable to resist,
the squire did as he was bidden, staring deeply into the candle flame as
Camber’s voice soothed and silenced. After only seconds, Crinan swayed
slightly, his head drooping lower toward the flame. Abruptly, Camber tightened
his grasp on the man’s hands and extended control. Crinan’s eyes closed as
though in sleep. “Good,” Camber
breathed, releasing the hands and looking across at Rhys. “Now, stand while I
set the wards”—he gestured toward the candles of the square, and a circle of
silver light flared around them—”and we begin.” He lowered his
head and murmured a short passage which Rhys could not catch, before blowing
out Crinan’s candle with a scarce-breathed “Amen.” Then he held his left hand
beside Rhys’s darkened candle, fingers spread slightly. His eyes met Rhys’s,
calm, serene. “Match hand and
mind with mine, my friend, and let your candle flare when we are one.” With a solemn nod,
Rhys touched his fingertips to Camber’s, stilling his thoughts that the other
might come in. His eyes slitted shut, the better to exclude the outer world,
and then he was aware of Camber’s palm pressed firmly against his own. In total
calm and all control, he bade the light flare in his other hand, and felt the
still, almost musical resonance he had come to cherish, as his thoughts meshed
with those of the Master. Then he was seeing
through Camber’s eyes, noting the candle burning steadily in his own left hand,
his right pressed palm to palm with Camber’s. He watched Camber’s other hand
rise slowly to rest on Crinan’s forehead. The Master’s eyes
closed, and there was only the crystal stillness, the peace, the all-pervading
oneness of the bond they shared. Camber’s voice was like the whisper of leaves
rustling in a summer breeze, which no mere mortal may command; and Rhys knew
that what Camber bade would be. ‘‘Behold the light
in thy mind’s eye,” the Master said to him. “It is the essence of thine outward
form upon the earth. Extend it now, and let it flow around the man here
standing. His visage shall be thine until the need is past, as like to thee as
any man may see.” And as he spoke,
Rhys felt a soothing lethargy coursing through his limbs, a pulling of energy
which tingled on his skin and centered in the hand that held the flame, which
now ached to leap the void to Crinan’s hands. None saw the mist which gathered
round, or watched the fire flare from hand to hand. But suddenly Rhys knew the
deed was done, the spell complete. He staggered as
the bond dissolved away, and looked to see his candle dark, the one in Crinan’s
hands ablaze with light. And as his gaze swept upward to the face, he gasped to
see his own. His hands dropped to his sides in wonder; the candle fell
forgotten to the floor. “My God!” was all
Rhys could manage to whisper. Camber smiled
distractedly and sighed, the silvery eyes veiled now, shrouded with fatigue.
“And no demons or other evil that I could detect,” he quipped. “Joram will be
pleased.” He passed his
hands above the wards and murmured words, and the silver circle died. Then he
bent to douse the candle in Crinan’s hand, touched the squire lightly on the
forehead. Rhys could only stand and watch, speechless with awe, as Crinan’s
eyelids fluttered wide. “Crinan, attend
us. Look at me.” Crinan did so, his
face—or rather, Rhys’s face— bewildered. “Did it w—work?” He faltered as he
realized the voice was not his own. Smiling
reassurance, Camber took his arm and led him to the vestment press and showed
him a small mirror. Crinan gasped and ran his hands over his face; and even the
gesture was Rhys’s. Rhys shook his head disbelievingly as Camber laid a hand on
Crinan’s shoulder and calmed him once more. “Crinan, I’ll ask
you to assume your role now, and to go outside with Rhys. Then, when you’re ready,
you’re to go back into the church as Rhys, and meditate. I’ll join you
directly. If anyone tries to make conversation, which I doubt, just do what you
think Rhys would do. You’ll be guided when there’s need.” “I will, sir.” The
voice was crisp, professional— and Rhys’s. Rhys was still
shaking his head as he opened the door and let his double go through. Joram and Wulpher
were directly outside, Wulpher already in a light trance from Joram’s
ministrations, so the steward did not see the two Rhyses who emerged from the
sacristy. But Joram did, and he froze in amazement as the first one, wearing
Rhys’s clothes, nodded acknowledgment and then went past to wait, hand on the
outer door latch; a second Rhys stood hard against the wall. Joram looked at
the second one then, and realized that this must be the real one. But Rhys only
shook his head and put a finger to his lips in silence as his double opened the
door and went back inside the church. Rhys himself was
still a little dazzled at what had just occurred, though he had been privy to
every part of the operation. He watched silently as Joram and the entranced
Wulpher disappeared behind the sacristy door, but he did not care to envision
what was about to occur. Not that he felt guilty, in any wise, about the deed
just done: they had done no wrong. But there was something vaguely disquieting
about the whole thing, if only because of the shock of meeting his twin when he
knew he had been an only child. Instead, he went
to the spy hole in the door to the church and watched his double kneel by
Cathan’s bier, saw Evaine touch one hand in compassion before returning to her
own devotions. He was still watching a few minutes later when the sacristy door
opened and Camber and Joram emerged, neither giving him a second glance as they
passed on into the church and knelt together beside the other Rhys. A second
Joram stayed in the doorway of the sacristy, and he beckoned to Rhys to join
him as the physician turned to stare. “I’d rather not
talk about this until we’re well away from here, if you don’t mind,” Joram
murmured, standing aside so that Rhys could enter. “Come, the passageway is
open.” An hour later,
they were on their way to Saint Foillan’s. chapter twelveFor by wise
counsel thou shall make thy war. —Proverbs
24:6 The burial that
evening took its sad course. The words were said, the earth scattered, the
gravesite blessed by old Father Jonas, the parish priest, as well as
Wulpher/Joram and the two monks who had come with the soldiers from Valoret.
Snow had begun falling gently as the grave was closed, softening the harsh
outlines of earth and stone and frost-burned sod piled grim in the dancing
torchlight. The final psalms floated clear and lonely on the crystalline air.
The incense swirled and made a small child sneeze. After, the folk of
the village escorted their beloved lord and his family back to the castle—for
Camber had had his son buried in the village churchyard, close by the people he
had loved—not in the vaults beneath the keep. The walk was ghostly silent, made
more so by the muffling snow which drifted down and glittered in the
torchlight, making torches sputter and snap. Only the metallic clink of the
soldiers’ harness punctuated the slow procession back. Other than that, stunned
silence prevailed—a reluctance to speak of the unspeakable, the
incomprehensible. The king’s
soldiers displayed an unexpected sympathy throughout. Despite their orders to
keep Camber and his family under watch, they had also been instructed to
interfere as little as possible with the baring of MacRorie grief. And so they
merely followed along at the end of the procession, their lieutenant
requesting—and receiving—permission from Camber himself to camp that night in
the castle yard. Camber gave his
unbidden guests good night and retired to his chambers, the ensorcelled Crinan
and Wulpher taking Rhys’s and Joram’s rooms until Camber should determine that
it was safe to release them. Presently, Evaine came to his study, and father
and daughter communed as only two Deryni might. When they had finished, they
stepped into a corner of the room which glittered with hidden power. Camber
wove the magic of a spell, and they were no longer in Caerrorie. “Where are we?”
Evaine whispered, as her eyes adjusted to the near-darkness and she pressed a
little closer to her father’s side. Wainscotted walls
and ceiling surrounded them at arm’s reach all around, covering solid rock such
as lay beneath their feet. The walls glowed faintly— arcane wards to keep one’s
power in, not out. Camber reached out tentatively to explore the fastness of
the warding spell, then sighed and withdrew, pressing his daughter’s shoulder
with his encircling arm. “Someone will be
along directly to let us out,” he said in a low voice. “This is the Michaeline
Commanderie at Cheltham.” “Will the Vicar
General come to meet us?” “I suspect so,
though I doubt he’ll be pleased to see us—especially when he hears the news we
bring.” Evaine scanned the
walls around them—it was getting more difficult to breathe—and acknowledged
that it was one of the most secure confinements that she had ever experienced.
Even without the wards, this Portal chamber would have been impervious to
invasion, for no Deryni could reach through so much solid rock and loose the
bolts which held the rock door closed. If no one chose to give admittance, a
would-be intruder had but two choices: to stay and slowly suffocate, for there
was no ventilation, or to quit the place entirely and go back the way he had
come. That could be a
problem, if one had been forced to destroy the Portal used to get here, she
realized, as her eyes continued to sweep the panelled walls. If one had no
place to go back to, and knew no other portal place, he could die here. The closeness of
the air and walls was growing more oppressive, when there was a scraping of
stone against stone before them, and a vibration as the outer rock was
unsealed. Then the wall swung back to reveal cold steel thrust into the opening
before them—swords held by faceless men in cloaks of midnight blue, their
identity obscured by the glare of blazing torches. Evaine raised her
hand to shield against the unaccustomed brightness, trying to see beyond to the
shadow forms who stood without. Camber merely stood and closed his eyes,
willing them to adjust to the light, but not moving his hands. There was a brief
silence, and then: “It’s Lord Camber,” a low voice said. The swords were
lowered and the torches withdrawn a space. As the glare
receded, Camber opened his eyes again and stepped forward, his hand on Evaine’s
elbow. Outside the Transfer Portal, a tall, blue-cassocked man with steel-gray
hair was waiting, while three blue-mantled knights of the Michaeline Order
sheathed their swords and moved into the background with their torches. Their
leader, Alister Cullen, bowed stiffly as Camber saw and recognized him—for he
was still wary of the turn of events which had made Camber MacRorie ally
instead of adversary, however much he loved and trusted the great man’s son.
Camber returned the bow, himself a little ill at ease, and gestured toward
Evaine. “My daughter,
Evaine, of whom I’ve spoken,” he said, by way of introduction. Cullen nodded in
her direction, as Evaine returned a slight curtsey; then he directed his
attention back to Camber, eyes glittering like sea ice, heavy brows nearly
meeting on his forehead. “We had not
expected you tonight, Lord Camber. Is something wrong?” “I’m afraid
there’s been a change of plans,” Camber said. “May I speak freely?” He gestured
toward the three Michaelines and raised an eyebrow. Cullen’s mouth set
in a firm line. “I will stand pledge for their loyalty. What is it?” “Joram and Rhys
will be at the haven with the prince within four days, if all goes well.” “Four days!”
Cullen exclaimed, his composure rattled. “But, we had agreed—it was to be the
week before Christmas!” “I know. We will
simply have to adjust somehow. My son Cathan is dead. We buried him but a few
hours ago.” Cullen’s jaw
dropped in shock, and then he closed his eyes and shook his head, crossing
himself with a hand which was suddenly a century older than it had been three
heartbeats before. The three behind him likewise signed themselves and bowed
their heads. Cullen, when he
looked up, was visibly shaken. He yearned to reach out to the shining man and
comfort him, to try to ease the pent-up grief; but his hands remained slack at
his sides. He could not do that yet. Pride forbade. Through Joram, he had known
Camber’s resistance to his order for far too long to trust fully so soon. And
so he folded his hands together awkwardly and searched for words, sighing at
the inadequacy of whatever he might say. “I’m sorry,” he
finally murmured. “Joram spoke of his older brother quite fondly, and I always
felt I knew him myself, though we never met. How did it happen?” “We don’t know for
certain,” Camber said quietly. Evaine bit her lip and clasped her father’s arm
more tightly, blinking back the tears. “The guards who brought his body back to
Caerrorie said that he simply collapsed and died with Imre, before the Yule
Court last night. The truth is that there was a wound in his chest, however—of
a sword thrust or a dagger. He must have died instantly.” A strained silence
followed. Then: “Do the guards know who did it?” “If they know,
they will not say,” Camber answered. “I believe Imre suspects us of something,
though, else the soldiers would not still be in my castle yard. Tomorrow, I
will have to make some excuse that Joram and Rhys left before dawn, to go into
retreat or on some other errand. We’ve not been formally forbidden to leave the
castle, so perhaps the ruse will work. Actually, they left for Saint Foillan’s
just after mid-day, though the soldiers don’t know that. With luck, they should
reach the abbey two nights from now.” Cullen’s quick
mind caught the glossing-over of time, the half-omission, and he looked
steadily across at Camber. “You say the
guards don’t know?” “I—ah—covered
their absence by placing a shape-changing spell on two of the servants,” Camber
said reluctantly. “I’ll restore them when I return.” Cullen’s face
hardened at the mention of the spell, though he had, in a way, been prepared
for such a revelation. Nonetheless, his hand twitched as if longing to move in
some protective counter-spell, though he knew that was superstitious nonsense. “Though I cannot
condone your action, I can see the necessity for it,” he permitted himself to
say. “But, ignore that for the moment. We must make our own preparations. How
many people do you intend to bring to the haven?” “We’ll be ten in
all: eight family and two servants—the ones I shape-changed; if Imre finds out
what I’ve done, it might not be safe for them to remain behind.” “I see,” Cullen
nodded. “When may we expect you?” “We’ll try to stay
at least the four days it will take Joram and Rhys to get Cinhil to safety. If
Imre doesn’t move against us before then, there should be no difficulty. If he
does—well, we’ll have a problem. If we must escape through our own Portal, and
I see no reasonable alternative if we’re discovered, we run the risk of Imre
placing troops before every known Portal in the kingdom to try to catch us. If
he goes that far, I doubt that Joram and the others could reach safety without
being captured. We’ll just have to do our best to stall.” Cullen nodded
thoughtfully. “We can probably cut our safety margin to three days, if
necessary. Imre can’t close off all the Portals that quickly, even if that
occurs to him: we may be giving him credit for more astuteness than he
possesses. And there’s no way for him to guess that Dhassa is our target. A
calculated risk, but it may be our only chance.” Camber controlled
a smile, admiring the logic of the man. “How are your preparations? Can your
people be ready?” Cullen turned to
the three behind him, his clasped hands behind his back. “You’ve been
listening, Jeb,” he said to the tallest of the men. “We’re talking about a
three-week compression of our timetable. Can you gather the order in three
days?” Jeb, Lord Jebediah
of Alcara, Grand Master of the order’s military arm, stepped forward with the
easy assurance of a trained warrior. “It will require judicious planning to
keep down suspicion at the increased Portal activity, Father. But, yes, I think
we can do it.” “How many men?”
Camber asked. “Two hundred
knights, my lord, carefully dispersed to places of safety until we have need of
them.” He smiled. “Your own son’s prowess with weapons will tell you of their
training.” Camber returned the smile,
and Cullen nodded. “Nathan?” The second man, a
scar sleek and white along his chin, stepped forward and bowed. “Provisioning will
be finished within a day, Father General. The grain ship arrived this
afternoon. We should have it unloaded and transferred to our hidden storerooms
by nightfall tomorrow. Everything else is in readiness.” “And the
non-combatants?” Cullen asked the third man. Jasper Miller laid
a hand on the Michaeline emblem on his mantle and bowed. “Three days hence,
even the king himself will find no servant of Saint Michael upon the land.
Until the true king comes again, the Michaelines shall cease to exist.” “You risk much for
an untried prince, sir,” Camber breathed, marvelling at the man’s faith. “Better the
untried prince of a once-noble house than the usurping son of regicides who now
sits on our throne!” the man retorted. “The Haldanes were ever friends to our
order, and to the people of Gwynedd.” “God grant that
they always will be,” Camber replied. “And pray that this Haldane comes. It
will be two days at best before Joram and Rhys even reach his side, and longer
before we see his face. Suppose he is unwilling to take up his crown?” “He will not fail
us,” Cullen said. “He must not. But in the meantime, our energies were
best spent ensuring him a safe haven when he comes. And at Caerrorie—is there
ought we can do to ease your work there?” Camber shook his
head. “We’ll begin tomorrow to bring through the few things we will need, in
small lots. Evaine will help me,” he added, laying his hand over his
daughter’s, who had been watching and listening all the while. “Very well,”
Cullen said. He stroked his
chin in a thoughtful gesture, then looked up at Camber with a slightly sheepish
expression which seemed doubly out of place on his dour, craggy face. “Ah, knowing how I
feel about the darker aspects of our abilities, you will probably think me
addled to ask this, but might I suggest that you leave the shape-changes on the
two servants for a few days—since the deed is already done,” he added
defensively. “It would help to alleviate needless suspicion, and perhaps gain
us a little more time.” Camber raised an
eyebrow and smiled in spite of himself. “I had not considered it, and might not
have mentioned it if I had, but yes, it could be done, provided Crinan and
Wulpher are willing—and I see no reason to suspect that they would not be.” Cullen looked very
uncomfortable, and cleared his throat uneasily. “Yes, well—ah—good. It should
ease matters a little. Are there—ah—any Deryni in the guard contingent?” “The lieutenant is
Deryni. There may be others. I’ve not spoken with anyone else, however.” “Hmm, well. I
don’t suppose I need remind you to be careful.” Camber controlled
the urge to smile again—he had the distinct feeling that he had taken the
measure of the gruff old vicar general, and found himself liking the man—then
held out his hand. “We’d best get
back before we’re missed. Will you pray for us, Father?” Cullen, taken by
surprise at the request, automatically put his hand in Camber’s and clasped it
in farewell. “If you truly wish it, my lord,” he said, as he realized what he
had done. “Though, frankly, I had not thought to hear such a plea from your
lips.” “Because of our
past differences? I think we both, perhaps, misread the other badly. God keep
you, Father.” And as Camber,
with his daughter, turned and stepped back across the Portal threshold, he
heard Cullen murmur, “And you, my son.” Then they were
back in his study at Caerrorie, and the newly widowed Elinor was rushing toward
him to fling herself into his arms. “Thank God, you’ve
returned,” she whispered, hugging him close for comfort. “The king’s lieutenant
wants to see you. I’ve been stalling him for nearly five minutes.” “Did he say why he
wants to see me?” Camber asked, stepping from the Portal and beginning to strip
off his outer garments. “It’s snowing
harder. He wants to move his men into the hall. I have the distinct impression
that they plan to stay longer than just overnight.” “That’s splendid,”
Camber answered, his tone indicating that he did not think it splendid at all.
“Where will I find this lieutenant?” Five minutes
later, he was entering the Great Hall, where, the lieutenant was waiting,
having paused to don a nightrobe and to clear his mind of his recent
activities. (After all, the man was a Deryni.) The lieutenant was
pacing the floor before the hearth, rustling the sweet rushes and disturbing
the sleep of the hounds sprawled by the fire. Several of his men were gathered
silently at the other end of the hall, muffled in great cloaks. Camber took in
the scene at a glance as he emerged from the stairwell, then crossed to the
hearth. The dogs raised their heads to greet him, but he stilled their motion
with a firm hand signal. “I’m sorry you had
to wait, Lieutenant,” he said quietly, drawing his robe around him against the
cold. “It is my custom to meditate before retiring, especially in times of
stress. I’m afraid I have trained my daughters too well that I am not to be
disturbed.” “I understand, my
Lord Earl” The lieutenant bowed. “I came to ask whether I might move my
men into the hall for the night. It’s beginning to snow harder. I think we’re
in for a storm.” “Certainly, sir,
though I hope you will not overstay your welcome,” Camber said softly. “I’m
afraid I haven’t the means to house an entire garrison indefinitely.” “Well, I hardly
think a score of men constitutes a garrison, my lord—” the man started to
protest “No, but it is a
reasonable substitute at a time like this. And I did not hear you clarify my
‘indefinitely,’ either. Just how long do you intend to stay?” The lieutenant
looked down in embarrassment. “I’m sorry, my lord. I dislike being here at such
a time just as much as you dislike having me here. But I am commanded to remain
until I receive further orders. You are acquainted with soldiers, sir, though
you were not one yourself. I’m sure you will understand—” “I understand your
orders, sir. I am not that far removed from military matters after twenty-five
years at Court. What I do not understand is the reason for those orders. Am I
and my household under arrest?” “Of course not,”
the lieutenant said uncomfortably. “We were sent to escort your son’s body home
in honor, and, I assume, to render you that same honor until it has been
determined just what really happened to your son.” “Then, you
acknowledge that he did not merely collapse and die, as your instructions first
gave you to say?” “I—er—I am not
permitted to discuss that, my lord. I’m sorry.” His voice trailed
off, very uncomfortably, and Camber smiled, with a gentle, resigned lifting of
one corner of his mouth. “I suspected as
much. You are not to blame,” he said. “Please feel free to billet your men here
in the hall, by all means. I will have the steward see to building up the
fire.” As the man bowed
thanks, Camber turned and made his way down the hall, nodding civilly to the
soldiers as he passed. One of them, who stood apart and made an especially
respectful bow, seemed strangely familiar. When Camber had instructed the
steward about the fire, he paused thoughtfully in the shadows at the end of the
hall, studying the young man’s back. Almost immediately, the man turned and
peered in his direction, then glanced casually at his fellows and began to walk
slowly toward him. Camber retreated farther into the shadows, to an alcove
hidden from the rest of the hall, and waited. The man joined him almost
immediately. “Do I know you,
sir?” Camber said, his eyes searching the young man’s face. “Guaire of Arliss,
Lord Camber,” the young man murmured, going down on one knee. “Your son and I
were friends at Court. You probably don’t remember me.” “But I do!” Camber
replied, taking Guaire’s hand and raising him to his feet. “Cathan spoke of you
often, and affectionately. But”—he glanced toward the hall—”what brings you
here with the likes of them? I thought you were aide to one of the military
earls?” “I was. To Earl
Maldred,” Guaire nodded. “Only he’s dead, killed by an assassin three days ago.
That’s part of what I came to tell you about. There’s something—” He broke off as
Camber glanced beyond him and held a finger to his lips, then led him into a
small storage room near the kitchens, away from the growing noise of the hall
as the king’s men made their camp. “Are you Der— No,
I can see that you are not of us,” Camber murmured, taking Guaire urgently by
the shoulders. “Young friend, we daren’t take much more time. Did you ever link
minds with Cathan? Were you and he that close?” Wordlessly, Guaire
nodded, his brown eyes wide. “Would you be
willing to share that bond with me, Guaire?” Camber continued. “I would not ask
it if I did not feel it needful.” As Guaire nodded a
second time, Camber moved his hands to either side of Guaire’s head and closed
his own eyes, thumbs resting lightly on the other’s temples. “Then, do it now.
Open your mind to me without delay. For Cathan’s sake, I beg it.” There was a
breathless pause, a lengthening time of stillness, and then Camber was opening
his eyes and pulling the younger man into close embrace, staring sightlessly
over the other’s shoulder as he analyzed what he had seen. Then he put Guaire
at arm’s length and looked into his eyes. If he had lost a son, he had gained a
worthy friend—though one more human, he could never hope to find. And now he knew,
too, that he was doing what had to be done. There was no proof yet that the
king had killed; but there was little doubt in Guaire’s own mind that Imre was,
in some way, responsible—or that Cathan’s own kinsman, Coel Howell, had had a
heavy hand in what happened at Valoret. Camber smiled and
clasped Guaire’s shoulders reassuringly, then glanced out of the storage room
to see if the way was clear. “You’d best get
back. I’ll wait until you’ve gone.” “Aye, sir. I’ll
bring you word when other orders arrive. They’ll not take you by surprise.” “God bless you,
son,” Camber murmured, as the young man slipped back into the passageway and
out of sight. Camber waited for
several minutes, composing himself to traverse the hall again, to be certain he
would give no inkling of what he had just learned. Then he left the tiny
chamber and made his way back through the hall, nodding distractedly to the men
as they stood at his passage, some of them saluting him courteously. The dogs
stirred as he came near the fireplace, but he stayed them with his hand as he
continued on. He did not see Guaire in the hall, but a very young soldier stood
and bowed as he approached the foot of the newel staircase. “Thank you for
allowing us inside, m’lord,” the young man said, tugging at his forelock. “
‘Tis no fit night for man nor beast to be outside.” Camber glanced up
at the high windows, saw them rattling under the attack of the storm, and
nodded acknowledgment as he stepped past the man. And as he made his way up the
stairs to his chambers, he thought about his son and son-to-be, riding the road
to a distant abbey in the storm; and of the other son, whom he would never see
again except in dreams, who slept outside beneath the storm’s reach, in the
growing cold of an early grave. He did not sleep
until very late. chapter thirteenFor your hands
Are defiled with blood. —Isaiah 59:3 The next two days
were spent, for the most part, in uneasy seclusion, awaiting further royal
reaction which did not come. Receiving no new orders to the contrary, the
king’s men stayed on, trying to intrude as little as possible on the MacRories’
grief, but they were forced by the worsening weather to remain close in the
hall. Camber was a gracious host under the circumstances, going out of his way
to see that the men’s physical needs were provided, but relations grew strained
as the days wore on. He spoke once more with Guaire, on the second day, when
the waiting had grown almost intolerable, but their meeting was short, and
nearly interrupted by Guaire’s lieutenant. Besides, the young lord had nothing
to add beyond what he had already made known to Camber. Further evidence of
familiarity could only breed suspicion where there was none as yet. The residents of
Caerrorie were careful not to engender such suspicion, either. Below stairs,
nothing occurred which was not in keeping with the expected behavior in a
household recently bereft of its eldest son. Life went on, but in a subdued
fashion. The growing tension in those who waited did not manifest itself within
the sight of the royal guards. But above stairs, where the guards were not invited,
preparations continued at near-fever pitch. Camber and Evaine spent hours
gathering and transporting the few belongings they deemed essential for their
impending exile, and briefing the others—Elinor, James —on the method, if not
the precise reason, for their escape. Wulpher/Joram and Crinan/Rhys remained in
their chambers except for meals and family devotions, engaged, as Camber
explained to the guard lieutenant, in prayer and meditation for the soul of
their departed brother. In point of fact, both spent the greater part of their
time in dreamless Deryni trance, both to keep them safely out of sight and
possible discovery, and to conserve their strength. Camber’s spell had never
been intended to last so long, and had to be reinforced periodically. And elsewhere,
others made preparations and played their various waiting games. In the haven, the
Brothers of Saint Michael completed the last of their provisioning for the long
winter exile ahead, dispersing the noncombatant brethren and arranging for the
safe billeting of the militant arm of the order. At Dhassa, four
Michaeline knights set up a watch to be certain that three very important
riders would reach safety without mishap. In Valoret, a
tense Deryni conspirator, unwittingly playing both sides of a desperate game,
perused five reconstructed pages from a parish register and sent out his agents
to learn more about the only three names on those pages which appeared to be
connected: members of a family named Draper—Daniel and Royston and Nicholas.
And so the time passed.... But if the days
were taut for MacRories and Michaelines and a wayward Deryni lord, they were as
nothing beside the misery of their king and liege lord, Imre. Grief stalked the
towers of the royal apartments like an uninvited specter, wept and raged and
hoarded vengeful thoughts in the keep of the House of Festil. The king, his
senses no longer dulled to gray oblivion by the balm of too much wine, spent
the day of Cathan’s funeral thrashing in sweat-soaked delirium, the fire in his
brain assuaged but little by the tender ministrations of his sister. Sick with
the aftereffects of wrung emotions, as well as the spirits he had consumed,
unable to draw the strength to quell his pain arcanely, too proud to ask
another’s aid to ease the ache which lay upon him like a stifling mantle, he
brooded in the sunless rooms and bore his suffering with an ever-sharper
temper, terrorizing the servants until they feared to venture past the outer
threshold. Only Ariella
seemed to understand, as she had always comprehended, from his youngest
childhood days. And that, too, plagued him: the dimly recalled memory of her
body next to his; their passion; a quirk of conscience urging condemnation
while another, more fleshly part of him still yearned for her again. In the end, he
succumbed—though that, too, brought him little comfort for the rending in his
soul. For two full days he kept his morbid isolation within his sister’s
chambers, seeing no one but her, taking little food, sleeping less, and
indulging in hysterical fits of weeping rage at fate, at Maldred and Rannulf
for letting themselves be slain, at Cathan for his betrayal, at Coel for
telling him about it and compelling him to act, and at God, who had somehow
conspired to make a shambles of Imre’s world. It was with full
knowledge of this indulgence in kingly self-pity that Coel Howell dared to
approach the royal apartments on the afternoon of the second day—with that
knowledge, and armed with protection in the form of a handful of new parchment
scrolls obtained but lately from his scribes. He was received in
Ariella’s presence chamber, where the king sat in fur-lined robes before a
roaring fire. Imre was strained and nervous—one had only to watch the tremor in
his hands to ascertain that— but his mental faculties had not been impaired,
and he listened to Coel’s findings with great attention. Ariella sat on a cushioned
stool at his side, her hand resting negligently on his shoulder, her darting
eyes missing no nuance. When Coel had finished, Imre perused the scrolls
superficially, then handed them to his sister. “Birth records of
a father and son,” he said, furrowing his brow. “Why the interest in them, and
why now?” Coel frowned. “I
don’t know, Sire. The father, Royston, has been dead for more than twenty
years. But his father, Daniel, died only a few months ago. In fact, Rhys
Thuryn was his physician—which makes me wonder why he and MacRorie stole the
records. I can only surmise that it was because of something the old man said
on his deathbed.” “How about the
son, this Nicholas? Does he still live?” Imre asked. “Unknown, Sire. If
he is still alive, he did not follow the profession of his father or
grandfather—at least not in this city. He seems to have disappeared shortly
after his father’s death. It’s possible that he died of the plague as well.” Ariella coughed
and turned her attention entirely on Coel. “This Daniel Draper, who died
recently— who was he?” “A merchant in
woolens, Your Highness. He apparently did moderately well in his trade, paid
his debts, and left his goods and business to his apprentice, one Jason
Brown—which would seem to indicate that his grandson was either estranged or
dead. Other than that, no one seems to know much about him. He was in his
eighties, after all. Most of his contemporaries died long ago.” “His
contemporaries,” Imre repeated. “I wonder . ..” “Beg pardon,
Sire?” “His contemporaries
. . .” Imre said again. “If he was as old as you claim, he was probably alive
in my great-great-grandfather’s time. He may even have lived through the Coup.” “Do you see a
connection?” Ariella asked. “Probably not.
Still—” Imre cocked his
head to one side and then rose thoughtfully to begin pacing slowly back and
forth across the room. Ariella watched him curiously, a little possessively.
Coel wondered what Imre was driving at. “Alive at the time
of the Coup,” Imre murmured, thinking out loud. “And Thuryn and MacRorie have
stolen the birth records of his son and grandson. Coel, what does this suggest
to you?—the theft of the records, I mean.” “That they were
trying to establish a line of legitimate descent?” Coel ventured. “Correct.” Imre
nodded, picking up a stylus from the table and gesturing to make his point.
“But for whom? A family of woolen merchants? We’re missing something here.
There’s something we’re overlooking. But what?” “What about the
books, Imre?” Ariella said, after a long pause, obviously thinking in tandem
with her brother now. “Coel, did you not say that Thuryn had consulted certain
volumes in the royal archives?” “Yes, Highness.” “That’s right.”
Imre stopped his pacing. “Coel, what volumes were they? From what time?” Sensing the direction
Imre’s thoughts were taking, Coel consulted his notes, then looked up in
fascination. “From the time of the Coup, Sire.” “And why,” Imre
whispered to the room at large, “why would Thuryn be interested in such books,
when his accomplice has stolen records to prove the legitimate descent of a man
possibly living now, unless they hoped somehow to forge a link with the past?”
He whirled to point the stylus at Coel like a weapon. “What link were they
trying to form? Who was this mysterious Daniel Draper before he became a
merchant in woolen cloth?” “I—don’t know,”
Coel stammered, uncertainty hampering his speech. “But one can
guess,” Ariella stated, her voice edged with steel. “They plot against you,
Imre. They seek to establish a link with the past, with the old regime, perhaps
with the Haldane line itself! It would be fascinating to learn whether any
pages were removed from the volumes Thuryn used. And if there are, and they
deal with the old nobility—” She bared her teeth in a predatory smile. “Then I
think we have certain evidence of a MacRorie conspiracy.” Coel,
thunderstruck at the turn of logic she had taken, bowed deeply as his mind
raced to catch up with all the implications. If Ariella’s reasoning was sound,
then Cathan MacRorie undoubtedly had been involved in his brother’s
treachery, and Coel’s position was considerably reinforced. He allowed himself
a slight smile as he straightened from his bow. “I will
investigate the possibility, Your Highness. In the meantime, all of the
MacRories are under surveillance at Camber’s seat at Caerrorie, where they
gathered for Cathan’s funeral. Do you wish Thuryn and Joram MacRorie brought in
for interrogation?” Ariella nodded
briskly. “An excellent idea. Imre?” But Imre had moved
to stare stiffly out a window at the mention of Cathan’s name, his chestnut
hair silhouetted darkly against the snowfall, his hands clenched tightly at his
sides. Ariella, realizing that he had resumed his previous depression, started
toward him to try to comfort him, but he whirled before she could reach him,
and stood glaring both at her and at Coel. “Arrest them all,”
he said in a low voice. “Thuryn and Joram and
Camber, Sire?” Coel asked, with some surprise. “I said all, Coel,”
the king repeated, his eyes glowing with an almost hysterical light. “You were
right about Cathan.” He swallowed heavily. “And doubtless you are right about
the rest. I want all the MacRories in chains by nightfall, do you
understand? All of them! There is not one who can be trusted!” The royal warrant actually reached Caerrorie just
past suppertime, when all of Camber’s family had gathered in his study,
ostensibly for evening devotions. Guaire of Arliss
was dicing with the lieutenant and two of the other officers when the courier
arrived, and even as the man approached, he knew how the message must read. He
controlled the urge to glance over his shoulder at the doorway to the
newel-stair leading to Camber’s chambers, forced himself to maintain an
appropriate air of detached boredom as the lieutenant broke the seal and
scanned the missive. He had already decided what he must do, if it came to
this, so he was fully prepared for the lieutenant’s next words. “It’s a warrant
for the arrest of the entire household, to bring all the MacRories back to
Valoret for questioning,” he said, reaching down to gather his sword and
baldric from the rushes. “Sergeant, see to the security of the hall. You men,
come with me.” He gestured in
Guaire’s direction and slipped the baldric over his shoulder as he stood,
waiting while his men armed themselves. Then he picked up the order once more
and headed for Camber’s stair. If he noticed that Guaire had made certain to
get there before him, he gave no sign of it. Consequently, Guaire was the first
to reach the door. The others stood back a few paces, all but two of them
around the curve of the staircase, as Guaire, at the signal of the lieutenant,
rapped gloved knuckles against the heavy oak. “My Lord Earl?” For a moment, the
only sounds were those of the men’s breathing in the close stairwell, a few
furtive clinks of metal against stone, and then the door opened. Camber stood in
the doorway, his body blocking vision of the rest of the chamber. His eyes
flicked over Guaire seemingly without particular recognition, then came to rest
on the guard lieutenant two steps farther down the stairwell. Guaire knew that
the glance had been far from inconsequential. “May I assist you
in some way, Lieutenant?” His words were the
essence of courtesy, and the lieutenant cleared his throat uneasily before extending
the order he had just received. “I have a warrant
for your arrest, sir. You and your family, and especially your son Joram and
the Healer they call Rhys Thuryn. By order of His Grace, King Imre of Festil.” There was a
skipped heartbeat in which no one moved or breathed, and then Camber slowly
reached out and took the parchment. Behind Camber, Guaire thought he detected
the sound of furtive movement, but he could not be sure. The lieutenant, his
Deryni senses more keen than Guaire’s, evidently heard it, too, for he came up
another step and laid his hand on the hilt of his sword as Camber read the
missive. “There is no
provision for question, sir,” the lieutenant said, as Camber reached the bottom
of the sheet and took in the royal seal. “I must ask you to step outside now,
and to open the door. We don’t want to use force, but we will if we must.” “Yes, I’m certain
you would, Lieutenant,” Camber said, a little sadly, Guaire thought. He started to open
the door further, James appearing at his side and looking very grave, and for a
moment Guaire thought he meant to surrender, after all. Then he noticed that
James’s sword arm was hidden behind the door, and that there were fewer people
in the room behind Camber and James than there should have been. But before that
could register with the lieutenant, James was bursting past Camber and pushing
the lieutenant down into the arms of his waiting men, while Camber dashed back
into the room to bundle Father Joram and Lord Rhys into a corner of the room,
where they promptly disappeared—all three! Then Guaire and
James were holding the stair at swords’ length, keeping the lieutenant and his
men at bay in the narrow stairwell while flashes of light behind them told only
that something arcane was going on, which Guaire did not care to know anything
more about. He parried a sword
thrust and slashed at a wrist, to send a second adversary screaming down the
stairwell into the arms of his comrades with a nearly severed hand. James took
another by surprise and ran him through the thigh, pushing the wounded man back
so he only narrowly missed impalement on one of his own weapons. Guaire glanced
over his shoulder to see the Lady Evaine pop into existence in that same corner
of the room where Camber had just disappeared, and then he was fighting for his
life again, warding off a concerted rush from two of his former fellows who had
somehow managed to slip past James and his adversary and both attack at once.
When he had remedied that situation, and could hazard another glance behind
him, he was just in time to see Camber emerge from the corner of the room and
herd the Lady Elinor and her younger son into the space with Evaine. Then the
women and the child were gone, and Camber was the only one in the room; and he
was dashing toward them and shouting at Guaire to look out. A stabbing pain in
his side brought his attention back to the stairwell—too late to avoid the
lieutenant’s blade. He felt a searing wetness all down one side of his body as
the lieutenant withdrew apace, his blade crimsoned with blood Guaire knew was
his own. But then sweet
reprisal was upon the lieutenant in the form of Jamie’s sword. The man
staggered back with blood spurting from severed jugular and carotid, a scream
gurgling in his throat. The damage to Guaire was already done, but even as the
young lord started to crumple, he found himself being whisked into the strong
arms of Camber and borne toward that same corner of the room where such strange
things had been happening only seconds before. James slammed the
door and dashed to join them, but as the door gave under the fresh onslaught of
men from below stairs, Guaire’s world began fading to a blissful shade of gray.
Just before he lost consciousness, he had a sickening, swooping sensation, as
though he were falling, and a blast of pure, brilliant energy which nearly held
back the darkness. For just that instant, he could have sworn that Camber
glowed. chapter fourteenBlessed shall
they be that shall be in those days,/He bringeth back His anointed. —Psalms of Solomon
18:6 In another part of
the kingdom, darkness came early that night. The wind drove a new storm through
the mountain passes, turning the twilight to white-shrouded blankness as two
riders approached the fastness of Saint Foillan’s Abbey. They had met no
one on their ride that day. The road was little travelled once the Yuletide
season had begun, and there had already been more snow than was normal for this
time of year. Even without the impending storm, the way would have been
difficult. With the drifts growing higher by the hour, most men would have
deemed the journey impossible, and have waited until the spring. Joram and Rhys
were counting on that, reckoning, rightly, that even if Imre could have
discovered their intent by now, word of their flight could not have reached
Saint Foillan’s before them—and might not now until the spring thaws came. But this knowledge
did little to ease their minds about the immediate problem. Somehow, they must
enter the abbey confines undetected, find Prince Cinhil, and bring him out
without being apprehended. Though they had reviewed their plans and all their
combined knowledge of the place at least a dozen times in the past two days,
with a thoroughness possible only for Deryni, they still could not know in
advance what human agents might unwittingly shatter the best laid of their
plans. It had been dark
for several hours when they drew rein in the shadow of the abbey’s outer wall.
The moon had gone behind a heavy cloudbank, and would likely remain there for
some time. Rhys huddled
closer in his fur cloak—white, to help him blend into the snowbanks—then turned
in his saddle to pull the extra horse in beside him. All of the animals were
hooded and blanketed in white, both for protection against the elements and for
camouflage, and in the dimness he could hardly see Joram, sitting his horse not
four feet away. Joram swung down
and secured his horse to a stump of winter-blasted tree, then moved to lay a
hand on Rhys’s bridle. “Our timing is
good so far,” he whispered. “They dare not ring the abbey bells at this time of
year because of snowslides, but it must be close to Compline. Remember, no more
talking until we’re out. Sound carries.” And that was not
the only kind of communication they had agreed not to use, Rhys reflected,
as he dismounted and began taking another fur cloak and a pair of woolen
leggings from the spare horse’s saddle. Even their Deryni mind-speech must be
used sparingly, if at all. The Ordo Verbi Dei was not a Deryni order,
but there might be a few individual Deryni in it. And if one of them should be
in deep meditation and chance to catch a careless word . . . It was not likely,
but it was possible. And far too much was at stake to risk all on a chance
which could be avoided. He moved close
against the wall and watched as Joram drew out a coil of braided cord ending in
a leather-padded, three-pronged throwing hook. The priest spent several seconds
ordering the coil, arranging the loops to his satisfaction. Then he stepped
carefully out a few paces from the wall and looked up. Rhys glanced back the
way they had come and was relieved to note that he could not see the horses. The snow was
falling harder now, and the snow flakes caught and glittered in Joram’s furred
hood. After a studied appraisal of the wall, the priest swung the padded hook
on its cord and flung it up and over. There was a muffled clunk as it hit the
other side a few feet below the edge, and Immediately Joram darted back to the
shelter of the wall to freeze and listen, gradually raising his head only when
he was certain that the slight sound had aroused no alarm. Slowly, he began
pulling on the cord—then stifled an oath as the hook failed to catch, and came
tumbling back, nearly on his head. The process was
repeated three more times before the hook held. But then they were very quickly
up the wall and over. A narrow catwalk ran along the inner edge of the wall,
and snow-caked steps led to the ground a few paces to the left. Soon they were
safely on the ground and huddled in the shadows, between two outbuildings,
their escape cord firmly anchored to the edge of the wall and camouflaged in
the shadow of a seam in the stone. In the next twenty
minutes, the two worked their way through the south applegarth and over the
nearest footbridge, then past the lay brothers’ range, the cellarer’s yard, and
under the very windows of the darkened abbot’s hall; past the abbot’s yard and
across a final expanse of open court; and then they were crouching in the
darkness of the abbey’s outer porch, listening for any sound of activity
within. Through here lay
the safest route to their quarry—provided, of course, that Saint Foillan’s
followed the traditional monastic building plan. Along the nave and up the
night stair, they should reach the monks’ sleeping quarters and the tiny cell
where Rhys had last seen Cinhil. (The Healer did not even wish to consider what
would happen if they could not reach Cinhil through the abbey proper. If they
had to go through the abbot’s hall and cloister yard, the way Rhys and Camber had
gone to see Cinhil the first time—no, better not even to think of that for
now.) A sudden twinge of
panic seized Rhys, a fear that he was a child playing at a very dangerous man’s
game, but he forced the feeling down and concentrated upon removing his cloak,
on bundling it with Joram’s and the one for Cinhil in the darkest corner of the
porch. Then he was
hovering anxiously at Joram’s elbow as the other slid a slender dagger from his
boot top, knelt beside the entry door, and slipped the thin blade deftly
between door and jamb until the latch gave with a satisfying snick. Flashing a grim
smile, Joram sheathed the dagger and eased the door a crack, peering into the
dimness for a long time. Finally he whispered, “Clear,” and glanced at his
partner. The word was more
breathed than spoken, and as he edged the door open enough to slip through, he
motioned Rhys into the shadows to the right of the nave. A short pause, just
long enough to relatch the door, and he was kneeling behind a column with Rhys
to scan the long expanse of nave, straining to pierce the gloom which the few
candles only barely touched. They watched for a
long time, studying the arrangement of pillars and side chapels and occasional
funeral effigies along the clerestory aisle. A processional door was given
their fleeting attention, but then they cast wary eyes on the lay brothers’
stair, which disappeared into the darkness to their right. There was no need to
fear the door, for it was used only by day; but the stairway was an entirely
different matter. If some zealous lay brother, seeking extra devotions, should
slip down those stairs undetected before they could gain the relative safety of
the south transept, they would surely be discovered. They must penetrate beyond
the nave altar, with its revealing candles and exposed approach and its side
chapels potentially housing hostile monks. And once that was accomplished,
there still remained the other night stairs, which led to Cinhil’s cell. Best
not to think of that yet, either. Touching a finger
to his lips, Joram glided to the foot of the lay brothers’ stair and peered up
into the darkness, casting out with his Deryni senses for some indication of
movement above. But there was none, save the slight echo of snoring. This early
after Compline, most of the brethren should be getting what meager sleep the
Rule allowed such an order. From now until Matins, well after midnight, should
be the quietest time for the entire abbey. With an
inclination of his head, Joram gestured Rhys to follow, then began making his
silent way down the side aisle, staying close to the wall, taking advantage of
every possible shadow. The first of the side chapels lay ahead, flanking the
nave altar. The chapels on the
left were empty—they could see that already—their recesses dimly lit by
Presence lamps and the banks of vigil candles guarding the nave altar itself.
Behind the main altar, the brass interlace of the rood screen glowed darkly in
the candlelight, mostly in shadow. Beyond that stretched the rest of the nave,
with more side chapels, and the choir looming in the transept crossing. The
night stairs they were seeking lay in the south transept itself, hard against
the west wall. So far there was no sign of movement, but they could not count
on that until they had made certain. They reached the
side wall of the first chapel on the right, and Joram peered gingerly around
the corner and inside. Deserted. The process was
repeated with the second. Again, deserted.
Thus far, their luck was holding. They crossed the
second chapel, venturing as close to the rood screen as they dared, to peer up
the rest of the nave and scan the north chapels before venturing further into
the open for the breaching of the screen itself. But the remainder of the nave
appeared to be clear, and the darkened choir showed no sign of movement. If
anyone was stirring in the cloistered portion of the church, they could only
hope that whoever it was would stay safely in the apse, far beyond the transept
and the stairs which Rhys and Joram sought. Neither man wanted to have to
desecrate a church by harming anyone within its precincts—and both men knew,
though they had never voiced it, that they would kill, if necessary, to
ensure Cinhil’s safe removal from Saint Foillan’s. They crouched and
listened for several minutes, finally satisfying themselves that all was still.
Then Joram eased his way behind the altar to the rood screen and laid his hand
on the gate latch, cursing silently under his breath as the thing resisted and
he realized it was locked. He cast a tense look at Rhys, who was anxiously
scanning back the way they had come; then he knelt and laid his hands on the
locking mechanism and extended his senses around it. After a few seconds, which
only seemed interminable, the latch moved in Joram’s hands. But before
he could begin easing the gate open, wondering whether it would squeak, he
caught Rhys’s frantic hand signal out of the corner of his eye and flattened
himsell against the back of the altar. Now he, too, could
hear the slap-slap of sandal-clad feet moving up the nave. The man was
alone, for which Joram thanked Providence, but if he continued on his present
course he would soon be abreast of Rhys’s hiding place. Silently, Joram willed
the man to move into one of the first side chapels—he had to choose one
of the first side chapels, or Rhys would be discovered. He was never
precisely certain, later, whether he or Rhys had any influence over the choice
made by the hapless lay brother. But for whatever reason, the monk paused only
briefly to bow before the nave altar, then moved noisily into the first chapel
on the right, next to the one where Rhys was hiding. After several minutes, in
which there was no further sound from the chapel in question, Joram eased his
way to the left of the altar and peeped around the corner. He could not see
into the chapel where the monk must be—but that was good, because it meant that
the monk could not see him, either. Rhys had crept silently to the wall common
to the two chapels and was peering around the edge when Joram looked out. After
a moment, he withdrew and glanced at Joram, giving a slight nod of his head. If
the monk’s suspicions should be aroused now, at least Rhys could silence him
before he could give the alarm. With a deep breath
to steady his nerves, Joram moved back to the rood screen and turned the latch.
No sound came from the metal as he eased the gate back far enough to enter.
Thank God for the monks’ industry; the hinges were well oiled and silent. They
gained the relative shelter of the next side chapel without mishap, leaving the
rood-screen gate closed but not latched as they passed into the domain of the
cloistered monks. A sound from the
direction of the occupied chapel froze them in the shadows, and they watched
unmoving as the monk shuffled before the nave altar to bow again. They had
about decided that the man meant to pray there forever, when he bowed again and
moved into a chapel on the other side of the nave. Grateful for that, at least,
Joram and Rhys, turned their attention to the tasks ahead. They dared not worry
where the man might be when they had to come out again, or that next time there
might be more than one. They were within
the cloister precincts now, and doubly damned should they be caught. Creeping
past the great processional door—barred now—which led, by day, from cloister
garth to church, they found their way blocked by yet another brass grillework.
Joram had already dismissed it, and was moving on to try entrance through the
choir, when Rhys laid his hand on the gate and felt it move under his hand.
Sending the briefest and weakest of calls to Joram, he swung back the gate and
slipped through. Joram, startled, doubled back and followed him through the
gate to crouch silently at the foot of the night stairs. Rhys’s shoulder
pressed hard against his as they peered up the stairway into the darkness. “Now?” Rhys
mouthed silently. For answer, Joram
took a deep breath and nodded resolutely. Then they began making their cautious
way up the stairs. The door stood
open at the top, and another, narrower stair continued upward from the landing
beside the door. They listened for several minutes, but other than the sounds
of sleep, they heard only the creak of the building itself as the snow settled
on the leaded roof. Now they must find Cinhil and bring him safely out. There was a single
vigil light burning at the top of the stairs, but it cast only scant
illumination down the long dormitory. Straining to see in the dimness, Rhys led
Joram slowly past the first of the curtained sleeping cubicles, moving to the
right of the chests and shelves ranged down the center of the room. Cinhil’s
cell was the fifth from the end-—Rhys had marked it well on his last visit
here—and as he paused in the curtained entryway, Joram pulled two spare white
robes of the professed brothers from a stack just outside. Stealthily they
entered the cell, to stop with pounding hearts until Joram had conjured a tiny
sphere of handfire. By its light, Rhys moved toward the head of the narrow
pallet and leaned close enough to verify the sleeper’s identity. Then they were
pulling on the robes over their clothes, Joram nudging the handfire near while
Rhys bent to gaze at their sleeping quarry’s face. Gently, he sought to touch
Cinhil’s mind, hoping to ease the man from sleep to deep control without
awakening him. But the touch’ was
not gentle enough, or Cinhil’s sleep not so deep as they had thought. Cinhil’s
eyes popped open with a start; he was fully awake at once. And when he saw two
figures bending over him, illuminated by the ghostly glow of Joram’s handfire,
his immediate and natural impulse was to panic. Rhys had clamped
his hand against the monk’s mouth at the first sign of movement, so Cinhil
could make no outcry; but now the monk was trying to twist from under his hand,
legs kicking frantically underneath his thin blanket. Joram threw himself
across Cinhil’s body to hold him quiet, pinning arms and legs while Rhys tried
to force control, but the Healer could not seem to get through. It was as
though the shields which he had sensed before grew doubly strong under assault,
to keep Rhys from even touching the mind behind those shields. Clearly, they
would not take Cinhil this way. And if they did not subdue him in the next few
seconds, his struggling would awaken his brethren all around him. It was a time for
drastic measures. Without further
waste of motion, Rhys clamped his free hand across the Prince’s throat and
applied carotid pressure, not relenting even when CinhiPs body arched a final
time before going limp beneath his hands. There was resistance still, as Rhys
extended his senses, Cinhil’s shielding of memory and intellect remaining
intact; but his center of consciousness, at least, was taken. Securing control
as he had on his previous visit, Rhys straightened carefully and allowed
himself a scarce-breathed sigh of relief. Joram cast a nervous glance at the
curtained doorway as he picked himself up. There had been no
sound outside, no indication that their scuffle with Cinhil had awakened the
other monks. Nonetheless, they waited for several steamed minutes to make
certain. Finally, Rhys bent and pulled the unconscious Cinhil to his feet, got
a shoulder under his arm. He watched anxiously as Joram let the light vanish
and peered out the curtains. Miraculously, the dormitory still echoed only to
the sounds of snoring men. They slipped out
the way they had come, Cinhil between them, keeping close to the shelves and
chests until they reached the vigil light again. They had just stepped onto the
landing when Joram froze in a listening attitude, then motioned urgently for
Rhys to get their unconscious burden up the stairs toward the tower. As Rhys
struggled to obey, he could hear the sounds of sandal-clad feet approaching the
night stairs from below. There must have
been monks in the east end of the church all this time! Not daring to
breathe, they eased their way up the spiral staircase past the first bend, to
huddle motionless as the feet ascended the night stairs. They heard no
conversation, nor did they expect to, and at length the footsteps faded away
into the dormitory. They waited for several minutes, in case the monks just
returned had come to awaken replacements for some all-night vigil, but no
further sound came from above or below the night stairs. Finally, they gathered
the courage to bundle their senseless charge down the stairs and through the
transept gate, to shrink breathlessly against the closed processional door and
listen again for a long moment. The next half-hour
was later to be remembered only hazily by both of those conscious enough to
recall it at all. They were able to make their way back through the rood screen
without being detected, and actually gained the shelter of the last side
chapel. But their plans were nearly foiled by the approach of another lay
brother from the stairs at the west end of the nave. Joram heard him
long before he came into view, for the man coughed and wheezed asthmatically
all the way down the stairs. But there was nowhere to hide. Quickly, they
arranged the unconscious Cinhil on one of the prie-dieus, Rhys kneeling
to support him while Joram hid in the shadows at the back corner. But it was not
sufficient to fool the old brother who came shuffling down the nave. One look
at the pair kneeling in the side chapel was enough to convince him that
something was amiss. After all, the two wore the white robes of professed
monks, not the gray of the lay brethren. Not that there was anything wrong with
the monks using the lay brothers’ area of the church—especially in deep winter,
when there was not likely to be an outsider on the premises. But the lay
brother, being the friendly, talkative sort, was curious as to who the two
monks might be, kneeling in what he had come to think of as his chapel. And naturally, he
had to ask them. He had time only
to gaze in astonishment at the fierce, redheaded stranger who looked up from
beneath his cowled hood, and at Brother Benedictus, who appeared to be asleep.
Then there was another brother standing behind him and taking him by the
shoulders—a tall, golden man with piercing eyes which bored into his and made
his head spin. As he sank to his
knees, oblivious to all around him, his memory of the entire encounter
conveniently fled. He would awaken during Matins, when the rest of the brethren
joined him in the great nave, joints stiff and aching from the hours he had
spent kneeling in the cold church, unable to explain what urgent need he had
felt to spend his night in prayer.... By the time the
abbey was rousing for the Great Office of the Night, Joram and Rhys were lowering
their precious burden over the wall, wrapped once again in their white fur
cloaks, their quarry bundled into a similar cloak and bound hand and foot to
his horse for his long, unconscious ride. The snow fell more
heavily now, erasing all sign of their passage, and they rode with their backs
to the storm, Cinhil’s horse between them on a double lead. They would ride
thus until tomorrow night, with stops only as necessary, until they reached the
relative safety of Dhassa. There, if all went well, they would make their way
to the Portal held by the Bishop of Dhassa. By now, it was probably the only
Portal which was not barred to them, one way or another. They should be safe in
Camber’s haven by this time tomorrow night. But for now, there
remained only to ride, and to try to keep the cold a thing apart, that they
might eventually reach Dhassa alive and uncaptured. If the hue and cry had been
raised against them in the past three days since Cathan’s burial, as it well
might have, they would have to be doubly careful. Capture now would be certain
disaster for their new and fragile cause. chapter fifteenI have
forsaken mine house, I have left mine heritage. —Jeremiah
12:7 As it happened,
they were never in any real danger on the journey to Dhassa, for news travels
slowly across winter-bound Gwynedd. But Rhys and Joram learned a great deal
about their captive in the course of their ride. The first few
hours, and those most crucial to their escape, were accomplished under cover of
darkness and the gradually slackening storm—that and the snow-filtered
moonlight which slowly faded as gray dawn approached. The snow layered
everything with a drifting powder which muffled sound and concealed their
tracks; but it also concealed holes and buried branches—hazards to the horses,
who stamped and shied at every snap of snow-laden bough. Their unconscious
captive, bound hand and foot to his horse between his two abductors, had a less
than gentle ride. They had been
riding without speaking for some time, alternating between a trot and a brisk
walk, snatching what fitful naps they could, when Rhys first became aware that
he was being watched. He had been drifting on the edge of consciousness while
the horses walked, mentally rehearsing what they would do and say when they reached
the Dhassa gate the next evening. To discover the gray eyes observing him,
albeit somewhat dazedly, gave him a start in that first instant of realization. He flashed a
reassuring smile at the man, mentally chasing the cobwebs of sleep from his
mind, but the gesture brought no response other than the continued fogged
appraisal—and perhaps a glimmer of recognition. Raising an eyebrow
at that, Rhys glanced across at the still-dozing Joram, hunched down in the
saddle and swaying easily with the motion of his mount. Though he knew that
Joram needed the sleep—they had been largely without for nearly thirty-six
hours now—it was important that they establish communication immediately. He
suspected from Cinhil’s expression that the monk remembered who he was. “Joram, we have
company again,” he said in a low voice. Joram raised his
head immediately, to become instantly alert and awake as only Joram seemed to
be able to do, and their captive turned his head to blink at his other escort. “Why have you
brought me out of Saint Foillan’s?” he asked, without giving Joram time for
amenities. “Who are you?” The priest studied
the fur-hooded face for several seconds, apparently considering how best to
answer the question, then decided on the truth. “My name is Joram
MacRorie. I’m a Michaeline priest. As for why we have brought you out of Saint
Foillan’s, that should be abundantly clear, my lord—or should I say, Your
Highness?” The man recoiled
as though struck, an instant of terror darting across his eyes before he could
mask it, but both Joram and Rhys heard the scarcely whispered “No,” as Cinhil
lowered his head and tried to turn his face away. The two exchanged
glances, and then Joram gestured ahead to where a stand of pines afforded some
protection from the wind. It was time to rest the horses anyway, and better
they say what they must on solid ground, face to face, where there could be no
mistaking their intent. The horses blew
and snorted gratefully as their riders reined in beneath the snow-laden trees,
and Joram, with a sigh, hitched their captive’s lead over his saddle and jumped
to the ground. Moving around to Cinhil’s right, Joram released the thongs
binding the man’s foot to the off stirrup, then repeated the process on the
other side. Rhys, Cinhil’s other lead still in his hands, swung his right leg
over his horse’s neck and around the saddletree to ease cramped muscles. They
had already agreed that one of them would remain mounted whenever Cinhil was on
horseback, for they dared not risk an ill-considered escape. “Come down and
walk a bit, Sire,” Joram said, loosing Cinhil’s hands from the saddletree but
not from the thongs which bound them together. “You must be stiff. I apologize
for the rough treatment, but we feared you would not come with us of your own
free will.” Cinhil turned his
head away and shrank from the offered assistance. “Call me not Sire,” he
whispered. “I am sire to no man, nor ever like to be. You have mistaken me for
someone else. I am a simple, cloistered monk, having quarrel with no one.” Joram shook his
head slowly, understanding what the man was trying to do, but knowing that he
could not permit it. He cast a resigned glance at Rhys, and knew that the
Healer recognized it, too. “You are Nicholas
Gabriel Draper, known in religion as Brother Benedict,” Joram said. “Your
father was called Royston, and your grandfather Daniel. But both had other
names, my lord, and other names have you.” “No,” the monk
murmured. “No other names.” “Your father’s
other name was Alroy, an ancient royal name; your grandfather was known as
Aidan, Prince of Haldane, in the years before the Coup,” Joram continued
relentlessly. “And you—you are Cinhil Donal Ifor, Prince of Haldane and last of
your grandfather’s royal line. The time has come for you to claim your birthright,
Your Highness. The time has come for you to mount the Throne of Gwynedd.” “No,” the captive
choked. “Say it not. I will not hear you. Such names are past, and best
forgotten. I am only Benedict, a monk, a priest. I have no other birthright in
this world.” Joram glanced at
Rhys uneasily, trying not to show the distaste he was feeling for what he must
do. They had planned the strategy for miles, on the long ride toward Saint
Foillan’s, crafting arguments to cover every possible contingency. But they had
not reckoned on the gentleness of the man, or the childlike grief evoked by the
threat of an ending to the life he had known until now. Joram steeled himself
for the next words he must utter, but it was Cinhil himself who broke the
silence, raising his head to stare unseeing between his horse’s ears, not
deigning to look at them. “I pray you, take
me back to Saint Foillan’s.” “We may not, my
lord,” Joram said. “Then, send me.
You need not go yourselves. I will tell no one what you have done.” “We may not,
my lord,” Joram repeated. “Other lives than your own have been touched—and some
ended.” “Ended? You mean
that men have died on my account?” Joram nodded,
unwilling to meet the man’s eyes just then, and the monk shifted his stunned
gaze to the winter-bare forest beyond, as though reading a half-forgotten
vision which he had tried to put aside. “Where are you
taking me?” he finally asked. “Among friends.” “I have no friends
outside the walls of my abbey. Nor are they friends who would end my life.” “One life ends,
another begins, my lord,” Joram said, laying a hand on the horse’s bridle and
gazing up unwaveringly. “You were born to other than monastic cells and hours
of prayer, however comfortable you may have found that life in recent years. It
is only now that you begin to enter your true destiny.” “No! It is this
I was born for!” He struck his white-cloaked breast with his bound hands
and turned frantic eyes to Rhys in appeal. “You, my lord—the story told you by
my grandsire—it was a fantasy he wove. I am not what he would have you think. I
am not of the stuff from which princes are made.” “You are a
Haldane, my lord.” “No! The Haldanes
all are dead. I was a Draper before I took my vows—and my father before me. I
know no other names.” Joram sighed and
glanced at Rhys, then shrugged lightly. “I think it’s pointless to continue for
now, don’t you? He’s tired and frightened. Perhaps later—” “That will not
change the truth,” Cinhil interjected. “No, but the truth
may be different than you now perceive it, my lord. You have been away from the
world for many years. Why not reserve judgment until you have a chance to
become reacquainted?” “It is a world I
have renounced. You, who claim to be a priest, should understand that.” “All too well,”
Joram sighed. “However, it does not change my present intent. Come, if I have
your word you’ll not try to escape, I would be pleased to release your bonds.
You’ll feel better if you get down and walk a bit.” Cinhil stared at
Joram for a long moment, as though weighing what he had said, then lowered his
eyes. “I will not resist
you.” “Your word on it?” “My word,” the
captive whispered. With a nod, Joram
reached up and cut the thongs binding Cinhil’s wrists. But when he held out a
hand to assist the man from his horse, Cinhil pursed his lips and brushed the
hand aside, sliding down the other side, past Rhys, to stagger but a half-dozen
steps before sinking to his knees in the snow. As the man bowed
his head and fought dry sobs, Joram frowned and glanced at Rhys, then hitched
his cloak back on his shoulders and folded his arms resignedly. Both were
painfully aware that the rest of the ride to Dhassa was likely to seem even
longer than they had feared. And indeed, the
rest of the ride was accomplished, though without further incident, in nearly
total silence. They stopped once at midday to change mounts at a small
hostelry, Rhys guarding the prince while Joram negotiated for the horses’
exchange. But Cinhil volunteered not one word of further conversation or
resistance in all that time. By that evening,
they were within an hour’s ride of their destination. A small, swiftly-running
stream wound alongside the road they travelled, crusted with snow along the
edges but not yet iced over for the winter. Men and horses were showing the
effects of the journey. Rhys was especially concerned about Cinhil, for the
prince was totally unaccustomed to the rigors of riding. He had nearly cried
out from the pain of aching muscles when they dismounted at their last rest
stop a few hours before, only pride maintaining the silence he had imposed upon
himself. It had taken both of them to assist him, half fainting, back into the
saddle when they were ready to ride on. Cinhil had been
looking more and more pale for the past half-hour, and Rhys knew that they
would have to rest soon or risk having Cinhil pass out. There was also the very
real uncertainty as to what Cinhil might do when they entered the city and
tried to make their way to the bishop’s palace. If he should resist, if his
seeming compliance all day was but preparation for a public denunciation— Rhys
preferred not even to think about that possibility. Nor had Rhys been
able to probe their royal captive’s mind during the long, silent hours of
riding. It was as though a sleek, rigid wall had been erected— one which Rhys
felt certain he could eventually broach, given time and rest and the proper
preparations, but one which he dared not even attempt without making Cinhil
more alert than he already was to the potential power of the Deryni men who
held him captive. No, some more
insidious method would have to be used on Cinhil—at least until they were
safely among allies, where his protests would do no good. What Rhys had in mind
for now would also help to numb the pain of tortured leg and thigh muscles
until more thorough and lasting methods could be applied. As though sensing
Rhys’s growing disquiet, if not the exact reasons or solution for it, Joram
stood in his stirrups to stretch and yawn, then gestured toward the side of the
road where the configuration of the stream bank allowed an approach to the
swiftly running water. Dismounting, he moved to Cinhil’s side to assist him
from his horse, then supported the limping prince to a seat on a rock sheltered
from the wind. Rhys, in a more leisurely manner, got down and led the three
horses to the stream to drink, then took an empty water flask from his saddle
and knelt by the water, hiding the flask with his body as he filled it from the
icy stream. Joram was helping
to massage the knots from Cinhil’s legs when Rhys returned. The prince, when he
had drunk deeply from Rhys’s flask, passed it to Joram without thinking. Before
the priest could drink in turn, Rhys reached across and took the flask with a
slight shake of his head, pouring the rest of the contents into the snow. “You’ve drugged
him.” Joram’s words were a simple statement of fact, only a little surprised. Rhys nodded as
Cinhil turned his head to stare. “The water?”
Cinhil whispered. “It was necessary.
A sleeping potion to calm you, to ease your discomfort until we can rest
properly.” “And to guard
against my betrayal, as well,” Cinhil said, a strained smile playing across his
lips. A muffled sob escaped him and he bowed his head, closing his eyes
briefly. When he looked up again, he would not meet their eyes. “What—what will
happen to me?” “From the drug?”
Rhys looked across at him steadily. “You will become very sleepy. Your
perception will be blurred. You will probably drift in and out of
consciousness. It will be better this way, believe me.” “Better for whom?”
Cinhil whispered. “Did you really fear I would betray you? I gave my word. It”
—he gestured toward the flask—”it was not necessary.” At that, Joram
stood abruptly and strode back to the horses, to kneel at the edge of the
stream, his back to Cinhil. Rhys followed, keeping a wistful eye on Cinhil, to
hunch down beside the priest. He could tell that Joram was annoyed. “Was it
necessary?” Joram asked, leaning down to scoop water from the stream and drink.
“I thought it was.
Joram, I’ve been trying to read him for hours, hoping something would slip.
Nothing. He’s like a blank wall. He has some kind of natural shield when he’s
under pressure, which I couldn’t penetrate—at least not without letting him
know what I was trying to do. I think that’s why we had trouble controlling him
last night. I didn’t think we could afford to take chances with him in Dhassa,
especially with both of us as tired as we are.” “No, I suppose
not.” Joram dried his hands on his cloak, then half turned toward Rhys. “He
really has that kind of natural defense, eh? Do you think you’ll be able to get
through to him later?” Rhys shrugged,
permitting himself a slight, nervous smile. “There are ways to overcome
anyone’s resistance eventually, especially if one is a Healer. Besides, I’ll
have Camber working with me, once we reach the haven. It’s a bit of a
challenge, but I think we’ll be able to handle it between us.” With a raise of
his eyebrow, Joram stood and stretched, then glanced toward the resting Cinhil.
“Did you tell him the truth about the effects of the drug?” “Yes. We should
have ample time to get him through the Portal before it wears off. And he will
sleep, if we let him.” “Hmm. Won’t he
attract attention, if he’s in a stupor?” “Not as much as he
would if he made a scene,” Rhys replied. He put the flask back on his saddle.
“If there should be any question, he’s ill and we’re taking him to the Bishop’s
Healer. That seemed like a simple enough ruse to me.” “Aye.” With a
resigned sigh, Joram shook his head and gave a smile. “I must be more tired
than I thought. I must say, though, you’ve certainly caught on to the ways of
conspiracy with the proper enthusiasm. And this is a man who never played the
treason game before.” “I wish you
wouldn’t use that word.” “What, ‘treason’?” With a chuckle,
Joram clapped Rhys on the shoulder and gestured toward their nodding prince.
Now they must get Cinhil back on his horse and ride. On the next hour rested
the fate of a kingdom. Fortunately for
the three who rode toward Dhassa at that hour, the wheels of feudal bureaucracy
were grinding with their accustomed slowness, with the result that only now was
the Abbot of Saint Foillan’s putting the pieces together properly to explain
the absence of a man known as Brother Benedictus. As Rhys and Joram
had suspected, Brother Benedict’s absence was not first noted until after
Matins, when it was remarked by the precentor that he had not seen Brother
Benedict in choir during that Divine Office. But the precentor was a busy man,
with many duties to perform, and it was not until several hours later, when
Bother Benedict did not appear at Lauds or Prime, that he became truly
concerned. Fearing that
Brother Benedict might have taken ill, the precentor checked with the
infirmarian; but Brother Reynard had not seen the missing monk for several
days. A thorough search of the rest of the abbey precincts after Terce likewise
revealed no trace of the missing monk. To be sure, his bed had been slept in,
but no one remembered seeing him after Compline the night before. A pair of lay
brethren went out on horseback to scout the road as far as a man might have
strayed on foot—just in case Brother Benedict had, indeed, taken ill and
wandered off in delirium. But the storm had done its work well. If Brother
Benedict had managed to wander off and die, they would not know for sure until
spring. Sadly, but with the resignation necessitated by the situation, the
abbot had a Mass sung for Brother Benedict the next morning, and life went on
in the abbey as usual. So the matter
might have remained indefinitely, had not the abby’s vestiarian, Brother
Leviticus, chosen the next afternoon to begin his winter inventory of the
abbey’s clothing supply. Checking the shelves near the cell of the missing
Brother Benedict, Brother Leviticus was astonished to discover that two robes
could not be accounted for. Careful inquiry among the brethren who shared the
area revealed that the robes had almost certainly been there two days before,
but no one could explain their absence now. Puzzled, the
vestiarian reported the matter to the subprior, who told the prior, who
eventually told the abbot himself, that evening after dinner. The abbot started
to shrug it off, but his mind had been lingering all day on the disappearance
of his friend, Benedict. Abruptly, the pieces began to fall together. “Brother Patrick,
how many robes did Brother Leviticus say were missing?” “Why, two, Father
Abbot.” The abbot picked
up a quill pen and twirled it between bony fingers. “Tell me, do you remember
the two men who came to see Brother Benedict a few weeks ago?” “The Healer and
the monk?” The young man blinked. “I remember the visit, of course, Father. And
the monk was in the service of the archbishop, but—” “Aye, I remember
that,” the abbot snapped. “He was a Gabrilite brother—or claimed to be!” As the prior
watched owlishly, not daring to say a word, the abbot pushed back his chair and
extracted a calendar roll from a shelf behind his desk. Not finding what he
sought among its notations, he tossed it back on the shelf in annoyance and
drummed his fingers on the desk. “Please ask the
infirmarian to attend us at once, Brother Patrick. Also Brother Paul and
Brother Phineas and Brother Jubal.” “At once, Father
Abbot.” The prior blinked myopically and backed out the door. For the next ten
minutes, the abbot sat and chewed at a hangnail, suspicion growing in his mind
that his theory would prove correct. The two men had come on the same day that
Benedict had fainted and had been speaking with him when it happened. Something
about an important message from Brother Benedict’s dead grandfather. He himself
had been standing in the background, listening. And the one had
been a Healer—what was his name? Lord Re—Ro—Rhys— Yes, that was it. And when
Benedict had not responded to the ministrations of the infirmarian, they had
asked this Rhys person to take a look at him, had even permitted the man to
enter the cloistered area. Why, he and the monk with him had been permitted
to attend Benedict in his very cell! Stifling an unholy
but entirely provoked oath, the abbot sat bolt upright and crumpled the letter
he had just finished writing to his vicar general in Valoret. He tossed it into
the fire with an angry gesture. Benedict had not
become delirious with some new illness and wandered out of the abbey to die in
the snow. Indeed, he probably had not been ill at all, either two nights ago or
a few weeks earlier! He had been kidnapped from right within the abbey walls—
from the cloistered area itself!—and spirited away by those two— His anger was
interrupted by a timid knock on the door, and he forced himself to submerge his
anger and assume the proper paternal mien. “Come.” Brother Patrick
peered in apprehensively before entering, followed by Brothers Jubal, Paul,
Phineas, and Reynald. The abbot stood as each came forward to bow and kiss his
ring, then waited until Brother Patrick had closed the door before sitting down
again. The monks stood silently, hands folded and hidden ia their voluminous
sleeves, as the abbot dipped his quill to ink and drew a fresh piece of
parchment in front of him. “Brother Reynald,
do you recall the date of Brother Benedict’s last illness?—the day he fainted
whilst speaking with the two visitors.” Brother Reynald
studied his sandalled toes for a moment, then looked up. “That would have been
about the Feast of Saint Margetan, Father Abbot. No, it was the day after,
Saint Edmund’s Eve.” “Which one,
Brother Reynald?” “Saint Edmund’s
Eve, the”—he consulted his calendar
again—”the fourteenth of
November.” He jotted down the date,
then looked up at Brother Jubal. “Brother Jubal,
you were gate warder that week, I believe.” “Yes, Father
Abbot.” “Can you recall
the names of the two visitors? There was a Healer and an older man, a monk.” After considering
the question for a moment, the monk raised an eyebrow. “I believe the monk’s
name was Brother Kyriell, Father Abbot. From the Order of Saint Gabriel.” “Ah, yes. Brother
Kyriell,” the abbot repeated. “Did he give any other name?” “No, only his
order,” Brother Phineas volunteered. “And that he was in the service of
Archbishop Anscom, of course, Father Abbot.” The abbot chewed
on the tip of his quill for a moment, then shook his head. He could associate
nothing more with the name, though he had the feeling he should be able to. But
even the one name ought to enable the vicar general to do something—if the monk
called Brother Kyriell really was in the service ;i of the
archbishop, of course. He wrote the name
down, tracing each letter carefully, then scanned the brethren once more. “Now, the name of
the Healer—Lord Rhys Something.” “Moorin, or
Toorin, or something like that?” Brother Jubal interjected. “I think it was
Thoorin, Brother Jubal,” Brother Reynard murmured, craning his neck a little as
the abbot started to write it down. “I’m not sure about the spelling, but that
was the sound of it. Thoor-in. He was a Healer, all right. I had a
toothache that day, and he—” He broke off as
the abbot looked up at him sharply, then bowed his head self-consciously. After
a long moment, the abbot bent his head to write again. The pen scratched
briefly on the parchment, and then he dismissed all of them with a wave of his
hand. As the doors closed behind them, he took out a fresh piece of parchment
and began a new letter to his superior, this time making all his letters clear
and round. “Most Reverend
and Excellent Father General,” the letter began. “I regret to report the
abduction from Saint Foillan’s of one of our brethren in Christ, Brother
Benedictus, two nights past. The wise of his taking is described as
follows....” “ ‘And so,’“ the
vicar general read to his superior, the Archbishop of Valoret, five days later,
“ ‘it appears likely that Brother Benedict was taken by the said Brother
Kyriell and Lord Rhys Thuryn in the manner I have described, though for what
reason I cannot discern. I am forwarding copies of all our records
pertaining to Brother Benedict, in the hopes that Your Reverence will be able
to make some connection which I have missed, and beg to remain Your Reverence’s
good and faithful servant, et cetera, et cetera.’“ The vicar general
lowered the letter and glanced up at his superior with something of a perplexed
expression on his face. The archbishop, who had been sipping at an earthen
goblet of goat’s milk, drained the glass with a final swallow and made a face,
then held out a gnarled hand for the missive. As he sat back to read, the vicar
general helped himself to another slice of cheese. It was
mid-morning, and the archbishop’s custom was to break his fast with his
subordinates while reviewing the day’s correspondence. Of course, Robert Oriss,
Vicar General of the Order of Saint Jarlath, hardly qualified as a mere
subordinate. Born within a week of the archbishop, he and Anscom of Trevas had
been reared a scant ten miles apart, and had first met at the tender age of
ten, when both boys were enrolled in the famous monastery school at Saint
Neot’s. Though Anscom was Deryni and Robert was not, this had not diminished
the friendship which had sprung up between them. In fact, when Robert was
resident in Valoret and not out inspecting the abbeys and monasteries under his
care, it was his custom to meet with the archbishop at least once a week.
Anscom was one of those rare men who did not forget his old friends simply
because he had risen above them; and Robert, though he did not always
understand everything his Deryni colleague did, greatly valued their continuing
interaction. But the good vicar
general had already made his visit for this week, two days before. It was the
receipt of the letter now in the archbishop’s hand which had prompted his
urgent message last night, and that same letter which accounted for Robert’s
presence here this morning. The vicar general poured more goat’s milk for the
archbishop—Anscom hated it, but drank it to soothe a delicate digestion—then
nibbled at a piece of bread until the archbishop looked up. Anscom’s seamed
face was puzzled and a little sad. “What is so
special about this particular monk, Robert? Why would anyone want to abduct
him?” The vicar general
shook his head. “I am at a loss to explain it, Your Grace. I’ve gone over his
records: He’s a poor draper’s son, an orphan. He has taken a vow of
poverty ... I simply don’t know.” “And this abbot of
yours, this Zephram of Lorda— is he trustworthy?” The vicar general
started to protest—for he believed all of his subordinates to be trustworthy—
then spread his palms in a yea-nay gesture. “I have received no unfavorable
reports of him, so I must assume ...” The archbishop
grunted, and dropped the letter on the table, staring past the vicar general
for several seconds. “Did you know that
Cathan MacRorie died last week?” “The king’s
advisor?” “The son of Earl
Camber of Culdi,” the archbishop amended. “And Camber’s daughter Evaine is
betrothed to Rhys Thuryn.” “Rhys Th—” The
vicar general broke off and flicked a glance at the letter on the table. “The
same Rhys Thuryn?” “The same.” The vicar general let out a long sigh and sat back
in his chair, all thought of breakfast forgotten. When his superior did not
volunteer further comments, the vicar general pursed his lips and gazed
thoughtfully across the table. “Your Grace,
you’re not implying that Earl Camber had something to do with Brother
Benedict’s abduction, are you?” The archbishop
looked up with a start, an instant of pain darting across his usually
inscrutable face. “Are you mad?” he whispered softly. “I know Camber. He
and I studied for the priesthood together at Grecotha, before his brothers died
and made him his father’s heir. I married him to his wife, baptized all his
children, ordained his son Joram, married Cathan and Elinor— Besides, what
possible reason could he have?” “I don’t know,
Your Grace. By your comment, I thought you might.” He sighed. “This Rhys
Thuryn— I’ve never heard of him. Is he active at Court? You seem to know him.” “I know of him,”
the archbishop replied. “He is very young for a Healer, but has an excellent
reputation. He is also very close to Camber’s younger son, Joram, who is a
Michaeline— Hmm, I wonder.” “You think that
this Joram may have been the monk?” “I don’t know,”
the archbishop replied, though his tone sounded doubtful. “On the other hand,
Joram is a Michaeline, and they have long been agitators.” “Agitators, yes,”
Robert Oriss snorted. “But, against a fellow priest? I see no political issue
in a man like Brother Benedict.” “Nor do I,” the
archbishop sighed. “But there is a political issue” surrounding the
MacRories. You’ve heard the rumors about Cathan MacRorie’s death, haven’t you?” Robert had not. “Well, there is
now some talk that young Cathan did not simply die—that he was killed, some say
by the king’s own hand. If true, it could explain Imre’s erratic behavior at
his Yule Court feast. And it certainly gives Joram, or Camber, or Rhys a motive
for political retaliation of some kind.” He frowned. “But not against a
cloistered monk. I’ll confess, I haven’t any answers, Robert. Have you?” The vicar general
had none. After another
silent period, the archbishop stood and slowly walked to the window, laying his
hands wearily along the wide casement edging. Outside, the snow was falling. “Leave us, please,
Robert,” the archbishop finally said in a low voice. The vicar general,
noting the lapse into the formal “we,” stood at once and bowed, backing
silently out the door and closing it behind him. The archbishop, when he had
gone, returned to his chair and sat down, touched the discarded letter briefly,
folded his arms on the table, and lowered his head to pray. Though he had not
indicated so to Robert Oriss, Archbishop Anscom knew who had accompanied Rhys
Thuryn to Saint Foillan’s, and was now implicated in an abduction. He and the
“monk” had studied for the priesthood together at Grecotha and had shared a
thousand moments of the joys and sorrows of the world. For “Brother
Kyriell” was the name which had been used in religion by Camber of Culdi. chapter sixteenThere is one
alone, and there is not a second; yea, he hath neither child nor brother; yet
is there no end to all his labour;
neither is his eye satisfied with riches. —Ecclesiastes
4:8 Whatever Anscom’s
personal feelings about the MacRories, and about Camber MacRorie in particular,
the good archbishop was also a servant of the Crown; and duty dictated that,
even though the abduction of a monk was an ecclesiastical matter, it must be
reported to the king. Anscom did delete
the physical description of Brother Kyriell; let Imre figure out who the
mysterious monk was. In the meantime, perhaps Anscom could contact Camber and
find out what was going on. For Camber to reassume his old religious name as a
subterfuge was very much out of character for the Camber Anscom knew. Perhaps
Camber was trying to tell him something; or perhaps there was another Brother
Kyriell, and it was all coincidence—though Anscom tended to mistrust coincidence.
Whatever the explanation, Anscom wanted to know. Accordingly, the
archbishop’s missive went through regular channels; no sense in giving the king
a head start, if Camber was involved. And so, in due
course, it was delivered, not to the king but to Earl Santare, named but the
week before to head the investigation of the apparent MacRorie conspiracy. Coel
Howell had made it his practice in the past week to shadow Santare and be as
helpful as possible, even to the extent of sharing with Santare some of the intelligence
he had gathered on his own; and thus he was also present when the missive
arrived. But even before they received the new information, their combined
resources had already turned up some interesting coincidences—or were they
coincidences? They had known for
some time, for example, that Daniel Draper, one of the men named in the
documents stolen by Joram, had died of natural causes but a scant two months
ago—and that he had been attended on his deathbed by none other than Lord Rhys
Thuryn. But further
inquiry, in Thuryn’s household and surrounds, had revealed that the same Rhys
Thuryn, on the evening after the old man’s death, had taken horse and ridden
out of the city. Though his servants insisted that he had but gone to Caerrorie
for Michaelmas, the brethren of Saint Liam’s Monastery School— where Father
Joram MacRorie was currently assigned —claimed that Thuryn and Father Joram had
ridden off in great haste the same day, and in driving rain, in the direction
of Saint Jarlath’s Monastery. Curious. And as if that
were not enough, the monks of Saint Jarlath’s told how the two had inveigled
permission, in the dead of night, to consult the abbey’s induction records. The
crowning touch to the entire piece of work was the statement of one Gregory of
Arden, Abbot of Saint Jarlath’s, who remembered the two saying that they were
looking for a Brother Benedict whose grandfather had died recently in Valoret.
Coel’s scribes were compiling a list of Brothers Benedict in the order even
now. It was just possible that they were on the verge of locating the missing
Nicholas Draper. Coel and Santare
were together with a couple of Santare’s aides when the archbishop’s messenger
arrived, and it fell to Coel to receive the letter and break the seal. His feet
propped comfortably on the edge of the raised hearth, a tankard of ale at his
elbow, Coel read impassively until he had come almost to the end, the silence
broken only by the crackle of the fire. Then he started and sat up abruptly,
swinging his feet under him in astonishment. “S’blood! Would
you look at this?” He shoved the parchment under the earl’s nose. “You wanted
to know what Joram MacRorie and Thuryn were doing? Well, I can tell you about
Thuryn. And I’ll bet that this Brother Kyriell was MacRorie! What do you want
to bet that this Brother Benedict and our Nicholas Draper are one and the same
person?” Santare pulled the
missive before him and scanned it briefly. When he had finished, he leaned back
in his chair and hooked thumbs in his ample belt, nodding slowly. “No wonder we
couldn’t find Draper. He’s been holed up in a monastery all these years. They
must’ve traced him through the records at Saint Jarlath’s, the same way we were
trying to trace Benedict. And yet...” The earl got to
his feet and began pacing, his boots stirring the rushes beneath them. Coel
watched him, hawk-like, scarcely able to contain his impatience. “You know, that’s
odd,” Santare continued, after several circuits of the room. “According to the
archbishop’s report, they went to Saint Foillan’s for the first time a good
month ago, but they didn’t do anything. It’s as though they weren’t sure he was
the right one. The question is, the right one what? Why all this
interest in a simple monk from a family of merchants?” One of the aides
cleared his throat hesitantly. “There—ah—have been the rumors of the
Haldane, m’lord. You’ve seen the handbills that are starting to appear.” “Willimite
speculation and wishful thinking!” Coel snapped. “That may be what they’re
trying to imply, but it simply won’t work.” “But, Thuryn did
steal the painting of Ifor Haldane, sir,” the second aide
volunteered. “He must have had a reason.” “It’s a fraud. It
has to be!” Coel insisted. “No Haldane survived the Coup. Everyone knows
that.” “But if one had,
wouldn’t this be a bloody good time for him to turn up?” Santare said,
motioning the aides to leave them. Coel sat back and
planted a booted foot on the edge of the hearth in disgust as the door closed
behind the aides. “Yes, it would,” he agreed grudgingly. “But, it doesn’t make
sense. This whole thing doesn’t make sense. What is a Haldane to the MacRories?
They’re Deryni, the same as you and I. Certainly, Camber has no reason to love
the king, especially after the way Cathan died; but, damn it, they’re all Deryni!
He can’t seriously mean to replace Imre with a human king of the old line—or
worse, one who only says he’s of the old line. Where’s their proof? And
where is Camber?” “I don’t know,”
Santare shrugged. “We’ve questioned the servants and peasants at Caerrorie, of
course—” “And learned
nothing! Santare, I find it difficult to believe that skilled inquisitors were
unable to extract even one jot of information about Camber’s plans or
motivations. If it were up to me—” “If it were up to
you, I have no doubt that half of Camber’s servants would now be swinging at
the ends of ropes, the way those peasants ended up in October —for not
divulging information which they did not have,” Santare said pointedly. “Don’t
you think that a Deryni as powerful as Camber could manage to keep his plans
secure from a few human servants, if he wanted to—and be certain that no one
could get that information out of them?” “But, he’s got to
be somewhere!” Further argument
was curtailed by the explosive entrance of a very out-of-breath young squire in
Imre’s personal colors. A look of relief crossed the lad’s face as he swept off
his cap and bowed. “My lords, the King’s Grace commands your presence
in his chambers at once. He—” The boy paused to gulp another breath. “He is
most distraught, my lords. It would do well not to tarry.” As one, Coel and
Santare bolted for the door. “Miserable,
ungrateful, misbegotten whoresons!” Imre was screaming, as Coel and Santare
were admitted to his chamber. “Lying, deceitful— Coel! Do you know what they’ve
done? Can you conceive—” “What who has
done, Your Grace?” Coel interjected, bowing cautiously. “The Michaelines!
Filthy, two-faced, double-crossing, treacherous—” “Sire! What have
they done?” Imre glared at
him, wild-eyed, then flung his hands into the air and flounced into a chair.
“They’ve disappeared—every last treasonous one of them! They took their
treasury, their altar
plate—everything! They’re just—gone!” “Gone...” Santare
breathed. His reaction was
lost on Imre, who lurched to his feet and immediately launched into a new
stream of invective, proclaiming fluent and obscene descriptions of the base
birth and gross physical habits of the order in question. Santare, awed and
more than a little apprehensive, tried to discern a motive, forcing himself to
begin planning for the safety of the realm. Such action by an
order as wealthy and powerful as the Michaelines, coupled with the evidence of
a MacRorie conspiracy, pointed to only one thing: there was a plot brewing to
attempt the overthrow of Imre and replace him with an alleged Haldane heir. And
if the Michaelines were involved, then they must be well convinced that this
heir was a true Haldane, and that they looked for at least a reasonable chance
of success in their endeavor. Even now, the Michaeline knights must be
gathering somewhere, preparing to make their move. By removing their
noncombatant members to places of safety, they had rendered themselves
invulnerable to reprisal. Why, the Michaelines could be anywhere! Coel, too, was not
blind to the ramifications of the Michaeline disappearance, though his
thoughts, as the king raged on, were of a more personal and immediately
sobering bent. He had thought himself so clever. Why, he had not been clever at
all! All of his planning, his merciless engineering of Cathan’s apparent
betrayal, the assassination of Maldred, Cathan’s own murder—all of these had
been unwittingly aiding a real conspiracy. He had seen himself as architect of
a new power base in Gwynedd, not dreaming of the real enormity of the greater plan.
He was but a pawn in a game whose magnitude he was only now beginning to
comprehend. And now he could envision himself being swept along in that game,
impelled by forces which he, himself, had helped to focus. Would he eventually
be a sacrifice for his own king? “I’ll show them!”
Imre was shouting, as Coel’s attention snapped back to the immediate crisis.
“They’ll be sorry they dared to defy me!” Still cursing
under his breath, Imre flung himself into the chair behind his writing desk and
began scribbling furiously, muttering all the while as Coel and Santare
exchanged stunned glances. At length, the king sanded the ink, sealed the foot
of the page with his personal signet, and stood, flourishing it under Santare’s
nose with a malicious smirk contorting his face. “You will see to
the execution of these commands immediately, Santare.” “Sire?” “Go ahead, take
it!” Imre said, shaking the page impatiently. “The Michaelines dare to oppose
me? They think to replace me with another king? Well, we’ll see! The present
king intends to make things very uncomfortable. See to it!” he barked. Santare bowed his
head, not daring to look at the page he now held in his hand. “Aye, My Liege.” “And if, in the
process, you should happen to run any stray Michaelines to ground,” Imre added,
“I want them brought to me immediately.
Do you understand? Regardless of the hour. I want to question each one of them
personally, before he’s executed as a traitor!” “Yes, Sire.” “Then get out!
Both of you!” Outside, Santare
exhaled in relief—the first real breathing he had allowed himself since
entering the king’s presence—then unrolled the parchment, turning away
pointedly when Coel made as though to read over his shoulder. The earl scanned
the document slowly, meticulously, as Coel fidgeted in impatience; then he
handed it over, as Coel had known he would. Imre, by the
Grace of God, etc., to all leal subjects of Our Realm, greeting. Know that We
have this day been most grievously and treacherously betrayed by members of the
Order of Saint Michael, which Order We do dissolve, disband, and abolish. We
declare its former brethren outlaw, its goods and lands forfeit to the Crown.
We include in this ban all those bearing the name MacRorie: especially Camber,
the former Earl of Culdi; Joram MacRorie, a priest of the Michaeline Order; and
the Healer known as Rhys Thuryn. To Our
well-beloved Santare, Earl of Grand-Tellie, we give command to proceed to the
Michaeline Commanderie at Cheltham with a royal force and take into custody all
persons residing there. The establishment shall be sacked and burned, its
buildings levelled, its lands sown with salt, this to be accomplished no later
than the Feast of Saint Olympias, one week hence. An additional Michaeline
establishment shall be dealt with in this manner each week, until the Vicar
General of the Order shall present himself before Us on bended knee and
surrender both his Order and all members of Clan MacRorie, severally and
collectively. Reward is offered for the capture of any and all... There was more,
but even Coel had no stomach for it. “Per
intercessionem beati Michaelis Archangeli, stantis a dextris altari incensi..
.” The words of the
liturgy floated fervent and a little desperate on the incense-laden air, barely
audible in the listening gallery where Camber MacRorie waited. The celebrant
was Cinhil Haldane, thurible in hand, a deacon following behind to lift the
edge of his chasuble as he circled and censed the altar. Camber observed in
silence as priest-prince and monk completed their circuit and incensed one
another again, watching as the deacon put the incense aside and then poured
water over Cinhil’s fingertips into a small earthen bowl. “Lavabo inter
innocentes manus meets .. .” He had not talked
with Cinhil yet today—in fact had not seen the prince since the previous
afternoon, just prior to his last discussion with Alister Cullen. But he had
not been heartened by their progress to date. Though Cinhil had been with them
for nearly two weeks now, they still had not been able to win him to their
cause. Physically, Cinhil
was docile enough. He went where he was told and did as he was bidden. He read
the writings they brought him, answered dutifully when questioned on what he
had read—even, on occasion, showed sparks of genuine insight into the problems
of this land he was but now coming to know about. But he volunteered no word or
action and did his best, to show no sign of interest or caring about the
position for which he was being groomed at such great cost. It was not
resistance as such. That they could have coped with, with force, if necessary.
It was an almost studied apathy; an immersion, to the exclusion of nearly all
outside influence, in the world he had chosen as a very young man over twenty
years before. He tolerated his present situation because he must; but he would
allow no inkling of human feeling for his denied birthright to intrude upon his
conscience and the world in which he had lived for the past score of years. So
long as they permitted him to celebrate Mass daily, he was reluctantly
compliant. Except that this
morning, for the first time since his arrival, he was showing signs of human
apprehension, almost despair. Camber suspected he knew the reason why. Footsteps warned
of the approach of another in the passageway behind him, and then Alister
Cullen was slipping into the gallery to join him. Nodding greeting, Camber
stepped aside to let the Michaeline general peer down into the chapel. Cullen’s
demeanor betrayed nothing. “Orate
fratres,” Cinhil prayed, his arms spread in desperate supplication, “ut
meum ac vestrum sacri-ficium acceptabile fiat apud Deum Patrem omnipote-tem.” Camber glanced at
Cullen carefully. “I assume you’ve told him?” Cullen sighed and
nodded once, wearily, then gestured with his chin that they should go outside.
By the brighter torchlight in the outer corridor, Camber could read the concern
which had not been evident in the dim listening gallery. He suspected that
Cullen was suffering from more than lack of sleep. “I spoke with him
last night for a long time,” Cullen said. “I surmised as
much. And?” Cullen shook his
head in frustration. “I really don’t know. I think I’ve finally convinced him
that he really will have to give up his priesthood, but he’s scared witless.” “So was I ...”
Camber mused, almost without thinking. Then, realizing that Cullen might not
understand, he continued. “Of course, I didn’t give up mine for a crown—only
for the promise of an earldom, after my older brothers died. Nor had I actually
been ordained—I was only a deacon. But I recall the anguish, the
soul-searching. I thought at the time that I had a real vocation as a priest.” “You would have
been wasted on the Church, and you know it,” Cullen growled, admiration tinging
his voice despite the actual words. “Perhaps—though I
think I could have been a good priest. On the other hand, I like to think I’ve
been privileged to do important work in the outside world. And of course, if
I’d ignored my family obligations and gone your way”—he chanced a sidelong
glance at Cullen and controlled the urge to smile—”there’d have been no Joram,
and probably no Prince Cinhil, here and now, causing us our present dilemma.
What, besides his understandable apprehension, seems to be the problem?” “He’s convinced
that he has a true vocation— which he has,” Cullen said brusquely. “He also
feels that, even if he were to make the sacrifices we’re demanding, the people
wouldn’t accept him. After all, why should they?” “Ask those who
have suffered at the hands of our current king, whether they be human or Deryni,
and you need not ask any further. The Haldanes were never guilty of such acts.
Besides, no one has seen Cinhil yet.” He broke into a grin. “For that matter,
he hasn’t seen himself for a few weeks. With that beard, and with his
tonsure grown out!” He permitted himself a grim chuckle. “Well, let’s just say
that when the barber gets through with him this morning, he’s going to bear
very little resemblance to the clean-shaven, ascetic Brother Benedict who came
to us two weeks ago.” “Has he seen the
painting yet?” “It will be
waiting for him after he’s trimmed, right beside the mirror. And if that
doesn’t jolt him into an awareness of who and what he is, I don’t know what
will.” “I do.” The
Michaeline general extracted a much-folded piece of parchment from his cassock.
“Take a look at this.” “Which is?” “My list of
candidates for future queen of Gwynedd.” Cullen smiled wanly as Camber
uncreased the parchment. “I know he’s going to fight this, too, but we’ve got
to get that man married. We need another heir after Cinhil, and we need one
quickly.” “It still takes
nine months, the last I heard,” Camber murmured. He was aware of Cullen folding
his arms across his chest as he scanned the list. “If I could get
him married today, it wouldn’t be soon enough to suit me,” Cullen muttered. “As
it is, I’d like to make a choice by the end of the week, and marry them on
Christmas Eve. That’s a week from today.” “I see,” Camber
said. “I notice that your list includes my young ward, Megan de Cameron. Do you
consider her a serious contender?” “If you have no
objections. My main concern, other than her ability to bear children, of
course, is that our future queen be of absolutely impeccable background. Other
than Cinhil’s having left the priesthood, there must be no breath of scandal
touching the marriage and eventual heir.” “Well, you’ll find
none concerning Megan,” Camber said. “She’s young, but I suspect that’s what
Cinhil needs. Besides that, she has a strong sense of duty, no other
attachments, she’s healthy—and I think she just might like him.” “That’s
coincidental,” Cullen rumbled. “My main concern is finding someone who—” “No, it’s not
coincidental, Alister,” Camber interrupted. “Megan may be my ward, and
technically I have the right to bestow her marriage on whom I choose, but I
would never match her with someone she couldn’t care for. No more than I would
force my own daughter to marry for dynastic reasons.” “For God’s sake,
stop sounding like a father, Camber. I haven’t even picked her yet.” “I–” Abruptly, Camber
closed his mouth and stared at Cullen, then shook his head and began to
chuckle. After a few seconds, Cullen, too, began to smile. “Christmas Eve . .
.” Camber finally said, as the tension dissolved away. “Do you plan to perform
the ceremony yourself?” “Unless you have
someone better in mind.” “Not intrinsically
better, but better for Cinhil,” Camber replied. “May I make the arrangements?” “Please do.” “Thank you.” “Can you tell me
whom you have in mind?” “No. But I assure
you, if I can get him to agree, you’ll approve.” “Hmm. Very well.”
Cullen glanced at his feet, then raised his eyes to meet Camber’s once more.
“There’s —ah—one other thing. I wasn’t going to tell you yet, bu.t I suppose
you ought to know. Imre has started reprisals against the order.” Camber was instantly
serious once more. “What happened?” “The Commanderie
at Cheltham,” Cullen said dully. “Imre’s troops occupied it two days ago. They
took everything they could carry off, torched the rest. Now I understand
they’re pulling down the walls that are still standing and salting the fields.
The rumor is that they will destroy a former Michaeline establishment every
week until I surrender you and the order. Of course, that’s out of the
question.” Camber could only
nod mutely. “So, it seems that
honor extracts a high price from all of us, eh, my friend?” Cullen finally
said, recovering some of his former bravado. “But no one ever promised us it
would be easy.” He glanced toward the gallery and sighed. “Well, I’d best be
waiting when His Highness finishes Mass. I’ll send him to you when the barber
and I are done with him.” “Send him to
Joram, if I’m not in my chamber,” Camber agreed. “Perhaps some of Joram’s
enthusiasm will rub off.” Cullen shrugged at
that, as though to indicate his doubt that anything enthusiastic could rub off
on the despondent Cinhil, then lifted a hand in farewell and headed off down
the corridor. Camber returned to
the listening gallery, but Cinhil had finished his Mass and was disappearing
with his monk escort through the door. With a sigh, Camber made his way down to
the chapel door and slipped inside. Rhys was waiting for him, standing
expectantly to one side of the altar. “How is he this
morning?” Camber asked. Rhys shook his
head gravely. “He didn’t sleep last night. His hands were shaking during Mass.
I think he sensed that this might be the last time. His distress was so
poignant that I could sense it in the air, like a gray pall surrounding the
altar. Didn’t you feel it, too?” Camber looked at
him carefully. “I was called away. When did this occur?” “During the
Consecration,” Rhys said. He glanced toward the altar, then back at Camber,
whose face had gone quite still. “What are you thinking, Camber?” the Healer
whispered. “I can’t read you at all when you do that.” “I am thinking,”
said Camber, slowly mounting the three low steps, “that our Cinhil Haldane may
be even more remarkable than we thought.” He spread one hand
above the altar and extended his senses, careful not to touch anything
physically. After a moment, he turned his head slightly toward Rhys. “Rhys, will you
help me, please?” The physician
moved to Camber’s left to stand expectantly, one reddish eyebrow arched in
question. “Now, lend me your
strength and support while I probe this more thoroughly,” Camber continued.
“There is something very strange here, which I’ve never encountered before. If
Cinhil is the cause of it, we may have some very interesting times ahead of
us.” With that, he
closed his eyes and laid his hands flat on the altar cloth, flinching at the
initial contact. Rhys stayed at his elbow, a hand resting lightly on the
other’s sleeve as he poured his strength into the other’s mind and shared the
impressions gathered. When Camber withdrew, his brow was beaded with
perspiration, his eyes slightly glazed. A trifle unsteady on his feet, he
allowed Rhys to help him turn and sit on the altar step, noting with detachment
that the younger man’s hands were shaking, too. It was several
minutes before he dared to speak, and then his voice was tinged with a little
awe. “How much of that
were you able to pick up?” “Nearly all,
though not with the same intensity second-hand, of course. What do you think?” Camber shook his
head. “I’m not sure I have it all sorted out yet. We’re going to have to
discuss this with the others, of course. But if we could pick up impressions
like that when Cinhil isn’t even in the same room, I don’t wonder that you and
Joram weren’t able to breach his shields when you took him out of Saint
Foillan’s. In fact, I’m surprised that you were able to make him faint, when we
first found him.” “He wasn’t
expecting it then,” Rhys countered. “He was agitated, but not directly about
himself. His shields were down.” “But his shields
also went down during Mass this morning—again, an instance of great mental
stress which wasn’t directly threatening. He was agitated because he knows that
we’re going to make him give up his priesthood, sooner or later, but—” Camber
shook his head again. “No. That’s the wrong approach. It’s his ability to
maintain these shields of his in stress which should concern us—the
power he must be able to generate without even thinking about it. My God, do
you realize that if we could teach him to concentrate and direct that power, he
could do anything a Deryni can do? With power like that, he could be a king for
both humans and Deryni!” “For Deryni? Oh,
come now, he’d have to be Deryni for that,” Rhys replied. “The best we can
probably hope for is simple tolerance from a human king, even if he is
powerful.” “No, wait. Of
course he’s not Deryni, Rhys. But he’s not entirely human, either. And I mean
that in the finest sense of the term. We’ve always maintained that there is
something extra in our people which sets them apart from humans—but maybe it’s
not something extra, but only something changed. And if that’s the case,
maybe we could make Cinhil Deryni.” “But, that’s
impossible—” “I know it’s
impossible to make him an actual Deryni. But perhaps we could make him a functional
Deryni. Perhaps we could give him Deryni powers and abilities. You have to
admit, if we could do it, it would make it that much easier for him to oust
Imre.” Rhys thought about that for a moment, pursing his
lips in concentration. “I don’t think it would work, even so. We’ve been basing
our entire strategy on human support when we actually make our move—on the fact
that Cinhil, the last living representative of the line usurped by the
Festillic dynasty, is human, as opposed to Imre, who is the symbol of all the
Deryni atrocities.” “But don’t you
see, there’s danger of a backlash,” Camber said. “If we incite the humans to
rise against the Deryni Imre, we may start a reverse persecution the likes of
which we’ve never dreamed. There have been only a few Deryni responsible for
the evil that’s happened in the last eighty years. We have to be certain that
our revolt is against the man Imre, and his followers—not against the Deryni
race.” Rhys whistled low
under his breath. “I see what you mean. If Cinhil were more than a human king,
if he were also Deryni, or nearly so, he could be a ruler for both peoples. He
might accomplish the overthrow of Imre and the re-establishment of the Haldane
rule with a minimum of bloodshed.” Camber nodded.
“Cinhil, a human king with Deryni-like powers, would unite us, instead of
letting us continue to tear ourselves apart with interracial bickering, and
oppression by whichever race is currently in power.” “And we thought we
were talking about a simple coup,” Rhys finally said, when he had digested what
Camber was suggesting. “I guess things are never as simple as they seem.” “Never,” Camber
agreed. “And wait until I tell you what Imre’s done now.” chapter seventeenBut he shall
take a virgin of his own people to wife. —Leviticus
21:14 But Imre’s latest
move, at least so far as Camber and Rhys knew, was not to have nearly the
impact of his next and far less obviously menacing one. For Imre’s men, four
days after the destruction of the Michaeline Commanderie began, chanced to
capture one Humphrey of Gallareaux, a Deryni priest of the Michaeline
persuasion. Taken captive at
Saint Neot’s, while claiming sanctuary with the Gabrilite Order there, Humphrey
had been spirited away to Valoret under close guard, permitted no sleep and but
little food on the grueling, three-day ride to the capital. Imre was informed of
the prisoner’s capture within half an hour of his arrival. It was but minutes
before he had taken leave of his sister and friends and was striding into a
lower room where the Deryni captive waited. Coel and Santare
were already there, Coel paring his nails with a jewelled dagger Imre had given
him, while Santare conversed softly with the guard captain who had brought the
prisoner in. The prisoner himself was nodding in a heavy wooden armchair,
prodded to wakefulness from time to time by one of the two guards stationed to
either side of him. He glanced up dully as Imre entered the room, seeming about
to faint when the guards jerked him roughly to his feet. Imre waved the
others to their ease, then signalled the guards to release the prisoner’s arms.
The man swayed unsteadily under the king’s sharp gaze. Humphrey of
Gallareaux was an unimposing man, of the indeterminate years which are so often
attributed to those in religious life. By appearance alone, he would have
alerted no one to the fact that he was anything but the simple country cleric
his habit proclaimed him to be. (It was not the Michaeline habit, Imre
noted disdainfully. The man had obviously been trying to pass as an itinerant
friar.) But the real clue
to his otherness was in the way the eyes, even dulled with fatigue, gazed
across at Imre with a calm serenity which came only with Deryni discipline.
Imre reached mentally to Truth-Read the man, and was not surprised to find that
he could not. With a grim smile, he gestured for the man to be seated, then
nodded curt thanks as one of the guards brought a second chair for him_ to sit
facing the prisoner. “Dispensing with
formalities, you are Humphrey of Gallareaux, a Deryni of the Michaeline Order,
despite your habit,” Imre said, his eyes locking with Humphrey’s in a
no-nonsense stare. “I believe you know who I am.” “The King’s Grace
is well informed.” The priest’s voice was carefully neutral. “Thank you. Do you
know why you have been brought here?” “I know only that
Your Grace’s soldiers broke sanctuary at Saint Neot’s to take me from retreat,”
Humphrey replied. “And that I have not been permitted to rest in the three days
since my arrest. May I ask why?” “You may not. Tell
me, is it usual for a Michaeline to go into retreat in a Gabrilite
establishment?” “Not usual, no.
However, the novice master at Saint Neot’s was my spiritual director before I
chose my own order. I had sought out his guidance.” “I see.” Imre
studied the priest’s face for a long moment. “And I suppose you will next tell
me that you did not know that your order has been outlawed, that the rest of
your brethren have gone into hiding, that I have ordered the destruction of
Michaeline establishments and the surrender of your vicar general?” “I have been in
retreat, Your Grace,” Humphrey replied softly. “I can only say that I am
shocked to hear Your Grace’s words.” Imre flicked his
glance down Humphrey’s spare body, then back to the face, irritation beginning
to touch the corners of his mouth. “Are you aware
that you will likely be executed as a traitor?” Humphrey’s face
blanched and his hands tightened on the chair arms, but other than that he did
not move. “I claim benefit of clergy,” he whispered. “Coel?” The king
swung to face the older man, who had been watching and listening in silence. Coel sauntered to
Imre’s side with an easy grace, folding his arms across his chest. “Archbishop
Anscom claimed benefit of clergy for the Michaelines when he first learned that
they had been put to the horn. Unfortunately for him, and for any Michaelines who
chance to fall into our nets, Archbishop Anscom does not know that Father
Humphrey is our guest. Nor is he likely to find out.” “How regrettable.”
Imre smiled. “For Father Humphrey, that is. Of course, if he were to give us
certain information which we seek, his release might be arranged ...” His eyes, slipping
over Humphrey’s face, hardened as he saw defiance written there. In a single,
abrupt, movement, he was standing at Humphrey’s knee, leaning both hands on the
chair arms to stare into the grim brown eyes. “Don’t be a fool,
Humphrey,” he whispered. “I may lack the finesse of your Michaeline training,
but I come from a long line of ruthless Deryni, who were not afraid to take
what they wanted by brute force. I can break you if I must.” “Then, do what you
must, Sire,” Humphrey said in a low voice. “And I must resist you with all my
might. I give you my word as holy bond that I am innocent of treason, but
beyond that I may not go. My mind is mine own and God’s, holding the secrets of
many men, imparted to me in perfect trust. Not even my Lord King may command
that of me, though it cost me my life.” “The seal of the
confessional,” Imre said with a sigh, straightening wearily to shake his head
and lean back against the arm of his own chair. “How convenient. And how
useless. Santare, ask the Healer to attend us. I want to be certain of his
physical condition before I start tampering with his mind.” Mind-tampering of
a sort was the concern elsewhere, as well, only there it must be coercion
rather than brute force; for the mind to be influenced was that of Prince
Cinhill Haldane, who must be persuaded to take up his inheritance and become
his people’s champion. Some outward
progress had been made. The lean, elegant man who stood so defiantly before the
fireplace this Christmas Eve bore little resemblance to the frightened monk
whom Joram and Rhys had whisked from Saint Foillan’s but a scant three weeks
before. Clad in a winter robe of claret velvet, his high, Haldane cheekbones
accentuated by the trim of the neat beard and mustache, the physical
resemblance to his great-grandsire was uncanny. Even Cinhill, looking at his
ancestor’s portrait when he must, could not control a shiver of kinship
whenever his eyes met the identical gray ones of his predecessor. He avoided
this whenever possible, but the life-sized copy of the original portrait now
hung above the fireplace, where he could scarcely miss it. Time and again he
found his eyes drawn to it when he thought he should be meditating. But if Cinhil
looked a prince, he did not yet act it. Camber, with the aid of Rhys and Joram
and even Evaine, had worked with Cinhil daily, trying to coax a yielding in the
royal will, hinting at the power which might be bestowed, if he would only
cooperate. The prince was polite but firm. Today, the Eve of
Christmas, was doubly difficult, since each of the five of them present in the
room knew what the night must bring—and Cinhil was still having none of it. He
had been telling them so for the past two hours. Camber decided
that it was time to change the direction of the discussion. “Tell me, Your
Highness, does your silence mean that you condone what the king is doing?”
Camber asked, when Cinhil’s arguments against matrimony had at least
temporarily run down. Cinhil looked at
the older man sharply and started to make an indignant retort, then remembered
who he was desperately trying to be and folded his hands piously instead. “I am a man of
God,” he said evenly. “I could never condone the deaths of innocent men.” “No, but you could
cause them,” Joram said. “By your non-action,” he added, when Cinhil opened his
mouth as though to protest. Cinhil turned back
toward the fireplace, hands clasped stubbornly behind his back. “I cannot be
concerned with the affairs of the world. You do not understand my mission.” “No, it’s you who
don’t understand,” Camber corrected. “Can’t you get it through your head that
you’re involved already with the outside world, that a great number of people
are going through a lot of pain and suffering, and some of them dying, because
they believe in you and your cause?” “My cause?”
Cinhil retorted. “Nay, ‘tis yours. I never asked to be made king. I
never wanted anything but to be left alone, to find my peace with myself.” “And can you be at
peace,” Evaine murmured, “when you know that you could make a great change in
the world, that you could ease much suffering? And yet, you do nothing.” “What would you
know of such things?” Cinhil snapped. “Am I not a man? Am I not entitled to
lead my own life as I see fit?” Camber sighed
impatiently. “If you were my son, speaking that irresponsibly, I’d thrash you
within an inch of your life, even at your age!” “You wouldn’t
dare!” Cinhil stated, a hard edge of command biting into his words. Camber controlled
the urge to smile a little as he noted the reply. “No, you’re right, I
wouldn’t. And part of the reason is because you’re starting to sound like a
prince, despite your best efforts to the contrary. Do you think that Brother
Benedict would have answered me the way you did just now?” Cinhil dropped his
gaze to the floor uncomfortably, the whir of his tangled emotions almost
audible, then fumbled his way awkwardly to his chair and sat. He would not look
at Camber, and he was keeping his hands folded in his lap only with a visible
exertion of control. “I—I’m sorry.
Please forgive me.” “Forgive you? For
acting like a man for once? Certainly not. Don’t you see, you are Prince
Cinhil Haldane. That is where your destiny lies—not in the alias of your
Brother Benedict. Think of that identity as a temporary refuge, which you used
when it was needed, which kept you safe until it was time to answer your
greater call.” “But—” “Princes are not
like ordinary men, Cinhil. They have obligations—don’t you understand?—to push
back and defeat the destroyers. Your royal line had a knack for it in the old
days. Your great-great-grandsire, father to that same Ifor Haldane whose
portrait hangs on yonder wall, was known among his people as Saint Bearand,
even during his lifetime. It wasn’t all for being gentle and pious, either,
though he was that. He pushed the Moorish invaders back into the sea and broke
the back of their naval power once and for all. Their legions have never dared
to cross the great wastes or to sail the Southern Seas again. That saintly man
did all of this.” Cinhil was silent
for a long moment, but when he spoke his voice was edged with bitterness.
“Saint Bearand. Very pretty. Of course, you’re not asking me to do anything as
spectacular as pushing back the Moors —no, only to forsake my priestly vows and
depose a powerful Deryni king. And you’ll have to admit that there’s little
chance of an apostate priest ever being known as Saint Cinhil.” “Is that your
aim: sainthood?” Rhys asked quietly. “Most of us are not so proud as to think
that we could ever attain that kind of perfection.” Cinhil recoiled as
though struck a physical blow, myriad emotions flashing across his face in
rapid succession. Then he sagged in his chair, his hands fluttering uncertainly
as he searched for the proper words. “It—it isn’t like
that at all. How can I make you understand what it’s like to be able to live a
life totally committed to God? Father Joram might, if he weren’t constantly
playing devil’s advocate, but…” As he spoke, the
door opened quietly behind him and Alister Cullen appeared in the doorway,
pausing unseen to listen as the prince continued. “It’s as though
you’re shielded in a soft, golden light, floating about a handspan off the
ground, and you’re safe from anything that might try to harm you, because you know
that He is there, all around you,” Cinhil said, wrapped up now in his own
remembrance. “It’s as though—you reach out with your mind and grasp a beam of
sunlight, yet even as you grasp it, it’s all around. You ...” As Cinhil spoke,
his eyes took on a strange, other glow, and the air around him became
gently suffused with light—a pale, ghostly flickering which was almost, but not
quite, indiscernible in the firelight and wavering candle flames. Camber was
the first to notice it, followed almost immediately by Rhys; and Camber shook
his head slightly as Rhys started to make a reaction. While Cinhil rambled on
dreamily, his words no longer important to Camber, the Deryni lord reached out
with his own senses and poised on the brink, mentally ready to fling himself
across the void to essay the opening he could sense was imminent. Cullen must have
made some indication of his presence at that instant, for Cinhil suddenly
turned in his chair and saw the vicar general. He broke off his detached
monologue in mid-syllable, before Camber could make the contact he had so
desperately sought. As Cinhil scrambled to his feet to bow nervously to the
vicar general, Camber let out a long sigh which was mentally echoed by Rhys.
Joram and Evaine appeared unaware of the exchange, until Camber saw Evaine
touch her brother’s hand and nod. “Father Cullen,”
Cinhil murmured. Cullen returned
the bow, scowling somewhat. “Your Highness.” He flicked his gaze past Cinhil to
Rhys. “Lady Megan is here, Rhys. I think you should see her before she’s given
any further information. Camber, we told her you’d sent for her. I think you
ought to be the one to tell her why.” Camber got to his
feet with a sigh and nodded, glancing at the wide-eyed Cinhil with an almost
fatherly mien, despite the fact that there was only a dozen or so years’
difference in their ages. “Your bride has
arrived, Your Highness. I’ll send her in to meet you in a little while.” “My—my bride?”
Cinhil croaked, his face gray against his velvet robe. “The Lady Megan de
Cameron, my ward,” Camber said, studying Cinhil’s reaction hopefully. “She’s
human like yourself—a lovely, well-bred girl. She’ll make you a worthy queen
and wife.” “I— My lord, I cannot!” “Your Highness,
you will,” Camber replied, his eyes flint-hard on Cinhil’s face.
“Evaine, will you join Rhys and me? Megan is far from home, and will appreciate
another woman’s reassurance.” He bowed stiffly. “By your leave, Your Highness,”
he said, and turned and followed Cullen out the door. When they had
gone, a shaken Cinhil turned back to the circle of chairs by the fire, startled
to find Joram still sitting there, unmoving, studying him with an infuriating
detachment. “You’re still
here,” Cinhil said—then immediately felt foolish because that fact, at least,
was abundantly clear. To cover his
discomfiture, he wandered to the fireplace and poked the toe of his slipper
dangerously close to a smoldering coal, then ran a trembling fingertip along
the wing of an ivory statue of the Archangel Michael on the mantel. “Father Joram, is
there nothing I can say which will soften your heart?” he finally asked in a
small voice. “Yours is the
heart which must be softened, Your Highness,” Joram replied. “Weighed in the
greater balance, one man’s personal wishes have little substance. You have the
wherewithal to stop the slayings, the persecutions, to restore order and peace
to the people your forefathers ruled and loved. I should think the choice an
easy one. How can you, who claim to know the love of God, turn your heart from
His people, your people, while Imre ravishes the land and brutalizes them?” “They’re not my
people,” Cinhil whispered. “Not in that sense.” “Ah, but they
are,” Joram replied, pointing a finger at him emphatically. “I am the
good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine.” “No!” “I am
the good shepherd, and I lay down my life for the sheep.” Cinhil cast a
desperate, frantic look at the door through which Camber and Rhys and Evaine
had disappeared. “I beseech you, Father Joram, spare me this. I cannot do it.
You know the vows I took. You, of all people—” “Priest or prince,
sheep or people, you can stop Imre, Your Highness.” “I pray you, do
not do this!” “Think on it, Your
Highness,” Joram said, rising and moving toward the door. “Where, if anywhere,
is the break between your duty to God and your obligations to His people, your
people? Is there even a difference?” “I vowed vows,”
Cinhil moaned. Joram paused in
the doorway to gaze compassionately at his fellow priest. “Feed my sheep,”
he whispered--then slipped out and closed the door behind him. Cinhil spent the
next hour on his knees, storming the heavens relentlessly for the answer he
craved so desperately, and which he feared, more and more, would not come. At
length, when his supplications had left him no more comforted than when he had
begun, he lurched to his feet and stumbled to a small table near the fireplace.
Hands shaking, he poured a cup of wine and gulped it down. They would send
her to him soon. Only, he had no idea what he was supposed to do or say. He
supposed that he was to make sure he did not find her too ugly, or stupid, or
whatever it was he was supposed to use as a gauge for measuring what his
future—wife! —the word shook him—should or should not be. But he didn’t want
to see her. It was unthinkable enough that he must face her in the chapel
tonight, before God and all his Deryni captors. They would force him to go
through with it. His and Camber’s parting words had been almost a threat. “My
lord, I cannot!” “Your Highness, you will!” And, he realized
sickly, he would. He would have to. It was clear by now that they were
determined to have their way with him, that they would settle for nothing less
than a crown on his head, a wife at his side, the Deryni Imre toppled from his
throne. He trembled anew
at that thought, his mind going back immediately to the very real threat of
their power. They were Deryni. God knew, they would probably make him
obey, if he continued to resist them. Even the usually patient Camber had
become almost menacing today. The idea that he
did not really have control over the coming event was comforting for a moment,
for it relieved him of the responsibility for making the decision himself—at
least for a time. But then he was forced to recognize another, darker part of
himself which he had thought buried for many, many years, and somehow that
frightened him even more. Was he afraid of
the wrath of Heaven if he broke his monastic vows and left the priesthood? Or
was he afraid that it would be all too easy to break them, that he was actually
beginning to look forward to this new life they had been waving so
tantalizingly before him for these past weeks? The remark Camber had made about
him beginning to sound like a prince had hit agonizingly close to home. He had
sounded like a prince—or what he had always imagined a prince would sound
like—and, at the same time, it had been the most natural thing in the world. It
terrified him in a way he had never been frightened before in his life. And to marry! He
poured another cup of wine— fortunately, the cup was small—and drained it. To
take a wife he had never seen, to—he forced himself to think in the scriptural
term—to “know” her, to beget heirs— He found his hands
shaking, and he could not seem to make them stop. What was he doing? This was
not the sort of thing a man should have to worry about —especially not a man of
forty-three who had never known a woman. Why, marriage was supposed to be a
young man’s game. It was madness. They were insane! He heard a
fumbling at the doorlatch, and he turned away and froze. There was a pause, and
then the sound of soft footsteps entering the room. He closed his eyes. He did
not want to see her. He could not bring himself to turn. “Your Highness ...
?” The voice was
timid, shy, and sounded very young. Cinhil’s eyes flew open and his shoulders
tensed, but he found himself rooted to the spot, unable to move. They had sent
him a child, a mere girl! He could not marry a child! “I—I beg your
pardon, Your Highness, but they told me I should come to you. I’m Megan de Cameron.
I’m to be your wife.” Cinhil bowed his
head, leaning heavily against the table in front of him. The irony of her
position, coupled with his own, had suddenly struck him, and he had an almost
uncontrollable urge to laugh. “Is that what they
told you, child? How old are you?” “Fif—fifteen,
Highness.” She paused. “I beg Your Highness’s pardon, but—have I misunderstood
my guardian’s intent? Are we not to be married this night?” Cinhil smiled, a
bitter chuckle escaping his lips despite his best efforts. “Aye, little lass.
Though ‘tis dynastic considerations and none other which ordain this marriage.
The lost King of Gwynedd must have a wife. You’re to be the royal broodmare,
don’t you see?” “No, Your
Highness, I’m to be your Queen,” the young voice replied, strangely
mature-sounding now, in the hollow silence his laughter had left. Cinhil’s face
froze and he looked down at his hands, not seeing them at all. He wondered what
had possessed him to say so cruel a thing, realizing he had hurt her. “If you marry me,
you will be the mother either of kings or of traitors, if we all live that
long, child. Are you truly willing to risk the latter, with a man who cannot
love you as a husband should, who can never give you ought but woe?” “Who cannot love,
Your Highness?” the voice asked softly. “I am a priest,
child. Did they not tell you?” Another long
silence followed, and then: “They told me that you are the last Haldane, Your
Highness; that they would make you king.” The voice was low, almost husky with
tears. “I said I would risk all, even unto my life, to bring back the Haldane
line and end Imre’s bloody rule; and so I shall.” A short sob escaped her. “But
if, in your heart, there is no room for love, I had liefer die a maid than be
the unloved bride of God himself!” As Cinhil froze in
shock at the blasphemy of her words, he heard her footsteps running toward the
door, whirled just in time to see a mane of wheaten hair disappearing from
sight, a delicate hand pulling the door behind her, a slender ankle flashing
beneath voluminous turquoise skirts. Then the door was reverberating from the
force with which she slammed it, and he was standing there all alone, a hand
unwittingly outstretched in the direction she had gone, his heart wrenched by
her words. He started to follow
her, to apologize, to try to explain that he was not a king at all, that he was
but a simple monk, that he had never wanted to be king or even prince—but then
the old pathways took over and it was too late. Like an old man, he sank slowly
to a bench beside the table, letting his hand fall loosely to his side. And then he put
his head down upon the table and wept long, bitter tears for his lost youth,
his lost faith, for himself, for the girl—whose name he could not even
recall—and for all of them who would be lost. They would find him there,
unmoved, when they came a few hours later to prepare him for his wedding. chapter eighteenThe Lord said
to my lord, “You are my son. This day I have begotten you!” —Psalms 2:7 It was on the
Vigil of Christmas, the night of the Saviour’s birth, that Archbishop Anscom of
Trevas left his Evensong devotions in the Lady Chapel of All Saints’ Cathedral
in Valoret and made his way back to his apartments, there to watch and pray
until it should be time to celebrate the first Mass of Christmas. As was his
custom on Christmas Eve, he was preparing to meditate alone upon the successes
and failures of the fleeing year. He was not expecting the gray-hooded shadow
which stepped from a recess in the corridor just before he reached the refuge
of his chambers. “Will you hear my
confession, Father?” asked a strangely familiar voice. Anscom held his
candle a little higher and tried to pierce the gloom and darkness surrounding
the man’s face. Then he realized that it was more than mere shadow which
shrouded the speaker’s visage. The man in the cowled gray robe was a Deryni,
his head veiled in an arcane haze which obscured his features and also muffled
his voice. And yet there was no hint of menace in the voice or the presence, no
threat of danger. The mysterious visitor was benign, though still
unrecognizable. More curious and
anticipatory than alarmed, Anscom bowed his head in acquiescence and held the
door open for the man to enter, then closed it behind them. No words were
spoken as Anscom crossed to his oratory and lit another candle, took a purple
stole from the prie-dieu there, touched it to his lips, and draped it
around his neck. But when he turned to face the man again, the visitor reached
to his hood and pushed it back to reveal a head of gilded silver hair, a
countenance long familiar and loved. “Camber!” the
archbishop breathed, then embraced the other man warmly. “Praise God, I
wondered where you’d been,” Anscom whispered, as the two parted and he held his
friend at arm’s length to look at him. “When I learned that ‘Brother Kyriell’—
But, what are you doing here? Surely you know that the king has out a warrant
for your arrest.” “Would you betray
me?” Camber said with a smile which clearly indicated the preposterousness of
the question. Anscom fingered
the end of his stole with a wry smile. “Even if I wanted to, you bound me by
this. I am under the seal of the confessional. Whatever you tell me, I am bound
to keep silence.” “I require more
than your silence, Anscom,” Cam-ber said. “I require your help.” “You know you have
but to ask,” Anscom replied. “Tell me what you need, and if I can help you, I
will.” “I am wanted for
treason,” Camber said tentatively. “Are you a
traitor?” “By Imre’s
reckoning, I am. The facts speak a little differently. If you will agree to
come with me now, I would rather show you what I’m talking about.” “Come with you?
Where?” Camber glanced at
the floor. “I may not tell you that. I can tell you that we will reach
it through your own Transfer Portal, that you will be perfectly safe, that I
will not hold you to your promise to help if you decide otherwise once you know
the facts.” He looked up at his friend. “But you are going to have to trust me
with the location. I may not reveal that, even to you, even under the seal of
the confessional.” “Are the others
there, too?” “Evaine, Joram,
Rhys, a few others—yes.” “Rhys? But he—” “I would prefer
not to discuss it here, if you don’t mind. Will you come with me?” Anscom hesitated
for just an instant, torn by his curiosity to question Camber further, then
inclined his head. “As you wish. How long will we be gone?” “Several hours, at
least. Can you make arrangements for someone else to cover your duties?” The archbishop
raised an eyebrow at that. “On Christmas Eve? You know that I’m expected to be
the celebrant at Midnight Mass.” “We would be
greatly honored if you would perform that office for us, Anscom,” Camber said
quietly. “When you see, you’ll understand why.” Anscom studied his
friend’s face for a long moment, reading the importance there of the request,
then gestured for him to step into the oratory and draw the curtain. When
Camber had done so, the archbishop moved to the wall and pulled a velvet cord.
A few minutes later, a black-cassocked priest knocked and entered. He found the
archbishop sitting on his bed, looking quite unwell. “Your Grace, is
anything wrong?” “I’m feeling
rather ill,” the archbishop said weakly. “Would you please ask Bishop Roland to
take my place at Mass tonight?” “The Midnight
Mass? Why, certainly, Your Grace, but—is there anything I can do for you? May I
send for the apothecary or a Healer to attend you?” “No, that won’t be
necessary,” Anscom murmured, lying back on the bed and giving a pained sigh.
“Something I ate, I have no doubt. I shall meditate, and try to sleep. It will
pass by morning.” “Very well, Your
Grace,” the priest said doubtfully. “If you’re sure—” “I’m sure, Father.
Please go now, and on no account am I to be disturbed. Is that clear?” “Yes, Your Grace.” No sooner had the
door closed behind the priest than Anscom was leaping out of bed to draw back
the curtains of the oratory doorway. Camber chuckled at
the look on the Archbishop’s face. “Does this remind you of the pranks two
young subdeacons played at Grecotha? Though, I’ll warrant, neither you nor I
ever handled a subterfuge with better wit or finesse in those days.” “Humph! I would
hope that we had improved since then,” Anscom rumbled. “What next?” “Your nearest
Transfer Portal.” “You’re standing
in front of it,” Anscom replied, pushing Camber back a few steps farther into
the oratory and taking his place beside him. “What do you want me to do?” “Just open your
mind to me and let me take you through. I promise to give you the background
information as soon as we’re there.” “And also ensure
that I can’t figure out where we’ve gone.” Anscom snorted with a slight smile,
folding his arms across his chest. “Go ahead. I understand why you have to do
it that way. I just want you to remember,” he said, closing his eyes, “that I see
right through you, Camber MacRorie.” “And so you always
did, my friend.” Camber grinned and laid his hands on either side of Anscom’s
head from behind. “Open to me now ...” And they were
gone. And standing in
another Portal, in another place. Anscom opened his
eyes, stunned, and turned to stare at Camber incredulously. “You can’t be
serious,” he whispered. “A Haldane heir here? It was the Haldane that
was stolen out of Saint Foillan’s? Camber, you’re mad! It can’t possibly
succeed!” “There are a great
many who don’t agree,” Camber said quietly. “Even our Haldane himself is
beginning to believe that it’s possible and desirable. Unfortunately, his moral
scruples are interfering a bit with his dynastic duties. Your sanction of his
cause would be the seal of approval which he needs.” “You want me to give him
my blessing?” “I want you to
acknowledge the legitimacy of his descent, to declare him a lawful Prince of
Gwynedd, to release him from his vows, and to marry him to my ward—tonight.
Will you do that for me?” “What you’re
asking—” “I know what I’m
asking. If you cannot find it in your conscience to do it, then I’ll release
you, as I promised. We’ll just have to make do with Father Cullen.” “Alister Cullen,
the Vicar General of the Mi-chaelines? He’s here?” Camber nodded.
“And has been with us almost from the beginning, though it was Rhys who
discovered the first clue to the prince. Cullen can do what I’ve asked you to
do, but it won’t carry the same weight.” Anscom drew
himself to his full height and looked across at Camber indignantly, his craggy
face a mask of resentment. “I forbid Alister Cullen to do those things. If
they’re to be done, I will do them.” “And will they be
done?” Camber asked, controlling a smile and suspecting that he was about to
net his quarry securely in the snare of sacerdotal jealousy. “It is the
prerogative of the Archbishop of Valoret,” Anscom intoned, “to acknowledge the
royal succession, to perform royal marriages, and to crown the kings of
Gwynedd. While it is impossible to do the last tonight, I shall certainly
perform the first two!” “Good,” Camber
said simply. He turned away so that Anscom could not see the grin of triumph on
his face. “If you’ll come with me, I’ll introduce you to our reluctant
bridegroom and prince.” And the intended
bridegroom was, at that moment, still reluctant. “Father Joram, I
beseech you, do not let them do this. I cannot go through with the marriage. I
will be forsworn.” Joram, partially
vested for his role as deacon later on, folded his hands and prayed for
patience. “Your Highness,
believe me, I understand your hesitation—” “My hesitation?”
Cinhil shook his head and began pacing again, the silver tissue-cloth of his
wedding garments rustling with his agitation. “Nay, my refusal. It is all well
and good for you to promise that Father Cullen will release me from my vows.
But I did not make my vows to him, or even to his order. I made them to the
Vicar General of the Ordo Verbi Dei, and to God. The archbishop himself
could not—” “Suppose we allow
the archbishop to speak for himself, Your Highness,” Camber said, entering the
room with a man whom Cinhil had never seen. “May I present His Grace, the
Archbishop of Valoret, Anscom of Trevas. Your Grace, His Royal Highness, Prince
Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane.” Cinhil had
whirled, alarmed, at Camber’s first words, and now stared with blank amazement
at the gaunt, purple-cassocked man at Camber’s elbow. The man introduced as
Archbishop Anscom gazed sympathetically at the startled prince and made a
slight bow before extending the ring of his office. Cinhil’s resolve crumbled
at that, and stifling a sob he seized Anscom’s hand and dropped to both knees,
pressing the ringed hand first to his lips and then to his bowed head as he
collapsed at the feet of his superior. “Help me, I beg
you, Your Grace!” he choked. “I cannot do it! They say I must forsake my vows
and return to the world. I am afraid, Father. I do not know the world!” In compassion,
Anscom laid his free hand on Cinhil’s head, signed with his eyes for the others
to leave them alone. “I understand your
fear, my son,” he murmured, when they had gone. “I grieve with you that such a
cup must be placed before you. But these are grievous times in which we live,
and all of us must make sacrifices.” Cinhil looked up
at that, his wide eyes abrim with tears. “Are—are you telling me that I must
obey them? That I must forsake my vows, as they ask, and take up this crown
that they would thrust upon me?” “It is not always
an easy thing to walk the path which has been chosen for us, Cinhil,” Anscom
said gently. “But we who strive to serve the true path, to listen to the will
of God, must realize that we cannot hope to comprehend all which the Creator
has laid out for us. You can do a great service for Our Lord, and for all His
people, if you will take up this cross and bear it faithfully for Him.” “But I have given
Him my life already! I have served Him these twenty years and more, and would
gladly have given the rest of it for—” “I know, my son,”
Anscom nodded. “You have served Him, and well. But now He demands a different
kind of sacrifice. All of us have things which we alone can do best; now He
asks for that unique service which only you can give. It cannot be by accident
that the Lord allowed one Haldane to survive until this troubled time, waiting
in safety and love until His will might be fulfilled.” There was a spark
of defiance in Cinhil’s eyes as he searched Anscom’s gaunt face. “You’re
telling me, then, that I have no choice in the matter? That my fate is bound to
Camber’s futile cause?” Anscom shook his
head. “Not Camber’s cause only, my son. And ‘futile’ only if you choose it to
be so. Nor are you bound by other than your knowledge of God’s will. He has
called, and clearly; and the power to disregard His call is in your hands. But
if you make that decision, the lives of many thousands of His people will be
upon your head. The choice is yours; but you must also bear the consequences.” “Your Grace, how
can you do this to me?” Cinhil whispered. “You are no better than they, playing
on my emotions like a master lutenist, knowing exactly which strings will tug
most insistently at my heart and mind. It isn’t fair ...” “In your eyes,
no,” Anscom agreed. “But we are only mortal, Cinhil. We can only listen to that
silent voice within, and remember that we shall have to live with the
consequences of whatever we do, at least for the remainder of our allotted time
here on earth. My conscience is clear, my son. Is yours?” Cinhil could make
no answer to that. Sinking back on his heels, he buried his face in his hands
and wept silent, bitter tears for the road which now unrolled before him, and
which he knew he could not choose to refuse. The archbishop, a
shrewd judge of men, finally knelt down beside the prince and laid gentle hands
on his shoulders, holding the sobbing man close and letting him weep. After a while,
they prayed. Half an hour
before midnight, two women sitting in the listening gallery above the haven’s
chapel peered repeatedly through the viewing slits as they waited for the hour
to arrive. Below, most of the inhabitants of the haven had gathered in the
chapel—MacRories and priests and Michaeline knights—and the chapel itself
shimmered with the light of many candles. Racks of holly-twined candelabra had
been set along the faceted walls, throwing gay shadow-shapes among the ribs and
columns of the shallow vaulting, glinting gold and amber on the altar plate. A
rectangle of precious Kheldish carpet had been laid at the foot of the altar
steps, where the ceremonies of recognition and marriage would take place. In anticipation of
the first Mass of Christmas (and, all hoped, the promised royal wedding), the
altar had been dressed with evergreen boughs and the best altar linens which
the haven could provide. There was an air of uncertainty, a hushed
anticipation, as all waited for midnight and the coming of their king. The
bride, at least, was present, though nerves were wearing more than a little
thin. Megan de Cameron,
ward of the Earl of Culdi and soon to be Princess of Gwynedd, had borne up
bravely following her lone encounter with her intended, but now fatigue and
tension were beginning to take their toll. She was flushed with excitement and
had not been able to eat since her arrival that afternoon. Evaine had tried to
assure her that all would be well, but such attempts fell on deaf ears. She
suspected that Megan would probably be just as nervous, even were the situation
not charged with so much uncertainty. All things
considered, Evaine wondered how Megan and Cinhil would suit if the marriage did
take place —and right now, there appeared to be no guarantee that it would.
Rhys had told her of Cinhil’s mood when he and Joram went to prepare him for
the ceremonies, and of Archbishop Anscom’s unexpected arrival. She wondered
whether Anscom had been successful. According to Megan, the prince had not even
looked at her when she tried to speak with him. That was bothering
Megan most, Evaine knew. And from as objective a point of view as she could
manage under the circumstances, that was Cinhil’s loss: Megan was beautiful. Of
medium height, willow slender, with wide turquoise eyes spiced by a spray of
freckles across the slightly tip-tilted nose, Megan even moved with an
unaffected grace—an unspoiled girl-woman with, perhaps, just the right
combination of guile and innocence to appeal to the shy and conscience-stricken
Cinhil. She was gowned in silver tissue, as befitted a princess, her wheaten
hair caught up in shining coils beneath the crown of holly and rosemary. Truly
a vision to turn a prince’s fancy— at least an ordinary prince. The question
was, could she turn the head of a prince who wanted to be a priest? The vision glanced
at Evaine and twisted a fold of silver tissue between shaking fingers. “Oh, what’s the
use?” she whispered. “He does not need me. He—he does not even wish to marry at
all, and I—I fear I do not please him.” “Give him time,
Megan,” Evaine said, laying a reassuring hand on the younger girl’s arm. “He is
as afraid as you are—more afraid, for he had never thought to marry, and
you”—she touched the girl’s nose impishly—”you have been the object of men’s
devotion almost from birth, beginning with your father, God rest his soul, and
not ending with mine. For you, it was never a question of whether you would
marry, but when, and to whom.” “But, he said—he
said that the marriage was only for dynastic purposes, and that I should be
nought but a royal b—broodmare,” she stammered, her eyes reflecting her hurt. “He said what?” Evaine tried to
keep the shock and anger from her voice, unsuccessfully, and wished she could
take Cinhil by the shoulders and give him a good shaking, prince or not. “Oh, I don’t think
he meant to hurt me,” Megan added quickly. “He was lashing out at all his own
hurt of the past few weeks. It can’t have been easy for him.” “No, it has not.” “And I know what
it will cost him to take me to wife,” Megan continued softly. “For his own
sake, I wish I might spare him, but for all our sakes, I dare not. If it were
not to me, then it would be to some other maid he must be wed. Even I
understand that.” She sighed
resignedly, and Evaine studied her carefully for several seconds. “I think you love
him already,” she finally said, not moving as Megan’s head snapped up to stare
at her. “You do, don’t you?” Megan nodded miserably,
and Evaine returned a gentle smile. “I know. It’s
difficult, isn’t it, to love and not be loved in return? God grant his love
will grow.” “Easy enough for
you to say, who have Lord Rhys who loves you dearly,” Megan whispered. “I shall
have only a crown, and perhaps not even that, if we fail.” “And so, he needs
you even more, don’t you see?” Evaine answered. “He needs a gentle, loving
wife— more than just a bedmate—who can comfort him when he is afraid and
encourage him when he grows faint of heart. He is so much younger than you,
Megan, in so many important ways, and he has such a heavy burden to bear. Do
not make him bear it alone.” “But, I’m afraid .
..” Megan began. “So am I. Constantly,” Evaine replied gently. “But
if we do not support our men in their good works, what hope is there for any of
us? Think what has been risked already, even to bring us this far. You said
that I am fortunate to have Rhys. Oh, how right you are! But he has been in
grave danger for these many months now, and every day there was the chance that
I might lose him. Still, I would not have held him back from doing what he had
to do—nor will I. Just as I would not expect him to keep me from my part,
simply because I might be harmed. Do you understand what I’m trying to say?” “A little, I
think.” Megan sniffed, wiping at her eyes, and finally managed a smile. After a
minute, she asked, “Evaine, will you promise me something?” “If I can.” “Promise that you
will not leave me when I am queen. I shall be very lonely, otherwise.” “Oh, Megan!” Evaine hugged the
younger girl close, tears welling in her own eyes, but suddenly there was the
sound of movement in the chapel below, and both of them moved breathlessly to
the viewing slits. It was midnight;
it was Christmas Day. And as the door was thrown open and the processional
cross appeared in the doorway, they knew that this day brought the coming of
more than just the Christmas King. “Dominus dixit
ad me: Filius meus es tu, ego hodie genui te . . .” the Michaeline knights
and monks sang. The Lord said to my Lord, You are my Son. This day I have
begotten you. . . . And as the strains
of the ancient introit swelled in the chapel, reverberating from vaulting to
the gallery, Anscom led Joram and Cullen as escort to a pale but stately
Cinhil. Cathan’s young sons followed the princely procession, each bearing a
silver circlet upon a velvet cushion. The boys stood beside their grandfather,
eyes wide with wonder, as Archbishop Anscom ascended the altar. Cinhil, with
Joram and Cullen bowing to either side, knelt before the lowest step and
inclined his head, his face still and emotionless in the candlelight. When the prayers
had been concluded, Anscom turned and descended the three low steps, cope and
miter glittering in the candlelit chamber. Joram and Cullen moved from Cinhil’s
sides to Anscom’s, waited for the archbishop to speak. ‘‘Who art thou,”
the archbishop demanded, “who makest bold to approach the altar of the Lord?” Blanching, Cinhil
stood up and managed a nervous bow, all self-possession dissolving as the time
came to speak the fateful words. “May—may it please Your Grace, I am”—he
swallowed hard—”Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane, son of Alroy, grandson of Aidan,
great-grandson of King Ifor Haldane of Gwynedd, and the last of my line.” He
paused to draw shaky breath. “I come to claim the birthright of my name and
family.” “And what proof
bringest thou, Cinhil Haldane, that thou art, indeed, the true-born heir of
Gwynedd and, therefore, Prince in this realm?” The green-cloaked
Rhys stepped forward and presented a sheaf of parchment. “Your Grace, I present
the baptismal records of Prince Cinhil and his father, Alroy. Though the
records were kept in the mundane names which the Haldanes were forced to use
while in hiding these past eighty years, I vow and affirm that Daniel Draper,
Prince Cinhil’s grandsire of record, was, in reality, Prince Aidan, true-born
son of Ifor Haldane, last of the Haldane kings before the present dynasty.” Joram brought
forth the Gospel, and Rhys laid his hand upon it. “This I swear by my gifts of
Sight and Healing, and may God rip them from me and destroy me if I speak ought
but the truth.” At this Rhys
bowed, Anscom bowed, and Rhys returned to his former place to be replaced by
young Davin MacRorie, bearing his silver circlet on its cushion of velvet. As
Joram extended the book once more, Anscom took the circlet in his gloved hands
and laid it on the open pages. “Kneel, Cinhil
Haldane,” he said in a firm voice. Cinhil obeyed. “Cinhil Donal Ifor
Haldane,” the archbishop intoned, holding his hands above the prince’s bowed
head, “I acknowledge thee Heir of Haldane and Prince of Gwynedd in exile.” The
hands came to rest upon the silvered head. “Though it is not within my power to
restore thee to thy rightful place at this time, I give thee this circlet as a
token of thy royalty.” He took the circlet and held it above Cinhil’s head. “It
is my fervent prayer that one day soon I may replace it with a crown of gold,
in regal, public splendor, as is thy due. Until then, wear this as a reminder
of the weight of responsibility which thou assumest for thy people.” With that, he put
the circlet of silver on Cinhil’s head, then raised him up and bowed. Cinhil
acknowledged the bow awkwardly, then glanced at Camber and Rhys and, removing
the circlet, knelt once more. “Your Grace, I accept this circlet in the spirit
it was given, but I bear the burden of prior vows which prevent my full
assumption of the duties that accompany it.” “Dost thou, then,
wish release from those vows, my son?” “Not for myself,
but for the sake of my people, Your Grace,” Cinhil murmured, barely audible. “I
am the last of my royal line. If I shrink from my responsibilities, my people
will suffer longer under the tyrant’s heel. Though I love my former life, I am
told that I may better serve God’s purpose, for now, by taking up my birthright
and my crown, to free my people from the bondage of the conquerors and restore
just rule.” “We thank thee for
thy former service and do release thee from thy vows. Ego te absolve . . .” As the archbishop
recited the words of the release, Evaine stirred in the gallery chamber, to
lead a frightened but determined young girl down the narrow steps to the chapel
door. A moment later, the door was opening again, this time to admit a
silver-clad princess who kept her eyes averted as she came to meet her
bridegroom. All eyes turned toward her as she glided to the altar and made her
obeisance—all save Cinhil’s. The prince, standing to her right, kept his
attention fixed mostly on the crucifix on the archbishop’s breast, not daring
to glance aside. His vows released,
it was this part of the ceremony which frightened Cinhil most; and he had
difficulty concentrating on what was being said. He let himself be led through
the ceremony, responding when he was told, until he suddenly realized that he
had said the vows of marriage, and that a low, quavering contralto voice was
now repeating similar vows at his side. “I, Megan de
Cameron, only begotten daughter of the Lord and Lady of Farnham and ward of my
Lord Camber MacRorie, Earl of Culdi, wittingly and of deliberate mind, having
fifteen years completed in the month of January last past, contract matrimony
with the right excellent and noble Prince Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane, Heir of
Gwynedd, and take the said Prince Cinhil of Gwynedd for my husband and spouse,
all others for him forsake, during his and my lives natural, and thereto I
plight and give him my faith and troth.” Then there was a
slender band of gold in Cinhil’s hand, and he was slipping it on the finger of
this strange young girl. “In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti,
Amen.” After that, he vaguely remembered joining hands with her while the
archbishop laid the ends of his stole across their hands and pronounced a
blessing—and then Mass. He thought he
remembered receiving Communion, but for the first time in his life he could not
be sure. Because after that they bade him take the crown of holly and rosemary
from Megan’s head and remove the pins which held her coiled hair in place. It
came tumbling down in a cloud of wheaten glory, sweet-smelling, soft as
gossamer, reaching nearly to her waist—and he nearly dropped the silver circlet
they bade him place upon her head. Only when he was
safely in his chamber, and she in another, was he able to think clearly
again—and then, his thoughts did little to ease his anxiety. After a few
minutes, Joram came in to help him undress, then left him standing numbly
before the fire in a fur-lined dressing gown. He did not know
how long it would be before they came for him, and though he knelt dutifully at
the prie-dieu in the corner of the room and tried to say his evening
prayers, the words came stiff and meaningless, holding little comfort. He
trembled as he knelt there. All too soon, a
knock at the door called him from his tangled thoughts, and then a torchlit
procession escorted him to the door of the nuptial chamber. As the door opened,
he could see the archbishop sprinkling the bed with holy water. A pale, shy
face peered out above the top of the sleeping furs; it was surrounded by
all-too-familiar wheaten hair. He entered,
hesitantly, and the archbishop bowed to the occupant of the bed and then bowed
to Cinhil and blessed him with holy water as well. A reassuring touch on the
shoulder as he passed, and then archbishop and attendants and ladies and
everyone except the two of them were departing, the door closing; and they were
alone. Cinhil swallowed
heavily and studied the floor with great interest. Finally, he chanced a
cautious glance at the girl in the bed. To his surprise, she looked at least as
frightened as he felt. He wondered whether he looked the same to her. He looked
away quickly. “My—my lady,” he
whispered, his voice cracking and betraying him as he tried to speak. “I—thou
knowest what manner of man I am, that—that I know not the ways of women ...” His voice trailed
off, and he dared to raise his eyes to hers. They were deep pools of sea-blue,
eyes a man might drown in—and he could not have looked away now if he had
wanted to. “Then, we are
even, my lord,” she murmured, not quite so frightened as before, “for I know
not the ways of men. But thou art my husband”—she extended her hand
tentatively—”and I am thy wife. Wilt thou come and let us learn together the
ways of men.and women?” The bed was wide, and
she lay toward the middle. To take her hand, as he knew he must—and as he
suddenly wanted to do—he had to cross the several feet separating them and sit
on the bed. He did. And after a moment, when they had gazed into one another’s
eyes as best they could in the dim light, she brought his hand to her cheek and
rubbed it gently. He was astonished to find her cheek damp with tears,
incredibly soft lips brushing the back of his hand. Alarmed that he
might have frightened her, he shifted to peer at her more closely, and soon
found his other hand stroking her hair, wiping her tears away. Then she was
reaching up to touch his face, his beard, to run her fingers lightly along the
edge of his mustache, to brush her fingertips across his lips; and he was
responding, kissing her palm. Camber, when he
looked in on them in the early dawn hours, found them peacefully entwined in
one another’s arms, the bedclothes in disarray, Cinhil’s fur-lined robe
discarded across the foot of the bed. As he eased his way back out of the room,
a smile on his lips, he breathed a silent prayer of thanksgiving to whatever
saint watched over nuptial beds. Whoever it was, that saint had apparently done
his or her work well. chapter nineteenAnd they put
him in ward, that the mind of the Lord might be shewed them. —Leviticus
24:12 The days stretched
into weeks, and the weeks into months, until it was spring—spring, with its
promise of new beginnings. Deep in the rockbound fastness of the haven, the
exiles could not see the usual signs of spring: the flowering trees and the
leaping forth of all the new grasses and blossoms of the meadows. But there was
a greater flowering in the womb of her who was, perhaps, to be their future
queen. Archbishop Anscom himself returned to the haven long enough to celebrate
the Mass of Thanksgiving. And with the expectation of the royal birth in the
fall, they at last had a timetable toward which to work; they had not dared
risk Cinhil in a coup until the royal succession was assured. The next season’s
snow would bring with it the winter of Imre’s reign. For Cinhil,
however, this spring was not a time of rejoicing. Frightened and
conscience-stricken at what he had done, he betook himself more and more to his
academic studies after that, shunning his young bride’s bed and keeping himself
apart as much as possible. Though Rhys assured him that he had fathered a son,
and had only to wait until October to see the living proof, Cinhil pushed the
knowledge out of his mind and raised his defenses even more. They might force
him to become a prince, and even a king, but he did not have to like it. Never
again did he come as close to letting down his shields as he had in the chapel
that day at his last celebrated Mass, or on the afternoon of his wedding when
he spoke of his vocation as a priest. He refused even to address the
possibility of assuming Deryni-like powers on his own. One rather curious
gain had been made, however. Though Cinhil
still would not speak to Camber or Joram or any of the other men in the
compound about other than what was required, he did talk with Evaine sometimes.
And, oddly enough, it was not until after her marriage to Rhys on Twelfth Night
that the breakthrough began. Joram had blessed the union, with Camber and the
entire population of the haven standing proudly by. But though Cinhil had
attended, with Megan, and wished the couple well, he had retired to his own
quarters soon after the ceremony, oddly pale and quieter than even he was wont
to be. He had not felt like celebrating, he told Evaine later. But if Evaine’s
marriage shook Cinhil almost like his own, at least it placed Evaine in
another, safer relationship to him. He was not aware, and she would never have
dreamed of telling him and jeopardizing the fragile trust which was building
between them, but there had been a potential there—at least on Cinhil’s
part—for quite a different relationship than he would have approved or been
comfortable with. Whatever the potential, however, that facet was closed to him
forever when she made her marriage vows to Rhys. What Cinhil did not realize
was that the way had been opened for an even more intimate association:
he had no reference point for the union of minds. It became their
practice to meet each afternoon to talk, occasionally with Rhys or Joram in attendance,
but more often just the two of them, sitting comfortably before the fireplace
in his outer chamber. He told her of his childhood, of his father and
grandfather, and sometimes they even talked about his life in the monastery—a
thing he had never discussed with anyone before, and certainly not with a
woman. And her reaction
surprised him. He wondered at the insight she displayed when he described the
communion he felt with the Deity—not so much because she was a woman, for that
had not even occurred to him (he knew of the great female mystics of past
centuries)—but he found it difficult to comprehend that any layman could
approach the spiritual ecstasies which he had experienced in his own religious
life. He had thought such experiences a prerogative of those totally committed
to God—in a word, to those with a religious vocation. And Evaine, married to
Rhys Thuryn, had clearly had no call to a traditional religious life. For a while, he
marked it down to her association with her priest-brother, with whom she was
very close. But then he began to realize that she shared it with her father and
her husband as well, and he wondered whether it was a trait coincidentally
common to all four individuals in question, or whether it was somehow related
to their Deryniness—that otherness which sometimes set them all so far apart.
He examined his own feelings in the matter, and he found that this quality of
otherness was really not so alien at all. That, too, surprised him; but again,
he kept pushing the growing recognition out of his mind. The true turning
point in their relationship came one day late in March. He had come upon her
praying in the chapel, and had found such a look of peace upon her, such
tranquil oneness with the Universe as she knelt there, that he had almost
himself knelt in awe of it. Shortly, she became aware of his presence —or
perhaps she had known it all along—and she opened her eyes and turned to look
at him. When she did, there was a glow of such pure radiance, such sanctity,
about her, that he had not dared to speak until they had left the chapel.
Even then, he responded to her few comments mostly in monosyllables until they
were safely in his study room and he had closed the door. He felt that he must
ask her of what he had seen—felt he could ask. But he was having trouble
finding just the right words. As she seated
herself before the fireplace, he noticed a small, golden stone in her hand. She
toyed with it unconsciously, her fingertips caressing its smoothness with an
abstract contentment. Suddenly, Cinhil had to find out what it was. “What have you
there, my lady?” “This?” Evaine
glanced casually at the stone. “It’s called shiral. It comes from the
mountains of Kierney, near my father’s seat of Cor Culdi. He gave it to me last
year, after I asked an almost identical question of him.” She handed it to
him with a smile, and he turned it over in his hand, watching its surface catch
the light in liquid ripples. “Is it only a
trinket, a toy?” he asked, after a long pause. “It occurs to me that I have
seen you carry it before, though I never paid it much mind. It must mean
something very special to you.” Evaine lowered her
eyes, speculating on just how much Cinhil had seen; then she decided to venture
an experiment. “Aye, it is
special, Your Highness. Partly because my father gave it to me, of course, but
also for other reasons. Would you like me to show you what my father did with
it, when I asked your question?” His eyes flicked
to the crystal, his features tensing as his fingers clenched on it spasmodically.
Then he shook the emotion and looked back at her again. “Your words are
innocent enough, my lady. And yet, I feel a certain foreboding. Should I?” She held out her
hand, a gentle smile on her lips and in her eyes as she tried to put him at his
ease once more. She knew, as he put the crystal into her hand, that he had felt
something from it—even if he was not aware of what it was. “You must not fear
it, Your Highness—no more than one should fear to approach the Sacraments when
one is in a state of grace,” she breathed, couching her words in terms she
thought he might understand. “The crystal itself contains neither good nor
evil, though it does have power. But one must approach it with respect and
awareness of what one is doing. It can be a link—perhaps with the Deity?” She moved her
shoulders in a shrug, the crystal winking in the palm of her hand. Cinhil
leaned forward to look into her eyes intently. “Does it have
something to do with the look I saw on your face in the chapel a little while
ago?” : “It did not cause
it, though it may, perhaps, enhance it,” she replied softly. “That is but one
of its uses.” Cinhil let out a
long breath, never taking his eyes from hers. “Show me,” he
whispered. With a slight
inclination of her head, Evaine sat back and rested her elbows on the arms of
her chair, holding the stone lightly between the tips of her fingers, as she
had seen her father hold it so long before. Staring into its depths, she took a
deep breath and exhaled softly, willing her senses to extend around the
crystal. At first, only the reflection of the firelight flared in its depths;
but then it began to glow of itself. Still in light
trance, Evaine shifted her eyes to Cinhil’s, the crystal pulsating coldly
between them. “It is a focus,
and a finding,” she whispered, her face expressionless. “This is but the
beginning. From here, I could go—” She broke off and
shook her head, passing a hand before her eyes, and the light in the crystal
died. Cinhil sat forward in alarm, not comprehending what he had just seen. “Is anything
wrong?” he asked, reaching out to touch her arm in concern. Noting the touch,
but not daring to react to it, Evaine shook her head and smiled, glancing at
the crystal and then back at him. “Nothing wrong,”
she assured him. “It’s a trifle difficult to speak while maintaining the light,
though,” she lied. “I can better answer your questions in my normal state.” “Then, what you
were doing was not—normal?” “Well, it was
normal for Deryni—or rather, let us say that it was not abnormal,” she smiled.
“The shiral crystal is an aid to concentration. Anything can be used as
a focal point, but the shiral is better than most, because it shows you,
by glowing, when you’ve reached the minimum level of concentration. Anything
bright will do: a ring, a fleck of sunlight on glass. For that matter, you
don’t really need anything physical, though it does help, especially in the
beginning.” “You use it as a
focus of concentration,” Cinhil repeated. “And that is what you were doing in
the chapel?” “Well, yes, I
happened to be using it, but—” She glanced at him shrewdly, knowing that he was
about to ask the question she had been leading him to for the past five
minutes. “Your Highness, you surely aren’t thinking to try the shiral crystal
yourself? I don’t think it will work for humans.” “At least let me
try,” Cinhil pleaded, taking the bait and swallowing, without even realizing
the hook was set. Wordlessly, Evaine
laid the crystal in his hands and watched him settle back in his chair with a
triumphant glint to his eyes. Holding the crystal as he had seen her do, he
stared at it intently, tense with the effort of willing it to glow. Nothing happened. After a little
while, he clasped the crystal in his hand and looked up at her, his swallow
audible in the stilled room. It was obvious by the very line of his body that
he had not given up. “Show me how.” His harsh whisper
was a command, and with a nod Evaine moved her chair a little closer so she
could observe him from slightly to one side. “Now, you must
follow my instructions exactly,” she warned, touching his empty hand lightly
and gathering his full attention upon her. “I have never allowed a human to try
this, and I would not see you harmed. I have told you, the crystal has power.” “I will do only
what you tell me to do,” Cinhil said. His eyes were bright and intent upon her
as she turned slightly toward him. “I want you to
look at the crystal,” she said, noting that the firelight caught and flared in
the stone even as he steadied it before his eyes. “Stare at the crystal and let
all else in this room recede from your mind. Let my voice guide and guard you;
for to enter the peace of the crystal, you must let all else slip away and
recede for a time. Concentrate all of your consciousness upon the crystal, and
let my voice be your guide. Imagine all the light of your essence pouring
through your fingertips to gather in the matrix of the crystal. You see nothing
but the fire of the crystal, hear only my voice guiding you, and now your
universe is the crystal, and you are entering its domain . . .” As she spoke, her
voice low, almost a chant, his attention did focus on the stone, his breathing
deepened and slowed, the taut lines of his face relaxed. Cautiously, then, lest
she disturb the delicate balance which was forming, she extended her own senses
around him and felt the resistance melt away, felt his consciousness receding.
He was on the verge of a trance; he was in a trance. She closed her eyes and
let her senses guide her around the interstices of his outer consciousness,
felt them part before her as his shields crumbled and dissolved. Insidiously, then,
she entered and made certain adjustments, left certain instructions, forged
certain bonds of will which would be undetected when she withdrew. She found
his outer mind a place of order and beauty, as she had long suspected; but she
dared not go deeper this time, for his trance was light and she must not tax
his trust in her. Still, the seeds had been sown, and she knew that next time
she could return him to this state—and deeper—at will. Evaine withdrew
then, erasing all signs of her passage as she went, and opened her eyes slowly.
She glanced at him, his eyes unseeing, his face calm and untroubled—then felt
her gaze drawn unbelievingly to the crystal between his fingertips. It glowed!
Faintly and haltingly. But it did glow! Controlling the
impulse to make some sudden motion, to let some word of wonder escape her lips,
she softly began to speak again and lead him back to consciousness. As his eyelids
fluttered and his hands twitched a little in the coming back, the light in the
crystal died—but not before she was certain he had seen it, and had realized
that this had been his work. He blinked several times and breathed a sigh of
wonder, then carefully put the crystal on the chair arm between them, not yet
willing to meet her eyes. “Did I—did I
really see what I just thought I did?” he finally asked, when he had stared at
the crystal again for several heartbeats. “Yes, Your
Highness, you did.” He looked up at
her then, a beseeching look on his face. “I know I should not ask, but I would
like to keep the crystal, at least for a time. I—should like to examine
this feeling more closely.” “What did you
feel?” she said, not really needing to ask, but knowing he would expect such a
question. “I—don’t know. A
strange peacefulness, a—suspension of time.” He turned his gray Haldane eyes
upon her and his lips parted again. “May I keep it? Please?” “Very well. But
there is a condition: you must not try to use the crystal unless I am with
you.” “That is
understood.” “Your royal word
on it?” she insisted. “And more, your priestly word?” He picked up the
crystal again and looked at it, then nodded and gave a sigh of relief; he stood
and slipped the crystal into a small box over the fireplace. He caught himself
on the edge of the mantel and rubbed his eyes, then half turned toward her with
an ill-disguised yawn. “I’m sorry. I
don’t know why, but I’m suddenly very tired. I think I ought to rest now.” “Work with the
crystal can be very taxing,” she said, rising and taking his arm. “Come. Let me
help you to your bed.” Half an hour
later, Evaine was telling Camber and Rhys and Joram of the afternoon’s
developments, sharing the experience with them arcanely. Camber’s face beamed
with pride as she told her tale. When she had finished, Joram let out a raucous
whoop of delight and Rhys kissed her soundly. Camber sat back in his chair and
poured mulled wine for all of them. “Let us drink to
Evaine,” he said, handing cups around and lifting his in toast, “for doing what
no one else could do, for breaking through our prince’s shields without a hint
of battle. The way is clear now. We can go in and assess him, and he will never
know, until it’s time to do what must be done. To Evaine!” “To Evaine!” Rhys
and Joram echoed, and drank her salute in joy. They talked more,
then, long into the night, evaluating and assessing what she had learned in the
very shallow sampling she had made that afternoon, making plans, venturing
theories. ... The following
afternoon, after Cinhil had finished his studies for the day and taken his noon
meal, she sought him out again. He had been waiting for her; and as soon as she
was seated, he wasted no time in procuring the crystal and taking his place
beside her. “I have not touched
it since yesterday,” he told her, putting it in her hand. “When I awoke this
morning, I was initially angry at what you made me promise; but then I realized
that it was too powerful a thing to tamper with on my own, and that it were
best to go slowly. I had not thought to be so tired yesterday.” “That is a common
reaction when learning to use new abilities, even among Deryni,” she smiled.
“But, you awoke refreshed this morning, didn’t you?” “Yes, and in my
bed, my clothes removed. I”—he lowered his eyes—”I don’t even remember falling
asleep.” “You were very
tired when I left, Your Highness. I had Father Nathan come in and make you
comfortable for the night, since I suspected that you might not awaken before
morning. I hope you are not angry at the presumption.” “No, of course
not.” He folded his hands and studied them for a few seconds, obviously much
relieved by her explanation, then looked up at her again. “May—may we try it
again?” he asked. “Sit back and
relax.” She smiled, moving the crystal before his eyes. “And as I now place the
crystal in your hand, you will sleep.” His eyes closed
and his breathing changed, and he was deep asleep. With a sigh, she reached out
and touched his forehead, taking him ever deeper, securing control. Then she
rose and glided to the door to admit Camber, and resumed her place beside the
sleeping prince. She could feel her father’s reassuring presence as she
extended her senses and entered Cin-hil’s mind. She roamed its
recesses for perhaps a quarter-hour, Camber watching through her mind, never
touching Cinhil’s directly. Finally, she withdrew, shaking her head lightly to
clear away the last vestiges of her own trance, for she had been very deep.
Cinhil slept on, oblivious to what had happened, oblivious to their presence.
Camber smiled and brushed his daughter’s forehead lightly with his lips, then
quietly withdrew. After a moment, Evaine brought Cinhil back to the easy,
gentle trance he had achieved on his own the day before. As before, the stone
glowed faintly. She drew a sobering breath to steady herself. “Cinhil, hear my
voice only,” she said, “and listen to what I say. Though you are in this state
of otherness, you can still hear my voice and you can do what I tell you. Do
you wish to see the crystal glow? You may answer.” The royal lips
parted and breathed a scarcely audible “Aye.” “Then, when I
touch your hand, I want you to open your eyes. You will remain in this state of
otherness, you will still be in contact with the matrix of the crystal, but you
will be able to see it and react. It is real, and you have achieved this task.
Do you understand?” He nodded his head
slightly. “Very well, then.”
She touched his hand. “Open your eyes and tell me what you see.” He obeyed, the
long lashes rising slowly, his eyes like pools of quicksilver, tracking
dreamily to the crystal. For a moment there was no reaction, but then the ghost
of a smile tugged at the corners of his mouth and she knew that he saw. “It glows,” he
murmured, his voice flat in the trance, but tinged with a little wonder. “And I
have done this?” “Yes.” She touched
his hand again. “But now it’s time to return, remembering what you’ve seen.
Wake now, refreshed and relaxed. You’ve been successful.” As his eyelids
fluttered and he emerged from his trance, the light in the crystal died. But
this time, though he sighed at the return to the real world, a smile was on his
lips, and he closed the crystal in his hand instead of putting it down
immediately. He stared into the fire for just a moment, savoring what he had seen,
then looked at Evaine again and smiled, a genuine, relaxed smile such as she
had not seen upon his face in all the time he had been in the haven. “You remember,
don’t you?” she said. He nodded. “It was
beautiful. And I did it, didn’t I?” “You did it,” she
smiled. “This still doesn’t mean that you should try it without my presence
yet, but you’re learning. I think you can see, from the way you feel, that it
wasn’t nearly as difficult this time. Oh, Cinhil, if you will only let us help
you, we can make you such a king as the world has never seen!” He looked away at
that, as she had known he would, his face returning to its old, taut lines. But
though the shields were back, they were not nearly so high or so fast as
before. She left him to
ponder what he had seen; and though he stared long at the crystal after she had
gone, he did not try to enter it again that day. He had, after all, given his
word. They worked with
the crystal almost daily after that, until he learned to slip in and out of his
Deryni-like concentration unaided. After a time, she allowed him to use it in
his meditation; she did not tell him he no longer needed it. After that, he
seemed not quite so bitter at his lost priesthood. He still was not
eager to be king. And he still avoided intimate contact with the forlorn Megan
whenever he could, for he did not like to be reminded of this part of his
dynastic duty. But his education progressed smoothly, and in ways which he
himself did not dream. His work with the crystal, especially, was establishing
paths of discipline which would be invaluable once Camber discovered how to
unlock the potential that they now knew him to carry. It was May before
they were ready—the culmination of six long weeks of research and partial trial
and agonized planning. They argued over how much he should be told; over
whether he should be told ahead of time; over what form the unleashing of his
powers should take—for there were options available, and they must choose the
ones which would be least threatening to Cinhil and his rigid theological
orientation. They chose Rudemas
for the day of conferring power: Rudemas, called Beltane by the old reckoning.
Early that evening, before the prince’s evening meal had been brought, Camber
went with Evaine and Rhys to Cinhil’s quarters. He had been
sitting in his chair by the fire, his slippered feet propped on a footstool,
the shiral crystal in his hand, though he had not been using the stone.
He had been thinking about it, but it was more a thing to occupy his hands than
a focus for his mind just now. His stomach was telling him it was time for the
evening meal, and he wondered why they had not brought it yet. The knock at the
door was not unexpected, then, though he was a little surprised to see the
three of them instead of Father Nathan. With a slight nod, he bade them come
inside, motioning them to the chairs before the fireplace. “I thought you
might be bringing my dinner,” he said casually as he took his own chair.
“Father Nathan is usually quite prompt.” They had waited
until he was seated before sitting themselves. Evaine was in her accustomed
place to his left, Rhys on the arm of her chair away from Cinhil, Camber to
Evaine’s left. When they did not
speak, Cinhil cocked his head quizzically and shifted uneasily in his chair. “Is anything
wrong?” “No, all is as it
should be, Your Highness,” Camber replied. “It’s time we had a serious talk,
though. Of necessity, it will be brief.” “Why brief? The
evening is just begun, and I have no place to go.” “But you do,”
Camber said quietly. “That’s what we came to talk to you about.” “I’m afraid I
don’t understand.” Cinhil sat a little straighter and placed his hands
deliberately, formally, on the arms of his chair. He was not sure he liked the
tone of this conversation. He glanced at
Evaine, hoping for some clue, some hint of what was to come. Instead, he saw
her hand coming toward his forehead, knew suddenly that if he let her touch him
he would be lost. He shrank away from her, trying to avoid the hand, but it was
too late. “Sleep,” was all
she said. He felt the
swooping, slightly heady sensation he had felt before when he used the shiral
crystal—it was still in his hand, he realized dully—but this time he seemed
to have no control over it. He felt his eyes close and he sagged a little in his
chair. He could not seem to help himself, could not fight it. “Now, listen to
me,” he heard her voice say—-and her voice was the only thing in his universe.
“You will not resist us physically. You can open your eyes, but you will obey
me. Look at me, Cinhil.” His eyes opened
and he did look at her, but there was a sluggishness about his response which
he could not seem to shake. He swallowed and glanced at the others; he saw
Camber rising to walk around in front of him, to lean both hands on the arms of
his chair and stare into his eyes. He could not disengage from that gaze. “Open to me,
Cinhil,” the Deryni Master said. And Cinhil knew what they intended for him. He continued to
fight them, mentally, all the way to the chapel, but it was futile. They walked
him down the rockbound corridors, and he could not run or cry out or make one
move to thwart them. The chapel door
was guarded by a stern Michaeline knight—Cullen, Cinhil recognized with a
start—a naked greatsword resting with its quillons between his mailed fists. At
their approach, he touched a strangely glowing doorlatch, then bowed his head
in homage as they passed. The door closed behind them with a thud of finality
which made him long to wrench his head around for one last look at his
now-closed escape. But he did not.
For they had not told him he might. Instead, he went where he was bidden, stood
compliant and unresisting in the exact center of the faceted chamber, his feet
on the jewel-toned carpet where they had crowned him prince. By the light of
the Presence lamp and two tall altar candles, he watched with fogged detachment
as Joram came into view peripherally and mounted the three low steps to the
altar. The priest
genuflected and stood awhile in meditation, hair and surplice and brocaded stole
glowing in the sparse candlelight. Presently, a taper flared as Joram turned to
regard him; and then the priest was giving the taper to his sister, turning
back to the altar to spoon incense into a smoking thurible. Cinhil could not
see Camber or Rhys, though he knew they must be somewhere behind him. New beeswax
candles in free-standing brass holders had been placed at the foot of the altar
and a few paces to either side of Cinhil, and it was to the first of these that
Evaine now went. Cinhil seemed to recall that they had passed a fourth one as
they entered, in which case he was standing at the center of a circle defined
by the four new candles. He could not turn to verify that recollection—but that
was not the issue, anyway. What mattered was that the very concept of the
circle numbed him to cold panic. He told himself that there was a rational
reason for his alarm—tried to dredge that reason from his memory—but his mind
was not functioning properly. Evaine lit the
candle on the floor at the foot of the altar before him, then moved slowly
toward the one to his right, shielding the flame with her hand as she walked.
The otherness of the Deryni was like a sixth presence in the chamber, an icy
finger prodding at the base of his brain. He had the impression that the cold
he felt was not altogether the fault of the rock walls and floor. Joram set what
appeared to be a covered chalice on the floor at the base of the first
candlestick, then gave Camber something wrapped in white silk. The object was
small and delicate, from the way the Deryni lord was handling it, and Cinhil
found his attention drawn to it almost irresistibly. It was as though time hung
suspended, as though he watched through someone else’s eyes. Evaine lit the
candle to his right and began to move around behind him. “Would you please
kneel?” The voice at his
side was Rhys’s, and without hesitation Cinhil obeyed, unable to resist. He
could see now that what Camber held was a large, cabochon ruby the size of a
man’s little fingertip, set in the claws of a red-gold mounting and terminating
in a slender gold wire. “The gem is called
the Eye of Rom,” Rhys’s calm voice informed him, as the Healer’s hands did
something cold and wet to his right earlobe. “Legends say that it fell from the
stars on the night of Our Saviour’s birth, and was brought by the Magi as a
gift to the Child. Whether or not that is true, it has been in the MacRorie
family for twelve generations. We have endowed it with—ah—certain
characteristics which will be useful to you a little later tonight.” Rhys handed a
bright sliver of metal to Camber in exchange for the gem, brought the crimson
fire toward the royal head. Again, Cinhil felt the Healer’s gentle touch and
realized that Rhys must have pierced his ear. He wondered foggily how he would
look in an earring. “There. That’s
done,” Rhys said. He leaned back to inspect his work, then touched the prince
lightly on the shoulder. “You can stand up now.” Cinhil could and
did, and lost himself for the next few seconds in trying to fathom the
significance of what had just happened. The faint, musical jingle of metal
rattling against the thurible brought him back, and he saw that Evaine had
finished her circuit of the chamber and extinguished her taper, and was now
being censed by her brother. She made a slight
bow when he had finished, whether toward Joram or the altar or the first
candlestick, Cinhil could not be sure, then remained with her back to Cinhil,
her head slightly bowed. Joram, thurible swinging before him in a cloud of
sweet incense, began retracing the circle which Evaine had just trod. Cinhil
recognized the Latin Joram chanted: it was the Twenty-Third Psalm. He also, if
he squinted his eyes just so, was getting the distinct impression that the
circle glowed. He must have
drifted a bit, for the next thing he knew, Joram was censing those within the
circle. Camber stood to Cinhil’s left, Rhys to his right; and Evaine waited at
the edge of the circle with the cup in her hands, uncovered. He heard the faint
clink as Joram laid the thurible on the floor behind them, felt Joram’s passage
as he returned to Evaine and took the cup from her with a bow. He tensed as
brother and sister moved to stand before him, fearing he knew not what. The cup, he
noticed, was half filled with wine. Odd, but he could not remember having seen
this particular cup before, though he had thought he was familiar with all of
the altar furnishings in use in the haven’s chapel. “I suspect that
you’ve noticed this is not the chalice we customarily use in this chapel,” Joram
said, apparently reading his curiosity. “There are reasons for that, which will
become apparent to you in a little while. The wine is sacramental wine, but it
has not yet been consecrated. I tell you this to reassure you that there is no
desecration involved in what we do or ask you to do tonight. If that were our
intent, we would not be here, in this place. You may ask questions now, if you
wish.” The words freed
Cinhil’s tongue, and he swallowed apprehensively, a dozen questions boiling in
his mind. After consideration, he settled on a cautious approach, suspecting
that he already knew the sorts of answers he was going to get. “What were you
doing earlier?” “Warding. It is
something you will learn, in time. It is a protection from outside influences,
from forces which might otherwise interfere in what we do tonight. All within
the confines of the wards are now sealed from harm.” “Then there is
danger in what you do?” “There is always
danger,” Camber said in a low voice. “We seek to minimize that danger by
following certain carefully ordered procedures. Believe me, we would not risk
you here if we did not believe it was safe for you.” “But what are you
going to do to me?” Cinhil asked in a plaintive voice. Joram’s eyes met
his, unblinking, deadly serious. “We are going to give you the means to stand
against Imre.” “Enough, Cinhil.”
Camber touched his hand and he fell silent. “Joram, tell him what will be
expected of him.” Joram nodded
slightly. “The cup contains
wine, though it will soon be more than that. Not physically different, though
it will be bitter. But it will be changed in other ways which I cannot explain
just now. It is not unlike what occurs during the Mass, though it is not the
consecration with which you are familiar. It—” He looked to his father for
guidance, bowing gratefully at Camber’s nod. “Those details are
not important for your part,” Camber continued calmly. “In a little while,
Joram will ask you to repeat certain words after him. It doesn’t matter whether
you believe the words or not, though I think you’ll find that they’re very
familiar to you. In the right setting, following the proper sequence of
actions, they will accomplish our purpose. There should be no difficulties.” “And, after I
speak these words?” Cinhil whispered, knowing that he would obey, whatever
their answer. “Then you will
drink the wine,” Camber said. “And what will be, will be.” At that, Camber
moved a little more to Cinhil’s left, Joram taking a similar position to his
right. He felt Evaine move to stand behind him, the edge of her skirt brushing
his ankles in passage. Rhys, with a smile which Cinhil knew was intended to be
reassuring, turned to face the altar. Cinhil was
terrified, notwithstanding Rhys’s gesture, for he knew that it—whatever it
might be—was about to begin, and that he had no way to avoid it. Taking a
deep breath, he tried to calm himself, tried to let the tension wash out of him
a little—and was surprised to find that it worked. There was a moment of hush,
and then Evaine’s voice,behind him, weaving a crystal stillness around them
all. “We stand outside
time, in a place not of earth. As our ancestors before us bade, we join
together and are One.” He watched as Rhys
bowed his head, saw that Camber and Joram had done the same, inclined his own a
little in response. “By Thy Blessed
Apostles, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John; by all Thy Holy Angels; by all Powers
of Light and Shadow, we call Thee to guard and defend us from all perils, O
Most High,” she continued. “Thus it is and has ever been, thus it will be for
all times to come. Per omnia saecula saeculorum.” “Amen,” came the
joined response; and Cinhil found that he had answered the same. They made the sign
of the cross together then, and stood a while in silence. Finally, Rhys
turned to face him again, his golden eyes hooded, sun on dark waters. As Joram
passed him the cup with a bow, Rhys raised it to eye level between them, his
right hand spread flat above the rim, not touching. “I call the mighty Archangel Raphael, the Healer, Guardian of Wind and Tempest.
As the Holy Spirit didst brood upon the waters, so instill thou life into this
cup, that he who drinks thereof may justly bid the forces of the Air. Fiat,
fiat, fiat voluntas mea.” As he passed his
hand above the cup and exhaled upon it softly, a swirling mist gathered above
the wine and settled on its surface. The cup grew cold and frosted even as
Cinhil watched, bright beads of condensation sparkling as they ran down Rhys’s
hand. Rhys bowed over the cup, then passed it to Joram. The priest lifted the
cup as Rhys had done, spread his right hand over it. “I call the mighty
Archangel Michael,
the Defender, Keeper of the Gates of Eden. As thy fiery sword guards the Lord
of Heaven, so lend thy protection to this cup. That he who drinks thereof may
justly forge the might of Fire. Fiat, fiat, fiat voluntas mea.” A pass of his hand
above the cup, a murmured phrase, and cold fire burned blue around the rim and
on the surface of the wine. Cinhil closed his eyes and took another deep breath
to still his terror. Movement behind told him that Evaine now held the cup. “I call the mighty
Archangel Gabriel,
the Herald, who didst bring glad tidings to Our Blessed Lady. Send thou thy
wisdom into this cup, that he who drinks thereof may justly guide the knowledge
of the Water. Fiat, fiat, fiat voluntas mea.” Then the cup was
in Camber’s hands, the great lord grim and somber as the night. For the fourth
time, a hand was extended over the cup, Deryni forces brought into play. “I call the mighty
Archangel Uriel,
Angel of Death, who bringest all souls at last to the Nether shore. Herewith I
charge this cup, that he who drinks thereof may justly bind the forces of the
Earth. Fiat, fiat, fiat voluntas mea.” Another pass, a
dustlike rain of some white powder upon the surface of the wine, and then
Camber held it out to Cinhil. The metal ran with
moisture, glistening, cold; and about the rim played ghostly blue frost-fire.
Mist brooded on the surface of the wine—wine which was darker now, more opaque.
Cinhil felt an icy dread surge through his body, feared the words he knew would
come next. “Take the cup,
Cinhil,” Joram’s voice commanded from his right. “Hold the cup before you and
repeat the words I say.” Trembling, Cinhil
watched his hands reach out, felt the cup cold and wet and sleek within his
grasp. Almost without thinking, he found his hands lifting it as they had
lifted countless other cups, though not recently; he realized that what he had
seen, what he was about to do, was no whit less sanctified than any priestly act
he had ever performed. That thought
sobered him as all his reason had not been able to do. Precise and clear, he
echoed the familiar words which Joram bade. “Libera nos,
quaesumus, Domine, ab omnibus mails, praeteritis, praesentibus, et futuris. . .
.” Deliver us, we beseech Thee, O Lord, from every evil, past, present, and
to come. . . . “Per eumdem Dominum nostrum Jesum Christum Filium tuum, qui
tecum vivit et regnat in unitate Spiritus Sancti Dens. Per omnia saecula
saeculorum.” “Amen,” the
four responded. Then his hands
were bringing the cup toward his lips, and he knew that he would drink. Power was in the
cup now; he could feel it tingling in his hands and surging down his arms even
as he held it. The wine was cold and bitter, and he felt it hit his stomach in
an icy, leaden mass, felt fire course through his veins, a flash of brilliance
sear behind his eyes, as he drained the cup. A rushing wind
surged through his mind, rending, tearing, driving a wall of glass-green water
before it; lightning flashing; chasms opening up in the fabric of his being.
And pain—an agony so intense he could not even scream. He felt the cup
slipping from his fingers, faintly heard it ring against the muffling carpet
beneath his feet. But then he was blind, and he was deaf; and he was falling
into the abyss, his mind gripped in a soundless scream of terror. And the darkness
prevailed. chapter twentyHear us, my
lord; thou art a prince of God among us. —Genesis 23:6 He lay as one dead
for a day and a night after that, his condition watched closely by Rhys, the
others hovering anxiously nearby. When on the second morning he opened his eyes
again for the first time, they were there, peering down at him eagerly, a dozen
unspoken questions on their lips. But he did not
remember what had happened— or said he did not. And no, he did not seem to have
any new abilities or powers—why should he? They could not even go into his mind
again to see, having relinquished all control over him with the conferring of
their spells. If Cinhil had gained power, he was not telling them—perhaps never
would, if he was terribly angry at the way they had gone about their task. Or
perhaps their attempt had failed, and nothing had happened, other than to throw
their future king into a coma for a time. Until he decided to talk about what,
exactly, had happened, there was no way for them to know. They settled in to
await the birth of Cinhil’s heir, and to hope. Summer passed.
Outside the haven, Imre’s reprisals against the Michaelines ground to a halt
after his men sacked and burned a village adjoining one of the condemned
monasteries. If Imre had not stopped it, he might have faced rebellion. But if the
Michaeline furor had died down by the end of the summer, the activities of the
Willimites had not. Seizing on the by-now widespread rumors of a living Haldane
heir, small bands of Willimite executioners worked their deadly morthwork by
night, slaying a full score and more of Deryni folk whose crimes had gone
unpunished by the law. At last a Deryni princeling toppled—Termed of Rhorau,
cousin of the king himself—and Imre could ignore the Willimites no longer.
Outside of Gwynedd, the madness spread even as far north as Kheldour, where
human lords still held tenuous rule. Enraged, Imre determined to find the murderers
and make an end to the Willimites once and for all. Royalist troops,
under the leadership of Earl Santare, were more successful at rounding up
peasants than they had been at running the Michaelines to ground. (Less than a
dozen Michaelines were eventually executed, in the seven months of intensive
search for members of the ill-starred order.) By the beginning of autumn, more
than eighty Willimites, among them the key leaders of the Willimite movement,
had been captured, tortured, and horribly executed as an example. Imre,
reassured by the dwindling numbers of the enemy he could see, began to worry
less and less about one whom he could not see and whose existence, in fact, he
had begun to doubt. From not one of the Michaelines or Willimites captured had
he been able to get a shred of evidence of a Haldane pretender. As Michaelmas came
and went, still without that evidence, Imre relaxed even more. With Yuletide
approaching, it became far easier to become caught up in the gaiety of the
season than to worry about a disaster which would probably never come. Besides,
it had been nearly a year since the MacRories had disappeared into oblivion. And in hiding, the
promised saviour of his people continued in his solitude. Though he had, by
now, fully recovered from his ordeal of May—at least physically—the anticipated
manifestation of power did not occur. Cinhil continued to read and study as
required, seemingly resigned to the fate which had been chosen for him; and
after a few strained weeks, he resumed the afternoon visits with Evaine; but
there was never again the intimacy of their previous discussions. The
Michaelines continued to prepare, and life continued in the haven; but Camber
worried about the future—about what would happen when the child was born and they
must begin their plans in earnest for the coup. Nor were there any ready
answers. Cinhil’s son was
born on the Feast of Saint Luke, as they had known he would be; and with his
first lusty cry, his father’s spirits and mental attitude began to change. Cinhil
still had not displayed any evidence of arcane powers, nor volunteered any
suggestions as to why he could not use them. (Camber suspected that he would
not use them. They had gone over every step of the ritual, and there was no
chance for error, in light of the reactions Cinhil had made at the time.) But
the prince did smile more after the child’s birth. And one night, over dinner
with Rhys and Evaine, he actually made a joke. The event of his
son’s birth became a milestone of sorts. Though Cinhil tried hard not to show
it, it was soon apparent to everyone that the prince was more than a little
proud of his new heir. Quite without prompting, he suggested that it might be
appropriate if all of the residents of the haven were invited to the baby’s
christening. He even expressed an interest in planning the details with Joram. Camber conveyed
the royal invitation with relief and set the date. It would be November 6, the
Feast of Saint Illtyd. Sext, the Sixth Hour, was set for the christening
ceremony. Few had seen the
royal infant or mother in the past month, for the Princess Megan had had a
difficult birthing, despite Rhys’s best healing efforts. She walked with
Cinhil’s support at her elbow as they entered the chapel, radiant if a little
unsteady still from her recent confinement. Evaine carried the infant prince to
the baptismal font, Rhys at her left side. The look in Cinhil’s eyes was one of
dumbstruck awe, and he seemed not even to notice the heads which bent and bowed
as he passed into the chamber with his princess, so intent was he upon the
bundle of silk kicking lustily in Evaine’s arms. His gaze never left his son as
Archbishop Anscom began the form of baptism. “In nomine
Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti “Amen.” Rhys and Evaine,
the baby’s chosen godparents, stood before the baptismal font opposite Anscom
and Joram and another Michaeline whom Anscom had brought with
him from Valoret. The archbishop’s gravelly voice
reached to every corner of the faceted chapel chamber. “Exorcizo te,
creatura sails, In nomine Del . . .” As Anscom blessed
the salt which the priest at his left held forth, Cinhil craned his neck to get
a better view; in annoyance, he took Megan’s arm and eased her to a vantage
point at Rhys’s left, where they could gaze at their son. “Aidanus Alroi,
accipe sal sapiente…” Anscom intoned. Receive the salt of wisdom… The baby gurgled
and fussed a little as the salt was placed on his tongue, but Evaine cooed and
bounced him a bit and he settled down. Anscom, well used to the protestations
of salt-tongued infants, went blithely on with the ceremony, laying the end of
his stole across the baby’s body. “Aidanus Alroi,
ingredere in templum Del . . .” Enter into the temple of God ... When the
archbishop had anointed the baby with oil on the breast and between the
shoulder blades, he turned his attention on Rhys. “Aidanus Alroi,
credis in Deum, Patrem omnipotentum, Creatorem caeli et terra?” “Credo,” replied
Rhys, answering for his godson. I believe. “Credis in
Jesum Christum Filium ejus unicum, Dominum nostrum?” “Credo.” “Credis in
Spiritum Sanctum et sanctam Ecclesiam?” “Credo.” “Aidanus Alroi,
vis baptizari?” “Volo.” I
do. Smiling slightly,
Anscom picked up the silver ewer containing the water for baptism. He could
scarcely contain his delight as he turned and offered the ewer to the prince. “Would Your
Highness care to perform this office for his son?” Cinhil’s jaw
dropped and his eyes went round. “I, Your Grace?” “Even a layman may
baptize in necessity, Cinhil,” Anscom said, his smile broadening as he watched
the beginning of Cinhil’s comprehension. “I believe you more than qualify.” Cinhil stared at
the archbishop as though unable to believe his ears, joy transfiguring his face
as it had not for many, many months. “Can this be
true?” he whispered. “I am to be permitted this?” Anscom nodded
gently and put the ewer into the prince’s hands. “Fiat, Frater,”
he murmured. Bowing his head in
humility, Cinhil took the ewer to his chest and bowed thanks, then turned back
to where his son awaited him. The infant had quieted in Evaine’s arms, and as
Cinhil motioned her to move closer, the baby yawned and appeared to doze.
Evaine shifted so that she could hold the baby over the font, and Rhys laid his
right hand on the child’s shoulder. “Aidanus Alroi
Camberus,” Cinhil whispered, beginning to pour the water over the crown of
the baby’s head the requisite three times. Camber’s eyes
flashed to Cinhil in surprise as the prince continued, for he had not known
that his name was to be given to the royal child. “Ego te baptizo
in nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti. Amen.” But as Cinhil
returned the ewer to its place and reached for the towel which Joram held, Rhys
froze, then laid both hands on the baby’s head. The infant whimpered once,
coughed and gave a little sigh; then it was still. As Rhys’s jaw dropped in
shock, Cinhil’s eyes darted to the child. “Sweet Jesus,
what’s wrong with him? Why isn’t he moving? He’s not breathing!” Rhys stared
numbly, not daring to speak the icy horror which lay beneath his hands, and
Evaine raised stunned eyes to the prince. “He—he’s dead,
Cinhil,” she said in a small voice. There was no sound
in the chapel for perhaps five heartbeats, and then Princess Megan gave a
little cry and fainted. Guaire of Arliss caught her as she crumpled, his
stricken “My Lady!” breaking the still tableau; but even as Cinhil turned
shocked eyes toward her, he clutched at his chest in pain and started to
collapse. He caught himself
on the edge of the baptismal font, clung to it unsteadily, drunkenly, clamped
his eyes shut and shook his head as though to break free of some binding force
which would crush him. White-knuckled, he bent over the rim of the font, a
long, almost animal cry escaping his lips as he stared into the water. Then he
jerked upright to look wildly about him, a terrible expression lighting his
eyes. “They have killed
my son!” he cried, his glance striking each of them as though with physical
blows. “They have killed my son, and now they seek to destroy me!” “Who is trying to
destroy you, Cinhil?” Camber retorted. “Name your attackers! Tell us what you
feel!” His eyes sought some clue around the room, yet were drawn back to fasten
on Cinhil in dread fascination. He could detect no attack, no hostile threat at
all. If Cinhil was under attack, his assailant was very skilled. “No, not they—he!”
Cinhil gasped. “He is in this room! He is one whom we trusted. Do
not touch me!” he added, as Rhys moved as though to restrain him. Whirling about
abruptly, he snatched the body of the dead baby from Evaine and clutched it
protectively as he backed against the altar. “We will find him,
my Aidan,” he whispered savagely. “I will avenge you!” “Cinhil!” Camber’s
voice cut through the rising horror as though he had shouted, though he had
scarcely raised his voice. “Cinhil, there is nothing you can do. Let Rhys take
the baby. Perhaps he can—” “No. He is dead.”
The voice was flat, leaden. “I know it, Camber, with the sure certainty which
you yourself tried to teach me.” He swept his hard gaze around the room again.
“One of you has betrayed me!” “Has he gone mad?”
Joram whispered to Rhys. Rhys shook his
head. “No. The baby was poisoned —in the salt, I think. I—” The prince had
been scanning everyone in the room, and now he whirled and strode to the center
of the chapel, there to glare in outrage at a man in the habit of a Michaeline
priest—the same priest who had been assisting Anscom with the baptism. The
man’s eyes were calm, unreadable, until Cinhil took a single step closer and
whispered, “You!” As all eyes locked
on the priest, and those closest shrank away, a change came upon the man. His
eyes came alive, the body stood straighter—and then the arms were upraised in
the beginnings of a spell, fingers moving in a certain pattern of attack and
defense. Instinctively,
Cinhil threw up one arm in a warding-off gesture, a faint corona of pinkish
fire partially veiling his face. He gaped at the man unabashedly as everyone
else crowded against the walls. “You, a priest,
would dare raise hand against brother?” Cinhil murmured, unaware of what he had
just done. The Michaeline
said nothing; only stood and stared across at the Haldane heir, his eyes
smoldering. Power was building
in the center of the room. But if Cinhil’s attacker was a trained Deryni,
Cinhil himself was at least untested, and neither had yet paused to cast a
protective circle around the battle area. Camber, fearing for the humans among
them, signed for his kin to shield the noncombatants. It was just in time, for
Cinhil’s next words shook the very air, the ancient, awesome phrases echoing
from arch and joist and mosaicked panels. Cinhil’s words
brought crimson fire to encircle him —a dancing, living flame which was not so
much seen as felt and experienced, by those on the outside. It was a fire which
was sensed, if at all, out of the corner of the eye—which disappeared when
sought head-on, but which was no less deadly should it come within reach of the
unprotected. Cinhil stood straight and terrible, his dead son clasped close
against his breast. The Michaeline
moved toward him in a haze of gold, until only a few meters of sparkling air
separated them. The air glittered
with power, visible lightning arcing across from one man to the other, only to
be dashed ineffectually against the other’s shields. The air was sharp and
acrid, like the charged, moist stillness before a thunderstorm. The candles
guttered wildly in the growing flux of energy. Energy howled and echoed in the
rockbound chamber, coruscating around the heads of the two combatants like mad,
misshapen haloes. A greater surge now blew out all the candles, and for a
moment the wind moaned on in near-darkness. Then the roaring
of the wind increased in pitch, until the watchers could discern two
voices—wordless, mighty, contending darkly in the abyss which had been opened
by the forces locked in mortal combat. The pressure grew, and the watchers
tried to cover their ears, their eyes, their minds, against the not-sounds,
not-sights, not-thoughts which barraged the senses from every angle. Finally, the Michaeline
staggered and let out a low, desperate cry, his eyes at last clearing from
their trancelike stare as he reached out in desperate supplication and fell.
Abruptly, all sound ceased, and the room was plunged into blackness. Silence. Velvet
darkness, save for the fading aura, felt rather than seen, of the victorious
Cinhil, wrapped in the living light of his now-realized powers, living arms
still locked protectively around the dead form of his infant son. It was Camber who
finally had the presence of mind to break the tension, by stepping from his
place against the wall to flare the candles back to light. Anscom was not far
behind, walking slowly to the side of the motionless Michaeline priest,
kneeling to cradle the man’s head wordlessly in his lap. Rhys came and laid a
hand on the man’s forehead, but the priest was dead. Together with Anscom,
then, Rhys entered the dead man’s mind, clearing the way for Anscom to read
what little still remained. When Anscom raised
his head, it was to turn shocked eyes upon Cinhil. He did not rise, but bowed
his head in shame. “Forgive me, My
Prince. I fear that I am partially to blame for all of this. I should not have
brought him here. He told me, before, that Imre’s men had tried to capture him
last spring—that was one reason I took him in. But he could not tell me that,
in fact, they had succeeded. He—is not responsible. Please forgive him.” “The king had done
this?” Cinhil asked, his voice low, dangerous. “Yes, My Prince,”
Anscom whispered. “And he can warp a
man’s mind to do such a thing against his own will?” Anscom nodded, not
daring to speak, and Cinhil turned his terrible gaze on Camber, then on the
rest of them gathered still around the edges of the chapel, sweeping with his
glance but not really seeing any of them. Then he moved purposefully to where
Anscom and Rhys knelt by the fallen priest and stooped to lay his hand gingerly
on the dead man’s shoulder. “For that you were
vanquished by another stronger than yourself, and yourself wished me no harm,
nor harm to my son”—his voice started to break, but he controlled it—”I forgive
you.” He rose quickly to
his feet, his face terrible in the candlelight. “But for him who
has done this thing to you and me and mine, there can be no forgiveness in this
world or the next. Woe be unto thee, Imre of Festil, and to all thy base and
cowardly line, who would strike down helpless infants and break good men to the
yoke of evil. I will avenge them and all whom thou hast made to suffer by thy
might. This I swear—I, Cinhil Donal Ifor Haldane—by my faith, by the Crown of
Gwy-nedd, which my forefathers wore and which I shall surely wear again, if
only to destroy thee, and by the body of my murdered son. There shall be an
end!” And as the Prince
of Gwynedd stood straight and tall beneath the eyes of God and men, the raw
power dying around his head as he became only slightly more than mortal once
more, every knee bent in fealty, and every head bowed in homage. Camber,
kneeling with the others, tried to push his own apprehensions to the back of
his mind. chapter twenty-oneFor out of
prison he comes to reign; whereas also he that is born in his kingdom becomes
poor. —Ecclesiastes
4:14 They buried the
infant Prince Aidan in a tiny tomb beneath the floor of the chapel where he had
died, on the Feast of the Four Crowned Ones, who had also been martyrs to royal
tyranny centuries before. Cinhil, terrible in his grief, would not permit
anyone else to touch the body at first, keeping watch alone in the cold little
chapel for a night and a day and a night, taking no food and sleeping not at
all. Only on the morning of the second day did he permit them to enter and seal
the baby in its tiny casket and consign it to the grave. He would not speak of
the incident after the burial. The slain priest,
too, was buried in the chapel a day later, though it was only the Michaelines
and Camber who came to mourn him. Alister Cullen performed the simple rites.
Later, much later, there would be a carved stone set into the wall where he
lay, but the words would be brief, as they had always been for every Michaeline
who died in the Faith: Here lieth Humphrey of Gallareaux, a priest of Saint
Michael. Only that and the dates. Beyond that, they could do nothing for
him. Cinhil was much
changed after this. If he had been withdrawn and subdued before, now he was
cold, ruthless, machine-like in his dealings even with his allies. No longer
the quiet, guilt-ridden priest-cum-prince who had wrestled with his
conscience to reconcile his new calling, now Cinhil was coldly interested in
every facet of the planning which was being carried out at fever pitch—for all
that his interest was darkly colored by vengeance and shrouded by aloofness. He
must know their military strength, and from where each group of men would
attack when the order came, and who would command, and what provisions had been
made for each detail of the infiltration plan. Most of all, he would know when.
Delay now made him restless. The information
was his for the asking, though Camber continued to harbor some concern about
his motives. The Michaeline knights, he was told, were gathering even now, the
original fifty in the vicinity of the haven, and another century and a half at
Dhassa. The Culdi levies were also preparing, secretly raised by Camber on one
of his infrequent trips outside the haven, five hundred of them prepared to
stand the city of Valoret to siege if the Michaeline assault should fail. They planned their
move for the first of December, the night of the opening of Imre’s Yule Court,
when everyone of any importance in the kingdom would be within Valoret’s walls
and, more importantly, within the confines of Imre’s castle. Judging from past
Yule Courts, it would be a night of drunkenness and debauchery—in all, a
perfect night for invaders to infiltrate, overpower less-than-wary guards, and
topple a dynasty. They learned more,
too, of the man who had been responsible for Prince Aidan’s death. There had
been no deliberate betrayal; and Imre’s actions regarding Humphrey had resulted
in a mere fluke. When captured, Humphrey had not even known for certain of the
Haldane’s existence, and had no idea of the location of the haven; even Imre
had recognized this as soon as Humphrey’s will was broken. But just in case
Humphrey should happen upon word of such a man, the king had taken pains to
plant the seeds of treachery and destruction. Humphrey was released with the
memory that he had not been captured at all, though he had come close.
Naturally, he had flown to Archbishop Anscom for refuge; and Anscom, unwittingly,
had taken Humphrey in. When Anscom returned to the haven to baptize Cinhil’s
heir, it was the most natural thing in the world for Humphrey to accompany him.
After all, were not the Michaelines his brethren? This information was
dutifully passed on to Cinhil, along with all of the other intelligence they
were gathering; and it did soften his heart a little toward the man whose
physical body had been responsible for his son’s death. But though Cinhil
continued to show an astounding grasp of the military tactics and planning with
which he was being bombarded, an aloofness continued to surround him, couching
an ever-deeper resentment for the Deryni despite the circumstances of
Humphrey’s betrayal. Camber became increasingly aware of it, as his earlier
fears were reinforced by Cinhil’s actions; and he discussed this with the
others more than once. But there was really nothing that anyone could do, other
than to be aware of the potential problem— and to hope and pray that they would
not have to deal with it in any major way. Cinhil’s princess
probably suffered most directly in the weeks that followed. Though she was soon
with child again, Cinhil having been impressed with the necessity of another
heir as soon as possible, she was a wraith-like shadow of the spirited,
sensitive girl who had come less than a year before to be the bride of Haldane.
A little genuine attention from her lord husband could have eased her
heartsickness considerably, but Cinhil was too busy, too preoccupied, to notice
her need. He was gently courteous to her in public, as was fitting the mother
of his future heirs, and it could not be said that he abused her or even
ignored her, but there was a cool superficiality to their relationship, as
though living the role of prince and future saviour of Gwynedd had sapped him
of all ability to love or be loved. Though he now seemed to have accepted his
role as prince, he had an increasing otherworldliness about him—not purely of
religious fervor, though that continued to be an integral part of his personality,
but more a clinical detachment, an emotional divorce from the feeling of what
had happened, and what must happen in the future, if all of them were to
survive. Camber observed
all of this in
sadness—doubly so, because he loved Megan like a father, and saw how she
was grieving and alone when she most needed the love and support of her
husband. Camber understood what it was to lose a child. He had paid the price
of a son, and knew that he would pay the price of other children, and his own
life, if need be, if there were no other way to save their cause. But to lose a
child in battle with the enemy was one thing; to have one pine away for lack of
loving was quite another. He and Evaine and Rhys made special efforts to try to
comfort Megan, but it was poor substitute for what Megan really needed. He
could only hope that Cinhil would realize, after a time, what he was doing to
her. The evening of the
first of December found their preparations complete, the first steps set
irreversibly into motion. Late in the afternoon, the fifty Michaeline knights
who would be leading the assault through a Portal in the castle itself had
attended a Mass of special intention for the prince’s cause, reconsecrating
their swords to the holy fight in which some of them were certain to perish.
The other century and a half of Michaelines, under command of Lord Jebediah of
Alcara and Jamie Drummond, was already at the Portal in Dhassa, awaiting
Transfer to the archbishop’s apartments in Valoret. They would secure the city itself,
overpowering the city garrison and making certain that none but Haldane
supporters passed the city gates. The final
blessings given, all that remained in the chapel were the principals: Cinhil;
Camber and his kin; and the noncombatants, who would remain behind. The men
wore mail and helms and bright swords girded at their sides, surcoats and
coronets proclaiming the ranking among them. Only Cinhil was not clad as all
the rest—and that, in itself, was a victory of a sort. Cinhil had not
wanted to go armed at all. He had wanted to wear only a long, belted robe of
white, to show the purity of his intentions. He was not a warrior. He had not
thought it appropriate that a priest-king should go forth armed with mere
mortal steel to battle the archenemy. After all, it would not be steel which
would defeat Imre of Festil. But the women had
maintained otherwise, and had taken steps to ensure that their prince should go
forth as a king ought. Megan, Evaine, and Elinor had labored for weeks, not
showing him what they wrought. When, on the afternoon before battle, he had
gone to his chamber to meditate before appearing for Mass, he had found a
king’s attire awaiting him. He never learned
where they had gotten the gold-washed mail, though the stuff had a cold, unearthly
glow about it which he somehow did not care to think about. This was to go over
an undergarment of white silk, a doublet of softest leather cushioning the
metal links from his skin. Greaves of gold-chased steel buckled over leather
breeches and boots; matching vambraces guarded his forearms. Scarlet gauntlets,
rich-embroidered with his Haldane crest on the cuff, were the gift of the slain
Cathan’s Elinor. Over all would go the knee-length surcoat of crimson silk,
with the golden lion of Gwynedd blazoned bold on chest and back in gold-bullion
thread. Cinhil was speechless. He put on the
undergarment, the padded doublet and breeches, the boots. He stood a long time
looking into the mirror, studying the regal warrior’s face which stared back at
him with level gaze. Then he called for the women to attend him; he could do
nothing else. Gravely, he received them and thanked each one. After, he asked
them to help him arm. It was fitting, he said, that a man who had never borne
steel should be armed for his maiden battle by the women who had made it
possible for him to go at all. They armed him
then, though many a finger fumbled with straps and clasps as eyes blurred with
joyful tears. When they had finished, Evaine buckled a plain, cross-hilted
sword over his surcoat—the white belt for purity, she told him as she brushed
his cheek with her lips. Then she was stepping back to make a low curtsey, and
it was Megan’s turn. The princess had
saved her gift for last, watching shyly in the background as her lord assumed
more and more the appearance of a king. Scarcely breathing, with her
nervousness, she produced a coronet from behind her skirts—not the simple,
silver circlet with which he had been crowned Prince of Gwynedd on their
wedding night, but a band of gold and silver intertwined, surmounted by four
bold crosses. Her hands began to
tremble as she looked into his eyes. Cinhil, deeply moved, laid his fingertips
on hers, so that the coronet was held between them. She swallowed and started
to draw away, but he shook his head gently and closed his hands around hers. “Please forgive
me, my lady. I have ill-used you when I should instead have thanked you—for my
son, for your support when I needed it.” He glanced down at her body, then met
her eyes again with a strained smile. “And for our sons who are to be. There
will be two of them this time, you know. Twin boys.” Her eyes widened,
for though Rhys had told her that she was with child, and that there would be a
boy, there was as yet no sign of it upon her. And how could he know that there
would be two? “You—know, my
lord?” “I know,” he
smiled. “I know.” She lowered her
eyes and blushed prettily at that, and Cinhil thought that he had never seen
her look so lovely. He could sense Evaine and Elinor watching in the background,
and the thought crossed his mind that he was probably making them uncomfortable
with this moment of apparent tenderness, but he didn’t care. It had suddenly
occurred to him that he might well die tonight, despite his powers; and if he
did, he should never again see this lovely, unspoiled child who was his wife.
Strange, but he found that the term came easily now, no longer carrying the
mental qualms it once had borne. Abruptly, he regretted the weeks of neglect,
spent in brooding on vengeance, and in a flash of inspiration realized what he
could do to make at least a partial mending. He raised the
coronet slightly and took it from her hands. “I shall wear this
token of my lady’s favor on one condition,” he said, looking down into those
incredibly turquoise eyes. “That my lady shall wear it first.” He lowered it
briefly to crown her wheaten hair. “Let this be a symbol of the sovereignty we
share, and the regency I leave with her on behalf of my sons that are to be. If
I should not survive this night, my lady, you are Queen of Gwynedd, as the
mother of my sons.” Her eyes misted
with tears as he removed the coronet and placed it firmly on his own head. Then
he kissed her lightly on the lips and led her and the other women into the
chapel for Mass. It was well after
midnight when the Great Lords of Gwynedd finally lit King Imre to bed in his
tower chambers. It was nearly half an hour after that before Archbishop Anscom
could slip away from the others and make his way to the castle’s chapel. The evening had
been tense and interminable for Anscom, harboring, as he did, the knowledge of
how the night must end. He had found it far more difficult than usual to be
civil to the numerous toadying hangers-on at Court; he had been curt and
snappish more than once during the course of the feast and revelling. The lord
chamberlain had even asked whether he would rather not be excused, since he
obviously was feeling so out of sorts. Anscom had assured him that it was but a
momentary touch of indigestion, and that it would pass. The chamberlain had
thoughtfully brought him a cup of goat’s milk, for the archbishop’s touchy
stomach was well known at Court. He had made a
great effort at least to seem to be enjoying himself, after that. But it had
been an odd Court, full of strains and undercurrents not usually present at one
of Imre’s gatherings—and especially not at the opening of the Yule Court, one
of the most festive occasions of the year. Anscom wondered whether Imre
suspected that something was brewing, or whether his frenetic gaiety was only
symptomatic of the general malaise which had been growing at Court for the last
year. He also noted that Imre had decreed a green court this year—not the
disastrous white of the previous Christmas Court. Perhaps that, and the
memories of that last Yule, accounted for Imre’s nervousness. Anscom could not
say he blamed the king. Princess Ariella
was not in attendance, either— though no one had really expected her to be. She
was seldom seen in public of late, and rumor had it that she had been quite ill
for several months. More vicious castle gossip insisted that Ariella’s
“illness” was nothing which would not be alleviated by the loss of a
nine-month’s accumulation of weight, but such theories were never discussed
where they might reach the king’s ears. Anscom himself had
no opinion on the matter, though if Ariella were with child, it might be the
result of an incestuous relationship with her brother. If true, the child could
become a serious threat to the throne, should it live; but that was a problem
to be dealt with when the time came. It was entirely possible that Ariella was
quite innocent—though Anscom doubted it. And so the Yule
Court fared as Yule Courts will, when one is forced to be present at an affair
where one has no wish to be. The meal was passable, if somewhat tasteless to
Anscom’s nerve-dulled palate; and the entertainment was of an enforced gaiety
which only occasionally bordered on the genuinely amusing. Still, when the
Great Lords finally took up torches and conveyed the more than slightly tipsy
king to his chambers—to the tune of drunken songs and lewd jokes—it was all
Anscom could do to curb his impatience and pronounce the final blessing. When
he finally reached the refuge of the chapel and slipped inside, he leaned his
forehead against the cool bronze doors for several heart-pounding minutes until
he could collect his wits. Then he made his
way to the sacristy door and fitted his key to the lock, stepping into total
darkness as he closed the door behind him. A candle flared to light in the
center of the room, and there stood Camber, Joram, Evaine, Rhys, and a few
others, waiting for him, flanking the crowned Prince Cinhil. “Stand not on
ceremony, Archbishop,” Cinhil admonished, when Anscom started to kneel. “How
stands the situation without? Is the tyrant abed?” Raising an eyebrow
at the new title which Cinhil had apparently bestowed upon his rival, Anscom
straightened his cassock and nodded. “I accompanied the Great Lords to his
chambers but half an hour past, Your Highness. With the quantity of wine which
he consumed, he will be stuporous by now. The guard is in little better shape.
It is as we had hoped.” “Excellent,”
Cinhil nodded. “The outside strike force has already begun infiltrating the key
defense points throughout the city. We but await your word to bring our smaller
force of knights here.” Anscom sighed and
nodded his head. “Then, begin, Your Highness. There is much work for us here
tonight.” Two hours later,
the castle was essentially Cinhil’s, though sporadic fighting still continued
in the corridors and in the castle yard. Guaire and a handful of Michaelines
had slipped around and barricaded the doors to the guardroom and barracks where
the main castle garrison slept, so that the rest of their force had only to contend
with the guards actually on duty. Joram and Cullen led half a dozen knights and
the royal party in a sweep up the main corridor to the foot of Irnre’s own
tower, where they fought a quick but bloody battle to gain the spiral stair.
Though four of their Michaeline brethren fell to enemy swords, it was a matter
of only minutes before the rebels were making their way up the stairs to Imre’s
own door. There was no guard
outside, and no sound came from within. Joram wondered whether Imre had merely
slept through the sounds of battle, or whether he waited, even now, to unleash
a full arcane defense as soon as they should breach the door. Lowering his
sword, Joram wiped a blood-stained gauntlet across his brow and silenced a sigh
as he reached the top of the stairs. Behind him, Cullen and Rhys and the two
remaining Michaelines waited with their weapons still drawn, Camber sheathing
his and standing escort beside a dark-visaged Cinhil, shielding Evaine. Joram caught
Camber’s slightly nodded signal and turned back to the door, then raised the
hilt of his sword to pound heavily on the polished oak, one, two, three, four
times. The sound echoed down the spiral staircase which they had just ascended
at such cost. “What is it?” a sleepy and slightly wine-blurred voice
grunted, nearly inaudible. Cinhil tensed at
the sound and turned to glance at Camber. As his lips mouthed the single word, Imre?,
Camber nodded and Joram knocked again. “Who’s there?” the
voice said again, louder this time. “I told you, I didn’t want to be disturbed.
Go away.” “Officer of the
guard, Sire,” Joram said, disguising his voice slightly. “I have a message for
Your Highness.” “Can’t it wait
until morning, man?” the voice whined irritably. “I just got to bed. You know
that.” “The gate warder
said it was important, Sire,” Joram replied. “Perhaps Your Highness should take
a look at it.” “Perhaps My
Highness should have you whipped for your impertinence,” the voice snapped.
“Oh, very well. Slip it under the door and I’ll look at it later.” Joram glanced at
the others in annoyance, then let a slender smile flick across his lips. “I’m afraid it
won’t fit, Sire. It’s a sealed scroll,” he said, keeping the edge of smugness
out of his voice, if not his expression. They heard an
exasperated sigh and a shuffle of movement from far behind the door, and then
the nearly silent slap of bare feet approaching, the royal voice muttering
incomprehensibly. As the bolt was shot, Joram and Cullen hit the door together.
There was a whoof of surprise as the door struck the person on the other
side. They surged into
the room, sweeping an astonished and indignant Imre before them, and Rhys
slammed the door and shot the bolt all in one motion. Imre had been taken
totally by surprise, and he paled to find himself confronted by the glint of
steel. “Treason!” he
gasped. “Steel in my presence! Guards! Where are my guards? Who?—Camber!” His
eyes went wide as he recognized the man with the earl’s coronet. “How dare
you?! What treachery is this?” Camber said
nothing; he turned instead and, with a slight nod of deference, bade Cinhil
step forward. Imre blanched as the probable identity of the other man
registered, and he backed slowly away from them until his bare legs collided
with a bench. Nervous fingers plucked at the neckline of his nightshirt as he
whispered, “The Haldane! He does exist!” “The Tyrant of
Festil,” Cinhil countered, his voice low and deadly. “He, too, exists—at least
for the moment.” Imre, drink-fogged
though he was, shook his head as though he had not heard aright, starting as he
caught the movement of the two Michaeline knights circling to cut him off from
the sleeping chamber. In panic, he made a dash for freedom, screaming in terror
as the knights tackled him and flung him to the floor. “Ari!” he
shrieked, as he struggled to escape them. “Ari, run!” “Stop her!” Camber
shouted, as the others scrambled past Imre and crowded through the doorway.
“Don’t let her get away! She carries his child!” They almost caught
her. But even as they poured into the room, the curtained bed seemed to explode
in a flurry of pillows and sleeping furs and flashing white limbs. Ariella, a
night-maned wraith with murder in her eyes, streaked toward the fireplace to
disappear through an opening which had not been there an instant earlier. Joram
and Cullen were only a few paces behind her, but it was far enough for them to
rebound painfully from solid rock where, a few seconds before, a doorway had
stood. They battered at
the rock, trying to find the opening, but by the time they could locate and
force the triggering mechanism there was no sign of the fleeing princess.
Cullen, with a resigned glance at Camber, disappeared through the opening to
search, anyway, Joram following at his back. Imre, standing now
in the firm grasp of the two Michaeline knights, glanced uneasily around him,
sobering fast. Escape at this time was not likely. Even if the two Michaelines
had not held his arms, it was doubtful whether he could get past his other four
captors. Rhys and Evaine blocked the doorway leading to the inner chamber, and
Camber himself barred access to the passageway which Ariella had used. Cinhil
stood near Camber, his eyes never leaving the face of his enemy. Not that the
so-called Haldane really represented a threat himself, Imre reasoned. For that
matter, now that he was thinking more clearly, there were remedies even to the
hold the two knights kept on him. A lightning thought, and his personal shields
flared silver-bright, flinging his two captors’ hands from his person. Of
course, the knights were Deryni, too; and Michaeline shields surged in
response, to ring the captive in a less visible but more constricting net—but
that, too, was to be expected. At least he was fighting on his own ground now. Disdainfully, Imre
drew himself to his full height—still almost a head shorter than his Michaeline
guardians—and gathered the shreds of his kingly dignity. “You are
ill-advised to lay hands upon an anointed king,” he said, addressing Cinhil.
“And the traitor Earl of Culdi breaks his sworn oath of fealty to aid you.” He
glanced haughtily at Camber, then back at Cinhil, annoyed that the Deryni
earl’s gaze did not waver. “A real man would not fear to face me on his own,
Haldane! But, then, they tell me that you are really an apostate priest named
Nicholas Draper, so I suppose that I cannot expect either manly or honorable
behavior from you.” “I am not afraid
to meet you on your own terms, tyrant,” Cinhil said carefully, signalling the
Michaeline knights to withdraw and guard the two balcony doors. “I am prepared
to meet any challenge which you care to name—including the duel arcane.” “Oh?” said Imre.
“You’re bluffing, of course. You are human, if you’re who you say you are. And
without your Deryni traitors, your armed men, you and all your steel are
nothing.” “I shall slay you
without raising steel against you,” Cinhil said, unbuckling his sword and
letting it fall to the floor. “In truth, I should slay you with salt, if that
were possible. It were a fitting end for the fiend who slew my son.” “Your son? I? Come,
now, Haldane. And even if it were true, what magistrate in the land would hold
me to answer for the slaying of a priest’s bastard?” “I have been
released from my priestly vows,” Cinhil said evenly, though Camber could tell
he was only just controlling his temper, “and my lady wife is of gentle birth.
But I will not grace your crude remarks with further answer. You are
responsible for my son’s death, whether or not it was your hand which did the
deed.” “How so?” “Do you deny that
you captured a Michaeline priest, one Humphrey of Gallareaux, and tortured him
until you warped him to your intentions? He learned his poison well, tyrant. My
first-born died of the sacred salt placed upon his tongue at his baptism. It
was your minion who did the bloody deed!” Imre, astonished
at the tale Cinhil had woven, clapped his hands in glee. “Humphrey did that?
Oh, splendid! What subtle irony! I set him to slay the last Haldane heir.
And that was your son, not you. So it wasn’t a futile exercise after all. And
now, you plan to slay me in retribution?” “Yes.” “I see.” Imre’s
face went coldly serious. “Tell me, do you intend to have your traitorous
cohorts cut me into collops? Or am I to be permitted the dignity of fair combat
with my accuser?” “Fair?” Cinhil
mocked. “What is fair about poisoning baptismal salt? What is fair about
executing fifty peasants for a murder in which they had no part? What is fair
about striking down a friend in cold blood, on suspicion only, without even
ascertaining the facts? Do not speak to
me of ‘fair,’ tyrant! At this moment, I hold you in the deepest contempt!” He stood there,
glaring at Imre across the few meters which separated them, and for a moment
the room seemed frozen in time and space, no movement or sound disturbing the
tension which bound them there. Then Imre
shrugged, a maddening, insolent lifting of his shoulders, his hands, and one
proud Deryni eyebrow. The gesture was
too much—the final insult which Cinhil could not endure. Raising his arms, he
cast not only a crimson shield around himself, but a bolt of scarlet fire which
Imre only barely managed to deflect in time. Imre, recovering
from his initial surprise, moved his fingers automatically in the
counter-spell, throwing up his own shields and instinctively marking off a
protective circle for battle. His manner was thoughtful, curious, as he moved a
little to the right to give himself more working room. It was obvious from his
very movements that he had not expected this, and was casting frantically for
an alternative to the battle which now had become not quite so sure a victory. “They said you
were human,” he said tentatively. “I see they were mistaken. If so, then you
are no true Haldane—but you are Deryni, aren’t you?” His teeth flashed
white in the semi-darkness. “But, come. Deryni need have no quarrel with
Deryni. Give this up, and I will reward you with a place in my kingdom, with
riches beyond your wildest imaginings.” “Can you give me
back my son?” Cinhil whispered, his voice hollow within the shields. “Can you
restore to Earl Camber his son, revive the Willimite martyrs who, but for your
want of enforcing the just laws of this land, would never have dreamed of
rising against their anointed king? Can you resurrect the peasants of Earl
Camber’s village whom you slew?—victims of an injustice so great I cannot bear
to speak of it. Is there anything which could make you care for those people
whose welfare was placed in your hands? I did not want your crown, Imre of
Festil. But I am bound to take it from you now. I have no choice.” “That man betrayed
me!” Imre shouted, stabbing a finger at Camber. “That is why I slew his son.
You do not know what Cathan’s death cost me. I loved him!” Camber bowed his
head, compassion welling in his heart for this weak, misguided king. “But Camber’s complicity
in this treason is proof that I was right,” Imre continued, hysteria
edging his voice despite his best efforts. “Coel knew. I was a fool not to
listen to him sooner. I should have destroyed the whole MacRorie brood while
there was yet time!” With that, he
lashed out, silver flame lancing molten and searing against the crimson nimbus
surrounding Cinhil. The prince’s defenses held, and for a moment he merely let
the ravening tide of Imre’s anger spill and course around him harmlessly. The
fire flared and spat and crackled between them for a timeless while, neither
man touching or touched, until Imre, in rage, abruptly changed his tactics. Dread and hideous
shapes began to condense and solidify out of the mists, then—grotesque
creatures of night and unfathomed dark sea-slime, with gaping jaws and
tentacles, and claws and teeth and mottled leather wings. The stench of rotten
carrion and brimstone filled the air even beyond the shields; the screams of
grisly slithering things pierced the air and hinted at forms guessed only in
blackest nightmare. Poisoned fangs
clashed on prey which was no longer there; twisted talons grated on slate
fouled with sodden, slime-sogged fur, touched shudderingly on barely shielded
mind. Each one Cinhil managed to reflect back upon its creator, terror held in
abeyance so that vengeance might prevail. At length Imre stood, sweat-drenched
and breathless, to face Cinhil across only the flicker of their shields. The king raised a
shaking hand in interruption, nodded truce as Cinhil cocked his head to peer in
question. “I do not
understand,” Imre whispered, all swagger if gone from his voice now. “I am
nearly spent, and you—you stand still, hardly touched, strong, though only God
knows how!” He breathed
deeply, hugging his arms close to his body as the chill of the room settled
around him. Cinhil stood regarding him, unruffled, composed, scarcely a hair
out of place on the darkly silvered head, the pale hands relaxed at his sides. “Do you concede?”
Cinhil asked quietly. “Concede? You know
I cannot.” Imre shook his head. “I will not accept defeat from you. I have yet
one escape. Not the way I would have chosen, but never mind.” A wry smile
contorted his face as he staggered against a table, his breath catching in his
throat. “I am master still of mine own body,” he gasped, “and that I shall
never concede. I choose where and when I die. And I choose here and now,
and by mine own—mind!” With that, he
collapsed against the table and slowly sagged to the floor, his face going
ashen as his eyes closed and his shields melted away. Cinhil instantly dropped
his own defenses and darted toward him, a look of shocked amazement on his
face. Camber started to
raise a hand in warning, for it could be a trick. But then he saw that Cinhil
was very much aware and on guard, despite his swift approach; he watched as
Cinhil bent to touch the side of Imre’s neck for a pulse. The prince’s
disgust was apparent as he turned away from the cooling body. “He’s dead,” he
said, thin-lipped with anger. “He willed his own death rather than bear defeat
at my hand.” “He was Deryni,
Sire,” Camber said quietly. “You will learn, in time, that he truly had no
other option. Remember, I knew his father, and his grandfather before that.” Cinhil did not
answer, but stood for some seconds looking steadily across at Camber. Outside,
there was an uproar in the courtyard, the sound of fighting men, and Cinhil
flicked his gaze toward the balcony doors in mild annoyance. Gesturing for Rhys
and the knights to look outside, Camber reached the paling Cinhil’s side just
in time to catch him as he crumpled to his knees and swayed in aftershock. It was some time
before Cinhil could raise his head. For several minutes, he simply shook in
Camber’s arms and fought the churning in his stomach, as the realization of the
past hour’s work stabilized in his mind. Finally, he raised his head and passed
a shaking hand across his forehead, looked into the eyes of his mentor with a
strange and distant gaze. “I—am King of
Gwynedd now, am I not?” “You are, My
Prince.” Cinhil bowed his
head and took a deep, sobering breath, then glanced to where Imre’s body had
lain but a few minutes before—startled to see that it was gone. But in that
same instant, he saw that the two Michaeline knights had taken the body, had
lifted it under the arms as though it lived, and dragged it through the balcony
doors. As the body became visible to the soldiers battling in the yard below,
the sounds of conflict ceased, the voices died down. Cinhil started to
call out to the two knights, to ask what they were about; but Camber stayed his
arm and shook his head. Numbly, Cinhil watched as the knights brought the body
to the edge of the balcony railing and held it poised there, as though standing
on its own. For a still,
heart-stopped instant, the body seemed to stand of its own accord before the
silent soldiers. Then it toppled slowly, gently, over the edge. An instant more
of silence, until it hit the unyielding cobblestones of the yard below, and
then an ear-splitting roar of approbation from a hundred throats, and the
growing chant of, “Cin-hil! Cin-hil! Cin-hil!” With the chant
assailing his ears even within the chamber, Camber helped the new king to his
feet and gestured toward the open doors. “Your knights are
victorious and call for their king, Sire. Will you show yourself to them?” Wordlessly, Cinhil
let himself be led to the balcony, and at his approach the others drew back to
make him way. His appearance brought renewed cheering from the men below—a
deep, joyful shouting punctuated by the clash of swords on shields and the
rattle of spears on helms. As Cinhil rested trembling hands on the stone
balustrade, he noticed that only a few dozen of the cheering soldiers wore the
surcoats and mantles of the Michaeline Order. The rest were of the castle
garrison, who had fought his men minutes before and now flung down their
weapons and acclaimed him with one voice. The cheering broke
off abruptly, and as he turned to glance behind him for Camber, he knew the
reason why. In the Deryni earl’s hands lay the State Crown of Gwynedd, brought
from within by a gently smiling Evaine. Rhys was at her side, his face oddly
solemn beneath the familiar shock of reddish hair. Joram and Cullen had
returned sometime in the last few minutes, grim warrior eyes telling Cinhil all
he needed to know about their attempt to capture Ariella. He swallowed
nervously as the two Michaeline knights removed their helmets and knelt, swords
resting with cross-hilts uppermost as they gazed up confidently at him. He knew
what Camber was about to say, and had no way to stop him. “Sire,” said
Camber, “will you exchange your princely coronet for the Crown of Gwynedd?” There was a
tightness in Cinhil’s chest as he gazed at the crown, and for just a moment he
swayed in an infinity of indecision. It was still not
too late, was it? Though he had toppled the tyrant, Imre, he could yet refuse
the Crown. No man was really indispensable, despite their indoctrination
to the contrary. Perhaps they would permit him to retire to his monastery now,
his part in the struggle completed. Surely they could find another man to rule
Gwynedd. But he realized,
even as he thought it, that the notion was absurd. He could no more walk away
now than he could blaspheme the Name of God, or tread the sacred Host beneath
his heel. With or without his consent, he had been bound to this people, to
this throne which he had never sought; led thence by the might of men who
called themselves by the name Deryni, the same as the fallen tyrant—and he
shared power with them now, was practically the same as they. The thought
crossed his mind that the Deryni who had broken one king could easily bring
down another, if he did not suit their fancy—but he immediately forced himself
to dismiss it as unworthy. These Deryni
were honorable men and women, dedicated to the same high purposes which he,
himself, had so long espoused in theory; they had paid their own high prices to
ensure that the tyrant, Imre, should not harm the people anymore. He must
not—he would not—permit his own loss, his thwarted ambitions, to color his
dealings with an entire people. And yet, despite
his awesome powers, he was human still, and must recall the evil done his own
people during the interregnum of the Deryni. Now was the time for renewal and
appraisal, for righting the injustices of the old masters. And if there were
those, even among his apparent Deryni allies, who tried to thwart him— Well,
they, themselves, had taught him ruthlessness. Balance would not be an easy
thing, but it must be maintained. Shuddering, then,
in the cold, pre-dawn air, he gazed down at the hands which had called forth
such slaying power but a short time ago. He glanced at the men standing
expectantly in the courtyard below, at Camber and his children ranged beside
him, at the Michaeline knights kneeling before him, their cross-hilted blades
upheld to sanctify this moment. Then he reached up
and slowly removed his coronet, gave it over to Evaine with a slight
inclination of his head. As he did, the men in the courtyard knelt and Camber
raised the crown so that it caught the torchlight from the yard below. Cinhil clasped his hands and glanced up at
the brightening sky. His destiny approached; he could not but accept it. “Cinhil Donal Ifor
Haldane, thine ancient line is restored, to the great joy of thy people,”
Camber said, gazing at Cinhil with the eyes of a father and loyal servant,
both. “Be crowned with strength and wisdom for all thy days.” The, crown was
placed upon his head. “And may the Almighty grant thee a long and prosperous
reign, in justice and honor for all thy people of Gwynedd.” “Fiat voluntas
tua,” Cinhil whispered, so that only Camber could hear. Let it be done
according to thy will.... APPENDIX IINDEX OF
CHARACTERS AIDAN, Prince—only
child of King Ifor Haldane to survive the coup of 822; royal name of Daniel
Draper, grandfather of Prince Cinhil. AIDAN Alroy Camber
Haldane, Prince—infant son of Prince Cinhil and Princess Megan; killed by
poisoned salt .at his baptism, aged one month. ALROY,
Prince—royal name of Royston Draper, father of Prince Cinhil; son of Prince
Aidan (Daniel Draper). ANDREW, son of
James—the second “Benedict”; at Saint Piran’s Priory. ANSCOM of Trevas,
Archbishop—Deryni Primate of Gwynedd; Archbishop of Valoret. ANSEL MacRorie,JLord—younger
son of Cathan Mac-Rorie; age three. Ariella of Festil,
Princess—elder sister of Imre; age twenty-eight. ARMAGH,
Master—arms master to Imre. BEARAND, King and
Saint—great-great grandfather of Cinhil. BLAINE, King—fourth Festillic king of Gwynedd,
reigned 885-900; father of Imre. BORS—soldier under
command of Coel Howell; followed Joram to Saint John’s Church. CAMBER MacRorie,
Lord—Earl of Culdi; canonized as Saint Camber in 906; patron of Deryni magic. CAMERON—family
name of Princess Megan. CARLE—one of Earl
Maldred’s men. CATHAN MacRorie, Lord—Camber’s elder son and
heir; member of Imre’s council; killed by Imre for suspected treason. CIERAN,
Brother—lay brother at Saint Piran’s Priory. CINHIL Donal Ifor
Haldane, Prince—royal name of Nicholas Draper, alias Brother Benedict; first
post-Interregnum king of Gwynedd; reigned 904-917. COEL Howell,
Lord—brother to Elinor, Cathan’s wife; member of Imre’s council. CRINAN—Cathan’s
squire; doubled for Rhys under a shape-changing spell. CULLEN, Father
Alister—Vicar General of the Order of Saint Michael, and Joram’s superior. DANIEL Draper—as
Prince Aidan Haldane, only surviving son of King Ifor; grandfather of Cinhil. DAVIN MacRorie,
Lord—elder son of Cathan; age five. DERYNI—(Der-in-ee)—racial
group gifted with supernatural powers and abilities. DOMINIC,
Father—priest at Saint Liam’s Abbey; former teacher of Joram and Rhys. DRAPER—surname
used by the Haldanes during the Interregnum; see Daniel, Royston, and
Nicholas. DRUMMOND—see
James. EDULF—ostler to
Camber; one of fifty peasants executed at Imre’s command, for the death of Lord
Rannulf. EDWARD,
Father—priest who baptized Nicholas Draper. egbert, Brother—monk at Saint
Jarlath’s Monastery. ELINOR Howell
MacRorie, Lady—wife to Cathan; mother of Davin and Ansel. EVAINE MacRorie,
Lady—daughter of Camber; later, wife to Rhys Thuryn. FARNHAM, Lord and Lady—parents of Megan de Cameron. Festil I, king—first festillic king of gwynedd,
reigned 822-839; engineer of the coup of 822. Festil II,
king—second festillic king of gwynedd, reigned 839-851. Festil III,
king—third festillic king of gwynedd, reigned 851-885. Fulk—soldier under
command of Coel Howell; followed Rhys to the royal archives. Gabrilites—priests
of the Order of’saint Gabriel, an all-Deryni esoteric order based at Saint
Neot’s, in the south Lendour Mountains. Gifford—manservant
to Rhys. Gregory of Arden,
Father—Abbot of Saint Jarlath’s Monastery. Guaire of Arliss,
Lord—young officer at Imre’s Court; friend of Cathan; attached to Earl
Maldred’s command. Haldane—surname of
the ancient royal family of Gwynedd. Howell—see
Coel. Howiccan,
Pargan—classic Deryni lyric poet. Humphrey of
Gallareaux, Father—Michaeline priest captured by Imre’s men and interrogated;
later, attached to Archbishop Anscom’s staff; responsible for the death of the
infant Prince Aidan. Ifor, King—last
pre-Interregnum king of Gwynedd, reigned 794-822; father of Prince Aidan
(Daniel Draper). Imre, King—fifth
Festillic king of Gwynedd, reigned 900-904. James Drummond,
Lord—grand-nephew of Camber. Jarlath, Saint—sixth-century
Bishop of Meara and abbot; founder of the Ordo Verbi Dei. Jason Brown—apprentice
to Daniel Draper; inherited business. Jasper Miller, Father—noncombatant Michaeline
priest. Jebediah of
Alcara, Lord—Michaeline knight; Grand Master of military arm of Order of Saint
Michael, after the Vicar General. John, son of
Daniel—the first “Benedict”; at Saint Piran’s Priory. Joram macrorie,
Lord—younger son of Camber; priest of the Order of Saint Michael. Joseph—one of
Maldred’s men. Jubal, Brother—monk
at Saint Foillan’s Abbey. Leviticus,
Brother—vestiarian at Saint Foillan’s Abbey. Macrorie—surname
of Camber’s family. Maldred, Earl—one
of Imre’s warlords; assassinated by Coel Howell’s hireling. Maris—maidservant
to Princess Ariella. Megan de Cameron,
Lady—Camber’s ward; later, wife to Cinhil and Queen of Gwynedd. Melissa Howell, Lady—sister of Coel Howell; brought
to Court to tempt Imre. Michaelines—priests
and knights of the Order of Saint Michael, a militant teaching and righting
order, predominantly Deryni, headquartered at the Commanderie in Cheltham, in
the central Lendour highlands. Nathan,
Father—Michaeline priest; provisioner for the exiles in the haven. Nicholas Gabriel Draper—the third “Benedict”;
grandson of Daniel; see Cinhil. Patrick, Brother—Prior of Saint Foillan’s Abbey;
subordinate to Abbot Zephram of Lorda. Paul, Brother—monk
at Saint Foillan’s Abbey. Phineas, Brother—gate warder at Saint Foillan’s
Abbey. Rannulf,
Lord—Deryni lord drawn and quartered by Willimite terrorists. Revan—carpenter’s
apprentice saved by Cathan. Reynald, Brother—infirmarian at Saint Foillan’s
Abbey. Rhys Thuryn,
Lord—Deryni physician and Healer; discoverer of the Thuryn technique of
concentration; later, son-in-law to Camber, by marriage to his daughter,
Evaine. Robert Oriss,
Father—Vicar General of the Order of Saint Jarlath, Ordo Verbi Dei. Roland, Bishop—auxiliary Bishop of Valoret, and
Anscom’s subordinate. Royston John
Draper—see Alroy. Sam’l—loyal
retainer of Camber at Caerrorie. Santare, Earl of
Grand-Tellie—one of Imre’s warlords. Selkirk,
Master—arms master to Imre. Sellar, Wat and
Tim—among the fifty peasants executed at Imre’s command for the murder of Lord
Rannulf. Stephen,
Father—Prior of Saint Piran’s Priory. Termod of Rhorau,
Lord—Deryni princeling, cousin of Imre; executed by Willimite terrorists. Thuryn—surname of
Rhys. Index of
characters UMPHRED-^-bailiff to Camber at Caerrorie. Wat—servant to
Rhys. Weaver, Mary, and
brother Will, and cousin Tom— among the fifty peasants executed at Imre’s
command for the murder of Lord Rannulf. Willim,
Saint—child martyr to Deryni ill-use; patron saint of the Willimite movement. Willimites—terrorist
group sworn to punish Deryni who escape justice through normal channels. Wulpher,
Master—Cathan’s steward at Tal Traeth; doubled for Joram under a shape-changing
spell. Zephram of Lorda,
Father—Abbot of Saint Foillan’s Abbey. APPENDIX IIINDEX TO PLACE
NAMES All saints’
cathedral—Valoret’s cathedral; seat of the Primate of Gwynedd. Barwicke—site of
Saint Jarlath’s Monastery, a few hours’ ride north of Saint Liam’s Abbey. Caerrorie,
Tor—Camber’s principal residence, a few hours’ ride east of Valoret. Carbury—coastal
town north of Valoret, where Elinor macrorie’s parents live. Cheltham—site of
the Michaeline Commanderie (military headquarters). Cor culdi—hereditary
ancestral seat and fortress of the Culdi earls, near the city of Culdi, on the
Gwynedd-Meara border. Culdi—central city
of the Honor of Culdi, on the Gwynedd—Meara border. Dhassa—free holy
city in the Lendour Mountains; seat of the Bishop of Dhassa. Farnham—Honor of
the family of Megan de Came-ron; a Crown holding after the accession of King
Cinhil. Fianna—area across
the Southern Sea, famous for its wines. Grecotha—university
city on the north Gwynedd border, where Camber and Archbishop Anscom attended
school. Gwynedd—central of
the Eleven Kingdoms; seat of the Festillic Dynasty since 822. Kheldour—small
kingdom north of Gwynedd, famous for textiles and carpets; under human rule. Marley—Crown
earldom in northern Eastmarch. Marywell—town in
northern Gwynedd where a Festillic garrison ran amok. Meara—kingdom to
the west of Gwynedd; under human rule. Mooryn—kingdom to
the southeast of
Gwynedd. Nyford—site of the
new capital being built by Imre, formerly nought but a sleepy river town; in
central Gwynedd, near Saint Illtyd’s Monastery. Rengarth—town in
southern Eastmarch. Rhemuth—ancient
capital of Gwynedd under the Haldanes. Rhorau—seat of
Lord Termed, cousin of King Imre. Saint foillan’s
abbey—establishment of the Ordo Verbi Dei, about three days’ ride
southeast of Valoret, in the mountains, where Camber and Rhys found Prince
Cinhil Haldane. Saint illtyd’s monastery—establishment of the Ordo
Verbi Dei, on the river near Nyford. Index to place names
309 Saint Jarlath’s
monastery—mother house of the Ordo Verbi Dei, two hours’ ride north of
Saint Liam’s Abbey. Saint John’s
church—parish church near Fullers’ Alley in Valoret, where the Draper family
records were kept. Saint Liam’s
abbey—Michaeline-staffed abbey school, four hours’ ride northeast of Valoret. Saint Neot’s
monastery—stronghold of the Order of Saint Gabriel, an esoteric, primarily
Deryni religious order; in the Lendour highlands. Saint Piran’s priory—establishment of the Ordo
Verbi Dei, a day’s ride north of Saint Jarlath’s; Joram and Rhys
interviewed the first two “Benedicts” there. Saint Ultan’s
priory—establishment of the Ordo Verbi Dei, on the southwestern coast of
Mooryn. Tal Traeth—Cathan macrorie’s
manor house in Valoret. Torenth—kingdom to
the east of Gwynedd, ruled by Deryni. Valoret—Festfflic
capital of Gwynedd, 822-905. APPENDIX III (feel
free to clean this up yourself–ed.) PARTIAL LINEAGE OF
THE HALDANE KINGS Haldanes BEARAND HALDANE
(Saint) 720-794 9736 IFOR HALDANE
-]-—Nnala 778-822 I 790-823 *794 JASHAN [ MAIRB AJDAN. 807^22 ALROY
812-822 DONAL (Daniel 809-822 \/j. 818-822 > 820-S03 -A* I YSABEAU 825-875 MtCHAELA. 822 821-822 (2mo.) ALROY- (Royston Draper) 843-878 -Jfellwya 843-860 IFOR (Nicholas Draper) 860-917 *904 •Megan &
Cameron 888-S07 AIDANALROY ALROY
JAVAN RHYS- CAMBER (twin)
(twin) 906-928 904 905-921
905-922 »922 (Imo.) »917 *921 -Michaela ALISTER Drummond 907 908-989 (3mo.) OWAIN UTHTR 924-948 929-980 *928 *948 I I I NYGEL- JASHER
CLUIM 948-983 951-985
953-994 •980 *983 *985 * An asterisk
indicates the date of the beginning of each king’s reigo. 311 974-102S *994 CINHIL AIDAN MALCOLM 989-1023 999-1020 J008-1074 *1025 DONALBLAINB
1030-1095 •1074 _____I i n BRTON DONAL-|-Jehana NIGEL CLUIM-r- C1NH1L URIEN 1081-1120 »1095 1088- GWYDION RHYS 1087- 1090- 1 KELSON CTNHII, CONALL RORY PAYNB
RHYS ANTHONY 1107- 1110- 1115- 1106-•1120 312 APPENDIX IVTHE FESTILLIC
KINGS OF GWYNEDD AND THEIR DESCENDANTS EESTILJ 780-839 *822 I . I f fESTILH lm» 800-851 805-839 •839 SESTILIU 818-885
*851 I I I f 3FESTIL IMRE
CORINNE BLAINB 837-838 839-872
841-854 842-900 FESTtt.
ARIELLA—,—— JMRE 869-874. .
875-905 | 881-904-*900 I—|—— ? mark 905-981 T HOGAN GWERNACB “TheMarluk”
1060-110S CHARISSA, Duchess of Tolas 1094-1120 * An asterisk
indicates tbe date of the beginning of each ling’s reiga. 313 APPENDIX VPARTIAL LINEAGE OF
THE MacRORIES MacRORIES rArdisDrammoni
811-882 808-871 - - \& E40-91S j/ J/ 846-90S I I I I
I ELSPETH ADRIAN
ANGUS CAMBER, -,— Jocelyndo Abbess of 842-856
844-863 7th Earl St. Hilda’s I /,
\/f ofCuldi laMarcha
851-918 Earl S48-S9S I of \7 Kiemey 832-89S m (1”\ m
n^ I . I
I I « James Drummona-—^-U Elinor-—r-1-CATHAN, JERUSHA BALLARD JORAM EVAINE 876-918 Howell 880-957 MasteroJ 876-88S 877-888
878-948 882-918 |
877-917 Caldi 873-903 I I JUiysHaldans-—Michaela Cathan BAVIN, ANSEt. 906-928 Prummand Cinhil 8th Bad
900-948 *S22 908-989 Crummond ofCuldi 910-957 898-917 -p 1 MacATHAS * An
asterisk indicates the date of the beginning ot each king’s reign, THE FORBIDDEN SPELL“But how are you
going to explain our absence if we leave now?” Joram asked. “I don’t plan to
explain it,” Camber said. “As far as the guards are concerned, you’ll still be
here.” Joram froze. “Sir,
if you have in mind what I think you do—” “Hear me,” Camber
interrupted. “There are times when such things cannot be avoided. We’ve gone
too far to stop now. No matter what the risk, I’ll have to use black magic.
Shape-changing is the only way. You and Rhys must have other bodies— or you
will never return alive . . .” By Katherine KurtzThe Legends of
Camber of Culdi Volume I: Camber
of Culdi (1976) Volume II: Saint
Camber (1978) Volume III: Camber
The Heretic (1981) The Heirs of Saint Camber The Harrowing of
Gwynedd (1989) King Javan’s Year
(1992) The Bastard Prince
(1994) The Chronicles
of the Deryni Volume I: Deryni
Rising (1970) Volume II: Deryni
Checkmate (1972) Volume III: High
Deryni (1973) The Histories
of King Kelson Volume I: The
Bishop’s Heir (1984) Volume II: The
King’s Justice (1985) Volume III: The
Quest For Saint Camber (1986) Volume IV: King
Kelson’s Bride (1997) The Deryni
Archives (1986) Deryni Magic
(1991) http://www.sfsite.com/isfdb-bin/exact_author.cgi?Katherine_Kurtz Title PageVolume I in The
Legends of Camber of Culdi Katherine Kurtz A Del Rey Book
BALLANTINE BOOKS • NEW YORK A Del Rey Book Published by
Ballantine Books Copyright © 1976
by Katherine Kurtz All rights
reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published
in the United States by Ballantine Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New
York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Library of
Congress Catalog Card Number: 76-6977 ISBN 0-345-33594-5 Manufactured in
the United States of America First Edition:
July 1976 Thirteenth Printing: December 1985 Cover art by
Darrell K. Sweet For Frederick
Harry Kurt? and for The good folk of
the Society for Creative Anachronism, without whom this book would have been
finished far sooner, but far less well. Author doth not live by typewriter
alone! CONTENTSprologue Now go, write it
before them on a tablet, and inscribe it in a book, that it may be for the time
to come for ever and ever. —Isaiah 30:8 xv I In the
multitude of people is the king’s
honour; but in the want of the people is the destruction of the prince.
1 —Proverbs 14:28 II He
shall go to
the generation of
his fathers ... 10 —Psalms 49:19 III Then give place to the physician, for
the Lord hath created him: let him not
go from thee, for thou hast need of him.
20 —Ecclesiasticus
38:12 IV Hear counsel and receive instruction,
that thou mayest be wise in thy latter
end. 37 —Proverbs 19:20 V Now the king sat in the winterhouse in the
ninth month . . . 50 —Jeremiah 36:22 VI O that my head were waters, and mine
eyes a fountain, that I might weep day and night for the slain ... 66 —Jeremiah 9:1 VII The
skill of the physician shall lift up his
head: and in the sight of great men he shall be in admiration. 78 —Ecclesiasticus
38:3 VIII Wrath
is cruel, and anger is outrageous; but who is able to stand before envy? 92 —Proverbs 11-A IX When he
speaketh fair, believe him not: for there are seven abominations in his
heart. 109 —Proverbs 26:2? X Wine is a
mocker, strong drink is raging: and whosoever is deceived thereby is not
wise. 119 —Proverbs 20:1’ XI The
just shall be in everlasting remembrance.
140 —Psalms 112:6 XII For by
wise counsel thou shalt make thy war.
157 —Proverbs 24:6 XIII For
your hands are defiled with blood. 169 —Isaiah 59:3 XIV
Blessed shall they be that shall be in those days,/He bringeth back His
anointed. 178 —Psalms of
Solomon 18:6 XV I have
forsaken mine house, I have left mine heritage. 189 —Jeremiah 12:7 XVI There
is one alone, and there is not a second; yea, he hath neither child nor
brother; yet is there no end to all his labour; neither is his eye satisfied
with riches. 205 —Ecclesiastes 4:8 XVII
But he shall take a virgin of his own people to wife. 220 —Leviticus 21:14 XVIII
The Lord said to my lord, “You are my
son. This day I have begotten you!” 233 —Psalms 2:7 XIX And
they put him in ward, that the mind of
the Lord might be shewed them. 249 —Leviticus 24:12 XX Hear
us, my lord; thou art a prince of God
among us. 269 —Genesis 23:6 XXI
For out of prison he comes to reign; whereas also he that is born in his kingdom becomes poor. 279 —Ecclesiastes 4:14 Appendix I: Index of Characters 299 Appendix II: Index to Place Names 307 Appendix III:
Partial Lineage of the Haldane Kings 311 Appendix IV: The
Festillic Kings of Gwynedd and 313 Their Descendants Appendix V: Partial
Lineage of the MacRories 314 Now, these are the
Names of the Eleven Kingdoms, sung rightly well of old: Howicce, and
Llannedd, and fierce Connait; mountainous Meara, the Land Beyond the River; and
Kheldour, the windswept; and pastoral Eastmarch; Tolan, and Torenth, and
myth-ridden Mooryn; and lost Caeriesse, which sank beneath the sea; and
far-reaching Gwynedd, seat of the Haldane Kings. —lay of the lord
llewellyn, Troubadour to the High King of Mooryn Maps
PrologueNow go, write it before them on a tablet, and
inscribe in it a book, that it may be for the time to come for ever and ever. —Isaiah 30:8 Saint Camber. Camber of Culdi. Noble-born Deryni
earl. Gifted scholar and
legalist. Patron of Deryni
Magic. Defensor
Hominum. Camber. By the reign of
Kelson I, he had been a legend for more than two hundred years, in turn
respected, venerated, and feared. But who was the
man, Camber of Culdi? What was the man before he became the saint—and the
demon? Was he, as later
legends insist, the sole perpetrator of the atrocities and terrors associated
with the Deryni Interregnum? The apotheosis of Evil Incarnate? Or was there
another side to this man who became a legend in his own lifetime, saint after
his death, and curse word for generations to come? Just who was Camber
of Culdi? The scant Deryni
sources which survived by the reign of Kelson tell us that Camber MacRorie,
more than any other single man, was responsible for breaking the hold of the
ninth-century Festillic dynasty; he and his children who discovered, during
those chaotic times, that the awesome Deryni powers and abilities could
sometimes be bestowed upon certain, select humans. The old House of Haldane was
restored to the Throne of Gwynedd in 904, and for more than a decade humans and
Deryni lived in comparative harmony. Less than a year
after his death, Camber was canonized for his daring contributions. This we
also know is true. To humans and Deryni alike, he became Saint Camber, Patron
of Deryni Magic, and Defensor Hominum—Defender of Humankind. For a time,
a grateful people could not find high-enough praise for the man who had
delivered them from the hated Fes-tillic yoke. Churches and monastic schools
were named for him in the decade after his death. The mental techniques perfected
by Camber and the Healer Rhys Thuryn were taught in Deryni institutions of
learning throughout the Eleven Kingdoms. His family and followers continued to
assist the restored Haldane king and consolidate the new regime, and eventually
founded the Camberian Council, a form of which still existed by the time of
King Kelson. But human
gratitude is short and selective, and the gratitude of kings more capricious
still. It was difficult to put aside completely the reminders of Deryni
dominance, especially when many Deryni still occupied positions of authority
and prominence. It seemed almost disloyal to the memory of those humans who had
suffered so under Festillic rule to ignore the injustices which had marked the
eighty-plus years of the reigns just past. A bitter people soon forgot that
salvation, as well as slavery, had come from the powerful hands of the Deryni;
and the result was a rising tide of anti-Deryni feeling, culminating, on King
Cinhil’s death in 917, in a purge which annihilated fully two-thirds of the
Deryni population of Gwynedd. Thousands perished
by the sword, in fire, at the end of a rope—brutal sacrifices in retribution
for the evils done or imagined done under the Festils. Those few who survived
were forced to go into hiding, eking out an uncertain existence in fearful
exile, denying their once-proud heritage and awesome powers. Only a privileged
few found refuge and still retained their identities, and even these were
forced to live out their lives in semi-confinement, begging the tenuous and sometimes
careless protection of the few human lords who remembered how it had really
.been. As late as the Gwynedd-Torenth War of 1121, to be a known Deryni was
neither an easy nor an easily admitted thing. Needless to say,
Camber’s sainthood was one of the first casualties of the persecutions. In 917,
the Bishops’ Council of Ramos, acting on the demands of King Cinhil’s son and
heir, Alroy, repudiated Camber’s sainthood and forbade even the mention of his
name. The Church Militant, spurred by the backlash of quasi-religious movements
such as the Willimites, proclaimed anathema all use of magic, for whatever
purpose; declared Deryni sorcery to be among the chiefest of her heresies;
barred men of Deryni descent from any and all participation in the hierarchy of
the Church. On the secular side, Deryni were forbidden to own property except
under the most stringent of supervision; were denied the right to hold public
office or appointment; could not marry or inherit without the leave of their
liege lord. The policies set forth in the decade which followed were to
persist, almost without change, for nearly two centuries. But even
repudiated saints were human once-—or Deryni, in the case of Camber. Written
records may be lost or destroyed, and oral traditions garbled in the telling,
and the passage of years may leave a larger-than-life composite of fact and
myth and outright lie. Yet there is a truth about Camber of Culdi; and the man
is far more and far less than his many legends. Camber’s world
was, in many respects, a land less graceful and less refined than the world of
Kelson Haldane and Alaric Morgan; but it was a study in contrasts and, perhaps,
contradictions. It was a land two centuries closer to the ancient gods and
their arcane traditions, and yet the awesome powers of the Deryni were more a
science and less of magic than they had become by the reign of Kelson. It was a time when
some few, gifted Deryni had learned to heal most physical injuries, and were
learning about the causes of disease—knowledge lost for many, many years in the
dark times following the persecutions; when Transfer Portals, though
still costly in terms of time and strength and power to establish and
operate, were used as an ecclesiastical communication network over most of the
Eleven Kingdoms; when Mind-Seeing was an openly acknowledged practice among
many Deryni. It was but a
century since Pargan Howiccan, the great Deryni lyric poet, had set the known
world afire with his epic sagas of the old gods; but half a century since the
death of the Lord Llewellyn, the greatest bard and troubadour the world had
ever seen. Castles and palaces.and churches soared, using building techniques
which would not be rediscovered until late in Kelson’s reign. Ecclesiastical
scholarship flourished at half a dozen growing universities and cathedral
schools, learning becoming available to laymen as well as religious. Yet, it
was the twilight of the Deryni Festillic dynasty, though none knew it yet. Into this world
had come, fifty-seven years before, the Lord Camber MacRorie, third son of the
Sixth Earl of Culdi and later the Seventh Earl. A brilliant scholar and
legalist, as tradition tells, a devoted husband and father, which legends
generally do not mention, he was the loyal servant of two Festillic kings— though
not the new-crowned Imre. For Camber had seen the trends developing under the
young king’s father, Blaine, and knew he could not serve the king Imre was to
become. Retiring to his
castle at Tor Caerrorie, near the Valoret capital, Camber settled in to resume
his studies, to become reacquainted with his children and grandchildren, and to
watch further developments of the new reign. He was disapproving, but not
surprised, when the vain young Imre issued his first great tariff act, shortly
after his accession: We, Imre, son
of Blaine, son of the House of Festil, by the Grace of God King of Gwynedd and
Lord of Meara and Mooryn, do command that, no later than Mid-Summer next, all
male subjects of Our Realm, who shall have attained , the age of fourteen
years, shall pay into Our Royal Treasury at Valoret the money-worth of
one-sixth of all their possessions and land holdings, the monies thus raised to
be used in the erection of Our New Capital at Nyford. There shall be no
exceptions to this tariff, whether highborn or freedman, clergy or layman, save
as the Crown may deign to grant. We further
decree that those men having a worth below a minimum to be determined by Our
Financial Advisors, shall have the option of indenturing themselves and all
their dependents to the Crown for a period not to exceed one year, in lieu of
payment in silver, their services to be used in the construction of Our City of
Nyford. Default, whether in coinage or in service, shall be punishable by
forfeiture of all property, imprisonment for a term to be determined by a Court
of Crown Commissioners to be created for that purpose, and may, in duly
designated cases, be construed as treason, punishable by death. Wherefore do We
appoint to Our Royal Commission Our Well-Beloved Ministers: Lord Jo-werth
Leslie, the Honourable the Earl of Grand-Tullie, Lord Coel Howell, Lord
Torcuill de la Marche, ... PATENT ROLLS, 2 Imre
I The MacRorie lands
were extensive and rich, and Camber was able to pay the tax for himself and his
tenants; but many were not so fortunate. Nor would the Great Tariff, as it came
to be called, be the last rash measure promulgated by Imre. Unrest which had
been low-pitched and mostly token became more blatant. Semi-terrorist groups
began to arise, whose sole purpose was to harass Imre’s escheators and to
punish Deryni who used their status and powers to excuse unlawful indulgences.
Camber sat secure in his manor house at Caerrorie and watched, not yet tempted
to consider open resistance, but aware of the rise of anti-Deryni feeling. Camber MacRorie.
Seventh Earl of Culdi. Gifted scholar and legalist. Retired civil servant.
Sometime practitioner of Deryni magic. In 903, he had not
yet earned the title of Saint. |
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