“You would never credit it,” he kept saying, “but in their way, they are as interesting as people!”
“I suspect that may have more to do with the people you meet than the cows you raise, Baron,” Tiamak said, which made everyone laugh. But Sludig did not reply for some moments.
“To speak honestly, it is not the people in Engby who worry us,” he said at last.
“Remember, husband, this is a happy gathering,” said Alva.
For Simon, the pleasant haze of beer and company dispersed a bit. Based on the looks Sludig and his wife shared now, he had not been mistaken: something deeper and darker was disturbing them. “What do you mean?” asked Simon. “Not people?”
Sludig shook his head. “Truly, let us talk of something else, Majesty. Let us talk of your grandchildren. I hear Morgan is man-sized now. I would like to see him!”
“I would like to see him too.” Simon frowned. “At least now and then.” He knew he was being led away from something, and he didn’t like it. “Tell me what it is that worries you, Sludig.”
“Nothing for Your Majesties to fret yourself with. The north is always strange. Perhaps a bit stranger this winter, that’s all.”
“Is it about the White Foxes?”
“Husband,” said Miriamele in a tone Simon knew all too well. “Sludig does not want to speak about it now.”
“Begging your pardon, but the queen is right,” Sludig said. “Not when all are drinking good wine and ale and sharing tales of old times. But while you are still here in the northlands we should speak of these other things . . . and we will.”
They returned to other stories, other subjects, but the mood had changed, and Simon for one could not summon back his earlier carelessness. “This is the cruel trick of being a king,” he said at last to Binabik. “You can have anything you want, but you spend all your time worrying.”
“That, I am fearing, is not just true for monarchs, but for most who live long enough to become grown men and women.” He smiled. “What is your worrying now, friend Simon? Is it what Sludig was saying, or is it still the silence from the Sithi that troubles you, as you were telling to me before?”
Miri had come to stand behind him for a moment; Simon could feel her cool hand on the back of his neck. “The silence from the Sithi is something that worries us both,” she said, “but it troubles Simon the most.”
“It should trouble everybody.” Simon thought he sounded loud, so he tried again in a softer voice. “We haven’t heard a word from them in several years.”
“How strange that is being!” Binabik shook his head. “Not even words from Jiriki or Aditu? They have sent no messengers?”
Simon shrugged. “Nothing. And we have sent them many messages, or at least tried. Perhaps it’s their mother Likimeya who wants it this way. She was never very happy with us—was she, Eolair?”
The count, who had fallen out of the other conversation, started. “Certainly Likimeya was not friendly to us in the way Jiriki and his sister were,” he said at last. “But after meeting her, I would not say she hated mortals, either. Cautious is the way I would put it. And after what her people have gone through at mortal hands, who could say she is wrong?”
Simon made a sour face. “Spoken like the diplomat you are, carefully generous to all sides. But what do you truly think?”
Eolair shrugged. He looked uncomfortable. “It is not entirely fair to ask me to shed the habits of a lifetime in a matter of moments, Majesty. But I suspect there may be something at work we do not know, some argument among the Sithi themselves. I cannot see any reason for such a silence otherwise.”
Miriamele nodded. “I think you may be right, Eolair. And from what Simon has said about his months with them, they also seem to keep time differently than we do.”
“Still, it is strange, this so-long silence,” Binabik said, but then noticed his daughter Qina, who had appeared as if from nowhere and stood silently in the chamber doorway. He beckoned her to him and they had a murmured conversation, then she nodded shyly to the others and went out again, quick and quiet as a mouse.
“The young ones are back from their adventuring,” Binabik said. “Morgan the prince is tired and sore, Qina says, so he is going early to bed.”
Miriamele looked worried. “Is he unwell?”
Binabik smiled. “A mere tumble of small nature, Qina says. Bumped and bruised a little, and shamed because of it, but otherwise without harm. He is in good hands with my daughter and her nukapik, who studies the healing arts. I do believe they are all becoming friends.”
The queen looked uncertain, but Simon sidled over to her. “The boy’s fine. They went out for a walk, he had a little fall. Probably had too much to drink. Don’t embarrass him by rushing off to look in on him. The trolls will take good care of him.”
She did not seem entirely convinced, but she sighed and let herself be guided back to a chair by Sisqi. Soon the conversation turned back to the Sithi.
“We Qanuc have not been much meeting with the Zida’ya—the Sithi-folk, as you are calling them—in recent years,” said Binabik, “but we have also been seeing no great change in their dealings with us. Do you agree, Sisqi my wife?”
She nodded emphatically. The other conversations had now ended, and all by the fire were turned toward each other. “Many Sithi coming to Blue Mud Lake only three summers gone,” she said. “They giving us news of many things, and sharing meals with us then. They sang.” Simon could hear the change in her voice as she remembered. “At night, beneath all stars. It had so much beauty!”
“But nothing was being said by them of silence between the Zida’ya and their friends in the Hayholt,” Binabik added, a frown creasing his brow. “Still, these were being ordinary Sithi—I mean not of the family of Year-Dancing that we are knowing best, Aditu and Jiriki and their kin.”
“All we can do is be patient, I suppose,” Simon said. “We have sent them many messages. One day, perhaps they will answer.” But he could not keep the deep sadness out of his voice. Once, he had held out great hope that the Sithi and mortal men could be reconciled, but it had been many years since a better friendship between their peoples had seemed anything but a foolish, idle dream. He stared at the fire, watching the flames and thinking of his last, terrible night in Jao é-Tinukai’i with Jiriki and the rest, the night the Norns had attacked their Sithi kin, the night Amerasu Ship-Born had died.
The others were thinking their own thoughts; for long moments the room was silent but for the crackling of the fire. At last the king turned to Sludig. “I’m sorry I’ve made a muddle of the festive mood, old friend, but now you might as well tell me what you’ve heard of the Norns. Is it just rumor or something more? The north is always full of tales that the White Foxes are coming again, that I know. That hasn’t changed since the days of the Storm King’s War. Grimbrand said there were many stories this winter, but he did not think it was so much different from other years.”
“Simon, don’t,” said Miriamele. “You agreed.”
Sludig shook his head. “Perhaps your husband is right, Majesty. And perhaps things are different here in Elvritshalla—it is a large, well-guarded city. Engby, where we live, is farther north—closer to the Nornfells. But I should let my wife tell the story, since it is hers.”
They turned to Alva. “What story?” the queen asked.
Alva looked a little surprised. “I had not expected to . . . it will seem foolish, or at least parts of it will . . .” Several of the others urged her to speak. “Very well,” she said finally. “But it seems a poor way to end an evening of good fellowship.” She turned to Sludig. “Send the squire back to our chambers for it, will you, my husband?”
Sludig called for a young man who had been waiting outside in the hall’s antechamber. The young man bowed as he was given his quiet orders, but he was struggling to keep something else from his face—distaste or even fear, Simon thoug
ht.
“What is this mystery?” he asked.
“I beg your Majesties’ patience,” Lady Alva said. “All will be revealed soon enough. But here is what I must tell you first.
“Elvritshalla, Kaldskryke, Saegard, all these places are much like Erchester, cities with towns and villages all around. If you stand upon almost any road nearby, within an hour you will hear a farmer’s cart or the sound of hooves as a royal messenger rides past, or glimpse hunters or charcoal burners making their way through nearby woods. But in Engby where I grew up, and where Sludig and I now live, if you walk away from the houses you can continue on for days without seeing another living human soul. Some of the older roads will not see a traveler for a year or more. But that does not mean that you will be alone.
“In the north, we have always known that the land of the White Foxes—the Norns—is close to our borders. There is a valley just beyond ours to the northeast that has been called the Refarslod—the Fox’s Road—as long as anyone can remember, going back to my great-grandmother’s day, because the Norns have always used it.”
“Hold a moment, please, Countess,” Tiamak said, his usual shyness pushed aside by his curiosity. “Engby, your home, is far east of where we sit here in Elvritshalla—east even of Kaldskryke, is it not? Why would Norns travel so far that direction? Nothing lies to the east of the Dimmerskog forest except snow and emptiness.”
“I am not meaning to take offense where I am suspecting none was meant,” said Binabik a bit sternly, “but by ‘nothing’ I hope you are not speaking of Yiqanuc, land of our people?”
Tiamak was dismayed. “Forgive me, no! Of course not, Binabik. But the mountains of Yiqanuc are far away, many, many leagues, and I had not heard of the Norns being seen in the Trollfells.”
“They are not,” Binabik admitted. “Not since the most ancient of days, before great Tumet’ai vanished in the ice.”
“That truly is puzzling,” said Eolair. “The two ways the Norns have always traveled to the south, at least when mustered for war, are down the old Northern Road in the shadow of the western mountains or down the wide Frostmarch Road, that leads past this city and through the eastern heart of Rimmersgard on the way south.”
Simon was a bit dazzled. “All this map-reading and such. I don’t understand. Miriamele, does this make any sense to you?”
“A little, I think,” she said, “but I am still waiting to hear Alva’s story.”
“And me,” said Simon. “It’s only that I’ve had too much drink for patience. Go ahead, Lady Alva, please.”
“I hope you will be patient enough for this,” she told them. “Because I must tell you of a dream I had when I was a girl.”
“Tell, then,” Simon said. “I have had many dreams myself that turned out to be true.”
“Then we have that in common,” Alva said. “I have always had dreams of things that later come to pass. Small matters, mostly—things that are lost, visitors unlooked-for, messages from those who have passed on that make sense only to those who knew them.”
“It is true,” said Sludig. “All in Engby know of Lady Alva’s dreams.”
“Once when I was but a girl,” she went on, “I dreamed that St. Helvard himself came to me, dressed in robes of white, as I had seen him portrayed on the walls of our church. He led me out of my parents’ house and through the snows. In the dream there was a great storm, but I could hear other voices in the wind, singing and laughing. They were beautiful, but also frightening, and somehow I knew I was hearing the White Foxes, the ice demons I had been taught to fear since I was old enough to understand.
“In the dream, Helvard led me up a hill and across its crest to the far side, so that I could look down and see the Refarslod laid out below me. A ghostly army walked it, barely visible through the hard-blown snow, but what I could make out was spiky with spears and banners. In truth, all I could see clearly were their eyes glowing like the eyes of beasts, and they were beyond counting.
“‘They march to a city that never was,’ the saint told me. ‘They seek to win the everything that is nothing.’ And then I woke up, shivering in my bed.”
Simon was shaking his head. “I don’t understand,” he said at last. “You say this dream came to you when you were a girl?”
“I used to have many strange dreams,” Alva said. “But no other like that one.”
“Why do you look so puzzled, husband?” Miriamele asked.
“The wise woman Geloë used to say I was closer to the Road of Dreams than many people, Miri, but I don’t . . . of late I haven’t . . .” Simon paused. “I’ve just realized something. I’ve stopped dreaming.”
“What?” The queen was not the only one who stared at him as though he had begun babbling nonsense.
“It’s true! I only realized it now. I can’t remember the last time I dreamed. It’s been days—no, weeks!” Simon turned back to the baroness. “Lady Alva, I apologize for being distracted. I will try to make sense of it later. But I still do not understand—you said this dream came to you when you were a child. Why do you tell us now?” He looked from her to Sludig. “Am I misunderstanding?”
“No, Majesty,” said Alva. “Because I have not finished. We were going to wait and tell you this later, but it seems the moment is now.” She gave a little shrug. “Here is the rest. I have remembered that dream of St. Helvard all my life, with no sign of it ever coming true. In truth, the Norns seemed to have entirely stopped using the Refarslod they had traveled for generations. But just in the last few years such stories have begun to be told again. People are once again seeing strange things around and on the ancient fairy road. Then, scarcely a month before Sludig and I came to Elvritshalla, one snowy night several dozen cattle escaped from one of our barns. My good husband took several men and went in search of them. Nearly half of the cows were found wandering, but the others had simply vanished.”
“I started back with some of the men,” Sludig said, “leading back such cattle as we had found. My foreman, my wife, and several of our men stayed behind, searching for stragglers.” He nodded to his wife. “Now you speak, Alva.”
Sludig’s squire re-entered the chamber, but stood patiently waiting while his master and mistress continued their story. Simon could see the young man was carrying a bundle of cloth, handling it with the exaggerated diffidence of someone tasked to bear something foul-smelling or foul-feeling.
“It does not matter who tells the tale—the end is the same,” said Lady Alva. “We could ill afford to lose so many cattle, so we searched long after we should have gone back. As twilight fell, we came upon a group of strangers at the far eastern edge of our lands. It was snowing and hard to see well, but at first it seemed as though they were all sleeping—an odd thing to be doing in a snowstorm, you will agree. But when we got closer we saw that they were all dead, several of them besmeared in blood. More surprisingly, though, they were not men.”
“Norns?” asked Simon. “Were they White Foxes?”
“Yes, but not all of them. Some of the dead were equally strange in face and form, but golden-skinned.”
“Golden?” Simon looked at Miri, then at Binabik. “You mean they were Sithi?”
“Perhaps, but I cannot say it certainly, since I had never seen any of the Fair Ones before,” Lady Alva told him.
“But your husband has—he most definitely has!” said Simon. “What were they, Sludig?”
“I never saw the bodies, Majesty. My wife and the men hurried back to fetch me, but when we went back to where they had found the dead, they were all gone.”
“Gone?”
“Someone had come while we went to fetch the rest of the men,” explained Lady Alva. “They had carried away all the bodies and brushed away most of the tracks. But they had not had time to remove all traces—blood could still be seen in the snow. And something else as well, half covered in the drifts.” She turned
to Sludig. “You show them, husband,” Alva said. “I cannot bear to hold it, myself.”
Sludig took the bundle from his squire and unfolded the thick cloth. “This is what we found.” What he held out was a dagger of strange design, with a faint coppery sheen, its hilt made from a single piece of polished stone. At the top, just below the pommel, was a thin ring of what Simon at first thought was another kind of stone, shiny and gray. Then he saw that the gray stone had a grain. “God’s Bloody Tree,” he swore, pointing at the gray stuff with a trembling finger. “Is that . . . witchwood?”
“A bronze Nakkiga dagger, that is being,” said Binabik, peering at it. “And, yes, the decoration is witchwood.”
The Aedonites all made the sign of the Tree. Sisqi touched her hand to her heart, as did her husband.
“I know what that marking on the witchwood signifies,” said Tiamak. “Do you see it carved there?” He was obviously reluctant to touch the dagger, and only pointed at the ring of gray stone below the pommel and the tiny spiral rune carved there. “I have seen it in old books. It identifies the Order of Song—the Norn Queen’s chief sorcerers.”
Simon stared at the knife. It was such a small, simple thing, but he felt cold and heavy in his chest, as if a stone hung there instead of a warm, beating heart. He had not felt an apprehension like this since John Josua’s death. He turned to Miriamele, but his wife had gone very pale. “So not just Norn warriors, but Norn wizards, too?” Simon said. “And fighting against the Sithi? Are the White Foxes going to war with their kin again? If so, all the immortals seem to be keeping it secret from us. But fear not, friends—if our enemies are up to something again, we will remind them of what happened last time.”
He spoke with a certainty that he was nowhere close to feeling. He had hoped that a few of his companions might chime in with similar boasts, or at least a few brave, reassuring words, but the room had gone silent but for the crackling of the fire.
14
Ghosts of the Garden