The Witchwood Crown
“Dimple?”
“Dumple,” explained Snenneq. “From the stew Erna Long-Name was at making.”
“Ah,” said Morgan. “Dumpling.”
“I so much liked it,” Qina said, her eyes a little dreamy. “Most fluffly.”
Little Snenneq seemed concerned the conversation had wandered too far afield from his original purpose, so he gave his betrothed a meaningful look, then tried a new and more dignified tack. “Now, friend and prince Morgan, we have come in truth for asking, will you join out to the water with us? A trip to the lake?”
“No! In the name of all the saints, why would I?” Morgan wrapped his arms around himself and grimaced. “I still hurt all over from last time! And I was nearly sent home by my grandparents for sneaking out with you. Why would you want to go out on another lake, anyway? It’s freezing cold!”
“To fish!” Little Snenneq said. “It is good the lake is freezing, so we can go out among the ice. We are cutting a hole in it, then we are lowering into it the string for the fish to take. With the . . . the . . .” He turned to Qina and made a shape with his finger.
“Hawk,” she suggested.
“Hook?” tried Morgan.
Snenneq turned to the prince in delight. “That is being it! Yes! A hook on the string and the fish are coming. Hungry fish, down at the cold bottom. We will catch many!”
“I can’t. I’m still in bad grace with my grandparents for going out to the lake in Elvritshalla.”
Little Snenneq shook his head. “For my part, I am sorry. My father-in-law and mother-in-law, as they will one day be, were also upset with me. ‘Snenneq,’ they said, ‘you are having no right for leading the prince into danger.’ But we can go and find your guards or your swordsman friends to accompany our lake expedition.”
Morgan didn’t like that idea, either. Was he a child like his sister, in constant need of being watched? “Huh. If the old people had their way, we’d sit all day at their feet, waiting to be spoken to.” He contemplated his wearisome lot in life. “Do you have any of that kangkang with you?”
Little Snenneq did indeed happen to be carrying a skin full of the tart, chest-warming beverage. Morgan accepted a long draught. “I don’t need any guards,” he said as he handed it back, “but my grandmother wants me to join her and the rest of them in the hall—the nobles and all. They’re talking about the Norns and if there will be a war.” In truth, he was still strongly considering avoiding the council meeting. He felt sure Astrian and Olveris would have found somewhere warm by now, a place to drink and tell lies without interference from Morgan’s royal obligations.
“Ah,” said Snenneq, impressed. “Then that is being something important and you must, of course, give them your counsel. You are having a good fortune, Prince Morgan!” And Qina nodded, agreeing.
“Good fortune?”
“That they are at recognizing your wisdom even with your young age. I have all my life been studying and practicing for importance in my tribe, but had scorning for my reward. It was only Qina’s father, the so-wise Binbinaqegabenik, who was recognizing my cleverness. All the rest of the older Qanuc were thinking me foolish—even a bragger.” He frowned, then thumped his chest with his fist. “It was harming to even a heart of great bravery like Little Snenneq’s. But see, your people are more wisely thinking of you, Morgan Prince. They seek your counseling. They know your worthfulness!”
Morgan doubted that his grandparents and the rest truly did know his worthfulness—he wasn’t exactly certain of it himself—but as he considered Snenneq’s words he had to admit that he would also have been angry if the king and queen had not asked him to join them. Would they ask him again if he stayed away this time? They would surely call it ‘sulking,’ a word he loathed from the depths of his being. No, the more he thought about it, the more Morgan realized that it was the only sensible strategy. He would show up, and when they ignored him as they always did, his grandmother would have to admit he had been right.
“In any case, I suppose I had better be off,” he said. “Good luck with your fishing. Don’t fall in.” It had been meant as a jest, but Morgan felt a pang of regret when he realized how sorry he would feel if anything bad happened to either of them, and he quickly made the sign of the Tree.
But Snenneq seemed immune to such superstitious doubts. “Oh ho! I will be giving it my closest attention. It is the fish who will be coming out, Morgan Prince, not Little Snenneq who will be falling in!”
“True,” said Qina. “Because his leg holded will be. By me.”
Morgan watched them walk away across the courtyard, two small shapes, hand in hand. When they had gone, he straightened his shoulders and headed inside to try to be a prince.
If there was one thing that age had taught Eolair of Nad Mullach, it was that the present instant was no more real than a layer of fresh snow. As he had seen this morning on a slow walk around the Blarbrekk Castle commons, the drifts might make everything look clean and new, but underneath waited the same old trees, stones, and earth. The older he got, the more he realized how unusual true change was.
These thoughts had been spurred by Prince Morgan’s coming in from the cold to join them all at the table in the Earl’s study, although why Morgan did so was a bit unclear, since the prince looked as though he expected to be scolded for something. It was funny, actually: Eolair had not known King Simon well until the young man took the throne of Erkynland, but he was certain he’d witnessed similar baffled, angry expressions on Simon’s face during his first years of rule. And yet now, the same look from his grandson irritated the king to no end.
To be fair, Eolair had to admit that Morgan’s unhappy expression irritated him a bit, too. He hoped the prince’s appearance here was the beginning of a true change, not merely a new layer of snow. Morgan needed to take more interest in the affairs of the land, and not only because of a possible new threat from the north. Eolair was growing very dubious about King Hugh in Hernystir, the squabbling between the brothers in Nabban, and in fact the future of the High Ward. Decade after decade, it seemed, the old players shuffled off the scene, but those who followed them acted out the same parts, the same rituals of greed and foolishness.
But it’s not entirely their fault, Eolair thought. The young don’t realize that they know almost nothing, or that nothing is ever new. That’s their glory and their most dangerous flaw.
“What we need most now is knowledge,” King Simon declared, pulling Eolair’s attention back to the council at hand as if he had guessed his secret thoughts and meant to share them. “Merciful Usires, how I miss Doctor Morgenes! Geloë, too, of course, bless her. Without their wisdom, and with no word from the Sithi, we can only guess at what the Norns might be doing.”
“Yes, but we are without them,” said Miriamele. “We must think about what we do know—and what we need to learn.”
Prince Morgan stirred. “Morgenes—he was the one my father named me after, wasn’t he? I never understood that, because everyone says they didn’t even know each other.”
“Your father never met him, but he read Morgenes’ book about your great-grandfather, King John,” Simon said. “That is how he knew him, and why he honored him—and you—with the name.” He gave the prince a stern look. “And you should have read that book by now, too, as you kept promising you would. I managed when I was younger than you, and I scarcely knew how to read! You would have learned many lessons about kingship, and you would also know something about your father’s namesake.”
“Doctor Morgenes was indeed being very wise.” Binabik now did what Eolair as Hand of the Throne usually had to do in such situations, namely, try to unpick quarrels before they began. Eolair was grateful to let someone else do it for a change. “But all wise people are not being gone from the world. Some of them are here now.” The troll smiled. “I am not speaking of myself, with certainty, but instead our good Tiamak and Count Eolair,
who between them have been seeing and reading so very many things. And, Majesties, you are wise ones yourselves. Few others have been at doing the things that you have.”
“You rate yourself too modestly,” Simon said with a brief smile. “But nobody here knows very much about the Norns, and that’s what we need right now. The Sithi could help us, God knows, but they stay stubbornly silent. That’s why I miss Morgenes and his wisdom so much right now. That’s why I miss Geloë.”
“Who is Geloë, anyway?” Morgan asked. “I’ve heard people saying her name.”
“She was a valada,” said Binabik. “What the Rimmersfolk call a wise woman.”
“A very wise woman,” said Miriamele.
“She was a shape-shifter,” said Tiamak. “She could take the form of an owl. I saw her do it with my own eyes.”
“She was a witch,” Eolair said, then could not help smiling at the faces of the others as they turned toward him. “But of course she was! What else would you call her that would be more truthful? In Hernystir, where I was raised, the word is not quite so fearful as it is for you Aedonites. She could walk the Road of Dreams. By sweet Mircha’s rains, Tiamak is right—she could even take the form of a bird!”
“She’d lived four hundred years or more,” said Simon.
“Really?” said Tiamak. “How do you know that, Majesty?”
“Aditu told me.”
“Ah-dee-too? Who is that?” asked Morgan, a touch plaintively.
“A woman of the Sithi,” his grandmother said. “One of our closest allies.”
“Four hundred years old,” said Tiamak. “Amazing. When Geloë was dying, I heard Aditu call her ‘Ruyan’s Own.’ Perhaps that was true—perhaps she really was a great-great-grandchild of the Navigator. The Tinukeda’ya nearly all live longer than men.”
“This isn’t fair,” said Morgan. “I’m trying to pay attention, I swear I am, but who are all these people? Who’s the Navigator, and what does he have to do with this Geloë? What’s a Tinookidah or whatever you said? And what do any of these old stories have to do with someone finding dead Norns in a cow pasture in Rimmersgard last winter, which is what I thought you were all talking about?”
“Norns, yes, but Sithi as well,” said Binabik. “That is the strangest thing we were hearing. But it is good that you have questions, Prince Morgan,” Binabik said. “Perhaps, though, it is being too much for learning all in one day.”
But Eolair saw a moment to educate the prince, a rare moment when the young man actually seemed to want to learn. “The Norns and the Sithi were once all one family, Highness—one race,” he explained. “But not the Tinukeda’ya—Ruyan the Navigator’s people. They were mostly slaves and servants, at least in the early days. Even their leader Ruyan, it is said, with all his skill and craft, was no more than a thrall to the immortals. Long, long ago, he and his people built a fleet of ships to carry the Sithi and Norns here from the place they call the Garden.”
The king nodded. “My Sitha friend Jiriki said that, too—that the Sithi and Norns brought Ruyan’s people here as slaves. I do not know where the Tinukeda’ya came from. Jiriki said their name means Ocean Children. And it’s true that some of them live almost always on ships at sea. Miriamele met some.”
“The Niskies,” said the queen, nodding. “In fact one of them, Gan Itai, saved my life. The Niskies are the ones who protect the Nabbanai ships by singing the kilpa down.”
“Ah,” said Morgan, grasping at something he recognized. “Kilpa. I have heard of those things. Terrible, fishy creatures that steal sailors in the south from their ships and drown them.”
“You are correct, Highness,” Eolair said by way of encouragement. “And I have met Tinukeda’ya too, but from one of their other tribes,” he said, remembering the frightened, big-eyed dwarrows of Mezutu’a. “You see, these Tinukeda’ya are a race of changelings that can be as different in form between themselves as a noble lady’s lapdog is to a mastiff. These things matter to us now because all the creatures we are talking about, Sithi, Norns, Tinukeda’ya, live a long time.”
“Some of them live damn near forever,” said King Simon. “I’d guess the Norn Queen is still alive, even if she lost her power, as Aditu told us. Jiriki once said she was the oldest living thing in the world.” He turned to the young prince. “That’s why we want you to know these things, Morgan. Someday your grandmother and I will be gone—but the Norns won’t be.”
“But isn’t there anyone now like this Geloë?” asked Morgan, who seemed finally to have grasped the seriousness of their concerns. “Somebody who knows about the Norns and what they might be doing?”
“There is being nobody like Geloë,” said Binabik with a sad smile. “Not before, and not now that she is being gone. And there is also being nobody living today as knowledgeable about these things as your namesake Doctor Morgenes, Prince Morgan. No, it seems we will have to find the solving of this ourselves.”
The troll was right, Eolair realized, even as the others began again to discuss the Norns and what Lady Alva’s story might mean. There was no other like Geloë. Eolair had not known her well—he had only been in her presence for a few days, when he had visited Prince Josua’s camp during the Storm King’s War—but the memory of her bright, hunting-bird’s eyes would never leave him. From a distance she had looked like many other peasant women, short but solid, with the cropped hair and unprepossessing clothes of someone who cared little what others might think of her. But to be in her presence, to be examined by that yellow stare, had been to feel her power—not the might of a conqueror or even a will in search of mastery over others, but the unselfconscious power of a stone standing in the middle of a mighty river—something which did not move but instead let everything else bend around it in a rush of pointless motion and noise.
And she had dirty fingernails, Eolair remembered—something else he had liked about her. Too busy doing what needed doing to waste any time being anything but herself. Gods, yes, he thought. We would be immeasurably better off if all the Scrollbearers still lived—Geloë and Morgenes and Jarnauga and Father Dinivan—and if they were all here now to tell us what to do. But Geloë had died at the hands of the Norns, as had Jarnauga, and the red priest Pryrates had murdered Father Dinivan in the Sancellan Aedonitis and burned Doctor Morgenes to death in his own chambers.
Eolair looked around the room. Here they all sat, the king and queen, the trolls from distant Yiqanuc, Tiamak who had been born in the marshy Wran, and young Morgan, confused and frustrated by all the things he did not understand. But now we are the ones who must protect the realm, he thought. It is up to us to be those that others will speak of in some future time, the ones of whom they will say, “Thank the gods they were here.” Because if we are not—if the tide of vengeance comes rolling down from the north again, and we fail to hold what others helped us keep at the last time of darkness—there may be nothing to say, and no one left to say it.
Miriamele had just sent her ladies ahead to prepare the bedchamber when she noticed Binabik waiting at the door of the jarl’s study. The small man looked tired, but she thought she still might be unused to this aged version of a familiar face. She smiled at him. “It is so good to see you and Sisqi, Binabik. And your child, Qina—she’s grown to be such a beauty! It all gives me heart.”
He bumped his fist against his chest. “Heart is what we are all sometimes needing. As we say in Yiqanuc, ‘Fear is the mother of wisdom, but every child must be leaving the home one day.’”
Miriamele was still trying to work that out when Simon finished his conversation with Sir Kenrick about the disposition of the guards. Since they were staying in the house of a trusted ally, there had apparently been little to discuss.
Sir Kenrick paused in the doorway and bowed deeply to the queen, then looked down at the troll and made a curious half-bow, like an overbalanced nod: as with most of his fellows, the stocky captain marshal never q
uite knew how to treat the royal couple’s odd friends. Matters of deference and title were often especially difficult. Just a fortnight past, Miriamele knew, Lord Chamberlain Jeremias had been almost in tears trying to decide what Binabik’s rank, “Singing Man of Mintahoq Mountain,” signified as far as precedence at table.
“He’s my oldest and closest friend,” Simon had told him, then hurriedly added, “after you, Jeremias, of course.”
“One more question,” Kenrick said now, “begging your Majesties’ pardons. Perhaps if we make good time to Vestvennby we could give the men a day of freedom there. It would cheer them up after all this snow and short rations.”
“I’m sure that can be arranged,” said Simon.
“We will consider it, Sir Kenrick,” the queen said with a meaningful glance at her husband.
“Why shouldn’t they have a day in Vestvennby?” the king asked when the captain had departed.
“I didn’t say they shouldn’t, although we’ve lost time already with this storm. I just said we would consider it. Together. Before we make announcements.”
“I didn’t think you would disagree.”
“You don’t know unless you ask, husband.”
He pursed his lips, but at last nodded. “I suppose that’s true.”
For a moment she wanted only to put her arms around him, only for the two of them to be alone somewhere without responsibilities, just a husband and wife. But that would not happen. That would never happen. She sighed and squeezed his hand. “Right, then. I think Binabik is waiting to speak with you.”
“With both of you, to speak with exactness,” said the troll, stepping forward. “But it is about something you were saying another day, friend Simon. When we were in Elvritshalla, you told that you have stopped dreaming. Was that a true saying?”
An expression crossed her husband’s face that also reminded her of a younger Simon—a worried one. “It was,” he said. “It is. You know I’ve always had strange dreams, Binabik, but especially in the Storm King years. I dreamed of the Uduntree, didn’t I? Long before I saw it. The wheel, too, never knowing I’d be strapped to one! And I dreamed of Stormspike Mountain back in those days as well, and the Norn Queen, when I didn’t know anything about her. In Geloë’s house, when we walked the Dream Road—remember?”