In London, in the kitchen of the house in Idol Lane, Jane reached for a basket and looked to where Weyland sat at the table, counting his hoard of gold and silver.
“I am going to fetch some fish,” she said, and Weyland grunted.
“Don’t be too long,” he said, then went back to his pile of coin.
Jane stared at him a moment, then turned and left the house, closing the door quietly behind her. Jane had only been allowed to leave the house in the past three or four years. Before then she’d been Weyland’s prisoner, hardly able to even see the light without his constant presence. Now Jane’s pox had progressed to the point where no one would listen to what she had to say. She was so greatly the outcast—hated by the men who had used her and hated by those men’s wives and daughters—that Weyland felt comfortable in allowing her to leave the house. There was no one within London who would lift a finger to aid her or offer her sanctuary. Jane had two choices: Weyland’s comfortable house, or to live as a beggar beyond the walls of London.
Jane hated it, hated herself, that Weyland knew she would always come home. There was nowhere else for her to go.
Besides, it was hardly as if Jane walked the streets quite unescorted. There was always Weyland’s imp deep within her, ready to bite and gnaw and chew and create such agony it would drive Jane to her knees in despair the instant it felt that she had overstepped her boundaries in some manner.
Jane would be a good girl in her brief time away from Weyland, and well Weyland knew it.
Marguerite threw the turf towards the ceiling, rejoining her hands into the Circle as she did so; then all five watched as the turf fell and metamorphosed into the circle of emerald silk.
“Noah,” Charles said in a tight, hungry voice as the silk settled to the bed. “Noah!”
She stood atop the platform in the elm, feeling completely relaxed for the first time in weeks. The sun’s rays were hot, but here the branches of the elm created a lovely dappled shade around her, and a gentle wind stirred through the tree and eased away some of the heat.
She yawned, and thought that perhaps she would sit for a few minutes before she climbed down and started back to Lady Anne.
As she sat down, and her head started to nod sleepily, Noah realised that she was very close to the ancient Mag’s Pond where, as foolish Cornelia, she had gone to beg Mag to give her a daughter so she would bind Brutus to her through a child.
Brutus, she thought, and slipped into unconsciousness.
Jane reached Billingsgate fish market before she realised that something strange was happening. The market was almost empty—this was a holiday, and there were only a few stalls open for those needing to purchase fresh food—but Jane had a sudden sense of something impending. Something that made no sense in the sleepy quiet of the market.
“Brutus?” she whispered, and then almost immediately fought away the thought, and kept her mind blank.
But still Jane’s face turned north, and still her lips formed a single word. Brutus!
At the kitchen table, Weyland raised his head, and frowned.
High within her elm, Noah slipped very deep into an enchanted sleep. But even so, she remained aware.
She found herself standing at the edge of Mag’s Pond, with her glossy hair falling unbound down her back and dressed in nothing save a long, simple white linen wrap draped about her hips.
“Brutus!” she said, and stepped into the pond.
Eight
Mag’s Pond, Hampstead, and Middlesex
NOAH SPEAKS
I was shaking with nervousness. I knew what had happened—my friends had formed the Circle, almost certainly with the aid of Long Tom, for I could feel Sidlesaghe power in this—and had “arranged” for me to meet with Brutus here, in the magical waters of Mag’s Pond. I was both exhilarated and horribly nervous all in the same moment. Would he speak loving words to me?
Or would he condemn me?
We’d always parted in life with such bitterness. In our first lives he’d hated me so deeply he had refused to speak to me for almost twenty years. In our second lives he had finally kissed me, but then spat at me, and said I tasted corrupt, and that I had allowed myself to become Asterion’s whore.
Now here we were to meet again, through the magic of the Circle and of Mag’s Pond.
I was terrified, more of my own appalling hope than of what he might do or say. I cared not about healing old wounds or bridging ancient rifts. All I wanted was for Brutus to love me, and I was almost panicked that this could never be.
The water was cool as I stepped into it, its wetness tugging at the hem of my linen skirt, but as I stepped further into its depths that water took on a faint sheen, and became as if dry, and the linen of my skirt wrapped about my legs as if driven by a breeze rather than by the weight of water.
I walked through the water, and I stepped into…I stepped into…
Oh gods, I stepped into the chamber that had been mine in Mesopotama when I had been the spoiled princess Cornelia, and Brutus…well, when Brutus had been Brutus.
It was fitting, somehow, that we try to heal this wound in the place where it had first opened.
The chairs where Brutus and I had sat to sup of our first meal together were there, the food still spread upon the table between them. The bath that Brutus had caused the servants to pour was there, steaming gently. The bed where Brutus had raped me was there, its covers smooth and pristine, as if once again they awaited the press of our struggling bodies.
My throat felt dry, my heart was pounding so fast I thought my entire chest must be shaking with its efforts.
“Noah,” said a voice, and I started.
The voice had come from the windows, and I turned to look.
He was there, and had been for some time, I think. He must have observed me arrive through whatever magic portal had carried me here.
“Noah,” he said again, and I thought I heard a catch in his voice. Nervousness, almost, if I could believe that of him. I tried to arrange my face into a smile, but I was too anxious to make any great success of it. I must have looked pale and apprehensive and likely to run at any moment, and I thought this was not a good start.
He moved, and I tried to focus more clearly on him.
This was difficult, for the light was behind him, and I could not immediately discern his features. I could, however, see that he was dressed as I had originally known him to be, in a white hip wrap and with sandals upon his feet.
His limbs were bare of their kingship bands, but I could just make out the paler flesh where once they had been.
“You are Brutus?” I said, calling him for some reason by his original name and not the one he bore now (it seemed fitting, somehow). My voice struggled as much as had his, and I had to gather my strength in order to continue. “You are not some terrible glamour come to trap me?”
Gods, I couldn’t believe I had said that. I sounded accusatory where I think I had meant to sound humorous. What a fool I was to try and jest at this moment.
He made a soft sound (of exasperation?).
“I am truly Brutus,” he said. Then, “Is there someone else you’d prefer to be here?”
Oh, this was Brutus well enough. Here we were, making the same mistakes all over again, letting our mouths say words our hearts denied.
“There is no one I would prefer to be here more than you,” I said, and I was relieved to hear that this time my voice had a level of sincerity and emotion underscoring it.
He smiled—at least I saw the flash of white teeth as he walked a little closer to me. Finally, I could more clearly see his features. His hair was as black as ever, falling over his shoulders and partway down his back. His eyes were very dark, black mysteries, as they always had been. But there were differences. In this rebirth his build was finer, not so muscular as he had been in his two previous lives, but he was just as tall and just as beautiful to me.
“You grow more lovely with each life,” he said, and he smiled again. Now I could see that it was a
smile. “Noah…”
Terrified of what he might say, I rushed in. “Long Tom said we must heal the wounds between us. Brutus, I am so sorry that I ever denied you the right to kiss me, or that I said to you such foul words about Melanthus, or that—”
“Noah, do you loathe me?” He seemed to have disregarded every word I’d said, which made me cross, because it had taken all my effort to force them out. Gods, they’d been sitting unsaid in my mouth for two and a half thousand years and they had not easily leapt forth into voice.
Finally what he said sank into my consciousness. “Loathe you? Why?” How could he possibly think that? Hadn’t I spent two lifetimes throwing myself at him in one form or another?
“After what I said to you, when last we parted. After what I did.”
“Brutus, I begged you to kill me. I thought you loathed me. You said—”
“I said stupid things.” He suddenly reached out a hand and ran it through my hair. I shuddered, and I know he felt it, for his eyes widened in an almost stunned disbelief.
He hadn’t thought I would respond so readily to him. He had been scared, and was scared. Could it possibly be that he was as apprehensive as I? As terrified of failure as I?
His hand came to a halt at the back of my neck, his fingers so warm and strong.
“I have always said stupid and hateful things to you,” he repeated, “because I was so frightened of you.”
“Frightened of me? Why?” His fingers were now stroking at the back of my neck, and I wished to every god in heaven and hell they would never stop.
“I was frightened of you because I felt too deeply for you. I was scared of loving you. I was terrified of you the moment I first laid eyes on you, I think. You stood there so proud and sure in your father’s megaron—” he half laughed “—having just kicked one of my guards in the shins. I was scared of you, and of your father, and that is why I acted as I did. I demanded you as my wife, for I think I knew even then I could not bear to lose you to another.”
I could say nothing. I could hardly believe I was hearing these words.
“I would murder the world, if ever I lost you to another,” he whispered, and I shivered.
He was so close now, and our bodies touched briefly, with this breath and that, at breast and chest. I could feel his heat, see his heart skittering in his rib cage, and without thinking, acting only on instinct, I put out a hand and rested it on his chest.
His skin jumped under my fingers. “I am sick of being scared of loving you,” he said. “Noah, please…”
And then I knew that he truly was scared and I could stand it no longer. If he wanted a new beginning, then so be it. I did the one thing I had denied him in this chamber so long ago, the one thing our relationship had foundered on for so many lives.
I leaned against him, pressing my breasts against his chest, ran my hands down to his hips, and raised my face to his.
His hand tightened against the back of my skull, and somehow we were doing so easily what we had never allowed ourselves to do before: kiss.
It began gently and nervously, trembling tentative movements of mouth against mouth, each of us almost too scared to touch the other, but then suddenly he grabbed at me with his hands and body and mouth.
Oh, gods, this was not like the kiss he had given me in the death chamber under Tower Hill. This was the kind of kiss that could found empires and tear down skies all at the same time.
I would settle merely for the founding of an empire.
“Do I still taste foul?” I asked eventually, pulling my mouth away from his.
He paused, as if thinking through what he had felt.
“I tasted you, and all that you are,” he said, kissing me softly on the top of my nose, and then again behind my left ear.
Ah, I almost melted at those brief caresses.
“I tasted the land and its rivers and the tug of the moon; all this in your mouth.”
Again he kissed me, more deeply this time, and with enough passion that I moaned. Suddenly all this kissing was not quite enough for me.
“And, yes,” he said, pulling away just enough so his words could play across my upturned face. “Yes, I can taste that imp within you, but in you it does not taste foul. What you are overcomes all that the imp represents. When I kissed Swanne, then I tasted all that she had become, and it was foul.”
“But you said that I also—”
“I was a fool. I tasted only what I wanted. I was so angered, so terrified, and so lost when I realised how Asterion had tricked you, that all I could taste was foulness. But that foulness was my foulness, not yours.”
“But this imp remains within me, even in this enchanted place. Are you not afraid of it?”
“Oh, gods, Noah. I am afraid for you. Long Tom has told me that you are destined to become Asterion’s whore in this life, and—”
“Hush,” I said, laying fingers against his mouth, “do not speak of that now.”
“I cannot allow it.”
“You must, my love.”
“I will save you. Somehow. I will.”
His fervour touched me deeply. I knew that he could hate well. I had never realised until now how well also he could love.
“That is far into the future,” I whispered. “Pray, let us not talk of it. But…we do need to speak of the imp. I need to know if you are willing to—”
“I am not willing to allow this imp to keep me from you,” he said. “Not ever again. If it snatches, then so be it.”
“That is not the Brutus I knew and loved,” I whispered.
“Then can you know and love this one?”
“Truly,” I said, “I think I might be able to manage.”
And with that, he picked me up, and carried me to the bed. “Cornelia,” he said, naming me by my ancient and first name as he laid me softly down, “will you be my wife?”
“Yes!” I said.
“Cornelia,” he said, “will you love me?”
“Yes!” I said.
“Cornelia—Caela—Noah,” he said, and he was laughing and weeping all at the same moment, “and Eaving too, if she wants to hear it, the depth of love that I feel for you has been exceeded only by the stupidity I have shown in not realising it.”
“You love me?” I wished he’d just say it, three simple words, and not wrap them about with all this elegant court-speak.
“Most exceedingly,” he said.
“Then, dear gods, just say it!”
He laughed, and kissed me, softly. “Aye, I do love you, Noah. I always have.”
“Well, that is good,” I said, and I felt emotion choke my voice as I spoke those practical words, “for I happen to discover that I love you, too.” I paused, then continued in a whisper, “And always have.”
I reached out and undid the knots of his linen waistcloth, then allowed him to divest me of my skirt, and he lay down beside me and cradled me in his arms.
“Asterion be damned,” I whispered, and he laughed, and then kissed me, and all was very well.
When, eventually, he rose above me, and entered me, I ran my hands through his hair and pulled his face back to mine, and let him kiss me all he wanted.
“Shelter me,” he whispered, raising his face slightly, and I did, and so much of my worry and apprehension slid away as, together, in this place that was both Mag’s Pond and the bedchamber where we had originally made so many mistakes, we finally did something right.
Nine
Idol Lane, London, Hampstead, Middlesex, and Antwerp, the Netherlands
Jane felt it, knew it, the instant that Cornelia-reborn and Brutus-reborn met. She stood in the centre of the fish market, staring northwards, and gaped.
And then felt agony as the imp within her womb bit deep.
Come home! Weyland’s voice seethed through her mind. Come home! I command it!
Jane dropped the basket she held over one arm, tore her mind free of whatever it was Brutus and Cornelia were doing, and half sank to her knees in pain, her
arms wrapped about her belly.
“For Christ’s sake!” she whispered. “Allow me to walk and I will return to you!”
The pain abated somewhat, and Jane straightened. A few people had turned to stare at her, but none had moved to aid her. Instead they turned aside, presenting Jane with the cold hardness of their backs.
She was the Harlot of Idol Lane, and if she succumbed to whatever sinful disease beset her then it was no concern of theirs.
Jane took a deep breath and steeled herself against both the pain she suffered now and the pain she expected once she returned to Weyland; she hobbled as fast as she was able back to the house in Idol Lane.
The instant she was within the door Weyland grabbed her shoulder, spun her about, and slammed her back against the now-closed door.
“There is magic about,” he hissed, “and it involves Brutus!”
Jane’s loathing of Weyland had far outstripped her fear, and she was able to regard him with a modicum of composure. “It is Midsummer, the solstice. There is magic everywhere.”
“Don’t spin me tales about Midsummer. This is something else. It involves Brutus.”
There was fear in his eyes, and Jane almost smiled at it. You’re still afraid of him, aren’t you? “Brutus is in Antwerp,” she said. “You would have known if he had returned.”
Weyland’s eyes narrowed. “Have you been in contact with him?”
Now Jane did allow a cold smile to emerge. How, as Swanne, had she ever been fooled into thinking she loved this? “In contact? With Brutus? How can that be so? I am your slave, your whore, and I speak to no one without your consent.”
His fingers dug into her, his hazel eyes more intense than she’d ever seen them previously. When he spoke, his voice was dangerously calm. “You stupid bitch, Jane. Speaking to me as if I were a simpleton is no way to bolster your own position.”
“I can sink no further,” Jane snapped. “Threats of degradation have no power over me!”