It was night when Michael awoke. A light breeze whispered through the tree leaves overhead, brushing their silhouettes over the clear gem-like stars. Flakes of snow wobbled down from the leaves, melting as they struck his clothing and skin. The fresh cold smell of frozen grass sap and crushed leaves met him as he rolled over on his side.

  He had strayed north of the river when he had crossed the chasm. Now, to wash his wounds and clean off what remained of the dust from his passage, he stood on wobbly, prickly legs and tried to find the water again. The cut on his shin hurt the worst and his leg felt swollen. His hands were tender, but he wasn’t using them nearly as much. For a moment, Michael felt light-headed, and then his feet splashed in the cold reedy shallows and he wriggled his way through the ice.

  He sluiced his wounds thoroughly, then bound them with the reeds, spreading some of the astringent sap on them as the Crane Women had taught him, it seemed centuries ago. In a few minutes his light-headedness passed and he stood in the shallows and removed his clothes to wash more thoroughly.

  As he sat on the bank, allowing the night breezes and his heightened body heat to dry him, he listened to the noises of the woods. He had no idea whether he was past the worst of it or not. He felt at peace, however. After so many months in the barren Pact Lands, and the difficulties of his training, he had time to be truly alone, to search for himself in the middle of all his experiences. What he found—now—didn’t displease him, but he knew rough edges remained, even entire personalities still to be sacrificed.

  And however peaceful it seemed here, he had not left the Realm.

  He wished for some light so he could read the book, but the starlight, while bright, was inadequate, so he massaged his legs with his wrists and forearms and tried to connect with Death’s Radio.

  Failing that, he whistled for a few moments before he caught himself—looking around guiltily—and then began to make up a poem, speaking under his breath.

  How often death is simply love.

  Make way, make way for the new!

  He couldn’t go anywhere with that fragment, nor could he force more lines. Being at peace, it seemed, was ill-conducive to poetry—at least for the time being.

  And what in hell did he mean, anyway? Eleuth had killed herself for love—he had killed a part of himself, a kind of counter-sacrifice…

  The leaves rubbed against each other, tree-boughs swayed, snow fell, the grass hissed faintly and the river rumbled in its bed, making the frozen reeds snap.

  “Antros…”

  Michael was instantly on his feet. His hyloka vanished and the cold sucked up his warmth. A few yards away, standing in the darkness with wick in hand, was the tall, unmistakable shape of Alyons.

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Michael tried not to show his terror. He tried to restore his warmth and control the beating of his heart, which threatened to explode in his chest.

  He had seen Alyons crucified by the steel snake. He had watched the life and blood drain from the Sidhe, and had heard him call for the Arborals…

  And now Alyons stood before him, grinning as if nothing had happened. Michael knew the Sidhe were even less likely to return from the dead than humans, yet here was evidence to the contrary—solid-looking, terrifying.

  Alyons advanced slowly and stared at a point over Michael’s shoulder. “Why so frightened, human?”

  There wasn’t a thing Michael could say that wouldn’t seem ridiculous.

  “You thought you could be rid of me so easily? That you could save your people from their own stupidity?”

  Michael kept still. His hyloka flickered back, but he shivered from fear anyway and the returning heat didn’t seem to help. “I didn’t—”

  “Yes, man-child? Stupid, weak man-child.”

  “I didn’t kill you,” Michael said.

  “No matter.”

  “I didn’t… enjoy seeing you die.”

  The Sidhe shrugged. They faced each other in silence for a long minute. The Wickmaster’s coat flapped in the gentle night breeze; his red hair looked black in the starlight. His eyes were distantly reflective, like mirrors seen from miles away. Finally, Michael backed off. Alyons didn’t move.

  “You are dead, aren’t you?” Michael asked. He could feel nothing inside Alyons; there was no aura. Or… he hadn’t yet learned how to use the boon.

  “I am dead,” Alyons confirmed. “Beyond hope even of the trees. And if you didn’t kill me, then you led me to the circle, tempted me in. It’s all the same.”

  “I didn’t know.”

  “If you had known, I wouldn’t have been trapped,” Alyons said. “I would have read your knowing. Or do you think I was a complete fool?”

  “Sidhe don’t leave ghosts,” Michael said. Evidence to the contrary…

  “True.”

  “Then what are you?”

  “I am grief, Antros. Your grief, my grief. I am emptiness, not even one left. My horse wanders and does not take a rider now. You have wronged me twice, man-child.”

  “I don’t understand.”

  “You drew me to my death, yet you did not claim your prize. You disdained.”

  Michael was now several yards from Alyons, one foot behind the other, prepared to turn and flee.

  Alyons gestured to the woods. A horse emerged from between the trees. It was wounded on its withers and rump, and its eyes were wild with recent danger.

  “Kill a Sidhe, claim his horse. Disdain the horse, double the insult. You are very stupid, man-child.”

  “What do I do?”

  Alyons pointed to the horse. “Take my epon. Do not waste all that I was. Surely, a Sidhe horse will be valuable to you…”

  Indeed, it would, but Michael no more wanted Alyon’s horse than he desired the Wickmaster’s company, “I can’t,” he said. “I don’t even know—”

  “Tell it, ‘I am your master, you are my soul.’ It will know you then.”

  “Why do you want me to have it?‘

  “I have no wishes, no wants. It is the way things have been done. Only a human would not know instinctively, it is the way.”

  “You’re a shadow,” Michael said, revelation dawning.

  “With no wishes, no wants… and no time limit, if the horse is wasted.” He folded his arms as if prepared to patiently wait forever.

  “You’ll go away if I take the horse?”

  Alyons nodded once. “I am not here now. It is only your ignorance that shapes me from darkness. I am nothing but grief and violation.”

  “Then I take the horse,” Michael said. The shadow pointed his wick at Michael and the horse paced over to him, turning behind Michael to face the image of its former master.

  “The grief remains,” the shadow said, growing darker. “But the violation is ended…” Then, with a harsh braying laugh, the image became as black as the distant trees and blurred into nothingness.

  Michael convulsed violently, throwing aside his fear in a single paroxysm. The horse regarded him with large, puzzled gray eyes. He reached out tentatively to touch its muzzle.

  “Gift horse,” he said. “You must have crossed the Blasted Plain alone… or perhaps he, it, led you.” Michael peered into the night where Alyons had stood, as if the shadow might still be there, awaiting its chance. A hundred thoughts plagued him. What if a Sidhe could impress his essence in an animal after death—what if the horse still obeyed the Wickmaster? It could throw him, kill him…

  Yet as Michael probed, there wasn’t the slightest taint of the Wickmaster in the animal. And he could certainly use a horse in his journey.

  He lay back in the snowless lee of the oak and regarded his undesired mount for an hour before going to sleep again.

  The day was well along before he awakened. The horse kicked frost from the grass and ate breakfast. Michael was ravenous; hyloka had to get its energy from somewhere, and he suspected he wouldn’t stay warm for long without substantial food.

  “Where do we find something to eat, hm?” he asked t
he horse. It shook its mane and kept an eye on him as it ate. Michael stroked its flank softly, then approached its head and whispered slowly, carefully into its ear. “I don’t know if you understand English, but I am your master. And I hope I have room… now… for you be be my soul.” The horse nuzzled his palm and jerked its head back.

  “Ready to go, eh?” Michael said. No sense trying to mount as the Sidhe did. He climbed on as best he could, gripped the mane and nudged the animal.

  The horse tensed its muscles under him uncertainly and tossed its head. Then it broke into a trot. Michael laid himself low against its neck to keep trees branches from swiping at his face.

  There was very little food in the wintered Realm. He survived off a scant supply of red berries gleaned from bushes and was glad for them, and for the crazy character of the Realm’s seasons, that bushes should bear fruit in winter. With so little food, his hyloka became undependable, and he quickly learned how to concentrate what warmth was left and light fires with his index finger. It wasn’t as neat a trick as the ones Biri had performed, but it made him suspect that his abilities strayed at least a short distance into the domain of magic. He warmed himself by the fires and melted snow for drinking. The horse survived well enough on frozen grass, but gladly drank some of the snowmelt, and stayed close at night when the fire burned and smoked.

  After some days of that kind of fire-lighting, Michael noticed that the finger was losing its nail. He was soon able to peel back the skin and remove the nail completely. He thoughtfully tossed it in the middle of his most recent blaze and watched it blacken and shrivel. The consequences of certain kinds of discipline began to worry him from that moment.

  Within a week, he traveled about two hundred miles—there was no way he could be sure of the distance, if distances were ever reliable in the Realm—staying near the icy river. He was hungry all the time and growing thinner. He longed for the porridge the Crane Women had fed him, so bland and so wonderfully filling…

  On the eighth night, huddled close to his fire with woods all around (and this was a small forest!), the horse standing nearby with its head lowered and eyes hooded, Michael thought about killing the animal and eating it. Part of him remembered Biri immediately after his ritual horse-eating; another part fondly remembered the taste of solid food. He tried the grass, but it was bitter and clearly not fit for humans. He tried bark, or rather chewed on it while searching for grubs, but the bark tasted like quinine mixed with lemon rind and grubs didn’t exist in the Realm. He did manage to make a fair tea from the bark, using a queer scooped-out rock as a pot in the middle of the fire, and rolling a cup from the unstewed bark. He thought some of the trees might be laurel, because the leaves were shaped and smelled like the bay leaves his mother had used in cooking; others were obviously oaks, but lacking acorns (and he wasn’t sure he could have prepared acorns for eating, anyway—did one do more than just steep them in hot water after crushing?). By far the majority of the trees were now huge conifers with needles thick as iceplant leaves.

  He saw no other animals.

  On the ninth day, the pines gave way to more oaks and laurels; the air grew warmer; the snow became patchy.

  Within ten miles—about an hour on horseback—the seasons began to change. The trees had never lost their leaves and the grass had never browned off; when the Realm’s erratic and premature spring appeared Michael found his first food and wept for joy.

  There were fruit trees everywhere, standing unarrayed in wild orchards, bursting with fruit untouched by any but himself. Apples, pears, peach-like fruit with brown-striped skin, large cherry-like clusters that clearly tasted alcoholic. There was even a pulpy, salty fruit that grew on the laurel-like trees and satisfied his craving for meat.

  He was relieved of his troublesome thoughts about Alyon’s golden horse.

  Michael stayed in the wild orchard for two days, even taking the risk of getting mildly drunk on the wine-tasting pulp of the cherry-fruit. The horse cropped grass contentedly nearby. As Michael lay with his back against a tree trunk, he thought of the Kaeli and wondered what the animals had been like that had carried the Sidhe between the stars. He closed his eyes and tried to imagine such a journey, made without fireball launchings or spaceships; simply riding on the backs of the original epon, stretched out across space like quicksilver or molten gold—

  He read a few poems from the book, savoring them, his mind warmed by the fruit, his stomach full. He was content as never before, even with the past horror and his own shame—perhaps because of it. He thought of himself as a comet head at the source of a vast tail of experiences, flowing out behind him, growing longer and richer. Gradually his reverie muddied and he slipped into a doze. The book tumbled from his fingers and lay in the grass, the wind turning the pages deftly, sighing when it found what it wanted.

  An Arboral female stood at Michael’s feet, regarding him with unblinking green eyes. She walked over to the horse and patted it affectionately, though Arborals had no use for epon. Then she looked up at the Meteoral who had luffed the pages in the book, and a face between the tree branches winked at her. She knelt down and applied a blue-green paste to Michael’s forehead. The paste sizzled, releasing vapors which poured down the sides of his nose and into his mouth.

  Both of the Sidhe melted into the woods.

  Michael saw a palace of silk and gold, as airy and light as a vast tent, rising above a mountain of ice and granite. A huge cataract of melt-water poured from the caverns in the mountain’s side. He was led by a shadowy guide from enclosure to enclosure through the palace, and found within a great king—an oriental Khan—bemoaning the fate of his lost fleet, destroyed by a demon wind far to the east. The Khan had dreams also; dreams of great plains of grass and high snow-capped mountains and trackless desert and wild horses stalked by sturdy bow-legged men with hard, flat determined faces and lank black hair… all of that in the Khan’s past. Now he ruled the greatest empire of all time, stretching from the Eastern sea across the mountains and plains, south to the mountains of the snow devils, north to the tent-pole of the world.

  The Khan’s face changed, becoming that of a pale, gray-haired Caucasian, looking younger than his years, sitting on the Khan’s throne. He was not of the royal line. The plains of grass faded, the empire vanished into far history, and the pale usurper regarded his palace with an expression of repressed rage and boredom, of impatient waiting…

  Waiting for Michael.

  The paste had evaporated. The visions swirled and Michael opened his eyes slowly. He had never dreamed in the Realm, and he didn’t believe what he had seen was actually a dream. It had a certain quality, a stamp, which indicated he had once again had a message from Death’s Radio… this time, without the use of words.

  After tying up a supply of fruit in his shirt, Michael reluctantly left the orchard and followed the tree-lined river, which now turned east, sometimes doubling back in a lazy loop or wrapping around mist-shrouded islands. As the horse walked patiently on, Michael stared across the river at the largest of the islands and fancied he saw battlements in rocky crags. He always stayed on the left bank; it was equally easy to fancy Riverines lurking in the water, ready to deliver him up to Adonna’s forces if he was so indiscreet as to try to ford.

  He ate sparingly of the fruit, which stayed at the peak of ripeness. Like all Sidhe food, little was sufficient.

  In the dusk of his fourth day away from the orchard, the horse took an opportune gap in a wall of shrubs and followed a very old, almost overgrown trail up a gently sloping mountain. They spent the night near the crest, Michael sleeping in an open spot near a weathered cairn, the horse nearby, blinking sleeplessly in the dying firelight.

  Michael awoke and saw a silvery band crossing the predawn sky. He rubbed his eyes and looked up again. A mother-of-pearl ribbon of light stretched from horizon to horizon at an angle of about thirty degrees. It had moon-like mottlings, and in fact could have been a severely elongated moon, though it seemed about four times br
oader. As dawn came, the ribbon dissociated into blurred disks, which broke down further into an indistinct contrail and vanished.

  After breakfast—a chunk of meaty fruit—he walked the horse up to the crest to get his bearings. They looked down the opposite side of the mountain into a long, broad valley. The horse snorted with eager recognition; the atmosphere above the valley was as golden as its skin, and the trees—thick as lumpy moss, from this vantage—seemed suspended in another season entirely, not spring but autumn. They made up a patchwork of browns, oranges and golds. Despite the warmth of the colors, the morning air filling the valley like liquid in a bowl was quite chill.

  Michael looked for some time before finding the structure hidden far to one side of the valley. It was dark, angular and ornate, but he couldn’t make out much beyond its general shape. It resembled a tall Oriental pagoda.

  “Can you think of any reason we should go down there?” he asked the horse. The horse couldn’t. “Nevertheless, we’re going.”

  Caution had kept him from crossing the river, but he discarded caution now. The compulsion was strong—and had nothing to do with Death’s Radio.

  Chapter Thirty

  The slope down to the valley was about ten degrees, never greater than twenty. On the mountainside, the green trees of the regional spring gradually gave way to autumnal colors until few traces of green remained. The flowers beneath the horse’s hooves were transforming from blues, pinks and reds to a uniform golden yellow.

  The deeper into the valley they traveled, the darker the sky overhead became, until they were bathed in rich shadowy gold, like the twilight in a smoky old oil painting.

  Michael’s eye caught a last gleam of blue in a patch of flowers a few yards off the trail. He stopped the horse and dismounted to inspect them.