The Oracle's Queen
“There are several, but not ones suited to trade,” Saruel replied. “And the passes are only open for a few months of the year. The Retha’noi still control some of the better ones, too, and do not welcome outsiders, ’faie or Tír. Anyone with goods to sell must go by boat. There are pirates on both seas: Zengati in the Osiat and brigands of all sorts among the islands of the Inner Sea. And, of course, the clans on the southern coast must go by way of the strait below Riga, a somewhat risky passage in the best of weather. But it’s still safer than the overland route.”
“It’s no better for Skalan trade,” said Tamír. “I don’t suppose it would do to have a capital entirely isolated from the rest of the country.”
Even as she said it, though, Ki could tell by the faraway look in her eyes that she was seeing it anyway, from the fancy sewer channels all the way up to the tall towers of Arkoniel’s house of wizards.
“It would be shorter and safer to go around to the north, if the isthmus wasn’t in the way,” he noted.
“Well, until someone finds a way to move that, I’m afraid we’re stuck with a long sail or bad roads.” Laughing, Tamír turned to Arkoniel. “What do you say? Can your Third Orëska solve that problem for me with your magic?”
To Ki’s surprise, and everyone else’s, Arkoniel just looked rather thoughtful for a moment, then replied, “It’s certainly worth considering.”
Tamír was aware of how Ki was suffering, but there was nothing she could do to help him, or herself. As the days passed and they put the high mountains behind them, she tried to turn her thoughts to other things, but her nights were haunted.
“Where is your mother, Tamír?”
The Oracle’s question had chilled her in that dark cavern, and those words followed her, stained even darker by what Iya had confessed. The Oracle had offered Tamír nothing but silence, yet in that silence she’d sensed expectation.
So, as she and her small entourage neared the crossroads that led to Alestun, she made up her mind. She had to screw her courage, reminding herself that no one but Arkoniel and Ki knew the shameful secret of Brother’s death, or the angry presence in the tower.
“I want to stop at the keep for the night,” she announced as they came in sight of the river road turn.
Tharin raised an eyebrow at that, and Ki gave her a questioning look but no one else seemed more than mildly surprised. “It’s not far out of our way, and it will be better than an inn or sleeping in the open,” she went on, making light of it.
“A day or two difference shouldn’t matter,” said Arkoniel. “It’s nearly a year since you’ve visited there.”
“I can’t wait to see Nari’s face when we ride over the bridge!” Ki exclaimed. “And you know Cook will make a fuss over not having enough food prepared.”
The thought of something as familiar as being scolded by her old cook warmed Tamír, driving away some of her unease over the true task before her. Grinning, she replied, “Probably, but the surprise will be worth a cold supper. Come on, let’s go give them a start!”
She and Ki kicked their horses into a gallop, laughing over their shoulders as the others lagged behind. Tharin soon caught up and there was no mistaking the challenge in his grin. The three of them led the pack, racing each other up the road and thundering by laden carts and startled villagers as they reached the meadows surrounding Alestun.
Tamír looked across the fields to the walled hamlet, standing on a bend of the river. She’d thought it was a city, the first time her father brought her to see it. It wasn’t a completely happy memory; she’d foolishly tried to choose a doll for her name day treat, rather than a proper boy’s toy, and her father been shamed before the whole marketplace. She understood better now why he’d reacted the way he did, but the memory still made her cringe after all these years.
She shook her head, letting the wind in her face scour away the bad feelings. He’d given her Gosie, her first horse that day, as well, and Tharin had given her that first wooden practice sword. All her early memories were like that, a mix of darkness and light, but the darkness always seemed so much greater. Black makes white. Foul makes pure. Evil creates greatness, the Oracle had said. That summed up her life.
They streaked through the forest and came out at last in the broad, steep meadow. On the rise above it, the old keep loomed against the mountains, its square tower pointing like a blunt finger at the sky. Her royal banner flew from a pole on the roof, but that wasn’t what caught her eye.
The tower window that faced the road had lost one of its red-and-white-striped shutters. The other one, weathered and peeling, hung askew by one hinge. It was too easy to imagine she saw a pale face framed there.
Tamír looked away, slowing Midnight to a walk as she took in signs of life all around her.
The meadow had been mown and small haystacks dotted the slope. Sheep and goats grazed around them, cropping the new growth. There were wild geese and swans on the river, and a young servant boy fishing on the bank just below the plank bridge. He jumped up and stared at them as they approached, then bolted for the gate.
The barracks had a new roof, and the herb and flower beds she and Ki had helped Arkoniel plant beside it had been well tended and expanded. Bright flowers blossomed along the edges and there were rows of vegetables, too. Two young girls with baskets on their hips stepped around the corner of the barracks, then darted back out of sight as the boy had.
“Who are all these people?” asked Ki.
“New servants from the village,” Arkoniel told him, catching up in time to overhear. “When I was here with the children, Cook needed more help. It appears she’s hired a few more since I left.”
“And Brother not here to scare them away,” murmured Tamír. Then, whispering to the wizard, “Did my mother trouble them?”
“No,” Arkoniel assured her. “I was the only one who ever saw her.”
“Oh.” Tamír glanced up again, and something else drew her attention: an expanse of blank wall where several windows should have been. “What happened there?”
“Oh that?” said Arkoniel. “I made a few changes a while back, to hide my presence. Don’t worry, it’s only magic. Nothing permanent.”
They reined in at the front gate just as it swung open. Nari and Cook stood there, staring up at her with their hands pressed to their mouths. Nari was the first to recover.
Throwing her arms wide, she burst into happy tears and cried, “Oh, pets, come down for a hug!”
Tamír and Ki swung down from the saddle and she gathered them both into her arms at once. Tamír was amazed at how tiny Nari seemed. She was a head taller than her nurse now.
Nari rose on her toes and kissed them both soundly. “How you’ve grown this past year, the pair of you. And Ki with a bit of beard. And you, child!” She released Ki into Cook’s waiting arms and took Tamír’s face between her hands, no doubt searching for the boy she’d known. Tamír saw nothing but love and amazement in the woman’s eyes. “Maker’s Mercy, look at you, my darling girl! Slim as a wand and the image of your dear mother. Just as I always imagined.”
“You recognize me?” Tamír blurted out, relieved. “I’m not so different?”
“Oh, pet!” She hugged Tamír again. “Boy or girl, you’re the child I nursed at my breast and held in my arms. How would I not know you?”
Cook hugged her next, then held her at arm’s length to look at her. “You’ve sprouted up like a weed, haven’t you?” She kneaded Tamír’s upper arm and shoulder. “Not an ounce of meat on either of you. Tharin, doesn’t that aunt of yours feed them anything? And poor Master Arkoniel! You look like a scarecrow again, after I got you all fed up proper before. Come in, all of you. We’ve kept the house ready and the larder’s full. None of you will go to bed hungry tonight, I promise you!”
Tamír strode up the worn stone stairs to the great hall. It was just as she remembered from her birthday visit, in good repair, but with a dusty, tarnished air about it. Even with the afternoon sun shining in
through the open doors and windows, there were still shadows lurking in the corners and up in the carved rafters. There were good smells on the air, though: warm bread and apple pie and spices.
“You’ve been cooking. Did you know we were coming?”
“No, Majesty, though you might have sent someone ahead,” Cook chided. “No, I’ve been trading with the town and making a bit of profit for you. I’ve laid down some good wines and the buttery’s full. By the time your people are settled I’ll have a proper spread on for you. Miko, go and start the fire for me, there’s a good boy! Girls, you see to the linens.”
The servants they’d seen by the bridge emerged from the shadows by the door and hurried off on their assigned tasks.
As Tamír headed for the stairs she heard Tyrien whisper to Lynx, “The queen grew up here?”
Smiling to herself, Tamír took the stairs two at a time, with Ki close behind. She wondered when she could steal away to find Lhel, or if the witch would even show herself. And if she did, then what would Tamír say to her now?
Their old room was neat and well aired as if they still lived there. There was the wardrobe Brother had tried to crush Iya with, and the carved clothes chest where Tamír had hidden the doll. She felt a familiar pang, looking at that wide bed with its faded hangings and thick coverlet. She caught a look of the same pain in Ki’s face as he stepped next door to the toy room.
“The extra bed’s still here,” he called. “The Companions and I can use this room.”
Tamír leaned in the doorway, looking at the toy city and the other bits and pieces of her childhood lying about. The only things missing were the old rag doll and Brother’s sullen presence. Before Ki came to live with her, the demon had been her only playmate. She hadn’t felt or seen Brother since Afra.
She went across the corridor and stood a moment in her father’s room, trying to imagine she could still sense his spirit or catch his scent. But it was just a room, long abandoned.
Arkoniel paused in the doorway, with his traveling bundle in his arms. “I’ll take my old room upstairs, if that’s all right with you.”
“Of course,” she replied absently, thinking of a different room. She would visit that one later, and alone.
She lingered a moment longer, and Tharin quietly stepped in to join her. He had his saddlebags over one shoulder and looked slightly baffled.
“The guard will take the barracks. I still have my old room there, but—Well, perhaps you’d rather I take one of the guest chambers upstairs?”
“I’d be honored if you’d sleep in Father’s room.” Before he could object, she added, “I’d feel better, knowing you’re so close by.”
“As you wish.” He set his bag down and looked around. “It’s good to be back. You should come more often, when things settle down. I miss the hunting here.”
She nodded, understanding all he couldn’t say. “Me, too.”
Chapter 38
Cook was as good as her word; the supper was ample and well received. Everyone gathered around one long table and the squires helped the serving girls carry the dishes back and forth from the kitchen.
Nari sat on Tamír’s left and asked endless questions about her battles and Ero and all that was going on at Atyion in preparation to meet Korin, but not once did she ask about the change. She treated Tamír just as she had treated Tobin, not in the least troubled by the alteration. She didn’t even forget and call her Tobin. Not once.
They sat around the fire with their wine afterward and told more stories of the fighting they’d seen. Then Tharin and the women began reminiscing about Tamír and Ki when they were children here, much to the amusement of the other Companions. Arkoniel joined in, embellishing with apparent relish on what a poor student Ki had been. There was no mention of the death and tragedy these walls had witnessed, but Tamír caught the younger squires glancing around nervously as night closed in.
“I’ve heard this keep is haunted,” Lorin ventured at last. Nikides gave him a warning look and the boy shrank down on the bench, murmuring, “That’s only what I heard.”
With no proper entertainment, there was little to keep them up late. Tamír kissed Nari and Cook good night and sent her guardsmen off.
“It’s time we got some sleep, eh?” Nikides said, gathering the others.
They said good night outside their rooms, but Ki lingered at her door. “I’ll stay, if you want. No one here cares.”
The temptation to say yes was so strong it took her breath away, but she shook her head. “No, better not.”
“Good night, then.” He turned for the door, but not before she caught the hurt look in his eyes.
It’s for the best. This is my task. He can’t help and it would only endanger him needlessly. It’s for the best …
She kept telling herself that as she sat cross-legged on the bed, waiting for the others to settle next door.
Someone laughed. A low murmur of voices followed, and the sounds of a good-natured argument as the unlucky squires were relegated to the pallets on the floor. She heard the shuffle of feet, the creak of bed ropes, then a dwindling murmur.
Tamír waited a bit longer and wandered over to the window. The moon was bright over meadow and river. She rested her chin in her hands, thinking of all the times she’d played there with Ki, the snow soldiers they’d fought, the fishing and swimming, and just lying on their backs in the tall grass, finding shapes in the clouds.
Satisfied that all was quiet next door, she took her night lamp and stole from the room. There was no sound from Tharin’s room, either, and no light beneath his door.
Upstairs a single lamp burned in a niche near Arkoniel’s chamber. She tiptoed past, keeping her gaze fixed on the tower door. Only when her hand was on the tarnished latch did she recall it had been locked since her mother’s death, the key long since thrown away. Brother had opened the door for her last time.
“Brother,” she whispered. “Please?”
She pressed her ear to the door, listening for any sign of him. The wood was cold, much colder than it should have been on a summer night, even here.
Another memory stirred. She’d stood here before, imagining the bloody, angry ghost of her mother just on the other side, in a rising tide of blood. She looked down, but nothing crept out from beneath it but a big grey spider. She flinched as it scuttled across her bare foot.
“Tamír?”
She nearly dropped her lamp as she whirled around. Arkoniel caught it and placed it safely in a niche beside the door.
“Bilairy’s balls! You scared the piss out of me!” she gasped.
“Sorry. I knew you’d come and thought you might need some help with that lock. And you’ll need this, too.”
He opened his left hand and light spilled out between his fingers from the small pebble glowing there.
She took the lightstone. It was cool as moonlight in her hand. “Less chance of me setting the place on fire with this, I guess.”
“I should go with you.”
“No. The Oracle said it’s my burden. Stay here. I’ll call out if I need you.”
He pressed a palm to the door beside the lock and Tamír heard the wards grind and fall. She lifted the latch and pushed the door open with a squeal of rusty hinges. Cold air rushed out, smelling of dust and mice and the forest beyond the river.
They stepped into the little open space between the door and the base of the tower stairs and Arkoniel pushed the door to, leaving it open just a crack.
She climbed the stairs slowly, holding the lightstone up and steadying herself with one hand against the wall. The scabrous feel of lichen and bird droppings brought back more memories. She felt like a little child again, following her mother up these stairs for the first time.
I’m like these swallows, with my nest high above the keep.
The door at the top of the stairs stood wide, a gaping mouth of darkness. She could hear the breeze sighing in the room beyond, and the skitter of mice. It took all her courage to climb th
ose last few stairs.
She paused in the doorway, clinging to the jamb as she searched the deeper shadows beyond. “Mother, are you here? I’ve come home.”
Ki had guessed what Tamír intended to do the moment they’d turned aside for the keep. During supper he’d seen how often her gaze strayed to the stairs. When she turned down his offer to stay with her that night, he knew for certain she meant to go to the tower alone.
Lying in bed beside Lynx, he listened until his ears rang, and heard the sound of her door quietly opening and the soft pad of bare feet passing his door.
She’d have asked me to come if she’d wanted me along. Tamír had always been close-mouthed about the ghosts who haunted this place, even with him. So he wrestled with himself, and tried to sleep, but every instinct said to follow her.
He’d lain down in his shirt and breeches. It was a simple matter to ease out of bed and step carefully around the squires on their pallets. He thought the others were all asleep, but as he opened the door to creep out, he glanced back and saw Lynx watching him.
Ki put a finger to his lips and closed the door softly behind him, wondering what his friend thought he was off to do. There was no help for that now.
There was no sign of Tamír. He crept up the stairs and paused, stealing a quick look down this corridor just in time to see Arkoniel slipping through the tower door.
That gave him pause. She’d left him behind, but asked the wizard to help? Ki shrugged off the hurt and stole down the corridor to the tower door. It was slightly ajar and he pushed it open.
Arkoniel was sitting on the bottom step, fidgeting with his wand. A lightstone glowed on the next step up.
Arkoniel gave a start when he saw Ki, then shook his head. “I might have known you’d show up,” he whispered. “She insisted on going alone, but I don’t like it. Stay here with me. She’ll call if she needs me.”
Ki joined him on the step. “Is her mother really up there?”
“Oh yes. Whether or not she chooses to show herself—”
He broke off, and they both looked up as they heard the faint sound of Tamír’s voice. Ki broke out in goose-flesh, knowing what it meant. Tamír was talking with the dead.