Moons' Dreaming (Children of the Rock) (75 page)

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Authors: Marguerite Krause,Susan Sizemore

BOOK: Moons' Dreaming (Children of the Rock)
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Oriel?

she said gently to the brown-haired boy seated nearest the hearth.

You go first.

The six-year-old, with his father

s assistance, imitated Vray and stood on his chair. He hitched up his pants, scratched at his nose for a moment, then clasped his hands behind his back and closed his eyes.

My name is Oriel. My family has shown me what it means to be a Keeper. I know the nine gifts of the gods to their children. They are animals and plants and water to give us strength. The air above and earth below, our place to live. Intelligence,

he pronounced the word carefully.

so we can think and plan. The bending of power which brings us magic.

He paused, face screwed up in thought.

A helpful childish whisper prompted from somewhere in the room,

That

s seven.


I know,

Oriel said.

And our bodies. And our love, so that there will always be more Children of the Rock. I vow to keep these gifts. I vow to keep my body healthy with the right use
—”


Proper use,

his mother prompted.



proper use of the gifts of plants and animals and water and air and earth. I vow that I

ll
be a helper in my family and my
village by thinking and loving. And I don

t have to vow anything about magic,

he concluded, opening his eyes,

because my parents are Keepers and so am I.

His round face was flushed with pride and relief and, hopefully, his first inspired understanding of the words he had said.

And I vow to do whatever I

m supposed to do to help everybody else keep their vows. Because we are all Children of the Rock.


Well done, Oriel,

his father said.

The common room erupted with hand clapping and slapping of tables, shouts of approval and good wishes. Oriel, grinning, plopped down in his chair. As soon as the clamor died down a bit Vray picked out the next vow taker.

After each of the six-year-olds had recited their Keeper

s vows, Mankin made her commitment to become a Redmother. As she received the gathering

s congratulations, Vray sighed, glad the ceremonial part of the evening was over. She smiled fondly at the people, all of them now moving toward the food tables and warmth of the hearth. Some noticed her and smiled back.

Oriel

s father called out,

Why are you still perched up there, Iris? Come have some mulled wine.


How lovely,

Vray answered. She stepped down just as the door from the kitchen opened and a laughing young man stepped through, a tray perched on his muscular arm. She stared, hardly able to draw breath, totally disoriented as he moved forward, his attention on the food.

Candlelight shown on his silky black hair, caught the sparkle of his eyes. Vray saw his broad shoulders, and the confident grace with which he moved, and did not recognize a thing about him except the green and saffron embroidery on the neck of his tunic. Embroidery she

d done for Tobble. Her little brother Tobble.

She blinked, and Tob became Tob once more. Only

Vray took a deep breath and stumbled a few steps into the crowd. She was grateful Tob hadn

t noticed her. Tob, who was always underfoot lately. She took a seat, and accepted a cup of warm wine from Oriel

s father.

Her eyes went back to the young man who stood beside Herri, laughing merrily at one of the innkeeper

s jokes. She still hardly knew him. No, she didn

t know him at all. He

d grown. He

d more than grown. Tob wasn

t a child any more. What happened to the boy she

d walked here with tonight? She covered her mouth to hide an embarrassed smile, and tried to forget the confused tingling of her body, tingling warmth that would not go away, despite her realization of who she was looking at.

Don

t be a fool,
she chided herself.
We all stop being children sooner or later.
Vray put down the wine cup and hugged herself closely, as memories of Soza returned. She looked away from Tob and into the fire blazing in the wide hearth.

Some just lose their childhood sooner than others.

Chapter
36

When Pirse showed up in Raisal in the middle of autumn, the only member of the royal household who didn

t seem to be surprised was Sene. At first, Feather took it for one more demonstration of Sene

s knack for knowing everything about everything. During the ninedays that followed, however, she learned that Sene had welcomed Pirse as if he

d been expecting him because he was. Before Aage

s departure for one of his visits with Morb, Sene had asked the wizard to find Pirse and send him to Sitrine. With his usual supreme confidence, it never occurred to Sene that the Dherrican prince would fail to answer his summons.

Feather hardly noticed Pirse

s arrival. She had too many other things to worry about. A few ninedays earlier, without warning, the king had taken her aside and revealed that he was aware of her less-than-daughterly feelings for him. He

d given her a long, serious lecture about how he wasn

t offended, and understood that her reaction to him was rooted in a perfectly natural desire to express her gratitude for his protection. He also made his wishes clear. Whatever its harmless source, the attraction had to stop. He did not evict her from the royal residence, or banish her from future council meetings, even after she told him that she did not want to change the way she felt. He

d been kind, but as immovable as stone. From that day on, it was as if a wall had been erected between them. Subtle as the change was, perhaps even undetectable to anyone else, day by day Feather struggled with the hard reality. Sene was no longer part of her life.

Chasa, however, was always there. Even after Pirse appeared on their doorstep, Chasa made a point of drawing Feather into all of his conversations with the Dherrican prince. There was, not surprisingly, a lot of conversation. When they were young, Pirse had learned monster-slaying with Chasa and Jeyn. The three shared fond memories of their adolescent adventures. Feather began to understand some of Chasa

s anger with Jenil. If the Greenmother had not whisked her away to Garden Vale, she would have been a full member of this inner circle, a participant in the daily activities and grand schemes that even now, years later, reduced Pirse, Chasa, and Jeyn to breathless laughter as they described the incidents to Feather. Instead, her only memories of those years involved tapestries and Brownmother training.

The next time Jenil showed her face in Raisal, Feather would have a few things to say to her.

Most of the conferences with Pirse, however, concerned the present rather than the past. Sene quizzed him for hours on the state of affairs in Dherrica. On other days, the discussion centered on Rhenlan. Pirse had not been observing events as closely as Sene had, but he knew about the unrest among the Keepers-and he had heard of Captain Dael.


A fine swordsman,

Pirse said o
ver supper on the day after mid
winter.

He takes his vows seriously, too, by all accounts. More seriously than Hion and Damon take theirs. He could do it.


A Keeper, learn to slay dragons?

Jeyn asked. They were dining in the king

s audience hall for the sake of its wide hearth. Feather did not think the
day had been particularly cold—
not compared to what was usual in Garden Vale at this time of year

but with the setting of the sun enough of a chill crept into the air to make her willing to take the
seat closest to the fire. Jeyn
sat to her right at the long, linen-covered table, her brother across from her and Pirse, in turn, to Chasa

s right, across from Feather. Sene occupied the head of the table, between his children. For the moment, the king was concentrating on using a piece of crusty bread to mop up the last of his fish chowder. However
,
the tilt of his head assured Feather that he was listening to every word his children and their guest were saying.


What about you, Feather?

Chasa asked.

What do you think?

Feather silently thanked the gods that her memory retained the content of conversations even when she was not consciously paying attention.

We all know the Redmother stories. Shapers are traditionally the monster slayers because Keepers have enough to keep them busy with their herds and crops.


There

s more to it than that,

Jeyn argued.


Personality, mostly,

Chasa replied.

Dael has the self-discipline, and if you

d seen him against that phantom cat you

d know he

s fast enough.

Sene swallowed his last mouthful of bread and followed it with some wine.

Rhenlan needs a monster slayer. If not this winter, then the next. That

s Aage

s prediction, and I believe him.


Dragons in the western coastal villages?

Pirse shook his head.

I respect the foresight of the wizard Aage, but that seems unlikely to me. Most dragons attack in spring and summer. By Fall Festival, the danger is past.

Chasa took an apple tart from the platter in the center of the table.

What happens? Do dragons disappear, the way phantom cats do?


No. It

s just rare to find one moving about in winter,

Pirse explained.

They hate the storms that blow up along the coast. Too much wind, awkward for flying.


Awkward for sailing too,

Chasa returned.

That doesn

t stop fisher folk from going out, if they

re hungry enough.

The door to the hall jerked open, the motion too abrupt to come from the hand of a servant. Since only members of the royal staff were allowed this far into the building without escort, Feather expected to see one of the king

s guards, or perhaps a messenger. Therefore she didn

t recognize the man in the mud
-
splashed trousers, damp brown hair flattened against his skull, until he was halfway down the length of the room.

Pirse knew him, though. He jumped up and away from the table.


Ivey, what are you
….”
Jeyn began.

Ivey reached the end of the table.

By your leave, Your Majesty,

he said. Not waiting for Sene

s response, he hauled back his fist, and punched the still-retreating Pirse in the eye.

Pirse staggered against the wall and into a needlework stand, which toppled over with a clatter. Chasa leapt belatedly to his feet. Sene bellowed,

Ivey!


...
doing?

Jeyn concluded in the sudden silence.


That

s for irresponsibility,

the minstrel announced, ignoring the rest of them as he advanced toward Pirse.

The next one

s for abandonment. Then I

m going to
—”

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