Moving Water (40 page)

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Authors: Sylvia Kelso

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BOOK: Moving Water
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When I said without the old fear, “If I'm judge you can't dictate the verdict,” she yelled, “Partisan!” and he shouted, “Bully!” but the resulting fracas gave me time to think. So at its end I said, “Why not something quite new?”

They chorused, “What?” And remembering that dawn revelation in Morrya, I said, “Why not a lythian?”

But even when they cried in delight, “Flametree!”—“Moontree!”—“Green leaves—”—“We're both fire—”—“And it belongs to Assharral!” When Beryx said, “Thank the Four for Alkir,” and Moriana gave me the full blaze of that new smile, adding, “I knew you were on my side,” there was a chill where there should have been only achievement, and belonging's warmth.

It did not thaw when, as we shared a piece of cheese and a ferroth over my report, Beryx asked, “Has Callissa said anything about Hethria?”

I nodded. And his eyes, so uncomfortably perceptive, altered from warm hope to dashed understanding. Before he said flatly, “Oh.”

Moriana, who had her own ways of arriving where his arts took him, put down her cheese and said, “Pox on Math!”

His eyes turned to her, briefly amused. She said, “I couldn't command him now anyway, yazyk.” It is gutter-slang for thief. She considered. “Let's conquer Hethria and Alkir can be governor—no.” A wicked glance at Beryx. “That would threaten Everran. Worse than the worst Ammath.”

“Femaere,” he said agreeably. But the cloud did not lift. I was finding that the hardest of all to withstand when he released me, saying with decision, “You don't want to go. Enough said.”

But there was plenty more to be thought. It did not help when the twins came up that night, saying, “Da, we don't want to go to Hethria either. Silly old Ruanbrarx.” When even my blinkered eyes could see they were valiantly denying their dearest wish in life.

I said, “It isn't settled,” and on that craven compromise fled to the labor that had been so joyful, and now had lost its taste.

* * * * *

Next evening I was riding home from the Rastyr, through one of those breathtaking sunsets the Morhyrne bequeathed us, which continued with barely muted splendor long after the Wet. The sky flamed mulberry and coral and crimson, a light like liquid copper bathed the land beneath. Out of it from the roadside copses came Fengthira and her mare, like a horseman of legend, steeped in the gold of time itself.

The mare fell into step. The rider scanned the sky. Then she said baldly, “If t'is fighting tha thinkst tha craves, Hethria'll give thee tha fill. Not with men. T'is the oldest fight. The one that started when the first pharraz scraped a furrow with a stick, and the wind blew in wild oats. Tha blood knows it. Just as his knows that.” She gestured up to Ker Morrya, ringing the mountain with a necklet of lamps.

I sought a mannerly way to say it was not my fight, that I despised it, despised my selfishness. Thought resignedly that she would already know, and said, “I know I should go. For the twins' sake, if nothing else.”

“But t'is against tha wish. And Everran's holy Sky-lords forfend that a man do anything against his wish.”

When I made no reply she snorted. “He'll not coerce thee. Heardst me tell him in Gjerven, he's learnt his lessons too well. Through is sometimes worse than Round, and he was ever Through, so now he goes Round twice. He was ever, Do as I wilt, so now t'is, Take tha choice. And ever Act, not Abstain, so now t'is, Abstain, when he should act. Soft, ah. Told you it was right, didn't I? Ah. For him. But I'm another cup of tea.”

My surprise became a tingle of fear. She snorted again.

“I'll not use the arts to turn or twist or force thee. Just tell thee a few truths. Not about tha boys, tha knowst they're the hope of Pharaon Lethar, and a new race of aedryx, and the sons he'll never have. Canst not make that budge tha heart, however it spurs tha head. And for thaself, I've told thee, art a Stiriand to tha granite backbone. Think now what that means to tha wife.

“Thinkst I've no right to meddle,” she anticipated me. “Were I he, I daresay I'd not. Dost not think tha's treated her hardly, ah? Hast kept and honored and been faithful to her. And thinks, because tha gave up real soldiering for the Guard and then stayed in it when honor forbade thee, t'is rather she owes thee. Ah. Now think on tha waiting in Stirsselian. Pleasant, was it?” I shuddered. “And how long didst wait? A month? But when tha went whistling off to tha soldier games in Phaxia, she waited two whole years for thee. Never sure when she woke at morning that tha wast not crowbait a week already, and she left a widow with two brats on her back. Not to mention,” with irony, “losing thee. Think on that, when tha minds Stirsselian, waiting to know tha folk slain without a hand's turn tha couldst do for them, and they dead by their own choice.”

She nodded at my flinch. “And when th'art wanting to put her to army discipline and bearing with her poor manners and finding her tantrums vex thee and wishing she'd not build her whole life round tha sons, think thee on why she does. That t'is possible tha'st looked down tha long stone nose and let her see tha just tolerates her once too often. So she's turned away from thee, because tha wouldst not let thaself come first with her, and put them in tha place.”

“I didn't! I haven't!” I could bear it no longer. “I never—”

“Hold tha peace,” she said inexorably. “I'm not done. Think tha too, when th'art favoring that tender will of thine, that she came with thee from Frimmor to Zyphryr Coryan and never said a word, and then fled with thee to Phaxia, and then let thee browbeat—yes, I said browbeat, and tha'lt hear me out!—her into Stirsselian, as t'were a high-headed filly that tha'd bring to hand or make it the worse for her—no, tha'lt hear me, if I have to use a Command. And tha'd go tha merry way back to soldiering, and let her suffer again as tha didst in Stirsselian—I said, Quiet! Not once, but as often as tha canst manage it in the span of tha life. Then tha wonders why she'd go to Hethria, to have thee as well as her sons safe.” Her eyes were blazing on me, cold and clear and pitiless, untinged by the sunset light. “By the bones of Deve Saedryx Korven, Stiriand, if there's granite in tha backbone, there's more of it in tha head!”

My bridle hand was shaking. I could not speak. I shut my eyes a moment. There was no room for anger or shame or outrage, I simply wanted that flaying voice to stop.

“Hark'ee.” Though she spoke much more gently, still I shrank. “I know very well he'd never have cut thee so. And that t'is unjust. But t'is an easy matter to change the head, another to change the rest. If tha stayed in Assharral now, tha'd be thinking ever, I have played false to my sons. And if tha camest in tha present mind to Hethria, tha'd be thinking, I have played false to myself. So I've done what he'd not. I've taken a hot iron and fired tha conscience for thee. And if I've not changed tha head”—a gleam of mordant humor—“I'll warrant it's beaten a change of leads into tha heart.”

* * * * *

When I walked into our quarters Zem and Zam halted in mid-rush, took one look and retreated like whipped pups, clean out to their beds. Hurrying up behind them Callissa began, “Zem, Zam, what are—why—” Then her voice changed altogether. “Oh, what is it, my dear?”

I shut my eyes, in shame that it should show so glaringly on my face. Then her arms were round me. I should not feel ashamed, I suppose, to admit I was glad of them. Old schooling dies hard. But human nature is older still. I hid my face in her hair and was thankful she had not turned from me as I so often had from her.

When I lifted my head her eyes were full of purely unselfish anxiety and pain for my hurt. I was grateful for that too. Fengthira's iron had bitten deep.

She said, “Sit down. I'll get some—” And I sat. But I kept hold of her wrist. And when I said, “You're what I want,” I saw the flash of unbelieving joy before she landed, off-balanced, in my lap.

“Callissa,” I said into her breast. “I'll go to Hethria.” And stopped. She must not see it was the result of a flogging, not a free-made choice.

“I mean, we can go to Hethria. If”—I had to scout carefully—“you think it's best for the twins.”

“Never mind the twins,” she said quite brusquely. “Alkir, what's happened to you?”

There was no point in trying to lie. Whoever called love blind was blind himself.

“Fengthira—talked to me.”

She caught her breath.

“We'll—we can go to Hethria.” And then something changed in me, nothing to do with the mind, so I could go on in honest truth. “I wouldn't mind going. I've soldiered long enough.”

She took my face in her hands. Her eyes grew bigger. Then the tears started to roll down her cheeks. In some alarm I cried, “What is it? What have I done now?” And she clutched me round the neck and sobbed, “Can't I c-cry because I'm h-happy, for once?”

* * * * *

It was easy after that. It was more than easy. I did not just rediscover Callissa, I truly discovered her, and after ten years marriage found myself whistling round like some just-wed lout. When I came to say, with some guilt, “I think I must ask for a discharge,” Beryx's face lit up. Before he stammered, “No, I don't mean I'm glad to see you go, I mean—oh, Four, you know what I mean!” He took another look. “I'm so glad you want to.” Another, with those too-perceptive eyes. “I'll murder Fengthira, one day.” Yet another. Then a sudden grin blazoned joy all over his face. “Fylghjos, if you're not careful, I'll be shouting ‘Stand to' myself!”

Fengthira agreed to escort us. She would have traveled faster alone, she was carrying the Well, bound for storage under her eye at Eskan Helken, “where none other can meddle with it,” but prolonged coaxing from Beryx persuaded her to march in human company, rather than be called back, somewhere in the desert, to extricate strayed recruits. When an entire baggage train had been assembled, culled, packed, unpacked and packed again, horses chosen and a day finally set, only one thing remained. To see Beryx and Moriana. To say farewell.

In their usual workroom we found only the onetime lordling now prenticed as Beryx's much-tried secretary. His face lightened when he looked past his quill-store to recognize me. But when I asked, “The Lord and Lady?” he very nearly smiled. “They're both up by the fountain, sir.”

It was just mid-morning, a superb morning of the early Dry, sumptuous blue sky, green things in full leafage but not yet overblown, enough damp to put a fizz in the air, with a first invigorating nip to herald the winter ahead. As we climbed the rough-hewn steps familiar sounds of altercation floated down.

“Not like that, here!”

“No, here!”

“Let go, idiot!”

“Oh, you spitfire!” Then a bubble of laughter and sudden silence, ending in a hurried “Let go!” as our heads topped the rim of the stairs.

Moriana came forward, trying not to blush, sparkling her eyes at me as she said, “You can't talk, nowadays!” There was mud all over her skirts, and mud smeared Beryx's white silk shirt as he bent beneath the perridel, resurrected by the Wet. Its gold-and-silver foliage danced above him, its shadow played on the dapple of inner sunshine in his eyes. “Come and see what we're—oh!”

There had been an almost human chuckle behind her. A gurgle, a splash. And then a crystal, wordless melody, that flowed out unfaltering over the mountainside.

“It's moving!” Moriana hurried back, we hurried after her.

Los Morryan was flowing again. The water welled up out of its black basin, sluiced away the mud, rose to bubbling silver music, spattered the rim to glittering wet, blowing spray onto the fan of newly emerald moss.

“You did it!”

“I said I would.” His eyes laughed at her, a dance of thought and joy and laughter that owed nothing to the motion of the perridel.

“Don't be so smug!” She swiped at him. But he caught the hand and pulled her closer, and we all stood, watching reality's motion, the crystal water freed to clear and sing and flow.

“Sir Scarface,” Zem said into the pause, “you told us aedryx couldn't be kings.”

“No,” Beryx admitted gravely. “That was what I thought. But”—he gave the tail of his eye to Moriana—“I could hardly leave this—er—lady—to tidy the whole thing.”

Zem pondered. “Was it a Must?”

Green eyes met black. Wicked amusement blossomed in both.

“You could say,” agreed Beryx, straight-faced, “that it was a Must.”

His eyes turned, to scan my face with that perception I no longer had to fear. He smiled.

“Good luck, pharraz.” He knew the taunt would be understood, as I had once bade him, “Sleep well,” in his chains. “I won't say thanks. It's not enough. And anyway—I think you've made your own.”

He came to embrace us. Moriana followed, dimpling, but her voice did not tease. She said, “I hardly expected to say this. But thank you, Alkir.”

She kissed my cheek. Reflecting that I never expected that either, I returned the salute.

Beryx had turned to Callissa, who was looking like a recruit the first time the phalanx moves. With the merest spice of mischief in the laughter he reached for her hand. Bent over it, and murmured, “A safe journey, ma'am.”

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