“As well we made no child. That's the only reason she yet lives. How does Kiril keep safe?”
“His lady mother, the Princess Rahil, has maintained silence on Lord Edik's ascension, which disturbs Lord Edik greatly. Lord Edik has made a great show of wooing the Princess's blessing, claiming that his concern for Denischkar honor has forced him to these hard choices, and that his authority will not be complete until his own heged closes ranks behind him. Even so, Lord Kiril himself has made public witness against your folly in attacking the Hamraschi. He begs you understand that it scalds his tongue, but it is the only way he can uphold your interests. He negotiated the surrender of your legion after the battle and was able to get favorable terms, claiming that most were unwilling conscripts. But he is also in contact with several houses who clearly detest Lord Edik and the unseemly haste with which he has proceeded.”
Aleksander leaned forward. “So they will support me? Which houses?”
Sovari bent his head even farther. “Ah, my lord ...”
“Come, tell me. If it is only three or four, so be it, so long as they are of the Twenty. Every powerful heged has its own alliances that can be brought to bear. Which ones will join me?”
“None of them, my lord. Lord Kiril saysâ”
“None! How in the name of the holy gods is it possible that no heged will support their rightful Emperor? What of the cursed Rhyzka, the most loyal of all?”
Sovari flinched, as if the Prince's words were tipped with steel. “Prince Edik has given the Rhyzka charge of your personal holdings, my lord, to prevent your using them as a base for rebellion.”
“Get out. All of you. Get out!” Aleksander was shaking with rage. I believed that if Sovari or I had said another word right then, we would have found a dagger between our eyes. So we left him, and I warned Sarya that the Prince was not to be disturbed until I gave her leave.
“Perhaps he also needs the siffaru,” she said, peering through the glaring sunlight at the figure huddled in the stifling shade.
“It will take more than visions to put his life back in balance,” I said. “And I don't know where we'll find what's needed.”
“Gaspar seeks answers for the warrior of light, but just when he feels this urgent purpose, his sight is clouded.” Sarya's overwhelming sadness distracted me from Aleksander's distress. “Gaspar's time grows short. I can't think whether it is a mercy or a burden that he knows it.”
“Gaspar's sight ...” I touched Sarya's rounded shoulder as she turned away. “Tell me of a blind man's sight, Sarya.”
Bits of moisture beaded her red-rimmed eyes. “Gaspar was fifteen when his day came to look into the smoke. He had shown the signs since he was a child, of course, and had been brought to Drafa to await his time. Dyomed had only fifty summers, so Gaspar thought he would have a long waiting. But Dyomed was bitten by a cycnidâa poisonous scorpionâand died within a day. Since that day, Gaspar has been the Avocar of Drafa. For sixty summers he has held answers, but so very few have come to ask. And now it grows late.”
Avocar.
Oracle.
CHAPTER 10
Ezzarians were not the only sorcerers in the world. Though we believed that we alone understood enough of melydda and possessed enough of it to fight the demon war, we knew that every race and tribe had its seers, or prophets, or those who wove love charms or healing spells or wards against evil, and that, on rare occasions, those people wove true.
On a blistering morning a few days after Sovari's return, I asked Aleksander if he had ever heard of the Avocar of Drafa. I was helping the Prince shift his position, propping him up with mounds of packed sand and rolled blankets. His leg still pained him, though not so much as Sovari's report. The Prince had spoken scarcely ten words in the preceding days, save to the captain, whom he quizzed unendingly on the fates or the public and private positions of every lord in the Twenty hegeds. Sovari was to leave for Zhagad that very nightfall to discover the answers he had not been able to supply.
“An oracle? I don't remember hearing of such. Could have saved me a lot of trouble, couldn't it? Told me not to bother with a number of things.” I grieved to hear Aleksander's bitterness.
“Surely there was some mention of Drafa. You've been taught by people who revered Derzhi traditionsâyour uncle ...”
“Dmitri would have killed anyone who tried to predict his future. He'd have said they were plotting against him, and the only way to be sure they failed was to be rid of them. One of many lessons I should have learned from him.”
“Oracles don't predict the future,” I said. “They make no claim to see true events or to interpret or influence what you should do about them. They only report the insights that come from their visions. You must make your own choices as to what they mean. Sarya says that Gaspar is called the Avocar of Drafa.”
“Tell the old man to preach me none of his nonsense. Our future is written nowhere but in our deeds.” Aleksander threw his arm across his eyes to shut out the lightâa gesture I had learned meant dismissal.
“Perhaps,” I said and left him to his sleep ... or more likely to brood.
I could not shake my unease. My life had been intertwined with prophecy. Every time I denied it and charged off in a different direction, I ended up right in the middle of it again. Prophecy had caused my ancestors to close the way to Kirâ-Navarrin, and I had judged them wrong to have done it. They had not understood the consequences of their deeds: the existence of the rai-kirah and the torment of the demons' exile that had led to our unending war. That same prophecy, recorded in an ancient mosaic, had depicted a winged man walking toward the fortress of Tyrrad Nor with a key in his hand, and had warned of an overwhelming catastrophe that was one possible result of his deeds. I had done what I believed right, come to an interpretation that justified my actions to reopen the gateway, but I could not escape doubts, not when my dreams told me that the face of monstrous catastrophe was my own. Thus, it was more difficult to thrust aside Gaspar's words, now that I heard there was a tradition of mystical truth in Drafa.
I took my unease with me as I walked up the rise to our watch point and sent Sovari off to get some sleep before his night's journey. Sarya was sitting with the sleeping Prince, for Malver had not yet returned from his mission in Zhagad. The day was murderously hot. I sat under a lonely nagera tree, sipping occasionally from a waterskin, watching the lizards scuttle from one bit of shade to the next. To persuade myself to leave the shade and circle the rise every hour, in order to scan every direction for signs of pursuit, was a monumental effort. Kiril had sent warning that Edik would not sit comfortably on his stolen throne until he had proof that Aleksander was food for vultures, but it was hard to imagine the Derzhi would seek the Prince in Drafa out of all the vastness of Azhakstan.
The air throbbed with the heat. I felt myself nodding off. Only a short time had passed since my last round, but I pulled up the scarf of the flowing white haffai Sovari had brought me and stumbled to my feet. I picked a few juicy red pomegranate seeds from a fruit I had just cut open, popping the sweet little nodules in my mouth as I walked the dusty path again. The midday light was flat, the sky a hard silvery blue. The silence was unbroken by any bird or insect or whisper of wind. Yet in the north where Zhagad lay, I glimpsed a telltale puff of dust. I stopped and squinted. The dust was moving ... southward toward Drafa.
“Riders!” I yelled, running down the path toward our shelter.
As I had learned from hard experience, even powerful sorcery could not counter sheer numbers. No matter what enchantments I worked, Sovari and I could not kill fifty Derzhi by ourselves, and leaving any one of them alive to report Aleksander's position would be failure. I had no time to shift. Nor could we run, not until Aleksander was well enough to ride, which meant we had to let the riders search Drafa. The women had told us they had a place to hide us if the time came, but had refused to reveal it unless it was needed. Faced with no reasonable alternatives, I prayed that it was secure. The Derzhi would arrive in moments, not hours. “Qeb,” I shouted. “We need the hiding place.”
Standing in the dusty path, the boy stared north into the desert. “Sarya will show you,” he said quietly, folding his arms across his thin brown chest. “I'll go to Gaspar. We'll take care of this.”
“Tell Gaspar these are Derzhi warriors,” I said. “They're not coming to seek balance. They're hunting my friend who's injured. He's the heirâ”
Qeb waved off my concerns. “We know who he is. You needn't worry. Take him to safety.” I wanted to shake the boy from his strange detachment. Torn between the desire to get Aleksander away and the certainty that this quiet boy and the old man were going to do something foolish, I stood stupidly in the dirt, doing nothing. But then Sarya beckoned from beside a crumbled wall, and I had to move. “They'll show no mercy, Qeb,” I called after the boy. “They want him badly.”
As he walked slowly toward Gaspar's house, he nodded calmly. “We understand.”
Sovari had set our crude litter beside a snoring Aleksander and was shaking the Prince's shoulder. “My lord,” he said. “My lord, we must move you.” Aleksander mumbled drowsily, but did not wake.
“We can't wait for permission,” I said. I grabbed the Prince's middle and rolled him toward me, while Sovari slipped the litter underneath his back.
Aleksander grunted as we laid him down, and then, as I carefully lifted his leg and placed it on the litter, his color fled and his eyes flew open. “Demonfire, what do you think you're doing?”
“Riders, my lord. We're not sure who they are, but there's a goodly number of them. We've got to hide you.”
“So I'm to run away again.”
“We've no time to argue,” I said, tossing Aleksander's sword, dagger, and blankets on top of him. I nodded to Sovari, and we hefted the litter.
Manot had joined us, gathering up her medicines, the waterskins, and blankets scattered about our little shelter. She kicked sand and brush about, and soon the corner by the nagera grove looked like any other part of the decrepit ruin. Meanwhile Sarya had pulled aside a tangle of weeds and mud bricks, exposing a low doorway in the side of a mountain of rubble where a number of houses and walls had collapsed, one upon the other.
Sovari and I had to stoop as we stepped through into a dark passage. The air smelled smoky and sweet, and the walls and ceiling seemed a great deal more stable than the overlay of crumbled brick would suggest. What I could see of the path led steeply downward, disappearing into pitch-black after the glare of noonday. I whispered a light to augment Sarya's sputtering torch. It wouldn't improve our fortunes to stumble and drop Aleksander.
What we found at the end of the passage was astonishingâa cool, dry room, its walls of solid rockâa cave room, long buried by desert and city. As we set down the Prince's litter and turned to marvel, time itself seemed to roll backward. This place was not a part of Drafa, but far older. On every surface of the room were paintings, depicting neither the sophisticated abstractions of faces and figures that graced Derzhi sand paintings, nor the detailed representations of life and myth I had seen in other cultures of the Empire. These were simpler works, created by hands that believed in the power of what they drew. Kayeets, sand-deer, herds of dune-runners and gazellesâthe creatures of the desertâall of them moving, running, leaping, painted in deep reds and ochres and browns and blacksâthe colors of the desert. And everywhere were horses, the graceful horses that were the very soul of the Derzhi. The room was alive with their power.
“Holy Athos ...” The Prince gaped at the sweeping majesty, and I wondered at it, too, but only for a moment, as the horses reminded me of the hooves racing toward us across the dunes.
Manot had followed us down the path, but there was no sign of Fessa, Gaspar, or Qeb. I ran back up the passageway to fetch them, but Sarya stood in the bright rectangle of the outer doorway and caught my arm before I could go out. “Stay here. Qeb will close the way when he comes.” The sunlight illuminated her withered face. She was weeping.
“What are they going to do, Sarya?”
“Gaspar believes that not all of us can hide. The hunters will know someone lives here in Drafa. Best they find someone.”
The old man was right, of course. Much as I wanted to drag them to whatever safety this hidden room could provide, the absence of residents in a place that showed signs of recent habitation would goad the pursuers to tear the place apart. “He knows what these men will do?”
Sarya nodded. “For half his life he's known. Only the day was the mystery.”
We had to respect Gaspar and Fessa's choice. The gift was theirs to give, and to refuse their generosity would have been cruel, for it would not have saved any of us.
The old couple was sitting in the nagera grove. Qeb was kneeling beside them, his head bowed as a smiling Fessa stroked his shining hair. Gaspar laid his hands on the boy's wiry shoulders and kissed him, and then motioned for him to hurry. Clouds of dust rose beyond the tamarisks.
Qeb walked away from the old couple slowly, stopping several times to gaze out toward the desert and up at the sky. At one point he crouched down, scooped up a handful of sand, and watched it trickle through his fingers. I was about to split my skin with his dawdling.
Gaspar called out to the boy, “Go, child! You won't forget!”
Qeb stood up again and waved to Fessa, and then ran lightly toward our hiding place. Before moving aside to let the boy through the door, I raised a small whirlwind to mask our footsteps. In the nagera grove, Gaspar laughed and raised a cup in my direction. Perhaps the blind man felt the wind and knew it was not of the desert. I helped Qeb pull bricks and scrub into place, we retreated down the dim passage, and there we sat. Waiting.