The Diviner (50 page)

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Authors: Melanie Rawn

BOOK: The Diviner
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The relationship between this rich green land and its people was comparable to the correlation of the Za'ada Izim to the desert.
It remained for him to find that balance in a land new to the Tza'ab. For if his people were to endure in this new place, they must become part of the land itself.
Any recounting of the Diviner's life that attributes to him motives other than these is a lie.
 
—HAZZIN AL-JOHARRA,
Deeds of Il-Ma'anzuri,
813
22
O
ver the next years Qamar discovered several things, not all of them to do with his newfound art. He learned, for example, that a man could woo a woman with exasperation instead of exuberance, and manage it quite successfully, too.
He found out that his wife's visions of the present were spontaneous, but that to see future events required the burning of a complexity of herbs that sometimes worked and sometimes did not but that always left her helpless with exhaustion for a full day afterward. When he had refined enough of his ideas to share them with her—knowing that imprecision would only annoy her and leave him open to criticism—she commented that by this way of thinking, her susceptibility to the smoke of these herbs seemed just one more way the land provided for the people who belonged to it.
He agreed with her and added the observation to the notes he was assembling. For the most important thing of all that he discovered was that he must learn everything—
everything
—about this land before he could truly begin what he saw as the great work of his life. The work that would
mean
his life.
Upon their marriage, Qamar and Solanna were assigned three rooms on the second floor of a building overlooking the west zoqallo. It was a corner apartment, with the reception room and Qamar's study—which he persisted in calling the maqtabba—facing south, a coveted advantage; they were given the chambers only because Zario Shagara, just before he died, asked that his rooms should become theirs as his wedding gift to them. Their bedroom window had a clear view of the western mountains. It became their habit, on clear days, to sit and watch the sunset together. Qamar both loved and dreaded that little ritual. Each nightfall meant that soon he would be in bed with Solanna—but each also meant that another day had passed without his solving more than a tiny fraction of the puzzle.
They had also inherited all of Zario's books. These included volumes that were relics of the exile, made of parchment in thin, light leather covers, bound in the outdated method of sewing together the tops of the pages. These days books were assembled with the stitching on the left. It was a small, eccentric collection, mainly poetry, and included the collected works of Sheyqir Reihan al-Ammarizzad.
“It's easy to tell which poems he wrote before, and which after,” Solanna remarked one night. He had been teaching her to read and write the more ceremonial version of his language, the style used in all poetry. “I expect you have no need to ask‘Before and after what?'”
“None at all.” He did not look up from drawing acorns. A dozen types of oak trees grew in the foothills, and he was discovering that each had subtly different properties.
“Neither do you feel any remorse for what your great-grandfather did to him.”
“None at all,” he said again.
“Using Shagara magic to help him do it.”
He set down his pen. He recognized that note in her voice, the one that meant she would pursue the topic until he answered in a way that either satisfied her or angered her so much that she left the room. “Would you like me to write him a letter of apology? He's dead. What happened is what happened. Nothing I can do, say, think, or feel can possibly make any difference.”
“It might, if you knew what his kinswoman has it in mind to do.”
Frowning, he stoppered his ink bottle—he would get no more work done this afternoon—and said, “What have you heard?”
“Miqelo returned from Joharra yesterday.”
She put the book aside and began pushing hairpins back into the coil at her nape. It was a very hot summer day, one of the few each year when Qamar regretted the south-facing windows that were exposed to fierce sunlight from dawn to twilight. The heat rarely bothered him, but Solanna suffered terribly on days such as these. Not that she would countenance a change of clothing to the practical silks and tunics worn in Tza'ab Rih; that would be conceding to those she considered her enemies. Qamar never quite understood how she could love him, seeing as how he was technically her enemy—but he never said a word about it. His mother would have told him he was learning wisdom, and about time, too.
“What does Miqelo have to say?” he asked.
“That there is a new Sheyqa of Rimmal Madar.”
“New? Kerrima is dead?”
“This winter. Someone called Nizhria sits on the Moonrise Throne now. A cousin of yours in some way, but I'm not sure how.”
“Kerrima's younger sister. And before you say it, I am quite sure the death was not a natural one. They're worse than spiders, those al-Ammarizzad. They not only eat their own young, they devour anything they can find.”
“I thought the name was al-Ma'aliq these days, not al-Ammarizzad?”
“Only part of it.” He rose and went to the cupboard where fruit juice was kept cool by their daily summer ration of hoarded winter ice. “Considering the woman Nizhria's name recalls, I wouldn't be at all surprised if she gets rid of it. And, to be honest, it's been a very long time since any al-Ma'aliq set foot in Rimmal Madar. The people will have forgotten us, I think. If Kerrima, who was a good friend to my grandfather and my Aunt Ra'abi, did not die a natural death, then I suspect it was done by the faction at the palace more loyal to the al-Ammarizzad than to the al-Ma'aliq.”
Solanna had finished repinning her hair, and now shook her head in amazement—an action that threatened to loosen the hairpins again. “How do you keep track of them all?” she asked, accepting the clay cup of juice he gave her. “No, never mind, it makes my head ache even to think about it. And it doesn't matter anyway. Nizhria has decided that our land was so easy for the Tza'ab to conquer, surely her armies will do even better. From what Miqelo heard of the talk in Joharra, they fear she may have it in mind to use us as a base for conquering Tza'ab Rih itself. Or it may be simply that she hates the idea of the Empress owning more land than she does.”
Qamar hid a smile behind his cup. Solanna would never accept the notion that the Empress of Tza'ab Rih was her mother-in-law. “Has Nizhria taken into account that she could be fighting both the locals
and
the Tza'ab here?”
It turned out that she had. Qamar couldn't decide if the new Sheyqa was worthy or unworthy of the woman for whom she was named. Nizhria certainly had the acquisitive instincts, but she was also about as subtle as an avalanche.
She sent emissaries to absolutely everyone who had any stake at all in a prospective war. To Empress Mairid, she wrote that whatever troublesome resistance was still to be encountered in the conquered lands, her armies would help the Tza'ab make short work of it. To the nobles, in power or not, of these same conquered lands, she wrote that only her assistance could free them of their hated Tza'ab masters. To everyone she promised that the price of her support was nothing more than a trading outpost here and there for her merchants.
Nobody believed any of it.
“Not that she expects anyone to believe it,” said Qamar as he poured qawah for Miqelo that evening. “But she'll have everyone eyeing everyone else, wondering who will join with her and who will not.”
“And too suspicious of each other even to bring up the subject of an alliance,” Solanna added, then shook her head in disgust. “Trading outposts!”
“You will excuse me, Qamar, I'm sure,” Miqelo replied with a grimace, “when I say that we learned with the Tza'ab that once an army is here, it stays.”
Qamar shrugged. “Yet it seems there are those in Taqlis and Ibrayanza, and even in Cazdeyya, who are willing to take a chance.”
“Taqlis,” Solanna mused, “is quite a long way from everyone else. They may think the Sheyqa won't bother coming that far.”
“I think the Cazdeyyan nobles have this in mind as well,” Miqelo agreed. “This lamb is excellent, Solanna, I've never tasted it dressed with mint before.”
“An experiment,” Qamar said, smiling. “When you or my other roving friends bring me samples, once I've done with them we use them for cooking—
after
testing them for poison, Miqelo, I promise! This isn't our mountain mint but another kind—Ibrayanzan. It's odd, you know, that in the desert there are at most two or three varieties of any one plant—as if they learned early on what they must do in order to survive and just kept doing it. But here—ayia, my friends bring back for me four types of daisy, or six different grasses, and all from the same hillside! I've cataloged seven different sorts of mint, for instance, and of those acorns you brought me last time, three were entirely new to me. It's—” He broke off suddenly as Solanna clapped her napkin to her mouth, her dark eyes sparkling merrily. “I'm doing it again, aren't I?” he sighed. “Your pardon, Miqelo, I'm afraid I become worse than boring sometimes. Please go on with your news.”
Grinning, the merchant ladled more mint sauce over his plate of lamb. “It's good to see a young man with a real purpose in life, Qamar. My son—eiha, if he ever had a thought, it would die of shock at finding itself in his of all brains!”
Qamar laughed and did not look at his wife. His real purpose in life . . . after twelve years of marriage, after watching him do his research and helping him with it, she still had no idea what his real purpose was. That was how he preferred it.
“So our people—some of them, anyway—want to ally with Rimmal Madar to throw out the Tza'ab,” Miqelo continued. “I think it's possible that Sheyqir Allil would unbend his stiff neck and accept the Sheyqa's help to subdue the outlying regions of Joharra. They do keep him busy, you know.”
“I never much liked him,” said Qamar. “I can imagine what would happen if he even hinted at such a plan to the Empress.”
“It's a pity he won't dare,” Solanna said. “She'd be so outraged she'd throw him out. If that happened, at least the Joharrans wouldn't have to suffer any more.”
“Ayia, but what would happen then?” Qamar grinned at her. “Joharra might get to like their new ruler, and then what would happen to the spirit of rebellion?”
She scowled her opinion of his teasing. “And what if Sheyqa Nizhria simply attacks and succeeds in gaining a foothold? Do we join with her against the Tza'ab, or join with the Tza'ab to throw out this new enemy? And where, finally, stand the Shagara?”
“Aloof, as always,” Miqelo said firmly.
Qamar exchanged a glance with his wife. “More wine?” he asked their guest, and poured from the chilled flagon. He would have liked a taste of it himself, but since that last tavern night in the seaport—so long ago now!—he had not touched a drop. He had promised Solanna.
 
So much to learn. So much to codify. So much to organize into useful, useless, and possibilities to be investigated further.
Berries, for example. Mulberry for peace and protection, raspberry for protection and love, strawberry for love and luck. Blackberry brambles prevented the dead from rising as ghosts, but in combination with rowan and ivy warded off all other sorts of evil.
The plants and trees that grew here gave fascinating promise. So many of them were unknown in Tza'ab Rih. Qamar wished that the Shagara in his homeland had thought to study them before now. If nothing else—and there was a great deal else—there was help here for the pains of the bone-fever that afflicted Haddiyat, help in the form of the humble walnut. Yet the tree had another tantalizing association: it
expanded
things. Wealth, horizons, the mind, the emotions, the perceptions, the soul...and magic. Its use in inks was long established, but Qamar had from the first seen other ways of using the tree. Specifically, the wood. More specifically, to write on the wood. And finally, and most specifically, to
draw
on the wood of the walnut tree that expanded magic.
A few months after their marriage, when they were still telling each other things about their families and childhood homes, the sort of idle reminiscences sparked by a word or a scent, Qamar was describing the palace where he had grown up. Gardens, gravel paths through them, intricate mazes of shrubs or walls that led to cooling fountains—all the serene beauties he had so taken for granted.
“But the most beautiful garden and fountain were inside the palace itself. It was all made of tile—the grass underfoot, the trellises of climbing roses, the sky above them, darker and still darker blue until they reached the domed ceiling, sparkling with millions of stars. In the middle of the room was a fountain . . .”

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