White Mare's Daughter (45 page)

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Authors: Judith Tarr

Tags: #prehistorical, #Old Europe, #feminist fiction, #horses

BOOK: White Mare's Daughter
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He did what he could. He rubbed life into motionless limbs.
He lifted that dead weight and banked it in folded hides so that it could
receive guests. He prayed with a fierce intensity, storming the gods in their
ancient fastnesses, demanding that they listen. “We need him. We can’t lose
him. Give him back to us!”

They would not answer. Gods never would, in Agni’s
experience. Unless they were Horse Goddess; and she was no kin of theirs, or
friend, either.

oOo

Of a bitterly cold night, when by some trick of fate there
was none but Agni to keep vigil over his father—Agni and Taditi, who had fallen
asleep where she sat—a shadow slipped through the shadows of the tent and
wafted sweetness over him. He gasped and nearly cried out, but a white hand
silenced him. Rudira wrapped arms about him and clung, shivering with cold or
perhaps with fear.

Without his willing it, his arms closed the embrace. She
stroked herself against him. She was wrapped in leather and furs, he in coat
and warm mantle, for even here the air was chill; and yet he felt the heat of
her flesh as if they had both been naked.

“I missed you,” she breathed in his ear. “Oh, gods, I missed
you.”

With a mighty effort he gathered himself together, got a
grip on her arms, and thrust her away. “No,” he said, fierce and low. “We can’t
do this. Not here!”

“Why not here?” she demanded, and none too softly, either.
“Who’s to see? Who’ll care?”

“Everyone!” Agni stepped back out of her reach, though she
could easily have leaped into his arms. “Now go, before someone catches you.
You can’t be found here.”

“Nobody’s coming,” she said. “
He
is busy with Indra. Fat cow. He loves her because she worships
the ground he spits on.”

“Father can hear you,” Agni said.

“He cannot,” said Rudira without a glance at the still form
under its coverlet. “Soon he will not. They’ve decided it, you know. Since he
won’t go as he was supposed to, they’ll see that he does it regardless.”

Agni’s back went stiff. “How? What will they do?”

She shrugged. “I don’t know. Something in his potions. A
knife under the ribs. Maybe even a sacrifice, if enough of the priests agree to
it. They’re all saying that it’s past time; that he has to go, or the tribe
will suffer.”

“That’s king-killing,” Agni said.

“That’s the law, they say.”

“How do you know this? Who has been talking?”

“My husband,” she said, calm beside his intensity, as if it
did not matter to her. And yet it must, if it had driven her to come here.
“Some of his friends. A priest or two. A few of the elders. They meet in our
tent, and they talk all day and into the night. They think it’s time to make an
end.”

“The gods make an end,” Agni said. “Men may only do so on
the festivals that the gods have ordained. Not in their own time, of their own
choosing. That is murder.”

“They say it’s not,” said Rudira in her voice that was like
a child’s, breathy and light. “They say the gods are agreeing to it. And they
say . . .” She paused as if the words were too much to utter,
but in the end she spoke them. “They say that if you try to stop them, they’ll
do whatever they have to, to get you out of the way.”

Agni was not surprised. Nor was he afraid. He had expected
such a thing from the moment when he saw the king fallen. “If they kill me,” he
said, “the gods themselves will judge.”

“I’ll die if you die,” she said. “You mustn’t. Promise me
you won’t.”

Agni dared not laugh, or he would offend her. “I’ll do my
best,” he said.

She seemed to be satisfied. But she would not leave and have
done. Short of carrying her out bodily and dropping her in the snow, he could
not think what to do.

She slipped his guard, back into his arms again, searing him
with kisses. Not for the first time—and that was not an easy thing to admit—he
caught himself wishing that she had been a gentler creature. That she had not
been such a white fire of a woman; so dangerous, and so irresistible.

Tonight, in this place, he could resist her. Though his
father slept, or lay in a black dream that passed for sleep; though Taditi
slept the sleep of the dead—nevertheless their presence gave Agni the strength
to stand against her. He put her aside as gently as he could, but with
immovable firmness.

“Not here,” he said, “and not now. Go. I’ll come to you when
I may. I promise.”

Her face went hard and still. “You won’t come,” she said.
“You’re tired of me.”

“I am not,” said Agni, “and I won’t quarrel here. Go,
quickly, while it’s still safe.”

“If I go,” she said, “I won’t come back.”

“You shouldn’t,” he said.

Her eyes were terrible, her rage as great perhaps as the
king’s; as if Agni had betrayed her as the king’s body had betrayed him.

And yet he hardened his heart. For her sake he did it, even
more than for his own. She could not be caught here, least of all in Agni’s
arms.

He saw how she willed him to relent. But he would not. She
whirled in a passion of temper and ran, back the way she had come.

The air in her wake held a scent of thunder. Agni found that
he had forgotten to breathe. He sucked in air till it dizzied him. His body was
hot, but his rod was shrunken and cold, as if she had laid a curse on it.

Fear stabbed, that she truly had done such a thing. He
thrust it away. She was in a temper, that was all, because he had never denied
her before, never refused to give her what she wanted. She would wake to sense
soon enough; would see that he had done it for her sake, and out of respect for
the king’s presence.

oOo

In the morning Patir came into the tent where Agni sat,
where the king lay unchanging. He came every day, if only for a few moments, to
sit with Agni and to share with him some of the gossip of the camp. He and
Rahim and certain others of Agni’s old friends were his eyes and ears in the
tribe, and his voice too, in that they said the things he would have said if he
could have left his father’s side.

This morning Patir’s expression, usually so cheerful, was
somber. Nor did he chatter on as he most often did. He was silent, standing by
the king’s bed, looking down at him.

“Tell me,” Agni said.

Patir hunched his shoulders as if they pained him, then
relaxed them slowly. “They say he’s dead,” he said, “and rotting, but the cold
preserves him. The cold, and his kin who won’t admit that he’s gone.”

“My father is alive,” Agni said. “Look at his eyes. He hears
us. Father, listen to him! He’s talking madness.”

The king’s eyes did not shift. They had dulled as the days
passed, the rage diminished, the fierce edge blunted. There was life in them
still, but it flickered low.

“It’s being said,” said Patir, “that it’s time to end it.
That there should be a second sacrifice to the Black Bull; that he should go in
what dignity is left him, and not wither till there’s no telling if he’s alive
or dead.”

“Who says such a thing?” Agni demanded.
“Who?”

“I think,” said Patir, “that you should see and hear for
yourself.”

“You know I can’t leave here,” said Agni.

“I’ll watch over him,” Patir said.

Agni eyed him narrowly. This was the friend of his
childhood, his yearmate, his kinsman. And he was mistrusting even this one;
wondering if this was the plot, if he was to be betrayed and his father
murdered for a few moments’ folly.

Patir met his stare steadily, with clear-eyed innocence.
Agni drew a breath, sharp enough to hurt. “Well enough then,” he said. “Mind
you don’t move till I come back.”

“Not a muscle,” said Patir.

oOo

Agni did not like to admit it, but when he left that space
in which he had lived, eaten, slept for more days than he liked to count, he
was glad. When he saw the sky again, he wanted to whirl in a wild dance.

But he did not. He walked calmly through a camp that was
much as it always was.

It was quieter, perhaps. Somber. Troubled by the illness of
its king. But children still played, boys still galloped their ponies hither
and yon, and men gathered in circles to play at knucklebones or to share a skin
of kumiss, and to talk.

There was always talk. Talk was the sinew that knit the
tribe. Chatter of this, chatter of that. Nothing to the purpose, this deep in
the winter.

While the king was indisposed, the elders did what must be
done, which was not much in this season. A dispute or two, perhaps; an exchange
of gifts between families whose children would wed in the spring gathering.

It was all very peaceful. And yet, as Agni walked through
the camp, his hackles began to rise. There were no daggers drawn, no voices
raised. If there were factions, they were the same as always: the boys, the
young men, the priests, the elders, Yama’s pack of malcontents and Agni’s
friends and kin.

Those last managed one way and another to join him as he
walked, till there was a fair gathering of them.

That had not been Agni’s intention. He could hardly hear
secrets if he went escorted by a small army of men. Indeed he did hear words
spoken, but of the prince and his pride, and the king’s sickness, and other,
lesser things.

Nevertheless from what he heard he gathered enough to
understand why Patir had sent him out. This waiting time could not endure.
Something must break, and soon.

Only the king could break it, by letting go or by rising
from his sickness. Certain gatherings of people fell silent when Agni passed—a
suspicious silence. He suspected that they had been speaking of this. That they
contended among themselves that if the king would not die of his own accord, he
should be sent to the gods by the will of the tribe.

Even the elders went suddenly still in Agni’s presence. They
sat in their circle, wrapped in their bearskins, and glowered at nothing in
particular. Such was power, Agni thought: to impose silence on those
incorrigible talkers.

He came as to a haven, to Rahim’s father’s tent. Rahim was
tending the fire in front of it, and a pack of his brothers with him. They
greeted Agni with loud delight.

Rahim peered at him, searching his face; then nodded and
sighed as if in relief. “Ah. It’s you. I thought you’d turned into a woman,
you’ve been shut up so long.”


You
sent Patir,”
Agni said.

Rahim shrugged. “He sent himself. But maybe I allowed as how
that wouldn’t be an ill thing.”

Agni squatted beside his friend. One of the brothers handed
him a leg of wild goose, fresh-roasted and crackling with fat. Agni bit into it
hungrily.

“What have they been feeding you?” Rahim asked him. “You
look fair peaked.”

“I haven’t been hungry,” Agni said between bites of goose.

“You should eat,” said Rahim. “A man fights better if he’s
well fed.”

“I heard,” said Agni, “that it’s the lean and hungry man
who’s more dangerous.”

“Maybe he’s crankier,” said Rahim, “but he’s weaker, too.
Eat. Rakti, fetch him something to drink.”

Agni gnawed the last of the meat off the bone, cracked it
and sucked the marrow. When there was nothing left to glean from it, he tossed
it to a waiting dog and met Rahim’s glance. “Now tell me. Where’s the war?”

“Here,” said Rahim.

Agni raised a brow. The others drew in closer, he noticed;
maybe to listen, maybe to guard the circle. Maybe both.

“Tell me,” he said.

Rahim took his time about it. He waited for his brother to
bring the skin of kumiss and the cup, to fill the cup, to hand it to Agni, who
drank a sip of the fiery stuff and made as if to fling the rest in Rahim’s
face.

Rahim grinned, not at all repentant. But when he spoke, he
was as somber as he could ever be. “Word’s passing round the camp. The elders
are divided on it, but enough of them have agreed, that they’re going to do it
regardless of the rest. They’re going to make another sacrifice in the dark of
the moon. They’ll kill the black bull. And they’ll send the king to the gods on
his back.”

Agni nodded slowly. He was not surprised or greatly shocked.
“So. It’s three days to the dark of the moon. What if I forbid them?”

“You know well,” Rahim said, “they’ll laugh in your face.
You may be the king’s son, but you’re not king yet. There are many who say you
never will be. They’re wanting an older man, and not a raw boy who’s just won
his stallion. Who, they say, has been standing in the way of the king’s
departure for the gods’ country.”

“How am I doing that?”

“Who knows?” said Rahim. “Casting spells, maybe. Making
bargains with the gods below.”

Agni snorted. “I’m no sorcerer,” he said, “and they’re fools
if they think so.”

“They do recall,” Rahim said, “that your mother was one of
the Mare’s people, and that your sister is the Mare’s own servant. They think
you may partake of some of that power—especially since you came back from the
long hunt with a stallion of such quality, with Horse Goddess’ mark on his
forehead.”

“That,” said Agni with a touch of temper, “should be all to
the good. A king should stand above other men, and so should his horse.”

“Surely,” said Rahim, and the others nodded. “But some are
saying that too strong or strange a stallion is maybe an ill thing.”

“Yama,” Agni said. He spat. “Surely; and he couldn’t come
home with anything better than a poor yearling, and that one dead lame in a
year.”

“People want to believe him,” Rahim said. “It’s the small
spirits, the envious and the puny-minded—but there are an amazing number of
them. Some are elders. It’s only age that makes them elders, after all; not any
kind of wisdom.”

“Why, shame!” said Agni. “Age is wisdom.”

“And we’re all fools,” Rahim said.

Agni prodded at the fire, stirring up a tongue of flame. “I
think . . .’ he said. “I think I should ask my father. Whether
he wants to live; or whether he prefers to die.”

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