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Circle Of The Moon Part 25

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"No, sir?" The commander's white eyebrows flared up at the ends, like inquiring wings.

Oryn looked uneasily at the length of the shadows that had now completely crossed the wadi, at the fading gold of the sky. "No. Whatever is going on here, I'd rather risk losing track of it through not setting a guard than lose four more men as we did at Three Wells. Soth should be here by morning, and, please the G.o.ds, Shaldis. And one or the other of them will, I hope, be able to find some answers about whatever is going on here. And elsewhere."

As he walked back toward the horses, Oryn felt his eyes drawn, as if in spite of himself, to the dark of the tent doorway. Beyond the body of Urah's wife, nearly hidden in the shadows, the gla.s.s vessel gleamed like a watching eye.

"I thought there wasn't curses anymore, sir," he heard Zhenus argue to Bax. "That's what they say is going on with the rains, isn't it? That magic don't work no more, not for good nor for ill. So that means nothing that was cursed is still cursed."

"That's what it means," replied the commander imperturbably. "But that's only the curses that work by magic. Not going along with what the king says is one of those curses that doesn't work by magic. You step out of line, and magic or no magic, you're for it. Understand?"



"Yes sir. I understand."

By the horses Elpiduyek was muttering as he readjusted the ingenious gyroscopic arrangement that changed the angle of the royal parasol's canopy, cursing the sand that fouled the mechanism. Two of Urah's nephews brought the horses and camels from the lines behind the tents, the horses stumbling and wild with thirst. Oryn stopped and turned back to look at the dark tents again, and the sheikh paused beside him, his face filled with unbearable grief.

"How can it be," the older man asked quietly, "that the curse would pa.s.s by my horses and my camels and yet take my beautiful Nisheddeh, the honey of my days, the stars of my nights? Is this what the curse is: that I who sinned should not die but should live on in sorrow?"

"I do not think any man, not even the great sages of old, has ever found an answer to that," replied Oryn, thinking of the still, wasted body on the linen pillows, the voices of his Raven girls raised in spells that did not seem to touch the shadow that lay on Summerchild's face. "If I ever learn the answer I shall tell you."

And the sheikh glanced sidelong at him and managed a little smile under his grizzled mustache. "Thank you, Lord King. And I shall do the same for you, should I learn the answer first."

"I appreciate it." Oryn turned toward the horses again and paused once more, looking down at the black, writhed form of the naked mummy in the dust. "Is that common?" he asked. "I'm a scholar, and I've never encountered mention of it: of Zali mummies being deformed in that fashion. It's only recently that we've seen any that survived. But, if you will forgive my frank speech, lord sheikh, you're a tomb robber and have more experience in this matter than I. Is that something the Zali did to their dead that made them convolute that way?"

"Mummies?" Urah's eyes filled with shock and with pain as he looked down at the blackened, leathery thing at their feet. "Lord King, that is not a mummy! Look at the face-can you not see the tattoos still upon the forehead and the chin? I know those tattoos, my lord, and by them I know this man: he is my brother, Warha. It is the curse that has left him so."

FORTY.

Someone was seeking her.

Shaldis put the thought aside.

Darkness lay upon the desert. The moon had set; the evening wind was long stilled. Around here even the plants were failing, the eerie sentinels of cactus and the clumped sleeping sagebrushes growing farther and farther apart. Very soon, Shaldis knew, they would end altogether. Underfoot the floor of the world was colorless stone and sand.

The air smelled of heat and sand, and nothing more.

And far, far off, like the ghost of smoke, the faintest trace of indigo.

Look in a mirror!

But she knew now that if she took her attention from that far-off scent, she would never find it again. Not in this world that seemed to grow wider and wider, this silence that deepened with every forward step she took.

Behind her she had the dim consciousness of Jethan riding, leading the camels. Many yards behind, but what did it matter? In this world there was no longer any concealing brush, and even the cracks and wadis that came down out of the Dead Hills had shallowed to nothing.

Anything that would come at them could be seen for miles.

Anything that came near her now would swamp that elusive scent that was more within her mind than any part of the real world around her. Like a single silk thread flying loose in a windstorm she traced it. They have to be headed somewhere, and it has to be somewhere they can get afoot with only the water they can carry.

I will not be outwalked.

She stumbled, numb with exhaustion, her body burning with a fever of sleeplessness, weariness, dehydration. After two days and a night, the only thing that existed was the faint scent of indigo and it was weakening, calling her soul from her flesh in order to follow, leaving the flesh to catch up as it could.

You will not escape me.

Shaldis!

I'm sorry, she answered whichever sister it was who cried to her mind. I can't. This may be our only chance.

A footfall in the corridor. Foxfire dumped the water from the scrying bowl back into the ewer, thrust the bowl under the mattress, slid like a cat into the high-legged bed, and whipped the sheet over herself and Opal. Both girls dropped their heads onto the pillow and shut their eyes as the latch of the door slid back: Grandmother.

The whisper of hinges.

No light.

Of course. Grandmother can see in the dark as well as I can.

With moonset the chamber was dark as the inside of an oven. Maybe the reason Shaldis hadn't responded to her call was because she couldn't shine light on the water in the bowl-it was something she intended to ask the older girl as soon as she was safe in the king's palace. Now she could only deepen her breathing and think dreamy thoughts about Belzinan, the gazelle-thin dancer whose performances were all the rage in the Yellow City: conjure up thoughts about what it would be like to be pa.s.sionately clasped in his arms. Of course, all the gossip said that her father would be far likelier to attract Belzinan's notice than she would, even could she ever find it in herself to be interested in any man again. But never mind. The dream was pleasant enough.

She hoped Opal was doing the same. Her grandmother was capable of sensing other people's dreams, as she herself had sensed those of the guards at Nebekht's Temple. Maybe her grandmother could even read the dreams of another Raven sister.

After a long time she heard the door close again.

Foxfire didn't know if Red Silk suspected, but she knew she wouldn't dare try to reach Raeshaldis again tonight.

Maybe not until she was out of the house completely, on her way back to the city. How close would she have to be to the city's walls before she called out for riders to meet her? How far from her grandmother to prevent Red Silk from catching her before she was met?

And how would she be able to tell that?

She was still working out the mathematics of time and distance of a single hard-riding old lady against that of a troop of the king's guards searching the broken hill territory between the Valley of the Hawk and the Yellow City when she fell asleep. At least, she reflected, she actually dreamed of Belzinian dancing, rather than of a young teyn lying bound and gagged in slimy green water, staring with frantic eyes as the crocodile swam nearer and nearer. . . .

A guard coughed. The one at the watch fire over by the closest of the teyn pens, Oryn thought, identifying the direction of the sound. That d.a.m.ned kitchen cat who'd been courting one or another of the camp toms all night started up yowling again. All the half-wild toms who prowled the desert around the kitchen tents took up the serenade, and Oryn briefly considered turning out the entire guard to have the female captured and taken twenty miles out into the desert and dropped. It would take her the rest of the night to return to the camp and resume her love life, and by that time he'd be eating breakfast.

Chained in the quartermaster's tent, the mad digger continued to sing in that eerie up-and-down wailing, the same unknown words repeated over and over in an unknown tongue.

The king turned over on his gilded camp bed-carefully, since the last thing he wanted was Geb scurrying in yet again with inquiries of had he called and did he want a slave to fan him or someone to read to him or play the flute or engage him in a game of fox and geese that he'd be sure to win. No, and no, and NO.

What I want is for Soth to arrive.

What I want is for Raeshaldis to come with news that she's caught that wretched nomad Crafty her groom told me about and her wretched indigo-soaked teyn and has solved this entire tangled puzzle. Or even if she hasn't solved it, I want her here to tell me if she's heard from the ladies around Summerchild.

And while I'm wanting things, I want Summerchild here beside me in this deathly not quite silence, alive and healthy and well.

Despairingly, Oryn shut his eyes and saw her face again as last he had seen it, wasted, waxen, like a ghost on the threshold of death.

People always tried to bargain with Death, but Death was notoriously uninterested. I shall be in Death's house two days from tomorrow, he thought. What if while I'm there, when the priest seals me into that stone grave with the scorpion, I see Her, and She offers to bargain after all. What would I do?

Give the land to Mohrvine and to civil war in trade for Summerchild's life?

In front of the tent, the guard stood up.

Oryn heard it very clearly: the creak of belt and boot leather, the sweet clink of sword hanger and buckle.

But no footstep had approached.

He opened his eyes, curious at the anomaly.

The outer flap of his tent was open in the vain hope of catching a breeze. Through the gauze inner curtain he saw the man clearly by the glow of the camp torches. It was Sergeant Zhenus. There was definitely no one and nothing in the darkness beyond.

Yet Zhenus looked around him, then back into the blackness of the tent. And then, to Oryn's indignant surprise, he simply walked away.

Now, see here! The king sat up, again cautiously, groped for the shirt he'd left across the foot of the bed. Enough is enough!

I should have had you whipped back in the nomad camp when you argued with me, my lad. My father always warned me: you let them argue with you over shining bottles with curses on them one day, and by midnight that night they'll be running off and deserting you.

Pulling a dark cloak around him to cover the pale shirt, the king stepped to the tent door, soft footed and cautious as a cat. Looking out, he saw Sergeant Zhenus very definitely walking toward the edge of the camp.

And to the marrow of his bones he knew, the man was heading back to the nomad camp, where the iridescent bottle gleamed darkly in the blackness of the nomad tent. He knew because the image of it had returned to his own mind again and again through the sleepless hours.

Oryn pulled on boots, gathered up the dagger Bax insisted he carry with him at all times-one of these days I really MUST take the time to learn how to use it!-and followed his guard from the tent. Zhenus had disappeared into the darkness beyond the dim ambience of the fires and torches that dotted the camp, but Oryn had little trouble getting him in sight again. By the stars it was halfway between midnight and morning. Dear G.o.dS, where is Soth all this time? They shed a wan and tricky radiance in which it was nearly impossible to make out anything clearly. But Zhenus was making no effort at concealment. Nor, apparently, did he have any idea he was being followed as he headed east over the broken and uneven ground. He neither quickened his pace nor slowed it, nor made any attempt to seek the occasional cover of rocks or cactus clumps.

Merely followed the tracks of the horses, where they'd ridden to the nomad camp that afternoon.

Even Oryn, completely unversed in the lore of tracking, had no trouble following him. Yet to cross three miles of desert mounted, in full daylight, and surrounded by one's guards is a very different matter from walking those same three miles alone in the darkness. Jethan's account of teyn lying in wait all around the wizard Ahure's house returned to him, and his own fearful vision of those hairy hordes rising up out of the sagebrush near Three Wells village. Teyn attacking, moving in formation, directed by a single command.

The fact that that single command seemed to be far to the south, being trailed by the only academically trained Crafty woman in the known world, was a certain amount of comfort, but what if there was more than one nomad Raven sister? Shaldis had said, hadn't she, that the marks she'd found about the city had seemed inconsistent, as far as she could judge a magic that felt totally alien to her previous experience. Not to speak of the woman-another nomad, surely?-who called to her in her dreams.

Objects of accursed gla.s.s taken from Zali tombs, objects that seemed to have the effect of driving men mad.

A village and then a camp, both wiped out, their inhabitants either slaughtering one another or withering up-Dear G.o.ds!-into the horrible things he'd seen that afternoon. Maybe, in fact probably, none of the so-called mummies in Three Wells had come out of a tomb at all. All of them could easily have been inhabitants of the village.

But what had happened to them and to the an-Dhoki nomads of Sheikh Urah's family?

And why would nomad Crafties, with or without the services of ensorcelled teyn, want to steal objects so accursed?

Unless, of course, the nomads knew a way of using some magic that might still linger in those vessels of gla.s.s? Could that be true, with the spells of the ancient wizards turning to dust left and right? He'd heard it said that the nomads were descendants of the swarthy-skinned hunters who'd inhabited the forests west of the Great Lake and the Lake of the Sun during the time the Zali kings had reigned: had they preserved some tradition from those days that even the Sun Mages had forgotten? A tradition that let them handle such accursed objects without being sunk into a coma or driven mad?

Ahure evidently knew something, was seeking the same thing, either in concert with the still-hypothetical nomads or, likelier, in compet.i.tion.

Whichever the case, wondered Oryn, how powerful was the magic he or she or they could extract, if it existed at all?

How much trouble are we in?

And will my successor-Barun or Mohrvine or whoever decides to risk civil war by breaking with the rituals of sanctification-be able to harness that magic? Or is this going to be the final blow that will shatter the united strength of the realm and condemn everyone to death from starvation and thirst?

He stubbed his toe on a boulder, the scrunch of his feet in the sand like a drumroll to his own ears. Zhenus did not turn. Oryn debated going back, calling his guards, seeing if by some chance Soth or Raeshaldis had come into the camp. But a glance back over his shoulder at the cl.u.s.tered pinpoints of amber in the unearthly blueness chased the thought from his mind. He knew he didn't dare. If Zhenus took the bottle-and in his heart Oryn knew it was the bottle-and disappeared, where would they be then? Particularly if Shaldis's grandfather also vanished?

Three days. In three days this will all be beyond my ability to help or hurt, and one of those days spent just journeying back to the city- STOP IT! You're not dead yet.

At least the all-pervasive quality of starlight illuminated the nomad camp evenly, if faintly. The tents were visible, not hidden in pockets of shadow. Oryn slithered down the side of the wadi a hundred feet from where Zhenus descended, and only the sergeant's almost somnambulistic preoccupation with his own quest kept him from seeing that he was pursued. When Zhenus stopped, Oryn halted, too. The guard unhooked something from his belt, and a moment later a spot of yellow flared into the world of cobalt and black.

He had brought a lamp with him.

Therefore, he was planning to come here from before the time he went on duty.

Was the nomad Raven sister-or a nomad Raven sister-waiting for him in the darkness of the tent?

Oryn shifted the dagger in his hand and edged forward as the guard ducked into the low black entrance of the tent.

No sound. No outcry. Through the coa.r.s.e brown goat hair he could see the lamp moving and Zhenus's bulky shadow.

If I'm going to perform feats of physical derring-do like the heroes in all the best ballads, I really must acquire a sword and take some lessons in its use from Bax.

Oryn lifted the tent flap and looked in.

No crowd of teyn armed with sharpened bones.

No nomad Raven sister.

Only Zhenus, on his knees now and holding the iridescent bottle in both hands. He pressed it to his face, eyes closed, expression rapt. Rolled it against his cheek, his throat, his breast. His head dropped back; he began to sway, and from his throat came thin wailing, soft but growing stronger, exactly the same tune-if it was a tune-that the madman in the supply tent had been singing all day and all night.

Through half-clenched teeth, the same unknown words.

Oryn stepped into the tent, said, "Zhenus!"

The sergeant turned, and his lip lifted clear of his teeth in a snarl like a beast's.

"Put it down."

Saliva glistened as it tracked down Zhenus's chin. The singing did not stop, but the eyes that watched Oryn were watchful, ready, and quite mad.

"Can you hear me? Put it down. I order you-"

Zhenus lunged. Oryn thought the sergeant would simply try to thrust past him and flee into the darkness with his treasure, but he didn't. Clutching the bottle in one hand he drew his sword and flung himself on the king as if he were flinging himself into the line of battle, voice raised in a howling cry. Oryn ducked, tripped on the blankets on the floor, and went down. Zhenus stooped to kill him on the ground, and Oryn caught the leg of the table, slammed it into his attacker's shins. Zhenus fell, letting go of his sword as he clutched the bottle to keep it from breaking.

Oryn s.n.a.t.c.hed up the weapon, and, when Zhenus sprang up and threw himself at him again, screaming, swung the little table at the man's head with all the force of his arm. Zhenus fell, dazed, and Oryn smote him again, and this time the sergeant lay still.

He's truly unconscious, thought Oryn, kneeling beside him. He's let go of the bottle.

He used the sword to nudge the smooth, rounded vessel clear of the sergeant's hand and into the light of the lamp, which for a wonder hadn't gone out.

Why Oryn did this he wasn't afterward sure.

Just to see it more clearly.

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Circle Of The Moon Part 25 summary

You're reading Circle Of The Moon. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Barbara Hambly. Already has 432 views.

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