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B Y the end of the morning watch the guns had been run back in and the rumour had circulated round the ship like a fast-spreading pestilence: Pernicus had been murdered by a stowaway spy, and the murderer lurked aboard, unknown. The carrack began to take on some of the aspects of a besieged fortress, with soldiers everywhere asking people their business, the crew armed and the ship's officers barking orders left and right. The patched-up boats were swung out from the yardarms and crews of sailors began hauling the carrack westwards, out of the doldrums; a killing labour in the stock-still heat of the day.
In the midst of the militant uneasiness the last of the storm's damage was rectified and the ship began tolook more like her old self, with new timber about the sterncastle and waist and new cable sent up to the tops. But the sails remained flaccid and empty, and the surface of the sea was as obstinately flat as the surface of a green mirror, whilst the sun glared down out of a cloudless sky.
It was in the foretop that Bardolin and Griella finally found the peace to speak without being overheard.
They sat in the low-walled platform with the bulk of the topmast at their backs and a spider tracery of rigging all about them.
Still red-faced from clambering up the shrouds in this heat, Bardolin released the imp. With a squeak of pleasure it darted around the top, gazing down at the deck far below and peering out at the haze-dim horizon.
"You've heard, I suppose?" Bardolin asked curtly.
"About Pernicus? Yes. Why would anyone have done such a thing? He was a harmless enough little man." Griella was dressed in her habitual breeches and a thin linen shirt that Bardolin suspected was a cast-off of Murad's. Fragments of lace clung to its neck and she had rolled the voluminous sleeves up to her elbows, exposing brown forearms with tiny golden hairs freckling them.
"He was killed by a shifter, Griella," the mage said in a flinthard voice.
The pale eyes widened until he could see the strange yellow-golden circle around the pupils. "Bardolin!
Are you sure?"
"I have seen shifters kill before, remember."
She stared at him. Her mouth opened. Finally she said: "But you don't think-you do! You think it was me!"
"Not you, but the beast that inhabits you."
The eyes flared; the yellow grew in them until they were scarcely human any longer. "We are the same, the beast and I, and I tell you that it was not I who slew Pernicus."
"Are you expecting me to believe there are two shifters on board this ship?"
"There must be, or else you are mistaken. Maybe someone killed him in such a way as to make it look as though it was done by a beast."
"I am not a fool, Griella. I warned you about this many times. Now it has happened."
"I did not do it! Please, Bardolin, you must believe me!"
The glow in the eyes had retreated and there was only the light of the pitiless sun setting the tears in them afire. She was a small girl again, tugging at his knee. The imp looked on, aghast.
"Why should I?" Bardolin said harshly, though he longed to take her in his arms, to say that he did, to make it all right.
"Is there nothing I can do to convince you?"
"What could you do, Griella?"
"I could let you see into my mind, the way you did before when I was about to change into the beast andyou stopped me. You saw into me then, Bardolin. You can do it again."
"I-".
He was not so sure of himself now. He had thought to extract a confession from her, but he had not considered beyond that. He knew he would never have turned her over to Murad-there would have been some bargain made, some deal done. But now he no longer knew what to do.
Because he did believe her.
"Let me see your eyes, Griella. Look at me."
She tilted up her head obediently. The sun was behind him and his shadow fell upon her. He looked deep, deep into the sea-change of the eyes, and the top, the mast, the ship and the vast ocean disappeared.
A heartbeat, huge and regular. But as he listened the rhythm changed. It became erratic, slipping out of time. It took him a moment to realize that he was listening to two hearts beating not quite in tune with each other.
Pictures and images flickering like a shower of varicoloured leaves. He saw himself there, but shied away from that. He saw the ragged brown peaks of the Hebros Mountains that must have been her home. He saw swift, red-tinted images of wanton slaughter flitting past.
Too far back. He had gone too deep with his impatience. He must pull out a little.
The other heartbeat grew louder, drowning out the first. He thought he could feel the heat of the beast and the p.r.i.c.kle of its harsh fur against his skin.
There! A ship upon a limitless ocean, and in the dark hours aboard a vision of white limbs intertwined, linen sheets in crumples of light and dark. An ecstatic, lean face he knew to be Murad's hovering over him in the night.
The beast again, very close this time. He felt its anger, its hunger. The unrelenting rage it felt at being confined.
Except it was not. It was free and lying beside the naked man in the swaying cot, the stout supporting ropes creaking under the weight. It wanted to kill, to rip the night apart with scarlet carnage. But did not.
It lay beside the sleeping, nightmare-ridden n.o.bleman and watched over him in the night.
It wanted to kill, but could not. There was something that prevented it, something the beast could not understand but could not disregard.
Nothing else. A few spangled images. Himself, the imp, the terrible glory of the storm. Nothing more. No memory of murder, not on the ship, not since Abrusio. She had told the truth.
Bardolin lingered a moment, peering round the tangled interstices of Griella's mind, noting the linkages here and there between the wolf and the woman, the areas where they were pulling apart, where control was weakest. He withdrew with a sense both of relief and of mourning. She did love Murad, in some perverse manner that even the beast could recognize. And in loving him, she was doing some violence to herself that Bardolin could not quite fathom.
She loved himself, old Bardolin, also-but not in the same way, not at all. He scourged himself for the unexpectedly acute sense of grief at the discovery.The sun was beating down on them. Griella's eyes were gla.s.sy. He tapped her lightly on the cheek and she blinked, smiled.
"Well?"
"You told the truth," he said heavily.
"You don't sound too overjoyed."
"You may not have killed Pernicus, but you play a dangerous game with Murad, child."
"That is my business."
"All right, but it seems that the impossible is true: there is another shifter aboard the ship."
"Another shifter? How can that be?"
"I have no idea. You have not sensed anything, have you? You do not have any suspicions?"
"Why, no. I have never in my life met another sufferer of the black disease, though folk said the Hebros were full of them."
"Then it seems there is nothing we can do until he chooses to reveal himself."
"Why would another shifter take ship with us?"
"To cause the abortion of the voyage, perhaps. That would be his motive for killing Pernicus. Murad told me something today which intrigues me. I must go down and consult my books."
"Tell me, Bardolin! What is going on?"
"I don't yet know myself. Keep your eyes open. And Griella: do not let the beast free for a while, not even in the privacy of Murad's cabin."
She flushed. "You saw that! You pried on us."
"I had no choice. The man is bad for you, child, and you for him. Remember that.
"I am not a child, Bardolin. You had best not treat me like one."
He stroked her satin cheek gently, fingers touching the tawny freckles there, the sun-brown skin.
"Do not think ill of me, Griella. I am an old man, and I worry about you."
"You are not so old, and I am sorry you worry." But her eyes were unrelenting.
Bardolin turned away and scooped up the watching imp.
"Come. Let us see if this not-so-old man can make his way down this labyrinth of ropes without cracking open his grey-haired skull on the deck."
T HE carrack inched westwards painfully, towed by the labouring men in the ship's boats. They made scarcely two leagues a day, and the sailors became exhausted though the boat crews changed every hour. Hawkwood began to ration the water as though it were gold, and soldiers with iron bullets in their arquebuses guarded the water casks in the forward part of the hold day and night. The ship's company became subdued and apprehensive. Salt sores began to appear on everyone's bodies as the allowanceof fresh water for washing was cut and the salt in garments began to abrade the skin. And still the sun blasted down out of a flawless sky, and in the clear green water below the keel the shadow of hanging weed grew longer as it built up on the carrack's hull.
The sailors trolled for fish to eke out the shipboard provisions. They hauled in herrin on their westward migration, wingfish, huge tub-bodied feluna, and sometimes the writhing, entangled sliminess of large octopuses, some of them almost big enough to swamp the smaller of the longboats.
Weed began to be sighted in matted expanses across the surface of the sea, and on the weed itself colonies of pink and scarlet crabs scuttled about seeking carrion. The weed beds stank to high heaven and were infested with sealice and other vermin. Inevitably some made their way aboard, and soon most of the ship's company had their share of irritating red bites and unwelcome itches on scalp and in groin.
In the dark of one middle watch a great glistening back rose like a birthing hill out of the sea alongside the carrack, and for half a gla.s.s it rose and sank there, a bulk that rivalled the ship in size. A long-necked head with a h.o.r.n.y beak regarded the astonished ship's watch before diving below the surface again in a flurry of white foam. A knollback turtle. The sailors had heard of them in old maritime tales and legends.
They were supposed to have been mistaken for islands by land-hungry mariners far from home. The crew made the Sign of the Saint at their b.r.e.a.s.t.s, and the next day Brother Ortelius' sermon was better attended than it had ever been before, affording the Inceptine a grim kind of pleasure. He called the voyage a flight in the face of G.o.d, and with Murad looking on declared that G.o.d's servants could not be muzzled by threats or fear. G.o.d's will would be done, in the end.
The same evening Hawkwood had two men flogged for questioning the orders of the ship's officers.
The men in the boats rowed on through the humid nights, watch on watch, their oars struggling through the stinking, matted weed with its population of crabs and mites. And on the gundeck the talk was turned to Pernicus' death and its possible author. Wild theories were hatched and did the rounds and it was all Bardolin could do to keep the Dweomer-folk calm. As it was, there were more manifestations of magic now. Some of the oldwives were able to purify small amounts of salt water whilst others worked to heal the salt sores everyone bore, and still more ignited white were-lights and left them burning through the night for fear of what would creep about the decks in the dark hours.
And then, eight tense, airless, back-breaking days after Pernicus had met his end, a wind came ruffling over the surface of the undisturbed sea. A north-easter that gathered in strength through the morning watch until the carrack's sails were drawing full again and the white foam broke beneath her bow. The ship's company drew a collective sigh of relief as the wake began to extend ever further behind her and she set her bowsprit squarely towards the west once more.
It was then that the killing began.
TWENTY-TWO.
V OL Ephrir, capital of Perigraine. A city considered by many to be the most beautiful in the world.
It sat on an island in the midst of the mighty Ephron river. Here, three hundred miles from its headwaters, the Ephron was a glittering blue expanse of water over a mile wide. Ephrir island was a long, low piece of land that curved with the meanders of the Ephron for almost three leagues. Centuries ago the Fimbrians had walled it in against the constant flooding of the river water and they had reared up an artificial hill a hundred feet high in its midst so that a citadel might be built there. The city had grown around the fortress, fisher villages coalescing into towns, merchant wharves taking up more and more of the riverfront, fine houses and towers springing up in the island's interior-until one day the entire island had been built over,a sprawl of houses and villas and warehouses and taverns and shops and markets with no discipline, no order. A long-ago king of Perigraine had decreed that the city must be better regulated. The fisher slums were demolished, the streets widened and paved, the harbours rebuilt and dredged out to accommodate the deep-bellied grain lighters that came upriver from Candelaria.
The city had been reconstructed along the lines of an architectural ideal, and had become a marvel for most of the western world: the perfect city. And Vol Ephrir had never known war or been besieged, unlike many of the other Ramusian capitals.
There was something peculiarly innocent about the place, Abeleyn mused as he rode along its wide streets and inhaled the fragrance of its gardens. Perhaps it was the balminess of the climate. Although a man might look east and see the Cimbrics thirty leagues away, white with early snow, here in the Vale of Perigraine the air was neither warm nor cold. It could be bitter in the winter, but this slow slide into autumn suited the city, as did the millions of red and yellow leaves that floated in the city's ponds and upon the surface of the mighty Ephron, having fallen from the birch and maple woods that were flaming everywhere. The drifting leaves heightened the impression of quietude, for though Vol Ephrir was a busy, thriving place, it was nonetheless sedate, dignified. Somehow ornamental. The population of the place, at a quarter of a million, was almost as great as that of Abrusio, but there was something about Abeleyn's home city that was more frantic. Its teeming colour, perhaps, its vibrant cheek-by-jowl disorder. If Vol Ephrir was a dignified lady who welcomed guests with regal stateliness, then Abrusio was a bawdy old wh.o.r.e who opened her legs for the world.
King Abeleyn of Hebrion had been two days in the Perigrainian capital. Already he had been feasted by young King Cadamost and had tried his hand at hunting vareg, the vicious, tusked herbivore which haunted the riverside forests. Now he was impatient for the conclave to convene. The major rulers had arrived: himself and Mark of Astarac, their alliance a secret between the pair of them; white-haired, irascible Haukir of Almark, Inceptine advisers flapping around him like vultures eyeing a lame old warhorse; Skarpathin of Finnmark, a young man who had a.s.sumed his throne in rather murky, murderous circ.u.mstances; Duke Adamir of Gabrion, the very picture of a grizzled sea-dog; and Lofantyr of Torunna, looking harried and older than his thirty-two years.
There were others, of course. The dukes of the Border Fiefs were here: Gardiac, Tarber, and even isolated Kardikia had sent an envoy, though Duke Comorin could not come in person. Since the fall of Aekir, Kardikia was cut off from the rest of the Ramusian world; the only links it had with the other western powers now were by sea.
The Duke of Touron and the self-styled Prince of Fulk were present also, and in Abeleyn's own entourage, but not seated at the council table, was a representative of Narbukir, that Fimbrian electorate which had broken away from its fellows almost eighty years ago. The Narbukan envoy was to be revealed at the proper time. From the Fimbrian Electorates proper Abeleyn had had no news, no response to his overtures. He had expected as much, for all Golophin's optimism.
The rulers of the Ramusian kingdoms of the world were young men in the main. It seemed that a generation of older kings had relinquished their hold on power within a few years of each other, and the sons had taken their father's thrones whilst in their twenties or early thirties.
There were three Prelates present in the city also, newly arrived from the recent Synod at Charibon.
Escriban of Perigraine, who was Prelate of the kingdom itself, Heyn of Torunna, who had spent hours closeted with King Lofantyr, and Merion of Astarac, who had spent the time likewise with Mark. Old Marat, the Prelate of Almark, had taken the quickest route home, but his monarch, Haukir, was so hemmed in by clerical advisers that he had probably deduced his presence unnecessary; so Abeleyn thought sourly.The first meeting of the conclave was convened amid a buzz of rumour and speculation. There were reports that the first a.s.saults on Ormann d.y.k.e had taken place, and though part of the fortress complex had fallen the rest was standing, defying a Merduk horde half a million strong. Thanks to Golophin's gyrfalcon, Abeleyn was more accurately informed. Though it had taken place only days ago, and was almost a month's travel away, he knew of the failed river a.s.sault and the current enemy lethargy. He was at a loss to account for it, however.
But the miracle had been granted: the d.y.k.e still stood. It might be possible to reinforce it now. Five thousand Knights Militant were purportedly riding to the relief of the fortress from Charibon even as the kings took council in Vol Ephrir.
But there was another item of news which only Abeleyn and a few others were privy to. It had been confirmed that Macrobius was alive and well at the d.y.k.e, blinded but in possession of his senses.
Himerius' elevation to the Pontiffship was therefore null and void. It was the best news Abeleyn had heard in weeks. He settled back in his leather-padded chair at the council table in the King's Hall of Vol Ephrir in a better mood than might otherwise be expected.
King Cadamost of Perigraine, as befitted his status as host, called the meeting to order.
The most powerful men in the western world were in a circular chamber in the highest tower of the palace. The floor upon which their chairs sc.r.a.ped was exquisitely mosaicked with the arms and flags of the Royal houses of Normannia. Tall windows of coloured gla.s.s tinted the flooding sunlight twenty feet above the heads of the a.s.sembled kings, and Perigrainian war banners hung limp from the rafters. There were no guards in the great chamber; they were posted on the staircases below. The round table at which everyone sat was littered with quills and papers. Those who disdained to read or write themselves had brought scribes along with them.
Courtesies were exchanged, greetings bandied about, protocol satisfied with an interminable series of speeches expressing the grat.i.tude of the visiting kings to their host. As a matter of fact, hosting the conclave was no mean feat, even for the s.p.a.cious city of Vol Ephrir. Every ruler present had brought several hundred retainers with him, and these had to be accommodated in a certain style, as did the monarchs themselves. Entertainments had to be laid on, banquets and tourneys to keep the crowned heads diverted when they were not in the council chamber, delicacies to whet their appet.i.tes, beer and wine and other liqueurs to help them relax. All in all, Abeleyn thought petulantly, Cadamost could have raised and equipped a sizeable army with the money he had spent playing the gracious host to his fellow monarchs. But that was the way the world worked.
Once the preliminaries were over, Cadamost rose from his seat to address the men about the table. They awaited his words with interest. Some of the seats among them were empty, and they were keen to know whether or not they would be filled, and by whom.
"This is a time of trial for the Ramusian states of the world," Cadamost said. He was a slim man of medium height, and he had the aspect of a scholar rather than that of a king. Some ocular complaint had ringed his eyes with red. He blinked painfully, but in compensation his voice was as musical as a bard's.
"In the past, conclaves have been called to deal with a crisis affecting the kingdoms and princ.i.p.alities of Normannia. They are convened to offer a place of arbitration and settlement. All the kingdoms represented here have at one time warred upon one another-and yet their monarchs sit now in peace beside each other, united by a common crisis, a foe who threatens us all.
"In the past there has been one power upon the continent that has always gone unrepresented at our meetings, and has refused to join in our councils. This power was once supreme across Normannia, butof late it has withdrawn into itself. It has become isolated, cut off from the concourse of normal diplomacy and international relations. I am glad to say that this state of affairs has changed. Only this morning, envoys arrived from that state. I ask you, my fellow rulers, to bid welcome to the envoys of Fimbria."
On cue, a pair of doors opened in the wall and two men stood there, dressed wholly in black.
"I bid you welcome, gentlemen," Cadamost said in his lilting voice.
The men marched into the chamber and took seats at the council table without a word. The doors boomed shut as if to emphasize the finality of their entrance.
"I give you Marshals Jonakait and Markus of Neyr and Gaderia, authorized in this instance to speak also for the electorates of Tulm and Amarlaine. In effect, they are the voice of Fimbria."
The other monarchs sat stunned, none more so than Abeleyn. His own envoys had returned empty-handed from the enigmatic Electors of Fimbria. But the four electorates had combined to send two representatives to the conclave. It was unprecedented. One of the reasons for the fall of the Fimbrian Hegemony had been the bitter rivalries between the electorates. What had caused this change of heart?