Temple
of the Winds
Sword
of Truth 4
Let me
kill him," Cara said, her boot strikes sounding like rawhide mallets
hammering the polished marble floor.
The
supple leather boots Kahlan wore beneath her elegant, white Confessor's dress
whispered against the cold stone as he tried to keep pace without letting her
legs break into a run.
"No."
Cara
exhibited no response, keeping her blue eyes ahead to the wide corridor
stretching into the distance. A dozen leather- and chain-mail-clad D'Haran
soldiers, their unadorned swords sheathed, or crescent-bladed battle-axes
hooked on belt hangers, crossed at an intersection just ahead. Though their
weapons weren't drawn, every wooden hilt was gripped in a ready fist as
vigilant eyes scrutinized the shadows among the doorways and columns to each
side. Their hasty bows toward Kahlan only briefly interrupted their attention
to their task.
"We
can't just kill him," Kahlan explained. "We need answers."
An
eyebrow lifted over one icy blue eye. "Oh, I didn't say he wouldn't give
us answers before he dies. He will answer any question you have when I'm
finished with him." A mirthless smile ghosted across her flawless face.
"That is the job of a Mord-Sith: getting people to answer
questions"-she paused as the smile returned to widen with professional
satisfaction-"before they die."
Kahlan
heaved a sigh. "Cara, that's no longer your job-your life. Your job now is
to protect Richard."
"That
is why you should let me kill him. We should not take a risk by letting this
man live."
"No.
We first have to find out what's going on, and we're not going to start out
doing it the way you want."
Cara's
smile, humorless as it was, had vanished again. "As you wish, Mother
Confessor."
Kahlan
wondered how the woman had managed to change into her skintight red leather
outfit so fast. Whenever there was so much as a whiff of trouble, at least one
of the three Mord-Sith seemed to materialize out of nowhere in her red leather.
Red, as they often pointed out, didn't show blood.
"Are
you sure he said that, this man? Those were his words?"
"Yes,
Mother Confessor, his exact words. You should let me kill him before he has a
chance to try to bring them to pass."
Kahlan
ignored the repeated request as they hurried on down the hall. "Where's
Richard?"
"You
wish me to get Lord Rahl?"
"No!
I just want to know where he is, in case there's trouble."
"I
would say that this qualifies as trouble."
"You
said that there must be two hundred soldiers holding weapons on him. How much
trouble can one man cause with all those swords, axes, and arrows pointed at
him?"
"My
former master, Darken Rahl, knew that steel alone could not always ward danger.
That is why he had Mord-Sith nearby and at the ready."
"That
evil man would kill people without even bothering to determine if they were
really a danger to him. Richard isn't like that, and neither am I. You know
that if there is a true threat, I'm not shy about eliminating it; but if this
man is more than he seems, then why is he so timidly cowering before all that
steel? Besides, as a Confessor I am hardly defenseless against threats that
steel won't stop.
"We
have to keep our heads. Let's not start leaping to judgments that may be
unwarranted."
"If
you don't think he could be trouble, then why am I nearly running to just keep
up with you?''
Kahlan
realized that she was a half a step ahead of the woman. She slowed her pace to
a brisk walk. "Because it's Richard we're talking about," she said in
a near whisper.
Cara
smirked. "You're as worried as I."
"Of
course I am. But for all we know, killing this man, if he is more than he
seems, could be springing a snare."
"You
could be right, but that is the purpose for Mord-Sith."
"So,
where is Richard?"
Cara
gripped the red leather at her waist and stretched her armor-backed glove
tighter onto her hand as she flexed her fist. Her Agiel, an awesome weapon that
appeared to be nothing more than a finger-width foot-long red leather rod,
dangled from a fine gold chain at her right wrist, ever at the ready. One just
like it, but no weapon in Kahlan's hands, hung on a chain around Kahlan's neck.
It had been a gift from Richard, a gift that symbolized the pain and sacrifice
they had both endured.
"He
is out behind the palace, in one of the private parks." Cara gestured over
her shoulder. "The one that way. Raina and Berdine are with him."
Kahlan
was relieved to hear that the other two Mord-Sith were watching over him.
"Something to do with his surprise for me?"
"What
surprise?"
Kahlan
smiled. "Surely he's told you, Cara."
Cara
snatched a glimpse out of the corner of her eye. "Of course he has told
me."
"Then
what is it?"
"He
also told me not to tell you."
Kahlan
shrugged. "I won't tell him that you told me."
Cara's
laugh, like her smile before, bore no humor. "Lord Rahl has a peculiar way
of finding out things, especially those things you wish him not to know."
Kahlan
knew the truth of that. "So what's he doing out there?"
The
muscles in Cara's jaw flexed. "Outdoor things. You know Lord Rahl; he
likes to do outdoor things."
Kahlan
glanced over to see that Cara's face had turned nearly as red as her leather
outfit. "What sort of outdoor things?"
Cara
cleared her throat into her armored fist. "He is taming chipmunks."
"He's
what? I can't hear you."
Cara
waved an impatient hand. "He said that the chipmunks have come out to test
the warming weather. He is taming them." Her cheeks rounded as she huffed.
"With seeds."
Kahlan
smiled at the thought of Richard, the man she loved, the man who had seized
command of D'Hara, and had much of the Midlands now eating out of his hand,
having a fine afternoon teaching chipmunks to eat seeds out of his hand.
"Well,
that sounds innocent enough - feeding seeds to chipmunks."
Cara
flexed her armored fist again as they swept between two D'Haran guards.
"He is teaching them to eat those seeds," she said through clenched
teeth, "out of Raina and Berdine's hands. The two of them were
giggling!" She aimed a mortified expression toward the ceiling as she
threw her hands up. Her Agiel swung on the gold chain at her wrist.
"Mord-Sith - giggling!"
Kahlan
pressed her lips tight, trying to keep from breaking into laughter. Cara pulled
her long blond braid forward, over her shoulder, stroking it in a way that
provoked in Kahlan an unsettling memory of the way Shota, the witch woman,
stroked her snakes.
"Well,"
Kahlan said, trying to cool the other woman's indignation, "maybe it's not
by their choice. They are bonded to him. Perhaps Richard ordered it, and
they're simply obeying him."
Cara
shot her an incredulous look. Kahlan knew that any of the three Mord-Sith would
defend Richard to the death - they had shown themselves prepared to sacrifice
their lives without hesitation - but though they were bonded to him through
magic, they disregarded his orders wantonly if they judged them trivial, unimportant,
or unwise. Kahlan imagined that it was because Richard had given them their
freedom from the rigid principles of their profession, and they enjoyed
exercising that freedom. Darken Rahl, their former master, Richard's father,
would have killed them in a heartbeat had he even suspected that they were
considering disobeying his orders, no matter how trivial they were.
"The
sooner you wed Lord Rahl the better. Then, instead of teaching chipmunks to eat
out of Mord-Sith hands, he will be eating out of yours."
Kahlan
exhaled in a soft, lilting laugh, thinking about being his wife. It wouldn't be
long, now. ' Richard will have my hand, but you should know as well as anyone
that he will not be eating out of it - and I wouldn't want him to."
"If
you regain your senses, come see me, and I will teach you how." Cara
turned her attention to the alert D'Haran soldiers. Men at arms were rushing
everywhere, checking every hall and looking behind every door, no doubt at
Cara's insistence.
"Egan
is with Lord Rahl, too. He should be safe while we see to this man."
Kahlan's
mirth withered. "How did he get in here, anyway? Did he come in with the
petitioners?"
"No."
A professional chill settled back into Cara's tone. "But I intend to find
out. From what I gather, he just walked up to a patrol of guards not far from
the council chambers and asked where he could find Lord Rahl, as if just anyone
can walk in and ask to see the Master of D'Hara, as if he was a head butcher
that anyone can go to if they want a choice cut of mutton."
"That's
when the guards asked him why he wanted to see Richard?"
Cara
nodded. "I think we should kill him."
Realization
wormed up Kahlan's spine in a cold tingle. Cara wasn't simply an aggressive
bodyguard, unconcerned about spilling the blood of others - she was afraid. She
was afraid for Richard.
"I
want to know how he got in here. He presented himself to a patrol inside the
palace; he shouldn't have been able to get inside, wandering around unfettered.
What if we have a hitherto-unknown breach in security? Wouldn't it be better to
find out before another comes without the courtesy of announcing himself?"
"We
can find out if you let me do it my way."
"We
don't know enough yet; he could end up dead before we find out anything, then
the danger to Richard could become greater."
"All
right," Cara said with a sigh, "we will do it your way, as long as
you understand that I have orders to follow."
"What
orders?"
"Lord
Rahl told us to protect you as we would protect him." With a toss of her head,
Cara flicked her blond braid back over her shoulder. "If you are not
careful, Mother Confessor, and needlessly endanger Lord Rahl with your
restraint, I will withdraw my permission for Richard to keep you."
Kahlan
laughed. Her laughter died out when Cara didn't so much as smile. She was never
entirely sure when the Mord-Sith were joking and when they were being deadly
serious.
"In
here," Kahlan said. "It's shorter this way, and besides, I want to
see what petitioners are waiting, in view of our strange visitor. He could even
be a diversion to draw our attention away from someone else-the true
threat."
Cara's
brow twitched as if she had been slighted. "Why do you think I had
Petitioners' Hall sealed and ringed with guards?"
"You
did it surreptitiously, I hope. There's no need to frighten the wits out of
innocent petitioners."
"I
told the officers not to frighten the people in there if they didn't have to,
but our first responsibility is to protect Lord Rahl."
Kahlan
nodded. She couldn't argue with that.
Two
heavily muscled guards bowed, along with twenty others nearby, before pulling
open the tall, brassbound doors leading to an arched passageway. A stone rail
supported by fat, vase-shaped balusters ran along the white marble pillars. The
barrier, separating the petitioners in the hundred-foot-long room from the
officials' passageway, was symbolic rather than teal. Skylights thirty feet
overhead lit the waiting room, but left the length of the passageway to the
muted golden light of lamps hung in the peak of each small Vault in its
ceiling.
It was
a long-standing custom for people-petitioners-to come to the Confessors' Palace
to seek any number of things, from settlement of disagreements over the rights
of peddlers to coveted street comers, to officials of different lands seeking
armed intervention in border disputes. Maters that could be handled by city
officials were directed to the proper offices. Matters brought by dignitaries
of the lands, if those matters were deemed to be important enough, or could be
handled in no other way, were taken before the council. Petitioners' Hall was
where officers of protocol determined the disposition of requests.
When
Darken Rahl, Richard's father had attacked the Midlands, many of the officials
in Aydindril had been killed, among them Saul Witherrin, the Chief of Protocol,
along with most of his office Richard had defeated Darken Rahl, and being the
gifted heir, had ascended to Master of D'Hara. He had ended the bickering and
battling among the lands of the Midlands by demanding their surrender in order
to forge them all into a force capable of withstanding the common threat from
the Old World, from the Imperial Order.
Kahlan
found it unsettling to be the Mother Confessor who had reigned over the end of
the Midlands as a formal entity, a union of sovereign lands, but she knew that
her first responsibility was to the lives of the people, not to tradition; if
not stopped, the Imperial Order would cast the world into slavery, and the
people of the Midlands would be its chattel. Richard had accomplished what his
father could not, but did so for entirely different reasons. She loved Richard
and knew his benevolent intent in seizing power.
Soon
they would be wedded, and their marriage would unite the Midlands and D'Hara in
peace and unity for all time. More than that, though, it would be a personal
fulfillment of their love and deepest desire: to be one.
Kahlan
missed Saul Witherrin; he had been a capable aide. With the council now dead,
too, and the Midlands now a part of D'Hara, matters of protocol were in
disarray. A few frustrated D'Haran officers were standing at the railing,
attempting to minister to the petitioners' needs.
As she
entered, Kahlan's gaze swept the waiting crowd, analyzing the nature of
problems brought to the palace this day. By their dress, most appeared to be
people from the surrounding city of Aydindril: labors, shopkeepers, and
merchants.
She saw
a knot of children she knew from the day before when Richard had taken her to
watch them playing a game of Ja'La. It was the first time she had seen the
fast-paced game, and it had been an entertaining diversion for a couple of
hours: to watch children play and laugh. The children probably wanted Richard
to come watch another game; he had been an ardent supporter of each team. Even
if he had picked one team to cheer over the other, Kahlan doubted it would have
made any difference; children were drawn to Richard, seeming to instinctively
sense his kind heart.
Kahlan
recognized several diplomats from a few of the smaller lands, who she hoped had
come to accept Richard's offer of a peaceful surrender and union into D'Haran
rule. She knew the leaders of those lands, and was expecting them to heed her
urging to join with them in the cause of freedom.
She recognized,
too, a group of diplomats from some of the larger lands that had standing
armies. They had been expected, and later that day Richard and Kahlan were to
meet with them, along with any other newly arrived representatives, to hear
their decision.
She
wished Richard would find himself something more suitable to wear. His woods
clothes had served him well, but he now needed to present a more fitting image
of the position he found himself in. He was so much more than a woods guide
now.
Having
served nearly her whole life as a person of authority, Kahlan knew that it
often smoothed matters of leadership if you matched people's expectations.
Kahlan doubted people who needed a woods guide would have followed Richard if
he hadn't dressed for the woods. In a way, Richard was their guide in this
treacherous new world of untested allegiances and new enemies. He often asked
her advice; she was going to have to talk to him about his clothes.
When
the people assembled saw the Mother Confessor striding into the passageway,
conversation stilled and they began going to a knee in deep bows. Despite the
fact that she was of an unprecedentedly young age for the post, there was no
one of higher authority in the Midlands than the Mother Confessor. The Mother
Confessor was the Mother Confessor, no matter the face of the woman who held
the office. People bowed not so much to the woman as to that ancient
authority.� Matters of Confessors were
an enigma to most people of the Midlands; Confessors chose the Mother
Confessor. To Confessors, age was of secondary consideration.
Though
she was chosen to preserve the freedoms and rights of the people of the
Midlands, people rarely saw it in those terms. To most, a ruler was a ruler.
Some were good, some were bad. As the ruler of rulers, the Mother Confessor
encouraged the good, and suppressed the bad. If a ruler proved bad enough, it
was within her power to eliminate them. That was the ultimate purpose of a
Mother Confessor. To most people, though, such far removed matters of governance
simply seemed the squabbling of rulers.
In the
sudden silence that filled Petitioners' Hall, Kahlan paused to acknowledge the
gathered visitors.
A young
woman standing against the far wall watched as all those around her fell to one
knee. She glanced in Kahlan's direction, back to those kneeling, and then
followed suit.
Kahlan's
brow tightened.
In the
Midlands, the length of a woman's hair denoted her power and standing. Matters
of power, no matter how trivial they might seem on the surface, were taken
seriously in the Midlands. Not even a queen's hair was allowed to be as long as
a Confessor's, and no Confessor's hair was as long as that of the Mother
Confessor.
This
woman had a thick mass of brown hair close to the length of Kahlan's.
Kahlan
knew nearly every person of high rank in the Midlands; it was her duty, and she
took it seriously. A woman with hair that long was obviously a person of high
standing, but Kahlan didn't recognize her. There was likely to be no man or
woman in the entire city, other than Kahlan, who would outrank the woman-if she
was in fact from the Midlands.
"Rise,
my children," Kahlan said in formal response to the tops of the waiting,
bowed heads.
Dresses
and coats rustled as everyone began coming to their feet, most keeping their
eyes to the floor, out of respect, or needless fear. The woman rose to her
feet, twisting a simply made kerchief in her fingers, watching those around
her. She turned her brown eyes to the floor, as most of the others were.
"Cara,"
Kahlan whispered, "could that woman there, with the long hair, be from
D'Hara?"
Cara
had been watching her, too; she had learned some of the customs of the
Midlands. Though Cara's long blond hair was about the length of Kahlan's, she
was D'Haran. They didn't live by the same customs.
"Her
nose is too 'cute' to be D'Haran."
"I'm
serious. Do you think she could be D'Haran?"
Cara
studied the woman a moment longer. "I doubt it. D'Haran women don't wear
flower-print dresses, nor are the dresses they do wear of that cut. But clothes
can be changed to fit the occasion, or to fit in with local people."
The
dress didn't really fit the local dress of Aydindril, but it might not be so
out of place in other, more remote, areas of the Midlands. Kahlan nodded and
turned to a waiting captain, motioning him over.
He
leaned his head close as she spoke in a low tone. "There is a woman with
long brown hair standing against the wall in the back, over my left shoulder.
Do you see who I'm talking about?"
"The
pretty one, in the blue kirtle?"
"Yes.
Do you know why she's here?"
"She
said she wished to speak with Lord Rahl."
Kahlan's
brow drew tighter. She noticed that Cara's did, too. "What about?"
"She
said that she's looking for a man-Cy something-I didn't recognize his name. She
said he's been missing since last autumn, and she was told that Lord Rahl would
be able to help her."
"Is
that right," Kahlan said. "And did she say what business she has with
this missing man?"
The
captain glanced to the woman and then brushed his sandy hair back from his
forehead. "She said that she's to marry him."
Kahlan
nodded. "It could be that she's a dignitary, but if she is, I'm
embarrassed to admit that I don't know her name."
The
captain glanced at a tattered list with scribbles all over it. He turned the
paper and scanned the other side until he found what he was looking for.
"She said her name was Nadine. She gave no title."
"Well,
please see to it that Lady Nadine is taken to a private waiting room where she
will be comfortable. Tell her that I will come speak with her and see if I can
help. Have dinner brought to her, along with anything else she might require.
Give her my apology and tell her that I have something of vital importance that
I must attend to first, but I will come see her as soon as I am able, and that
I wish to do what I can to help her."
Kahlan
could understand the woman's distress if she really was separated from her love
and was searching for him. Kahlan had been in that situation herself and knew
well the anguish.
"I'll
see to it at once, Mother Confessor."
"One
other thing, captain." Kahlan watched the woman twisting her kerchief.
"Tell Lady Nadine that there is trouble about, what with the war with the
Old World, and that for her own safety we must insist that she remain in the
room until I can come to speak with her. Post a heavy guard outside the room.
Place archers at a safe distance down the hall to either side of the door.
"If
she comes out, insist that she must return to the room at once and wait. If you
must, tell her that it is by my command. If she still tries to
leave"-Kahlan looked into the captain's waiting blue eyes-"kill
her."
The
captain bowed as Kahlan swept on through the passageway, Cara right at her
heels.
"Well,
well," Cara said, once outside Petitioners' Hall, "at last the Mother
Confessor comes to her senses. I knew I had a good reason for allowing Lord
Rahl to keep you. You will make him a worthy wife."
Kahlan
turned down the corridor toward the room where guards held the man. "I
haven't changed my mind about anything, Cara. Considering our strange visitor,
I'm giving Lady Nadine every chance to live, every chance I can afford to give,
but you're mistaken if you think I'll balk at doing whatever it takes to
protect Richard. Besides being the man I love more than life itself, Richard is
a man of vital importance to the freedom of the people of both D'Hara and the
Midlands. There's no telling what the Imperial Order would try in order to get
to him."
Cara
smiled, sincerely, this time. "I know he loves you the same. That's why I
don't like you going to see this man; Lord Rahl may separate me from my hide if
he thinks I allowed you near danger."
"Richard
is one born with the gift; I, too, have been born with magic. Darken Rahl sent
quads to kill the Confessors because there is little danger to a Confessor from
one man."
Kahlan
felt the familiar, yet distant anguish of their deaths. Distant, because it
seemed so long ago, though it had been hardly a year. For months, in the
beginning, she had felt as if she should be dead along with her sister
Confessors, and that she had somehow betrayed them by escaping all the traps
laid for her. Now, she was the last.
With a
flick of her wrist, Cara snapped her Agiel into her fist. "Even a man,
like Lord Rahl, born with the gift? Even a wizard?"
"Even
a wizard, and even if, unlike Richard, he knows how to use his power. I not
only know how to use mine, I am very experienced at it. I long ago lost count
of the number ..."
As
Kahlan's words trailed off, Cara considered her Agiel, rolling it in her
fingers. "I guess there is even less than 'little' danger-with me
there."
When
they reached the richly carpeted and paneled corridor they were seeking, it was
thick with soldiers and bristling with steel from swords, axes, and pikes. The
man was being held in a small, elegant reading room close to the rather simple
one Richard liked to use for meeting with officers and for studying the journal
he had found in the Wizard's Keep. The soldiers hadn't wanted to risk an escape
attempt and had simply stuffed the man in the room nearest to the spot they
found him, pinning him down until it could be decided what was to be done.
Kahlan
gently took the elbow of a soldier to urge him back out of the way. The muscles
of his bare arm felt as hard as iron. His pike, pointed toward the closed door,
could hardly have been more steady had it been embedded in granite. There had
to be fifty pikes likewise aimed at the silent door. More men, gripping swords
or axes, hunkered beneath the pike points.
The
guard turned as Kahlan tugged on his arm. "Let me through, soldier."
The man
gave way. Others glanced back and began moving aside. Cara shouldered her way
ahead of Kahlan, pushing men out of the way. They did so reluctantly, not out
of disrespect, but out of concern for the danger that waited beyond the door.
Even as they moved aside, they kept their weapons pointed toward the thick oak
door.
Inside,
the window-less, dimly lit room smelled of leather and sweat. A lanky man
squatted on the edge of an embroidered footstool. He seemed too spare, should
he make the wrong move, to permit all the steel aimed at him to find a virgin
patch to penetrate. His young eyes dithered among the steel and grim glares
until he caught sight of Kahlan's approaching white dress. His tongue darted
out to wet his lips as he looked up expectantly.
When
the burly soldiers in leather and chain mail behind him saw Kahlan and Cara
forcing their way into the room, one of them landed the side of his boot on the
small of the young man's back, pitching him forward.
"Kneel,
you filthy cur."
The
young man, dressed in an outsized soldier's uniform that looked to have been
scrounged together from dissimilar sources, peered up at Kahlan, then over his
shoulder at the man who had kicked him. He ducked his head of disheveled dark
hair and shielded it with a gangly arm, expecting a blow.
"That's
enough," Kahlan said in a quietly authoritative tone. "Cara and I
wish to speak with him. All of you, wait outside, please."
Rahl
sent quads to kill the Confessors because there is little danger to a Confessor
from one man."
Kahlan
felt the familiar, yet distant anguish of their deaths. Distant, because it
seemed so long ago, though it had been hardly a year. For months, in the
beginning, she had felt as if she should be dead along with her sister
Confessors, and that she had somehow betrayed them by escaping all the traps
laid for her. Now, she was the last.
With a
flick of her wrist, Cara snapped her Agiel into her fist. "Even a man,
like Lord Rahl, born with the gift? Even a wizard?"
"Even
a wizard, and even if, unlike Richard, he knows how to use his power. I not
only know how to use mine, I am very experienced at it. I long ago lost count
of the number ..."
As
Kahlan's words trailed off, Cara considered her Agiel, rolling it in her
fingers. "I guess there is even less than 'little' danger-with me
there."
When
they reached the richly carpeted and paneled corridor they were seeking, it was
thick with soldiers and bristling with steel from swords, axes, and pikes. The
man was being held in a small, elegant reading room close to the rather simple
one Richard liked to use for meeting with officers and for studying the journal
he had found in the Wizard's Keep. The soldiers hadn't wanted to risk an escape
attempt and had simply stuffed the man in the room nearest to the spot they
found him, pinning him down until it could be decided what was to be done.
Kahlan
gently took the elbow of a soldier to urge him back out of the way. The muscles
of his bare arm felt as hard as iron. His pike, pointed toward the closed door,
could hardly have been more steady had it been embedded in granite. There had
to be fifty pikes likewise aimed at the silent door. More men, gripping swords
or axes, hunkered beneath the pike points.
The
guard turned as Kahlan tugged on his arm. "Let me through, soldier."
The man
gave way. Others glanced back and began moving aside. Cara shouldered her way
ahead of Kahlan, pushing men out of the way. They did so reluctantly, not out
of disrespect, but out of concern for the danger that waited beyond the door.
Even as they moved aside, they kept their weapons pointed toward the thick oak
door.
Inside,
the window-less, dimly lit room smelled of leather and sweat. A lanky man
squatted on the edge of an embroidered footstool. He seemed too spare, should
he make the wrong move, to permit all the steel aimed at him to find a virgin
patch to penetrate. His young eyes dithered among the steel and grim glares
until he caught sight of Kahlan's approaching white dress. His tongue darted
out to wet his lips as he looked up expectantly.
When
the burly soldiers in leather and chain mail behind him saw Kahlan and Cara
forcing their way into the room, one of them landed the side of his boot on the
small of the young man's back, pitching him forward.
"Kneel,
you filthy cur."
The
young man, dressed in an outsized soldier's uniform that looked to have been
scrounged together from dissimilar sources, peered up at Kahlan, then over his
shoulder at the man who had kicked him. He ducked his head of disheveled dark
hair and shielded it with a gangly arm, expecting a blow.
"That's
enough," Kahlan said in a quietly authoritative tone. "Cara and I
wish to speak with him. All of you, wait outside, please."
The
soldiers balked, reluctant to lift a weapon from the young man cowering on the
floor.
"You
heard her," Cara said. "Out."
"But-"
an officer began.
"You
doubt that a Mord-Sith is capable of handling this one scrawny man? Now, go
wait outside."
Kahlan
was surprised that Cara hadn't raised her voice. Mord-Sith didn't have to raise
their voices to get people to follow their orders, but still it surprised her,
considering Cara's nervousness over the young man before them. The men began
withdrawing, turning sideways to eye the intruder on the floor as they filed
out the door. The knuckles of the officer's fist around his sword hilt were
white. As he backed out last, he gently closed the door with his other hand.
The
young man looked up from under his arm to the two women standing three strides
away. "Are you going to have me killed?"
Kahlan
didn't answer the question directly. "We have come to talk with you. I am
Kahlan Amnell, the Mother Confessor-"
"Mother
Confessor!" He straightened on his knees. A boyish grin swept onto his
face. "Why, you're beautiful! I never expected you to be so
beautiful."
He put
a hand to a knee and began to rise. Cara's Agiel was instantly at the ready.
"Stay
where you are."
He
froze, staring at the red Agiel before his face, and then lowered the knee back
onto the fringe of the crimson carpet. Lamps on the fluted mahogany pilasters
supporting shallow pediments over bookcases to each side of the room cast
flickering light across his bony face. He was hardly more than a boy.
"Can
I have my weapons back, please? I need my sword. If I can't have that, then I'd
like my knife, at least."
Cara
heaved an irritated sigh, but Kahlan spoke first.� "You are in a very precarious position, young man. None of
us is in the mood to be indulgent if this is some kind of prank."
He
nodded earnestly. "I understand. I'm not playing a game. I swear."
"Then
tell me what you said to the soldiers."
His
grin returned as he lifted a hand, gesturing casually toward the door.
"Well, like I was telling those men when I was-"
Fists
at her side, Kahlan advanced a stride. "I told you, this is no game!
You're only alive by my grace! I want to know what you're doing here, and I
want to know right now! Tell me what you said!"
The
young man blinked. "I'm an assassin, sent by Emperor Jagang. I'm here to
kill Richard Rahl. Can you direct me to him, please?"
CHAPTER
2
Now,"
Cara said in a dangerous voice, "can I kill him?"
The
incongruous nature of this harmless-looking, skinny young man, kneeling,
seemingly helpless, in enemy territory, surrounded by hundreds, thousands of
brutish D'Haran soldiers, saying so openly and confidently that he intended to
assassinate Richard, had Kahlan's heart hammering against her ribs.
No one
was this foolish.
She
realized, only after the fact, that she had retreated a step. She ignored
Cara's question and kept her attention riveted on the young man.
"And
just how do you think you could accomplish such a task?"
"Well,"
he said in an offhanded manner as he exhaled, "I had designs on using my
sword, or if I must, my knife." His smile returned, but it was no longer
boyish. His eyes had taken on a steely set that belied his young face.
"That's why I need them back, you see."
"You'll
not be getting your weapons back."
Disdain
powered the dismissive shrug of his shoulders. "No matter. I have other
ways to kill him."
"You'll
not be killing Richard; you have my word on that. Your only hope, now, is to
cooperate and tell us everything of your plan. How did you get in here?"
His smirk
mocked her. "Walked. Walked right in. No one paid me any mind. They're not
too smart, your men."
"They're
smart enough to have you under their swords," Cara pointed out.
He
ignored her. His eyes remained locked on Kahlan's.
"And
if we don't let you have your sword and knife back," she asked, "then
what?"
"Then
things will get messy. Richard Rahl will only suffer greatly. That's why
Emperor Jagang sent me: to offer him the mercy of a quick death. The emperor is
a man of compassion, and wishes to avoid any undue suffering; he is basically a
man of peace, the dream walker, but also one of iron determination.
"I'm
afraid I'll have to be killing you, too, Mother Confessor: to spare you the
suffering of what's to come if you resist. I have to admit, though, that I
don't like the idea of killing such a beautiful woman." The grin widened.
"Rather a waste."
Kahlan
found his confidence grating. To hear him claim that the dream walker was
compassionate turned her stomach. She knew better.
"What
suffering?"
He
spread his hands. "I am but a grain of sand. The emperor does not share
his plans with me. I am but simply sent to do his bidding. His bidding is that
you and Richard are to be eliminated. If you don't let me kill him mercifully,
then Richard will be destroyed. I'm told that it won't be pleasant, so why
don't you just let me get it over with?"
22
"You
must be dreaming," Cara said.
His
gaze shifted to the Mord-Sith.�
"Dreaming? Maybe you're dreaming. Maybe I'm your worst
nightmare."
"I
don't have nightmares," Cara said. "I give them."
"Really?"
he taunted. "In that ridiculous outfit? What are you pretending to be,
anyway? Maybe you're dressed like that to scare the birds away from the spring
planting?"
Kahlan
realized that the man didn't know what a Mord-Sith was, but she wondered how
she could ever have thought he looked hardly more than a boy; his demeanor was
one of age and experience. This was no boy. The air crackled with peril.
Remarkably, Cara only smiled.
Kahlan's
breathing stilled when she realized the man was standing, and she couldn't
recall seeing him come to his feet.
His
gaze shifted, and one of the lamps went dark. The remaining lamp cast harsh,
flickering light against one side of his face, letting the other side hide in
shadow, but, for Kahlan, that act had brought his nature, his true threat, out
of the shadows.
This
man commanded the gift.
Her
resolve to spare a possible innocent unnecessary violence evaporated with the
heat of need to protect Richard. This man had been given a chance; now he was
going to confess all he knew-he was going to confess it to a Confessor.
She had
but to touch him, and it would be over.
Kahlan
had walked among the thousands of corpses of innocent people slaughtered by the
Order. When she had seen the women and children in Ebinissia, butchered at
Jagang's command, she had sworn undying vengeance against the Imperial Order.
This man had proven himself to be part of the Imperial Order, and the enemy of
free people. He did the dream walker's bidding.
She focused
on the familiar flush of magic deep within herself, always at the ready. A
Confessor's magic wasn't released so much as her restraint on it was simply
withdrawn. The act was faster even than thought. It was the lightning of
instinct.
No
Confessor enjoyed using her power to destroy a person's mind, but unlike some
Confessors, Kahlan didn't hate what she did, what she was born to; it was
simply part of who she was. She didn't maliciously use what she was given, but
used her magic to protect others. She was at peace with herself, with what she
was and what she could do.
Richard
was the first to see her for herself, and care about her despite her power. He
didn't irrationally fear the unknown, fear what she was. Instead, he had come
to know her, and to love her, Confessor's power and all. For that reason only,
he could be with her without her power destroying him when they shared their
love.
She
intended to use that power, now, to protect Richard, and for that reason it was
as close as she ever came to valuing her ability. She had but to touch this man
and the threat would be eliminated. Retribution was at hand for a willing
minion of Emperor Jagang.
Keeping
her gaze firmly fixed on the man, Kahlan held up an admonishing finger to Cara.
"He's mine. Leave this to me."
But
when his squinting gaze sought the remaining lamp, Cara swept between them. The
air cracked as she backhanded him with her armored glove. Kahlan nearly
screamed in rage at the interference.
Sprawled
across the carpet, the man sat up, looking genuinely surprised. Blood
23
ran
down his chin from a split in his lower lip. His look changed to genuine
displeasure.
Cara
towered over him. "What is your name?" Kahlan couldn't believe that
Cara, who had always professed to fear magic, seemed to be deliberately
provoking a man who had just shown his command of it.
He
rolled away from her and into a crouch. His eyes were on Kahlan, but he spoke
to Cara. "I don't have time for court buffoons."
With a
smile, his gaze flicked to the lamp. The room plunged into darkness.
Kahlan
dove for the spot on the floor where he hunkered. She had but to touch him and
it would be over.
She
caught only air before hitting the empty floor. In the pitch black, she wasn't
sure which way he had darted. She snatched wildly, trying to net a part of him.
She needed but to touch him, and even his thick clothes wouldn't protect him.
She seized an arm, and only an instant before releasing her power realized that
it was the leather Cara wore.
"Where
are you!" Cara growled. "You can't get away. Give it up."
Kahlan
scrambled across the carpet. Power or not, they needed light, or they were
going to be in a great deal of trouble. She found the bookcase against the wall
and felt along its lower ledge until she saw a faint sliver of light coming
from beneath the door. Men were banging on the other side, calling out, wanting
to know if there was trouble.
Her
fingers skimmed up the edge of the molded stile of the door, toward the handle,
as she lurched to her feet. She stepped on the hem of her dress and tripped,
stumbling forward, landing on her elbows with a bone-jarring thud.
Something
heavy smashed into the door where she had almost stood a moment before, and
crashed down onto her back. The man laughed in the darkness. As she flailed to
shove the thing off, her arms whacked painfully against the sharp edges of the
stretcher bars of a chair's legs. She grappled an upholstered armrest and
rolled the chair off to the side.
Kahlan
heard the air driven from Cara's lungs with a grunt as she slammed into a
bookcase on the other side of the room. The men on the other side of the door
pounded into it, trying to break it down. The door wasn't budging.
As
books across the room were still tumbling and thudding to the floor, Kahlan
sprang up and groped for the handle. Her knuckles struck the cold metal of the
lever. She slapped her hand over it.
With a
shriek, she was thrown back from a sudden flash and landed on her bottom. Like
sparks from a flaming log struck with a poker, a shower of flashes from the
handle filled the air. Her fingers stung and tingled from touching the shield.
Small wonder the men couldn't open the door. As she regained her feet,
recovering from the shock, Kahlan could see again by the flickering sparkles of
light that still slowly drifted toward the floor.
Suddenly
Cara could see, too. She snatched a book and flung it at the man near the
center of the small room. He ducked into a squat.
Quick
as a slap, Cara spun, catching him off guard. The air resounded with a hard
thud as her boot nailed his jaw. The blow drove him backward. Kahlan took aim
to leap for him before all the sparks extinguished and it went dark again.
"You
die first!" he railed in rage at Cara. "I'll have no more of your
trifling interference! You'll taste my power!"
24
The air
at his fingertips lit with glimmering flashes as he leveled his full attention
on Cara. Kahlan had to deal with the threat now, before anything else went
wrong.
But
before she could leap for him, his curled fingers twitched up. With a
contemptuous sneer, he thrust one hand toward Cara.
Kahlan
expected Cara to be the one on the floor next. Instead, the young man crumpled
with a cry. He tried to stand, but collapsed with a shriek, hugging himself as
if he had been stabbed in the gut. The room went black again.
Kahlan
reached for the door lever, taking a chance that whatever Cara had done to him
had broken his shield. Wincing against the pain she feared might still be
waiting, she seized the handle. The shield was gone. Relieved, she twisted the
lever and yanked the door open. Light from behind the crowd of soldiers pierced
into the dark room. Confounded faces peered in.
Kahlan
didn't need a roomful of men getting themselves killed while trying to save her
from things they didn't understand. She shoved the closest man back.
"He
has the gift! Stay out!" She knew that D'Harans feared magic. They
depended on the Lord Rahl to fight magic. They were the steel against steel,
they often said, and Lord Rahl was supposed to be the magic against magic.
"Give me a lamp!"
Men to
each side simultaneously snatched lamps from brackets beside the door and held
them out. Kahlan grabbed one and kicked the door shut as she turned back to the
room. She didn't want a pack of muscle-bound, weapon-wielding men to get in her
way.
In the
wavering glow from the lamp, Kahlan saw Cara squat down on the crimson carpet
beside the man. He clutched his arms across his abdomen as he vomited blood.
Her red leather outfit creaked as she rested her forearms on her knees. She was
rolling her Agiel in her fingers, waiting.
Once
his retching had ceased, Cara snatched a fistful of his hair. Her long blond
braid slid across the back of her broad shoulders as she leaned closer.
"That
was a big mistake. A very big mistake," she said with silky satisfaction.
"You should never have tried to use your magic against a Mord-Sith. You
had it right for a moment, but then you let me make you angry enough to use
your magic. Who's the fool now?"
"What's
... a ... Mord-Sith?" he managed between gasps.
Cara
twisted his head upward until he cried out. "Your worst nightmare. The
purpose of a Mord-Sith is to eliminate threats like you.
"I
now command your magic. It's mine to use, and you, my pet, are helpless to do
anything about it, as you will soon learn. You should have tried to strangle
me, or beat me to death, or to run, but you should never, ever, have tried to
use magic against me. Once you use your magic against a Mord-Sith, it's
hers."
Kahlan
stood transfixed. That was what a Mord-Sith had done to Richard. That was how
he had been captured.
Cara
pressed her Agiel against the man's ribs. He shivered as he screamed. Blood
soaked through his tunic in a spreading stain.
"Now,
when I ask a question," she said in a quiet, authoritative tone, "I
expect an answer. Do you understand?"
He
remained silent. She twisted the Agiel. Kahlan winced when she heard his rib
pop. He flinched and gasped, holding his breath, unable to scream.
Kahlan
felt as if she were frozen in place, unable to move a muscle. Richard had told
her that Denna, the Mord-Sith who had captured him, had liked to crack
25
his
ribs. It made each breath agony, and screaming, which she soon provoked,
excruciating torture. It also left the victim that much more helpless.
Cara
rose. "Stand."
The man
staggered to his feet.
"You
are about to find out why I wear blood red leather." Unleashing a mighty
swing, launched with an angry cry, Cara clouted his face with her armored fist.
As he went down, blood sprayed across the bookcase. As soon as he hit the
floor, she straddled him, a boot to each side of his hips.
"I
can see what you're envisioning," Cara told him. "I saw the vision of
what you want to do to me. Naughty boy." She stomped a boot down on his
sternum. "That was the least of what you will suffer for that thought. You
had better learn real fast to keep ideas of resistance out of your mind. Got
it?''
She
bent and drove her Agiel into his gut. "Got it?"
His
scream sent a shiver up Kahlan's spine. She was sickened by what she was
watching, having once felt the profoundly painful touch of an Agiel, but worse,
knowing that this was what had been done to Richard, and yet she didn't make a
move to stop it.
She had
offered this man mercy. If he had had his way, he would have killed Richard. He
had promised to kill her, too, but it was that threat against Richard that kept
her silent, and prevented her from stopping Cara.
"Now."
Cara said with a sneer. She jabbed her Agiel against his cracked rib.
"What is your name?"
"Marlin
Pickard!" He tried to blink away the tears. A sheen of sweat covered his
face. Blood frothed at his mouth as he panted.
She
pressed her Agiel against his groin. Marlin's feet kicked out helplessly as he
wailed.
"The
next time I ask a question, don't make me wait for an answer. And you will
address me as Mistress Cara."
"Cara,"
Kahlan said in a quiet tone, still seeing the vision of Richard in place of the
man, "there is no need to ..."
Cara
looked over her shoulder, glaring with cold blue eyes. Kahlan turned away and
with trembling fingers wiped a tear as it rolled down her cheek. She lifted the
glass chimney of the lamp on the wall and used the one she held to light it.
When the wick took to flame, she set her lamp down on a side table and replaced
its chimney. It was frightening to see the cold look in those Mord-Sith eyes.
Her heart pounded at the thought of how many weeks Richard had seen only cold
eyes like that looking back as he begged for mercy.
Kahlan
turned back to the pair. "We need answers, nothing more."
"I'm
getting answers."
Kahlan
nodded. "I understand, but we don't need the screams along with them. We
don't torture people."
"Torture?
I have not yet even begun to torture him." Cara straightened, casting a
glance to the shivering man at her feet. "And if he had managed to kill
Lord Rahl first? Would you wish me to leave him be, then?"
"Yes."
Kahlan met the woman's eyes. "And then I would have done worse to him
myself. Worse than you could even conceive of. But he didn't hurt Richard."
A
cunning smile curled the comers of Cara's mouth.� "He intended it. The canon of the spirits says that intent
is guilt. Failure to successfully carry out the intent. does not absolve the
guilt."
"The
spirits also mark a distinction between intent and deed. It was my intent to
take care of him, in my way. Was it your intent to disobey my direct order?''
Cara
flicked her blond braid back over her shoulder. "It was my intent to
protect you and Lord Rahl. I have succeeded."
"I
told you to let me handle it."
"Hesitation
can be the end of you ... or those you care about." A haunted look passed
across Cara's face. Iron quickly repossessed her countenance. "I have
learned never to hesitate."
"Is
that why you were provoking him? To get him to attack you with his magic?"
With
the heel of her hand, Cara wiped the blood from a deep cut on her cheek- a cut
Marlin had given her when he had struck her and slammed her into the bookcase.
She stepped closer. "Yes." She took a long lick of the blood from her
hand while watching Kahlan's eyes. "A Mord-Sith can't take a person's
magic unless they attack us with it."
"I
thought you feared magic."
Cara
tugged the sleeve of her leather, straightening it down her arm. "We do,
unless it is specifically used by the one who commands it to attack us. Then
it's ours."
"You
always claim not to know anything about magic, and yet now you command his? You
can use his magic?"
Cara
glanced down at the man groaning on the floor. "No. I can't use it, like
he uses it, but I can turn it against him-hurt him with his own magic."
Her brow twitched. "Sometimes, we feel a bit of it, but we don't
understand it the way Lord Rahl understands it, and so we can't use it. Except
to give them pain."
Kahlan
couldn't reconcile such contradictions. "How?"
She was
struck by how much Cara's emotionless expression was like a Confessor's face,
the face Kahlan's mother had taught her, showing nothing of the inner feelings
about what had to be done.
"Our
minds are linked," Cara explained, "through the magic, so I can see
what he's thinking when he is thinking of hurting me. or fighting back, or
disobeying my orders, because it contradicts my wishes. Since we are linked to
their minds through their magic, our will to hurt them makes it happen."
She looked down at Marlin. He suddenly cried out anew in agony.
"See?"
"I
see. Now stop it. If he refuses to give us answers, then you can ... do what it
takes, but I won't sanction doing anything that isn't required to protect
Richard."
Kahlan
looked up from Marlin's torment to Cara's cold blue eyes. She spoke before she
thought. "Did you know Denna?"
"Everyone
knew Denna."
"And
was she as good at... at torturing people as you?"
"Me?"
Cara said with a laugh. "No one was as good at it as Denna. That's why she
was Darken Rahl's favorite. I could hardly believe the things she could do to a
man. Why, she could ..."
With a
glance at the Agiel hanging at Kahlan's neck-Denna's Agiel-Cara suddenly caught
the meaning behind Kahlan's questions.
"That
was in the past. We were bonded to Darken Rahl. We did as we were commanded. We
are bonded to Richard, now. We would never hurt him. We would die to keep
anyone from hurting Lord Rahl." Her tone lowered to a whisper. "Lord
Rahl not only killed Denna, but he also forgave her for what she did to
him."
Kahlan
nodded.� "So he did. But I have
not. Though I understand how she did
as she
was trained and commanded, and her spirit has been a comfort and an aid to both
of us, and I appreciate the sacrifices she has since made on our behalf, in my
heart I can't forgive her for the horrifying things she did to the man I
love."
Cara
studied Kahlan's eyes a long moment. "I understand. If you ever hurt Lord
Rahl, I would never forgive you, either. Nor would I ever grant you
mercy."
Kahlan
held the woman's gaze. "Likewise. It is said that, for a Mord-Sith, there
is no worse death to be had than by the touch of a Confessor."
A slow
smile came to Cara's lips. "So I have been told."
"It's
fortunate we're on the same side. As I've said, there are things I won't, I
can't, forgive. I love Richard more than life itself."
"Every
Mord-Sith knows that the worst pain comes from one you love."
"Richard
need never fear that pain."
Cara
seemed to consider her words carefully. "Darken Rahl never had to fear
that kind of pain; he never loved a woman. Lord Rahl does. I have noticed that
where love is concerned, things sometimes have a way of changing." '
So that
was the heart of the matter.
"Cara,
I could no more hurt Richard than could you. I would lay down my life first. I
love him."
"As
do I," Cara said, "if in a different way, but with no less ferocity.
Lord Rahl freed us. In his place, anyone else would have had every Mord-Sith
put to death. He instead has given us a chance to live up to his expectations."
Cara
shifted her weight to her other foot as her eyes withdrew their cold
assessment. "Perhaps Richard is the only one of us to understand the good
spirits' principles-that we can't truly love until we forgive another their
worst crimes against us."
Kahlan
felt her face flush at Cara's words. She never thought of a Mord-Sith as having
such depth of understanding in matters of compassion. "Was Denna a
friend?" Cara nodded. "And has your heart forgiven Richard for
killing her?"
"Yes,
but that's different," Cara admitted. "I understand the way you feel
about Denna. I don't blame you. In your place, I would feel the same."
Kahlan
stared off. "When I told Denna-her spirit-that I couldn't forgive her, she
said that she understood, and that the only forgiveness she needed had already
been granted. She told me that she loved Richard-that even in death she loved
him." Just as Richard had seen in Kahlan the woman behind the magic, he
had seen in Denna the person behind the fearsome persona of a Mord-Sith. Kahlan
could understand Denna's feelings at having someone finally see her for
herself. "Perhaps the forgiveness of one you love is the only thing in
life that really matters-the only thing that can truly heal your heart, heal
your soul."
Kahlan
watched her finger as she traced the scoop of a curled leaf carved in the
banding of the tabletop. "But I could never forgive anyone who hurt
him."
"And
have you forgiven me?"
Kahlan
looked up. "For what?"
Cara's
fist tightened on her Agiel. Kahlan knew that it hurt a Mord-Sith to hold her
Agiel in her hand-part of the paradox of being a giver of pain. "For being
Mord-Sith."
"Why
should I have to forgive you that?"
Cara
looked away. "Because if Darken Rahl had commanded me instead of Denna to
take Richard, I would have been as merciless as she. As would Berdine, or
Raina, or any of the rest."
"I
told you, the spirits mark a distinction between the might have been and the
deed. So do I. You cannot be held responsible for what others have done to you,
any more than I can be held answerable because I was born a Confessor, and no
more than Richard can be held guilty because that murderous Darken Rahl
fathered him."
Still
Cara didn't look up. "But will you ever truly trust us?"
"You
have already proven yourselves, in Richard's eyes, and in mine. You are not
Denna, nor responsible for her choices." With a thumb, Kahlan wiped oozing
blood from Cara's cheek. "Cara, if I didn't trust you, all of you, would I
allow Berdine and Raina, two of you, to be alone with Richard right now?"
Cara
glanced again to Denna's Agiel. "In the battle with the Blood of the Fold,
I saw the way you fought to protect Lord Rahl, as well as the people of the
city. To be Mord-Sith is to understand that you must sometimes be merciless.
Though you are not Mord-Sith, I have seen that you understand this. You are a
worthy guardian to Lord Rahl. You are the only woman I know worthy of wearing
an Agiel.
"Though
to you that may sound reprehensible, in my eyes, it is an honor that you wear
an Agiel. Its ultimate purpose is to protect our master."
Kahlan
offered a sincere smile, understanding Cara just a little bit better than she
had before. She wondered what the woman behind the appellation had been like
before she was captured and trained to become a Mord-Sith. Richard had told her
that it was a horror far beyond anything that had been done to him.
"In
my eyes, too, because Richard gave it to me. I am his protector, as are you. In
that way, we are sisters of the Agiel."
Cara
smiled her approval.
"Does
this mean that you'll follow our orders for a change?" Kahlan asked.
"We
always follow your orders."
With a
wry smile, Kahlan shook her head.
Cara
nodded toward the man on the floor. "He will answer your questions, as I
promised you before, Mother Confessor. I won't practice my skills on him any
more than is necessary."
Kahlan
squeezed Cara's arm in sorrow and sympathy for the warped role the woman's life
had been twisted into by others. "Thank you, Cara."
Kahlan
turned her attention to Marlin and the problem at hand. "Let's try it
again. What were your plans?"
He
glared up at her. Cara shoved him with a foot.
"You
answer truthfully, or I'll start finding some nice, tender places for my Agiel.
Understand?"
"Yes."
Cara
squatted down, fanning her Agiel before his face. "Yes, Mistress
Cara." The sudden threat in her tone seemed to annul everything she had
just said. It frightened even Kahlan.
Wide-eyed,
he swallowed. "Yes, Mistress Cara."
"That's
better. Now, answer the Mother Confessor's question."
"My
plans were as I told you: to kill Richard Rahl and you."
"How
long ago did Jagang give you these orders?"
"Nearly
two weeks."
Well,
there was that. It could be that Jagang had been killed at the Palace of the
Prophets when Richard destroyed it. That was what they had been hoping, anyway.
Perhaps he had given the orders before he was killed.
"What
else?" Kahlan asked.
"Nothing
else. I was to use my talent to get in here and kill the both of you, that's
all."
Cara
landed a kick on his cracked rib. "Don't lie to us!"
Kahlan
gently pushed Cara back and knelt beside the choking, gasping young man.
"Marlin,
don't mistake my distaste for torture as a lack of resolve. If you don't start
telling me what I want to know," she whispered, "I'm going to go for
a long walk and then to dinner and I'm going to leave you in here all alone
with Cara. Crazy as she is, I'll leave you alone with her. And then, when I
come back, if you still think to hold out on me, I'm going to use my power on
you, and you can't even imagine how much worse that will be. Cara can't even
come close to what I can do; she can use your magic and your mind. I can
destroy it. Is that what you want?"
He
shook his head as he clutched his ribs. "Please," he begged, tears
welling up again, "don't. I'll answer your questions ... but I don't
really know anything. Emperor Jagang comes to me in my dreams and tells me what
to do. I know the cost of failure. I do as I'm told." He paused to gasp a
sob. "He told me to ... to come here and kill you both. He told me to find
a soldier's uniform, and weapons, and to come kill you both. He uses wizards,
and sorceresses, to do his bidding."
Kahlan
stood, puzzling over Marlin's words. He seemed to have reverted to being hardly
more than a boy. Something was missing, but she couldn't imagine what it could
be. It made sense on the surface-Jagang sending an assassin-but something
deeper didn't tally. She paced to the side table with the lamp and leaned a hip
against it. With her back to Marlin, she rubbed her throbbing temples.
Cara
inched close. "Are you all right?"
Kahlan
nodded. "This worry is just giving me a headache, that's all."
"Maybe
you could have Lord Rahl kiss it and make it better."
Kahlan
chuckled silently at Cara's concerned frown. "That would work." She
waved her hands in the air as if shooing a gnat, trying to chase away the
doubts. "It doesn't make any sense."
"The
dream walker trying to kill his enemy doesn't make sense?"
"Well,
think about it." She glanced over her shoulder to see Marlin hugging his
ribs and rocking on the floor. His eyes, even when they were filled with
terror, and even, as now, when he wasn't looking her way, for some reason made
her skin crawl. She turned back to Cara and lowered her voice. "Surely
Jagang had to know that one man, even a wizard, would fail at such a task.
Richard would recognize a man with the gift, and besides, there are too many
people here who would be only too ready to kill an intruder."
"But
still, with his gift, he might have a chance. Jagang wouldn't care if the man
was killed. He has an abundance of others to do his bidding."
Kahlan's
thoughts flicked about, trying to pick out the nettle of a reason behind her
itching doubt.
"Even
if he managed to kill some of them with his magic, there are still too many. A
whole army of mriswith failed to kill Richard. He can recognize one with the
gift, with magic, as a threat. He doesn't know how to command his magic, much
as you don't understand how to control Marlin's, beyond giving him pain with
it, but his guard would be up, at the least.
"This
just doesn't make any sense. Jagang is far from stupid; there has to be more to
it. He must have some plan to this. Something more than we're seeing."
Cara
clasped her hands behind her back as she took a deep breath. She turned.
"Marlin." His head came up, his eyes at attention. "What was
Jagang's plan?"
"To
have me kill Richard Rahl and the Mother Confessor."
"What
else?" Kahlan asked. "What more was there to his plan?"
His
eyes flooded. "I don't know. I swear. I told you as he ordered me. I was
to get a soldier's uniform and weapons so I would look like I belonged and
could get close. I was to kill you both."
Kahlan
wiped a hand across her face. "We're not asking the right questions."
"I
don't know what else there could be. He has admitted the worst of it. He told
us his goal. What more could there be?"
"I
don't know, but there's something still itching at me." Kahlan sighed in
resignation. "Maybe Richard can reason this out. He is the Seeker of
Truth, after all. He'll figure out what it means. Richard will know the right
questions to ask so that ..."
Kahlan's
head suddenly came up, her eyes wide. She advanced a long stride toward the man
on the floor.
"Marlin,
did Jagang also tell you to announce yourself when you arrived?"
"Yes.
Once inside the palace, I was to give my reason for being here."
Kahlan
stiffened. She snatched Cara's arm and pulled her close while keeping her eyes
on Marlin. "Maybe we shouldn't tell Richard about this. It's too
dangerous."
"I
have Marlin's power. He's helpless."
Kahlan's
gaze darted about, hardly hearing what Cara had said. "We have to put him
somewhere safe. This room won't do." She put a thumbnail between her
teeth.
Cara
frowned. "This room is as safe as anywhere. He can't get away. He's safe
in here."
Kahlan
took her thumb from her mouth as she stared at the man rocking on the floor.
"No.
We have to find someplace safer. I think we've made a big mistake. I think
we're in a lot of trouble."
CHAPTER
3
Let me
just kill him," Cara said. "I have but to touch him in the right
place with my Agiel and his heart will stop. He won't suffer."
For the
first time, Kahlan seriously considered Cara's oft-repeated request. Though she
had had to kill people before, and had ordered the execution of others, she
dismissed the impulse. She had to think this through. For all she knew, that
could be Jagang's true plan, though she couldn't imagine what good it would
gain him. But he had to have some scheme to what he had ordered. He wasn't
stupid; he had to know that Marlin would be captured, at the least.
"No,"
Kahlan said. "We don't know enough yet. For all we know, that could be the
worst thing we could do. We can't do anything else until we think it through
carefully. We've already walked into a swamp without pausing to think about
where we were going."
Cara
sighed at the familiar refusal. "Then what do you wish to do?"
"I
don't know yet. Jagang had to know he would be captured, at the least, yet he
ordered it. Why? We have to figure this out. Until we do, we have to put him
somewhere safe, where he can't escape and hurt anyone."
"Mother
Confessor," Cara said with exaggerated patience, "he cannot escape. I
have control of his power. Believe me, I know how to control a person when I have
domination over their magic. I have had an abundance of experience. He is
incapable of doing anything against my wishes. Here, let me show you."
She
threw open the door. Surprised men reached for weapons as they gazed around the
room in silent, professional appraisal. With the extra light from beyond the
door, Kahlan could see the true extent of the mess. A spray of blood crossed
the bookcase at an angle. Blood soaked the crimson carpet, the spongy, reddish
blotch extending past the perimeter of gold banding. Marlin's face was a bloody
sight. The side of his beige tunic was dark with a wet stain.
"You,"
Cara said. "Give me your sword." The blond-haired soldier drew his
weapon and handed it over without hesitation. "Now," she announced,
"all of you listen to me. I'm going to give the Mother Confessor, here, a
demonstration of the power of a Mord-Sith. If any of you go against my orders,
you will answer to me"-she gestured back to Marlin-"just like he
did."
After
another glance at the miserable man on the floor, some men nodded and the rest
voiced their consent.
Cara
pointed with the sword at Marlin. "If he can make it to the door, you all
are to let him go-he is to have his freedom." The men grumbled objections.
"Don't argue with me!"
The
D'Haran soldiers fell silent. A Mord-Sith was trouble enough, but when she had
command of a person's magic she was something altogether beyond trouble: she
was dealing in magic, and they had no desire to stick their finger in a
cauldron of dark sorcery stirred by an angry Mord-Sith.
Cara
strode over to Marlin and held the sword down to him, hilt first. "Take
it." Marlin hesitated, then snatched the sword when she frowned in
warning.
Cara
looked up at Kahlan. "We always let our captives keep their weapons. It's
a constant reminder to them that they are helpless, that even their weapons
will do them no good against us."
"I
know," Kahlan said in a small voice. "Richard told me."
Cara
motioned Marlin to his feet. When he didn't move fast enough for her, she
punched his cracked rib.
"What
are you waiting for! Get up! Now, go stand over there."
After
he had moved off the carpet, she grasped the corner and flung it aside. She
pointed at the polished wood floor and snapped her fingers. Marlin scurried to
the spot, grunting in pain with each step.
Cara
snatched him by the scruff of his neck and bent him over. "Spit."
Marlin
coughed blood and spat on the floor at his feet. Cara hauled him up straight,
seized the neck of his tunic, and yanked his face close.
She
gritted her teeth. "Now, you listen. You know the kind of pain I can give
you if you displease me. Do you need another demonstration?"
He
vigorously shook his head. "No, Mistress Cara."
"Good
boy. Now, when I tell you to do something, that is what I wish you to do. If
you do otherwise, if you go against my orders, my wishes, your magic will twist
your guts like a washrag. As long as you continue to go against my wishes, the
pain will only get worse. I won't let the magic kill you, but you will wish
otherwise. You will beg me to kill you in order to escape the pain. I don't
grant my pets' requests for death."
Marlin's
face had gone ashen.
"Now.
stand on that spot of your spit." Marlin moved both feet onto the red
splat. Cara gripped his jaw in one hand and pointed her Agiel at his face.
"My
wish is for you to stand right there, on that spot of your spit, until I tell
you otherwise. You are never to so much as lift a finger to harm me, or anyone
else, ever again. That is my wish. Do you understand? Do you fully understand
my wishes?"
He
nodded, as best he could the way her hand clamped his jaw. "Yes, Mistress
Cara. I would never hurt you-I swear. You want me to stand on my spit until you
give me permission to do otherwise." Tears welled up anew. "I won't
move, I swear. Please don't hurt me."
Cara
shoved his face away. "You disgust me. Men who break as easily as you
disgust me. I've had girls last longer under my Agiel," she muttered. She
pointed behind. "Those men won't hurt you. They will do nothing to stop
you. If you get to the door, against my wishes, you are free and the pain will
be gone." She glared at the soldiers. "You all heard me, didn't you?
If he reaches the door, he's free." The soldiers nodded. "If he kills
me, he's free."
This
time they didn't agree until Cara yelled her order again. Cara turned her hot
glare to Kahlan. "That includes you. If he kills me, or if he makes the
door, he's free."
No
matter how improbable, Kahlan wouldn't agree to such a thing. Marlin wanted to
kill Richard. "Why are you doing this?"
"Because
you need to understand. You need to trust my word."
33Kahlan
forced out a breath. "Get on with it," she said, without agreeing to
the
terms.
Cara
turned her back to Marlin and folded her arms. "You know my wishes, my
pet. If you wish to escape, this is your chance. You reach the door, and you're
free. If you want to kill me for what I've done to you, now's your chance for
that, too.
"You
know," she added, "I don't think I've seen nearly enough of your
blood. When we're done with all this nonsense, I'm going to take you somewhere
private, where the Mother Confessor won't be around to intercede on your
behalf, I'm going to spend the rest of the afternoon and night punishing you
with my Agiel, just because I'm in the mood. I'm going to make you regret the
day you were born."
She
shrugged. "Unless, of course, you kill me, or escape."
The
soldiers stood mute. The room exuded a heavy silence as Cara waited with her
arms folded. Marlin carefully looked around, studying the soldiers, Kahlan, and
Cara's back. His fingers worked on the hilt of the sword, drawing it tighter
into his grip. His eyes narrowed as he considered.
Watching
Cara's back, he finally took a small, tentative step to the side.
To
Kahlan, it looked as if an invisible club had whacked him in the gut. He
doubled over with a grunt. A low groan wheezed from his throat. With a cry of
effort, he dived for the door.
He hit
the floor screaming. He clutched his abdomen with both arms as he writhed. With
fingers curled in agony, he threw himself out flat on the floor and tried to
claw his way to the door. It was still a goodly distance. Each inch he gained
racked him with ever worse convulsions of pain. Kahlan winced at his panting
screams.
In a
last, desperate effort, he snatched up the sword again and staggered to his
feet, straightening partially, lifting the sword above his head. Kahlan tensed.
Even if he couldn't make his arms do his bidding, he could fall and cleave
Cara.
The
risk to Cara was too great. Kahlan took an urgent step forward as Marlin
bellowed and tried to bring the sword down to hack at Cara. Cara, watching
Kahlan, held up an admonishing finger, stopping Kahlan where she stood.
Behind
her. Martin's sword clattered to the floor as he crumpled, holding his stomach
as he shrieked. He crashed to the floor, his distress obviously growing
precipitously with each moment as he writhed on the polished wood floor like a
fish out of water.
"What
did I tell you, Marlin?" Cara asked in a quiet voice. "What are my
wishes?"
He seemed
to grasp the meaning of her words as if they were from a person yelling as he
threw a lifeline to a drowning man. His frantic gaze hunted the floor. Finally,
he saw it. He clawed his way to the spot of his spit, moving as quickly as the
racking pain allowed. At last, he managed to stagger to his feet.
He
stood, fists at his side, still shaking and screaming.
"Both
feet, Marlin," Cara said casually.
He
looked down and saw that only one foot was on the spit. He jerked the other
closer, onto the red spot.
He
sagged and finally fell silent. Kahlan felt herself sag with him. His eyes
closed, panting, dripping sweat, he stood trembling with the lingering effects
of the ordeal.
Cara
lifted an eyebrow to Kahlan. "Understand?" ]
34
Kahlan scowled. Cara scooped up the sword and marched it over to the door. As
one, the soldiers all backed up a step. She held the sword out, hilt first.
Reluctantly, its owner retrieved it.
"Any
questions, gentlemen?" Cara asked in an icy voice. "Good. Now stop
banging on the door when I'm busy." She slammed the heavy door in their
faces.
Marlin's
lower lip sucked in and out over his teeth with each panting breath. Cara put
her face close to his.
"I
don't recall giving you permission to close your eyes. Did you hear me say you
could close them?"
His
eyes opened wide. "No, Mistress Cara."
"Then
what were they doing closed?"
Marlin's
terror quavered through his voice. "I'm sorry, Mistress Cara. Please
forgive me. I won't do it again."
"Cara."
She
turned, as if she had forgotten Kahlan was even in the room. "What?"
Kahlan
tilted her head in gesture. "We need to talk."
"You
see?" Cara asked, when she had joined Kahlan at the table with the lamp.
"You see what I mean? He can't hurt anyone. He can't escape. No man has
ever escaped a Mord-Sith."
Kahlan
lifted an eyebrow. "Richard did."
Cara
straightened and let out a noisy breath. "Lord Rahl is different. This man
is no Lord Rahl. Mord-Sith have proven themselves unerring thousands of times.
No one but Lord Rahl ever killed his Mistress to reclaim his magic and
escape."
"No
matter how improbable, Richard has proven that Mord-Sith aren't infallible. I
don't care how many thousands Mord-Sith have subjugated; the fact that one
escaped means that it's possible. Cara, I'm not doubting you-it's just that we
can't take chances. Something's wrong; why would Jagang throw this lamb in a
wolf's lair, and specifically tell him to announce himself?"
"But-"
"It's
possible Jagang was killed-he might be dead and we have nothing to fear-but if
he's still alive, and anything goes wrong with Marlin, here, it will be Richard
who pays the price. Jagang wants Richard dead. Are you so stubborn that you're
willing to put Richard at risk for the sake of your pride?"
Cara
scratched her neck as she considered. She took a quick glance over her shoulder
at Marlin standing on the spot of his spit, his eyes wide open, sweat dripping
off the end of his nose.
"What
do you want to do? This room has no windows. We can lock and bar the door.
Where can we put him that would be safer than this room?"
Kahlan
pressed her fingers over the burning ache under her sternum.
"The
pit."
Kahlan
twisted her fingers together as she came to a halt before the iron door.
Marlin, looking like a frightened puppy, stood silently in the center of a knot
of D'Haran soldiers a ways back up the torch-lit hall.
"What's
the matter?" Cara asked.
Kahlan
flinched. "What?"
"I
asked what was the matter. You look like you're afraid the door is going to
bite you."
35Kahlan
pulled her hands apart and made herself put them at her sides.
"Nothing." She turned and lifted the ring with the keys from the iron
peg in the coarse stone wall beside the door.
Cara
lowered her voice. "Don't lie to a sister of the Agiel."
Kahlan
mimicked a quick smile of apology. "The pit is where the condemned await
execution. I have a half sister-Cyrilla. She was the queen of Galea. When she
was here, when Aydindril fell to the Order, before Richard liberated the city,
they threw her in the pit with a gang of about a dozen murderers."
"Have
a half sister? She still lives, then?"
Kahlan
nodded as the mists of memories swirled before her mind's eye. "But they
had her down there for days. Prince Harold, her brother, my half brother,
rescued her when they were taking her to the block to be beheaded, but she's
never been the same since. She's withdrawn into herself. On rare occasions she
comes out of her stupor, and insists that the people need a queen able to lead
them and that I become the queen of Galea in her place. I agreed." Kahlan
paused. "She screams inconsolably if she comes awake and sees men."
Cara,
hands clasped behind her back, waited without comment.
Kahlan
gestured to the door. "They threw me down there, too." Her mouth was
so dry that it took two attempts before she could swallow. "With those men
who had raped her." She surfaced from the memories and sneaked a quick
glance at Cara. "But they didn't do to me as they did to her." She
didn't say how close they had come.
A sly
smile came to Cara's lips. "How many did you kill?"
"I
didn't stop to take an exact count as I escaped." Her brief, flitting
smile wouldn't stick. "But it scared the wits out of me-being down there,
alone, with all those beasts." Kahlan's heart pounded so hard at the
memory that it made her sway on her feet.
"Well,"
Cara offered, "do you want to find another place to put Marlin?"
"No."
Kahlan took a purging breath. "Look, Cara, I'm sorry I'm acting this
way." She peered briefly at Marlin. "There's something about his
eyes. Something strange ..."
She
looked back to Cara. "I'm sorry. It's not like me to be so jittery. You've
only known me a short time. I'm not usually so apprehensive. It's just that ...
I guess that it's just because it's been so peaceful for the last few days.
I've been separated from Richard for so long, and it's been bliss being
together. We were hoping Jagang was killed and that the war was ended. We were
hoping he was in the Palace of the Prophets when Richard destroyed it ..."
"He
still might have been. Marlin said it's been two weeks since Jagang gave him
orders. Lord Rahl said Jagang wanted the palace; he was probably with his
troops when they stormed it. He's no doubt dead."
"We
can hope. But I'm so afraid for Richard ... I guess it's affecting my judgment.
Now that things have come together, I'm terrified that it's going to slip away
from me."
Cara
shrugged, as if to dispel Kahlan's need for apology. "I know how you feel.
Now that Lord Rahl has given us our freedom, we have something to fear losing.
Maybe that's why I'm so jittery, too." She flicked her hand toward the
door. "We could find another place. There have to be other places that
won't touch painful memories for you."
"No.
Protecting Richard comes above all else. The pit is the safest place in the
36palace
to keep a prisoner. We have no one else down there, now. It's escape-proof. I'm
fine."
Cara
lifted an eyebrow. "Escape-proof? You escaped."
The
memories repressed, Kahlan smiled. With the back of her hand, she gave Cara's
stomach a dismissive slap.
"Marlin
is no Mother Confessor." She glanced back up the hall at Marlin. "But
there's something about him-something I can't put my finger on. Something
strange. He frightens me, and he shouldn't, not with you controlling his
gift."
"You
are right, you shouldn't be concerned. I have complete control of him. No pet
has ever slipped from my control. Ever."
Cara
lifted the key ring from Kahlan's hand and unlocked the door. With a tug, it
drew open on rusty, squeaking hinges. Dank stench wafted up from the darkness
below. The smell clenched Kahlan's stomach muscles with the memories it
carried. Cara took a nervous step back.
"There
aren't any ... rats, down there, are there?"
"Rats?"
Kahlan glanced to the dark maw. "No. There's no way for them to get in. No
rats. You'll see."
Kahlan
turned her attention to the soldiers back up the hall, waiting with Marlin, and
gestured toward the long ladder resting on its side against the wall opposite
the door. Once they had the ladder through the door and it had thudded down in
place, Cara snapped her fingers and motioned Marlin forward. He scurried to her
without hesitation, anxious to avoid doing anything to displease her.
"Take
that torch and get down there," Cara told him.
Marlin
pulled the torch from its rust -encrusted bracket and started down the ladder.
With a frown of puzzlement, Cara followed him down into the gloom when Kahlan
motioned her to the ladder.
Kahlan
turned to the guards. "Sergeant Collins, you and your men wait up here,
please."
"Are
you sure, Mother Confessor?'' :he sergeant asked.
"Are
you eager to be down there, in a small space, with an ill-tempered Mord-Sith,
sergeant?"
He
hooked a thumb behind his weapons belt as he glanced at the opening into the
pit. "We'll wait up here, as you command."
Kahlan
started backing down the ladder. "We'll be fine."
The
smooth stone blocks of the walls were so precisely dry-fit that there wasn't so
much as a fingernail hold to be had. Looking back over her shoulder, she could
see Marlin holding the torch, and Cara, waiting for her nearly twenty feet
below. She carefully put a foot in each rung, mindful not to step on the hem of
her dress lest she fall.
"Why
are we down here with him?" Cara asked, as Kahlan stepped off the last
rung.
Kahlan
wiped her hands together, brushing off the grit from the ladder rungs. She took
the torch from Marlin and went to the wall before them. She stretched up on her
toes and pushed the torch into one of the brackets on the wall. "Because
on the way down here I thought of some more questions to ask him before we
leave him here."
Cara
glared at Marlin and pointed to the floor. "Spit." She waited.
"Now, stand on it."
Marlin
moved onto the spot, careful to get both feet on it. Cara eyed the empty
37room,
checking the shadows in the corners. Kahlan wondered if she was making sure the
place really was free of rats.
"Marlin,"
Kahlan said. He licked his lips, waiting for her question. "When was the
last time you received orders from Jagang?"
"Like
I told you before, it was about two weeks ago."
"And
he's not sought you out since then?"
"No,
Mother Confessor."
"If
he was dead, would you know?"
He
didn't hesitate with his answer. "I don't know. He either comes to me, or
he doesn't. I have no way of knowing of him between his calls."
"How
does he come to you?"
"In
my dreams."
"And
you've not dreamed of him since you say he last came to you a fortnight
ago?"
"No,
Mother Confessor."
Kahlan
paced to the wall with the hissing torch and back as she thought. "You
didn't recognize me, when you first saw me." He shook his head.
"Would you recognize Richard?"
"Yes,
Mother Confessor."
Kahlan
frowned. "How? How would you know him?"
"From
the Palace of the Prophets. I was a student there. Richard was brought there by
Sister Verna. I knew him from the palace."
"A
student, at the Palace of the Prophets? Then you .. . How old are you?"
"Ninety-three,
Mother Confessor."
No
wonder he seemed so strange to her, sometimes like a boy and sometimes seeming
to have the demeanor of an older man. That explained the sage bearing in his
young eyes. There was a presence about those eyes that didn't fit his youthful
frame. This would certainly explain it.
The
Palace of the Prophets trained boys in their gift. Ancient magic had aided the
Sisters of the Light in their task by altering time at the palace so that they
would have the time needed, in the absence of an experienced wizard, to teach
the boys to control their magic.
That
was all ended, now. Richard had destroyed the palace and the prophecies, lest
Jagang capture them. The prophecies would have aided him in his effort to
conquer the world, and the palace would have given him hundreds of years to
rule over those he vanquished.
Kahlan
felt the weight of worry lift from her mind. "Now I know why I felt there
was something strange about him," she said as she sighed her relief.
Cara
didn't look so relieved. "Why did you announce yourself to the soldiers
inside the Confessors' Palace?"
"Emperor
Jagang didn't explain his instructions. Mistress Cara."
"Jagang
is from the Old World, and no doubt doesn't know about Mord-Sith," Cara
said to Kahlan. "He probably thought a wizard, like Marlin here, would be
able to announce himself, cause a panic, and wreak havoc."
Kahlan
considered the supposition. "Could be. Jagang has the Sisters of the Dark
as his puppets, so he would have been able to get information about Richard.
Richard wasn't at the palace long enough to learn much about his gift. The
Sisters of the Dark would have told Jagang that Richard doesn't know how to use
his magic. Richard is the Seeker, and knows how to use the Sword of Truth, but
he doesn't know how to use his gift. Jagang might have thought to send in a
wizard, on the chance that he might succeed, and if he didn't ... so what? He
has others."
"What
do you think, my pet?"
Marlin's
eyes filled with tears. "I don't know, Mistress Cara. I don't know. He
didn't tell me. I swear." A tremor seeped from his jaw into his voice.
"But it could be. What the Mother Confessor says is true: he doesn't care
if we are killed while performing a task. Our lives mean little to him."
Cara
turned to Kahlan. "What else?"
Kahlan
shook her head. "I can't think of anything else at the moment. I guess it
could all make sense. We'll come back later, after I've thought about it. Maybe
I'll think of some other questions that might settle it."
Cara
pointed her Agiel at his face. "You stand right there, on that spot of
your spit, until we come back. Whether it's in two hours or two days, it
doesn't matter. If you sit down, or any part of you, other than the soles of
your feet, touches the floor, you will be down here all alone with the pain it
brings for going against my wishes. Understand?"
He
blinked as a drop of sweat ran into his eye. "Yes, Mistress Cara."
"Cara,
do you think it necessary that-"
"Yes.
I know my business. Let me do it. You yourself reminded me what was at stake
and how we dared not take any chances."
Kahlan
relented. "All right."
Kahlan
took hold of a rung above her head and started up the ladder. On the second
rung, she paused and looked back. Frowning, she stepped back off the ladder.
"Marlin,
did you come to Aydindril alone?"
"No,
Mother Confessor."
Cara
snatched the neck of his tunic. "What! You came with others?"
"Yes,
Mistress Cara."
"How
many!"
"With
one other, Mistress Cara. She was a Sister of the Dark."
Kahlan's
fist joined Cara's on his tunic. "What was her name!"
Frightened
by both women, he tried to back away a bit, but their grip on his tunic
wouldn't allow it. "I don't know her name," he whined. "I
swear."
"She
was a Sister of the Dark, from the palace, where you lived for close to a
century, and you don't know her name?" Kahlan asked.
Marlin
licked his lips, his gaze moving between the two women. "There were
hundreds of Sisters at the Palace of the Prophets. There were rules. We had
teachers assigned to us. There were places we didn't go, and Sisters we never
came in contact with, like those who handled administration. I didn't know them
all, I swear. I saw her before, at the palace, but I didn't know her name, and
she didn't tell me."
"Where
is she now!"
Marlin
shook in terror. "I don't know! I haven't seen her for days, since I came
to the city."
Kahlan
gritted her teeth. "What did she look like, then?"
Marlin
licked his lips again as his gaze flicked back and forth between the two women.
"I don't know. I don't know how to describe her. A young woman. I don't
think she was long out of being a novice She was young-looking, like you,
Mother Confessor. Pretty. I thought she was pretty. She had long hair. Long
brown hair."
Kahlan
and Cara shared a look. "Nadine," they said as one.
CHAPTER
4
Mistress
Cara?" Marlin called from below.
Cara
turned, hanging by one hand on the next rung down from Kahlan. She held the
torch out in her other hand. "What!"
"How
will I sleep, Mistress Cara? If you don't come back tonight, and if I have to
stand, then how will I sleep?"
"Sleep?
That's not my concern. I told you-you must remain on your feet, on that spot.
Move, sit, or lie down, and you will be very sorry. You will be all alone with
the pain. Understand?"
"Yes,
Mistress Cara," came the weak voice from the darkness below.
Once
Kahlan was up in the hall, she reached down and took the torch from Cara,
freeing the Mord-Sith to use both hands to climb out. Kahlan handed the torch
to a relieved-looking Sergeant Collins.
"Collins,
I'd like all of you to remain here. Keep the door locked and don't go down
there-for anything. Don't let anyone else so much as take a peek."
"Yes,
Mother Confessor." Sergeant Collins hesitated. "Is it dangerous,
then?"
Kahlan
understood his concern. "No. Cara has control of his power. He's incapable
of using his magic."
She
took appraisal of the troops clogging the dingy stone corridor. There had to be
close to a hundred.
"I
don't know if we'll be back tonight," she told the sergeant. "Get the
rest of your men down here. Divide them into squads. Take shifts so that
there's at least this many down here at all times. Lock all the barricade
doors. Post archers at the doors and at each end of this hall."
"I
thought you said there was no need for concern, that he couldn't use his
magic."
Kahlan
smiled. "Do you want to have to explain it to Cara, here, if someone
sneaks in and rescues her charge out from under your nose in her absence?"
He
scratched his stubble as he glanced at Cara. "I understand, Mother
Confessor. No one will be allowed within shouting distance of this door."
"Still
don't trust me?" Cara asked, when they were out of earshot of the
soldiers.
Kahlan
offered a friendly smile. "My father was King Wyborn. He was Cyrilla's
father, and then mine. He was a great warrior. He taught me that it's
impossible to be too cautious with prisoners."
Cara
shrugged as they passed a sputtering torch. "Fine by me. It doesn't hurt
my feelings. But I have his magic. He's helpless."
"I
still don't understand how you can fear magic, and have such control over
it."
"I
told you. Only if he specifically attacks me with it."
"And
how do you take control of it? How do you make it yours to command?"
Cara
spun the Agiel on the end of the chain at her wrist as she walked. "I
don't know myself. We just do it. The Master Rahl himself takes part in some of
the training of Mord-Sith. It is during that; phase that the ability is
instilled in us. It's not magic from within us, but transferred to us, I
guess."
Kahlan
shook her head. "Yet you don't know, really, what you're doing. And still
it works."
With
her fingertips, Cara hooked the iron rail at a corner, swung around it, and
followed Kahlan up the stone stairs. "You don't have to know what you are
doing in order for magic to work."
"What
do you mean?"
"Well,
Lord Rahl told us that a child is magic: the magic of Creation. You don't have
to know what you are doing to make a child.
"One
time, this girl-a very naive girl-of about fourteen summers, a daughter of one
of the staff at the People's Palace in D Hara, told me that Darken Rahl- Father
Rahl, he liked to be called-had given her a rosebud and it had bloomed in her
fingers as he smiled down at her. She said that that was how she had come to be
with child-through his magic."
Cara
laughed without humor. "She really thought that that was how she became
pregnant. It never occurred to her that it was because she had spread her legs
for him. So you see? She did magic, created a son, and without knowing how she
had really done it."
Kahlan
paused on the landing, in the shadows, and seized the crook of Cara's elbow,
halting her.
"All
Richard's family is dead-Darken Rahl killed his stepfather, his mother died
when he was young, and his half brother, Michael, betrayed Richard ... allowing
Denna to capture him. After Richard defeated Darken Rahl, Richard forgave
Michael for what he had done to him, but ordered him executed because his
treachery had knowingly caused the torture and death of countless people at the
hands of Darken Rahl.
"I
know how much family means to Richard. He would be thrilled to come to know a
half brother. Could we send word to the palace in D'Hara and have him brought
here? Richard would be-"
Cara
shook her head and glanced away. "Darken Rahl tested the child and
discovered that he was born without the gift. Darken Rahl was eager to have a
gifted heir. He considered anything less deformed and worthless."
"I
see." Silence filled the stairwell. "The girl ... the mother ...
?"
Cara
heaved a sigh, realizing that Kahlan wanted to hear it all. "Darken Rahl
had a temper. A sick temper. He crushed the girl's windpipe with his bare hands
after he had made her watch him .. . well, watch him kill her son. When
ungifted offspring came to his attention it often made him angry, and then he
did that."
Kahlan
let her hand fall away from Cara's arm.
Cara's
eyes came up; the calm had repossessed them. "A few of the Mord-Sith
suffered a similar fate. Fortunately, I never came to be with child when he
chose me for his amusement."
Kahlan
sought to fill the silence. "I'm glad Richard freed you from bondage to
that beast. Freed everyone."
Cara
nodded, her eyes as cold as Kahlan had ever seen them. "He is more than
Lord Rahl to us. Anyone who ever hurts him will answer to the Mord-Sith-to
me."
Kahlan
suddenly saw what Cara had said about Richard being allowed to "keep"
Kahlan in a new light; it was the kindest thing she could think to do for him:
allowing him to have the one he loved, despite her concern for the danger to
his heart.
"You'll
have to wait in line," Kahlan said.
Cara at
last grinned. "Let us pray to the good spirits that we never have to fight
over first rights."
"I
have a better idea: let's keep harm from reaching him in the first place. But
remember, when we get up there, that we don't know for sure who this Nadine is.
If she is a Sister of the Dark, she is a very dangerous woman. But we don't
know for sure that she is. She might be a dignitary: a woman of rank and
importance. It could even be that she's nothing more than a rich nobleman's
daughter. Maybe he banished her poor, farmboy lover, and she's simply looking
for him. I don't want you harming an innocent person. Let's just keep our
heads."
"I'm
not a monster, Mother Confessor."
"I
know. I didn't mean to say that you were. I just don't want our desire to
protect Richard to make us lose our heads. That includes me. Now, let's get up
to Petitioners' Hall."
Cara
frowned. "Why would we go there? Why not go to Nadine's room?"
Kahlan
started up the second flight, two steps at a time. "There are two hundred
eighty-eight guest rooms in the Confessors' Palace, divided among six separate
wings at distant points. I was distracted before, and didn't think to tell the
guards where to put her, so we have to go ask.'
Cara
shouldered open the door at the top of the stairs and, head swiveling, entered
the hall ahead of Kahlan, as she liked to do in order to check the way for
trouble.
"Seems
a poor design. Why would guest rooms be separated?"
Kahlan
gestured to a corridor branching to the left. "This way is shorter."
She slowed as two guards stepped aside to make way for them, and then quickened
her pace along the deep blue carpet running down the hall. "The guest
rooms are separated because many diplomats visited the palace on business with
the council, and if the wrong diplomats are placed too close together, they
could become very undiplomatic. Keeping peace among allies was sometimes a
delicate balancing game. That included accommodations."
"But
there are all the palaces-for the representatives of the lands-on Kings
Row."
Kahlan
grunted cynically. "Part of the game."
When
they entered Petitioners' Hall, everyone went to their knees again. Kahlan had
to give them the formal acknowledgment before she could speak with the captain.
He told her where he had put Nadine, and she was about to leave when a boy, one
of the group of Ja'La players waiting patiently in the hall, snatched the
floppy wool hat from his head of blond hair and bolted toward them.
The
captain caught sight of him trotting across the room. "He's waiting to see
Lord Rahl. Probably wants him to come watch another game." The captain
smiled to himself. "I told him it would be all right if he waited, but
that I couldn't promise that Lord Rahl could see him." He shrugged
self-consciously. "Least I could do. I was at the game, yesterday, with a
crowd of soldiers. The boy and his team won me three silver marks."
Hat
crushed in both little fists, the boy genuflected on the other side of the
marble railing from Kahlan.�
"Mother Confessor, we'd like to ... well... if it's no trouble ...
we ..." His voice trailed off as he gulped air.
Kahlan
smiled encouragement. "Don't be afraid. What's your name?"
"Yonick,
Mother Confessor."
"I'm
sorry, Yonick, but Richard can't come watch another game just now. We're busy
at the moment. Perhaps tomorrow. I know we both enjoyed it, and we would very
much like to come watch again, but on another day."
He
shook his head. "It's not about that. It's my brother, Kip." He
twisted his hat. "He's sick. I was wondering if ... well, if Lord Rahl
could come do some magic and make him better."
Kahlan
gave the boy's shoulder a comforting squeeze. "Well, Richard's not really
that kind of wizard. Why don't you go see one of the healers on Stentor Street.
Tell them what he's sick with and they'll give him some herbs to help him feel
better."
Yonick
hung his head. "We don't have no money for herbs. That's why I was hoping
.. . Kip is real sick."
Kahlan
straightened and peered at the captain. His gaze went from Kahlan to the boy
and back again. He cleared his throat.
"Well,
Yonick, I saw you play, yesterday," the captain stammered. "Quite
good. Your team was quite good." Checking Kahlan's eyes again, he stabbed
a hand into a pocket and came out with a coin. He bent over the rail and pushed
the coin into Yonick's fist. "I know which one's your brother. He ... that
was a great play, that goal he made. Take this and get him some herbs, like the
Mother Confessor said he needs."
Yonick
stared in astonishment at the silver coin in his hand. "Herbs don't cost
this much, as I hear told."
The
captain waved away the notion. "Well, I don't have anything smaller. Buy
your team a treat, for their win, with the extra. Now take it and be off. We
have palace business we must attend to."
Yonick
straightened and clapped a fist to his heart in salute. "Yes, sir."
"And
practice that kick of yours," the captain called after the boy as he ran
across the hall to his fellows. "It's a little sloppy."
"I
will," Yonick shouted over his shoulder. "Thanks."
Kahlan
watched as he collected his friends and they rushed to the door. "Very
kind of you, captain . . . ?"
"Harris."
He winced. "Thank you, Mother Confessor."
"Cara,
let's go see this Lady Nadine."
Kahlan
hoped the captain who came to attention at the end of the hall had had an
uneventful watch.
"Has
Nadine tried to leave, Captain Nance?"
"No,
Mother Confessor," he said, when he straightened from his bow. "She
seemed grateful that someone was taking in interest in her request. When I
explained that there could be trouble about and we needed her to stay in her
room, she promised to abide by my instructions." He glanced at the door.
"She said that she didn't want to get me in 'hot water' and she would do
as I asked."
"Thank
you, captain." She paused before she opened the door. "If she comes
out of this room without us, kill her. Don't stop to ask her any questions, and
don't give her any warning, just have the archers take her down." When his
brow twitched, she added, "If she leaves first, it will be because she has
proven she commands magic and has killed us with it."
Captain
Nance, his face gone as pale as year-old straw, clapped a fist to his heart in
salute.
The
outer sitting room was decorated in red. The walls were a dark crimson, adorned
with white crown molding, pink marble baseboard and door casings, and a
hardwood floor almost entirely covered with a huge, gold-fringed carpet
embellished with an ornate leaf-and-flower motif. The gilded legs of the
marble-topped table and of the red velvet, tufted chairs were carved with a
matching leaf-and-flower design. Being an interior room, there were no windows.
Cut-glass chimneys on the dozen reflector lamps around the room sent sparkles
of light dancing across the walls.
To
Kahlan's mind it was one of the least tasteful color schemes in the palace, but
there were diplomats who specified this color room when requesting accommodations
at the palace. They felt it put them in the right frame of mind for
negotiations. Kahlan was always wary when hearing the arguments of
representatives who had requested one of the red rooms.
Nadine
wasn't in the extravagant outer room. The door to the bedroom was ajar.
"Delicious
rooms." Cara whispered. ''Can I have them?"
Kahlan
shushed her. She knew why the Mord-Sith would want a red room. With Cara
peering over her shoulder, Kahlan cautiously pushed back the bedroom door.
Cara's breath tickled her left ear.
If it
was possible, the bedroom was more jarring to the senses than the sitting room,
with the red theme carried into the carpets, embroidered bedcover, immoderate
collection of ornate, gold-fringed crimson pillows, and the swirled, pink
marble fireplace surround. Kahlan thought that if Cara was wearing her red
leather and ever wanted to hide, she could simply sit in this room and no one
would ever find her.
Only
half the lamps in the bedroom were lit. Several blown-glass bowls set about on
tables and the desk were filled with cried rose petals, their fragrance
mingling with the lamp oil to permeate the air with a heavy, sickly-sweet odor.
When
the hinges squeaked, the woman resting on the bed opened her eyes, saw Kahlan,
and sprang to her feet. Ready to take Nadine with her Confessor's power if she
gave the slightest indication of aggression, Kahlan unconsciously held an arm
out to her side to keep Cara out of her way. In preparation, her muscles tight
as coiled steel, Kahlan was holding her breath. If the woman conjured magic,
Kahlan would have to be quick.
Nadine
hastily knuckled the sleep from her eyes. By her indecision as to which foot to
put forward in the awkward curtsy she performed. Kahlan knew that she was no
noblewoman. But that didn't mean she couldn't be a Sister of the Dark.
Nadine
gawked at Cara for an instant before smoothing down her dress at her shapely
hips and addressing Kahlan. "Forgive me, Queen, but I've been on a long
journey and I was taking a bit of a rest.�
Guess I must have fallen asleep; I didn't hear you knock. I'm Nadine
Brighton, Queen."
As
Nadine dipped into another inelegant curtsy, Kahlan quickly surveyed the room.
The washbasin and ewer hadn't been used. The towels beside them on the
washstand were clean and still folded. A simple, worn woolen travel bag sat at
the foot of the bed. A clothesbrush and a tin cup were the only foreign objects
on the overwrought, gilded table to the other side of a red velvet chair beside
the fringed canopy bed. Despite the early spring chill and cold hearth, she
hadn't pulled down the bedcovers for her nap. Perhaps, thought Kahlan, so as
not to become tangled in them if she had to move fast.
Kahlan
didn't apologize for entering without knocking. "Mother Confessor,"
she said in a cautious tone, feeling the need to make clear the tacit threat of
the power she wielded. "Queen is one of my less . . . common, titles. I am
more widely known as the Mother Confessor."
As
Nadine blushed, the sprinkling of freckles at the top of her cheekbones and
across her delicate nose almost disappeared. Her large brown eyes turned to the
floor with unease. She hastily ran her fingers through her thick brown hair,
although it didn't look disheveled.
She
wasn't as tall as Kahlan, though she looked to be about the same age, or
perhaps a year younger. She was a lovely-looking young woman, and cast off no
warning signs of threat or danger, but Kahlan wasn't put at ease by a fresh
face and innocent demeanor.
Experience
had taught Kahlan hard lessons. Marlin, the latest lesson, hadn't appeared, at
first, to be anything other than an awkward young man. This young woman's
lovely eyes, though, didn't seem to have the same timeless quality to them that
had so unnerved Kahlan. Still, her caution wasn't allayed, either.
Nadine
turned and hurriedly swept the flats of her hands over the bedcover, pressing
out the wrinkles with quick strokes. "Forgive me, Mother Confessor, I
didn't mean to muss your lovely bed. 1 brushed my dress first, so I wouldn't
get road dust on it. I intended to lie on the floor, but the bed looked so
inviting I couldn't resist giving it a try. I hope I haven't caused
offense."
"Of
course not," Kahlan said. "I invited you to use the room as your
own."
Before
the last word was out of Kahlan's mouth, Cara had swept around her. Even though
there seemed to be no rank among the Mord-Sith, Berdine and Raina always
deferred to Cara's word. Among the D'Harans, the rank of the Mord-Sith, and
Cara in particular, seemed undisputed, though Kahlan had never heard anyone put
definition to it. If Cara said, "Spit," people spat.
Nadine
let out a wide-eyed squeak when she saw the leather-clad Mord-Sith coming at
her.
"Cara!"
Kahlan called out.
Cara
ignored her. "We have your friend, Marlin, down in the pit. You'll be
joining him shortly."
Cara
jabbed a finger in the hollow at the base of Nadine's neck, causing her to drop
backward onto the chair beside the bed.
"Ow!"
Nadine shouted as she glared up at Cara. "That hurt!"
As she
bounded up off the chair, Cara seized the young woman's throat in an armored
fist. She swept her Agiel up and pointed it between the wide brown eyes.
"I have not yet begun to hurt you."
Kahlan
snatched Cara's braid and gave it a mighty yank. "One way or the other,
you're going to learn to follow orders!"
Cara,
still gripping the young woman's throat, turned in surprise.
"Let
her go! I told you to let me handle this. Until she makes a threatening move,
you will do as you are told, or you can wait outside."
Cara
released Nadine with a shove that plopped her down in the chair again.
"This one's trouble. I can feel it. You should let me kill her."
Kahlan
pressed her lips together until Cara rolled her eyes and grudgingly stepped
aside. Nadine came off the chair, slower this time. Her eyes teared as she
rubbed her throat and coughed.
"Why'd
you do that! I've done nothing to you! I didn't disturb any of your fine
things. You people have the worst manners of anyone I've ever seen." She
shook a finger at Kahlan. "There's no call to treat a person that
way."
"On
the contrary," Kahlan said. "An innocent enough looking young man
showed up at the palace today, also asking to see Lord Rahl. He turned out to
be an assassin. Thanks to Cara, here, we were able to stop him."
Nadine's
indignation faltered. "Oh."
"That's
not the worst of it," Kahlan added. "He confessed to having an
accomplice-an attractive young woman with long brown hair."
Nadine's
throat-rubbing paused as she looked at Cara, then back to Kahlan. "Oh.
Well, I guess I can understand the mistake ..."
"You
asked to see Lord Rahl, too. That's made everyone just a little jumpy. All of
us are quite protective of Lord Rahl."
"I
guess I can see the reason for the confusion. No offense taken."
"Cara,
here, is one of Lord Rahl's personal guards," Kahlan said. "I'm sure
you can understand the reason for her belligerent attitude."
Nadine
took her hand away from her throat and rested it on one hip. "Of course. I
guess I landed in the middle of a hornet's nest."
"The
problem is," Kahlan went on, "you haven't yet convinced us you are
not the second assassin. For your sake, it would be best if you did so at
once."
Nadine's
eyes darted between the two women watching her. Her relief reversed to alarm.
"Me? A killer? But I'm a woman."
"So
am I," Cara said. "One who is going to have your blood all over this
room until you tell us the truth."
Nadine
spun around and snatched up the chair, brandishing its legs toward Cara and
Kahlan. "Stay away! I'm warning you; Tommy Lancaster and his friend Lester
once thought to have their way with me, and they now have to eat all their
meals without the benefit of their front teeth."
"Put
down the chair," Cara warned in a deadly hiss, "or you will be eating
your next meal in the spirit world."
Nadine
dropped the chair as if it had caught fire. She retreated until she was up
against the wall. "Leave me be! I didn't do anything!"
Kahlan
gently hooked Cara's arm and urged her back. "Let a sister of the Agiel
handle this?" she said in a whisper as she lifted an eyebrow. "I know
I said 'until she makes a threatening move,' but a chair is hardly the kind of
threat I had in mind."
Cara's
mouth twisted in annoyance. "All right. For the moment."
Kahlan
turned to Nadine. "I need some answers. Tell the truth, and if you really
have nothing to do with this assassin, you will have my sincere apology and
I'll do what I can to make up for our inhospitality. But if you lie to me, and
you intend to do harm to Lord Rahl, the guards outside have orders not to allow
you to leave this room alive. Do you understand?"
Nadine,
her back pressed against the wall, nodded.
"You
asked to see Lord Rahl." Nadine nodded again. "Why?"
"I'm
on my way to my love. He's been gone since last autumn. We're to be wed, and
I'm on my way to him." She brushed a strand of hair back from her
eyes.� "But I don't know where he
is, exactly. I was told to go see Lord Rahl and I would find my
betrothed." Nadine's lower lids brimmed with tears. "That's why I
wanted to speak with this Lord Rahl-to ask if he could help."
"I
see," Kahlan said. "I can understand your distress over your love
being missing. What is your young man's name?"
Nadine
pulled her kerchief from her sleeve and dabbed it at her eyes.
"Richard."
"Richard.
Is there more to his name?"
Nadine
nodded. "Richard Cypher."
Kahlan
had to remind herself to draw a breath through her open mouth, but her mind
couldn't seem to make her tongue work.
"Who?"
Cara asked.
"Richard
Cypher. He's a woods guide where I live, in Hartland, that's in West-land,
where we live.'"
"What
do you mean, you're to wed him?" Kahlan finally managed in a whisper. She
felt her world threatening to crush in around her as a thousand things all at
once whirled chaotically in her mind. "Did he tell you that?"
Nadine
twisted her damp kerchief. "Well, he was courting me ... it was understood
. . . but then he disappeared. A woman came and told me that we're to be
married. She said that the sky had spoken to her-she was a mystic of some sort.
She knew all about my Richard, how kind and strong and handsome he is and all.
She knew all manner of things about me, too. She said that it's my destiny to
marry Richard and Richard's destiny to be my husband."
"Woman?"
Kahlan could get out no more than that one word.
Nadine
nodded. "Shota, she said her name was."
Kahlan's
hands balled into fists. Her voice returned with venom. "Shota. Did this
woman, Shota, have anyone with her?"
"Yes.
A strange little . . . fellow. With yellow eyes. He kind of scared me, but she
said he was harmless. Shota is the one who told me to come see Lord Rahl. She
said Lord Rahl could help me find my Richard."
Kahlan
recognized the description of Shota's companion, Samuel. This woman's voice,
calling Richard, "my Richard," kept thundering around in the storm in
Kahlan's head. She worked at making her voice sound calm. "Nadine, please
wait here."
"I
will," Nadine said, gathering her composure. "Is everything all
right? You believe me, don't you? Every word is true."
Kahlan
didn't answer, but instead pulled her stunned stare from Nadine and marched
from the room. Cara closed the door as she followed on Kahlan's heels.
Kahlan
staggered to a halt in the outer room, everything swimming in a watery red
blur.
"Mother
Confessor," Cara whispered, "what's wrong? Your face is as red as my
leather. Who is this Shota?"
"Shota
is a witch woman."
Cara
stiffened at that news. "And do you know this Richard Cypher?"
Kahlan
twice swallowed past the painful lump in the back of her throat. "Richard
was raised by his stepfather. Until Richard found out that Darken Rahl was his
real father, his name was Richard Cypher."
CHAPTER
5
I'll
kill her," Kahlan rasped in a hoarse voice as she stared off at nothing.
"With my bare hands. I'll strangle the life out of her!"
Cara
turned toward the bedroom. "I will take care of it. Better if you let me
take care of her."
Kahlan
hooked Cara's arm. "Not her. I'm talking about Shota." She gestured
toward the bedroom door. "She doesn't understand any of this. She doesn't
know about Shota."
"You
know this witch woman, then?"
Kahlan
bitterly huffed out a breath. "Oh yes. I know her. She's been trying to
prevent Richard and me from being together since the first."
"Why
would she do that?"
Kahlan
turned away from the bedroom door. "I don't know. She gives a different
reason every time, but I sometimes fear that it's because she wants Richard for
herself."
Cara
frowned. "How would getting Lord Rahl to marry this little strumpet gain
Shota Lord Rahl?"
Kahlan
flicked a hand. "I don't know. Shota is always up to something. She's
caused us trouble at every turn." Her fists tightened with resolve.
"But it won't work, this time. If it's the last thing I do, I'm going to
end her meddling. And then Richard and I are going to be married." Her voice
dropped to a whispered oath. "If I have to touch Shota with my power and
send her to the underworld, I will end her meddling."
Cara
folded her arms as she considered the problem. "What do you wish done with
Nadine?" Her blue eyes turned toward the bedroom. "It still might be
best to ... get rid of her."
Kahlan
squeezed the bridge of her nose between a finger and thumb. "This isn't
Nadine's doing. She's simply a pawn in Shota's plotting."
"One
foot soldier can sometimes cause you more trouble than a general's battle plan
if he ..."
Cara's
words trailed off as her arms came unfolded. She cocked her head, as if
listening to a wind in the halls.
"Lord
Rahl is coming."
The
ability of the Mord-Sith to sense Richard through their bond to him was uncanny,
if not unnerving. The door opened. Berdine and Raina, wearing leather of the
same cut and skintight style as Cara's, but brown rather than red, strutted
into the room.
Both
were a bit shorter than Cara, but no less attractive. Where Cara was leggy,
muscular, and without a spare ounce of fat, blue-eyed Berdine had a more
curvaceous shape. Berdine's wavy brown hair was plaited in the characteristic
long braid of a Mord-Sith, as was graceful Raina's fine, dark hair. All three
shared the same ruthless confidence.
Raina's
incisive, dark-eyed gaze took in Cara's red leather, but she made no comment.
Both she and Berdine wore grim, forbidding expressions. The two Mord-Sith
turned to face one another from either side of the door.
"We
present Lord Rahl," Berdine said in an officious tone, "the Seeker of
Truth and wielder of the Sword of Truth, the bringer of death, the Master of
D'Hara, the ruler of the Midlands, the commander of the gar nation, the
champion of free people and bane of the wicked"- her penetrating blue eyes
turned to Kahlan-"and the betrothed of the Mother Confessor." She
lifted an introductory arm toward the door.
Kahlan
couldn't imagine what was going on. She had seen the Mord-Sith display a
variety of temperaments, from imperious to mischievous, but she had never seen
them acting ceremonial.
Richard
strode into the room. His raptor gaze locked on Kahlan. For an instant, the
world stopped. There was nothing else but the two of them, joined in a silent
link.
A smile
widened on his lips and gleamed in his eyes. A smile of unbounded love.
There
was only her and Richard. Only his eyes.
But the
rest of him . ..
She
felt her mouth drop open. In astonishment, Kahlan put a hand over her heart. As
long as she had known him, he had worn only his simple woods clothes. But now .
. .
His
black boots were all she recognized. The tops of the boots were wrapped with
leather thongs pinned with silver emblems embossed with geometric designs, and
covered new, black wool trousers. Over a black shirt was a black, open-sided
tunic, decorated with symbols snaking along a wide gold band running all the
way around its squared edges. A wide, multilayered leather belt bearing several
more of the silver emblems and a gold-worked pouch to each side cinched the
magnificent tunic at his waist. The ancient, tooled-bather baldric holding the
gold and silver wrought scabbard for the Sword of Truth crossed over his right
shoulder. At each wrist was a wide, leather-padded silver band bearing linked
rings encompassing more of the strange symbols. His broad shoulders bore a cape
that appeared to be made of spun gold.�
He looked at once noble and sinister. Regal, and deadly. He looked like
a commander of kings. And like a vision of what the prophecies had named him:
the bringer of death.
Kahlan
would never have thought he could look more handsome than he always did. More
commanding. More imposing. She was wrong.
As her
jaw worked, trying to bring forth words that weren't there, he crossed the
room. He bent and kissed her temple.
"Good,"
Cara announced. "She needed that; she had a headache." She lifted an
eyebrow to Kahlan. "All better now?"
Kahlan,
hardly able to get her breath, hardly hearing Cara, touched her fingers to him,
as if to test it this was a vision, or real.
"Like
it?" he asked.
"Like
it? Dear spirits ..." she breathed.
He
chuckled. "I'll take that for a yes."
Kahlan
wished everyone was gone. "But, Richard, what is this? Where did you get
all this?"
She
couldn't take her hand from his chest. She liked the feel of his breathing. She
could feel his heart beating, too. And she could feel her own heart pounding.
"Well,"
he said, "I knew you wanted me to get some new clothes-"
She
pulled her gaze from his body and looked up into his gray eyes. "What? I
never said that."
He
laughed. "Your beautiful green eyes said it for you. When you looked at my
old woods outfit, your eyes spoke quite c early."
She
took a step back and gestured to the new clothes. "Where did you get all
this?"
He
clasped one of her hands and with the fingers of his other lifted her chin to
gaze into her eyes. "You're so beautiful. You're going to look magnificent
in your blue wedding dress. I wanted to look worthy of the Mother Confessor
herself when we're married. I had it made in a hurry so as not to delay our
wedding."
"He
had the seamstresses make it for him. It was a surprise," Cara said.
"I never told her your secret, Lord Rahl. She tried her best to get it out
of me, but I didn't tell her."
"Thank
you, Cara." Richard laughed. "I bet it wasn't easy."
Kahlan
laughed with him. "But this is wonderful. Mistress Wellington made all
this for you?"
"Well,
not all of it. I told her what I wanted, and she and the other seamstresses
went to work. I think she did a fine job."
"I
will give her my compliments. If not a hug." Kahlan tested the cape
between a finger and thumb. "She made this? I've never seen anything like
it. I can't believe she made this."
"Well,
no," Richard admitted. "That, and some of the other things came from
the Wizard's Keep."
"The
Keep! What were you doing up there?"
"When
I was there before, I came across these rooms where the wizards used to stay. I
went back and had a better look at some of the things that belonged to
them."
"When
did you do this?"
"A
few days ago. When you were busy meeting with some of the officials from our
new allies."
Kahlan's
brow tightened as she appraised the outfit. "The wizards of that time wore
this? I thought wizards always wore simple robes."
"Most
of them did. One wore some of this."
"What
kind of wizard wore an outfit like this?"
"A
war wizard."
"A
war wizard," she whispered in astonishment. Though he largely didn't know
how to use his gift, Richard was the first war wizard to have been born in
nearly three thousand years.
Kahlan
was about to launch into a raft of questions, but remembered that there were
more consequential matters at the moment. Her mood sank.
"Richard"-she looked away from his eyes-"there is someone here
to see you ..."
She
heard the bedroom door squeak.
"Richard?"
Nadine, standing in the doorway, expectantly twisted her kerchief in her
fingers. "I heard Richard's voice."
50
"Nadine?"
Nadine's
eyes went as big as Sanderian gold crowns. "Richard."
Richard
smiled politely. "Nadine." His mouth smiled, anyway.
His
eyes, though, held no hint of a smile. It was as discordant a look as Kahlan
had ever seen on his face. Kahlan had seen Richard angry, she had seen him in
the lethal rage from magic of the Sword of Truth, when the magic danced
dangerously in his eyes, and she had seen him with the deadly calm countenance
invoked when he turned the blade white. In the fury of commitment and
determination, Richard was capable of looking frightening.
But no
look she had ever seen on his face was as terrifying to Kahlan as the one she
saw now.
This
wasn't a deadly rage that gripped his eyes, or a lethal commitment. This was
somehow worse. The depth of disinterest in that empty smile, in his eyes, was
frightening.
The
only way Kahlan could imagine it being worse would be if such a gaze were
directed her way. That look, so devoid of fervor, if directed at her, would
have broken her heart.
Nadine
apparently didn't know him as well as did Kahlan; she didn't see anything but
the smile on his lips.
"Oh,
Richard!"
Nadine
dashed across the room and threw her arms around his neck. She seemed ready to
throw her legs around Richard too. Kahlan shot an arm out to stop Cara before
the Mord-Sith could take more than a step.
Kahlan
had to force herself to stand her ground and hold her tongue. Despite
everything she and Richard meant to each other, she knew that this was
something beyond her say. This was Richard's past, and as well as she knew him,
some of that past-his romantic past, anyway-was largely unknown territory. Up
until that moment it had seemed unimportant.
Fearing
to say the wrong thing, Kahlan said nothing. Her fate was in Richard's hands,
and those of a beautiful woman who at that moment had hers around his neck-but
worse, her fate seemed once again in Shota's hands.
Nadine
began planting kisses all over Richard's neck even as he tried to hold his head
away from her. He placed his hands on her waist and pushed her away.
"Nadine,
what are you doing here?"
"Looking
for you, silly," she said in a breathless voice. "Everyone's been
puzzled-worried-since you disappeared last autumn. My father missed you- I've
missed you. None of us knew what happened to you. Zedd's missing, too. The
boundary came down and then you came up missing, and Zedd, and your brother. I
know you were upset when your father was murdered, but we didn't expect you to
run away." Her words were running together in breathless excitement.
"Well,
it's a long story, and one I'm sure you wouldn't be interested in."
True to
Richard's words, she didn't seem to hear a bit of it, and simply rambled on.
"I
had so much to take care of, first. I had to get Lindy Hamilton to promise to
get the winter roots for Pa. He's been beside himself without you to bring him
some of the special plants he needs that only you can seem to find. I've done
my best, but I don't know the woods like you. He's hoping Lindy will be able to
fill in until I can get you home. Then I had to think what to take, and how to
find my way. I've been looking so long. I came to speak with somebody named
Lord Rahl, hoping he could help me find you. I never in all the world dreamed
I'd find you before I even talked to him."
"I
am Lord Rahl."
This,
too, she seemed not to hear. She stepped buck and looked him up and down.
"Richard, what are you doing in that outfit? Who are you pretending to be?
Get changed. We'll go home. Everything's fine, now that I've found you. We'll
be back home soon, and everything will be back to the way it was. We'll be
married and-"
"What!"
She
blinked. "Married. We'll be marred, and have a house and everything. You
can build us a better one-your old house won't do. We'll have children. Lots of
children. Sons. Lots of sons. Big and strong like my Richard." She
grinned. "I love you, my Richard. We're going to be married, at last."
His smile,
as empty as it had been, was gone, and in its place a serious scowl grew.
"Where did you ever get an idea like that?"
Nadine
laughed as she playfully ran a finger down his front. She finally glanced
about. No one else was so much as smiling. Her laughter died out and she sought
refuge in Richard's gaze.
"But,
Richard . . . you and me. Like it was always supposed to be. We'll be married.
At last. Like it was always meant to be."
Cara
leaned toward Kahlan to whisper in her ear. "You should have let me kill
her."
Richard's
glare wiped the smirk from the Mord-Sith's mouth and drained the blood from her
face. He turned back to Nadine.
"Where
did you get such an idea?"
Nadine
was appraising his clothes again. "Richard, you look foolish dressed like
this. Sometimes I wonder if you have a lick of sense. What are you doing
playing at being a king? And where did you get such a sword? Richard, I know
you would never steal, but you don't have the kind of money such a weapon would
cost. If you won it in a bet or something, you can sell it so that we-"
Richard
gripped her by the shoulders and gave her a shake. "Nadine, we were never
engaged to be married, or even close. Where did you get a crazy idea like that?
What are you doing here!"
Nadine
finally wilted under his glower. "Richard, I've come a long way. I've
never been out of Hartland before. It was hard traveling Doesn't that mean
anything to you? Doesn't that count for anything? I would never have left
except to come get you. I love you, Richard."
Ulic, one
of Richard's two huge personal bodyguards, ducked as he stepped through the
doorway. "Lord Rahl, if you are not busy, General Kerson has a problem and
needs to speak with you."
Richard
turned a hot glare toward the towering Ulic. "In a minute."
Ulic, not
used to Richard directing such a forbidding look, or tone, his way, bowed.
"I will tell him, Lord Rahl."
Puzzled,
Nadine watched the mountain of muscle duck back out the doorway. "Lord
Rahl? Richard, what in the name of the good spirits was that man talking about?
What trouble have you gotten yourself into? You were always so sensible. What
have you done? Why are you tricking these people? Who are you playing at
being?"
He
seemed to cool a bit and his voice turned weary. "Nadine, it's a long
story, and one I'm not in the mood to repeat just now. I'm afraid I'm not the
same person ... It's been a long time since I've left home. A great many things
have happened. I'm sorry you've come a long way for nothing, but what was once
between us-"
Kahlan
expected a sheepish glance her way. She never got one.
Nadine
took a step back. She looked around at all the faces watching her: Kahlan,
Cara, Berdine, Raina, and the silent hulk of Egan back near the door.
Nadine
threw her hands up. "What's the matter with all you people! Who do you
think this man is? He's Richard Cypher, my Richard! He's a woods guide- a
nobody! He's just a simple boy from Hartland, playing at being somebody
important. He's not! Are you all blind fools? He's my Richard, and we're to be
married."
Cara
finally broke the silence. "We all know quite well who this man is.
Apparently, you do not. He is Lord Rahl, the Master of D'Hara, and the ruler of
what was the Midlands. At least, he is the ruler of those who have so far
surrendered to him. Everyone in this room, if not this city, would lay down
their lives to protect him. We all owe him more than our loyalty; we owe him
our lives."
"We
can all only be who we are," Richard told Nadine, "no more, and no
less. A very wise woman told me that, one time."
Nadine
whispered her incredulity, but Kahlan couldn't hear the words.
Richard
put his arm around Kahlan's waist. In that gentle touch, she read the message
of comfort and love, and suddenly felt profound sorrow for this woman standing
before strangers, exposing such personal matters of the heart.
"Nadine,"
Richard said in a quiet tone "this is Kahlan, the wise woman I spoke of.
The woman I love. Kahlan, not Nadine. Kahlan and I are soon to be married.
We're shortly going to leave to be wedded by the Mud People. Nothing in this
world is going to change that."
Nadine
seemed afraid to take her eyes from Richard, as if she feared that if she did,
it would become true.
"Mud
People? What in the name of the spirits are Mud People? Sounds dreadful.
Richard, you ..." She seemed to gather her resolve. She pressed her lips
together and suddenly scowled. She shook her finger at him.
"Richard
Cypher, I don't know what kind of foolish game you're playing, but I'll not
have it! You listen to me, you big oaf, you go get your things packed! We're
going home!"
"I
am home, Nadine."
Nadine,
at last, could think of no counter.
"Nadine,
who told you all this ... this marriage business?"
The
fire had gone out of her. "A mystic named Shota."
Kahlan
tensed at the sound of that name. Shota was the true threat. No matter what
Nadine said, or wanted, it was Shota who had the power to cause trouble.
"Shota!"
Richard wiped a hand across his face. "Shota. I might have known."
And
then Richard did the last thing Kahlan would have expected: he chuckled. He
stood there, with everyone watching him, threw his head back, and laughed
aloud.
Somehow,
it magically melted Kahlan's fears. That Richard would simply laugh off what
Shota might do somehow trivialized the threat. Suddenly, her heart felt
buoyant. Richard said that the Mud People were going to marry them, as they
both wanted, and the fact that Shota wished otherwise was worth no more than a
chuckle.� Richard's arm around her waist
tightened with a loving squeeze. She felt her cheeks tighten with a grin of her
own.
Richard
waved an apology. "Nadine, I'm sorry. I'm not laughing at you. It's just
that Shota has been playing her little tricks on us for a long time. It's
unfortunate that she's used you in her scheme, but it's just one of her
wretched games. She's a witch woman."
"Witch
woman?" Nadine whispered.
Richard
nodded. "She's taken us in with her little dramas in the past, but not
this time. I no longer care what Shota says. I'm not playing her games
anymore."
Nadine
looked perplexed. "A witch woman? Magic? I've been plied with magic? But
she said that the sky had spoken to her."
"Is
that so. Well, I don't care if the Creator Himself has spoken to her."
"She
said that the wind hunts you. I was worried. I wanted to help."
"The
wind hunts me? Well, it's always something with her."
Nadine's
gaze drifted from his. "But what about us . . . ?"
"Nadine,
there is no 'us.' " The edge returned to his voice. "You, of all
people, know the truth of that."
Her
chin lifted with indignation. "I don't know what you're talking
about."
He
watched her for a long moment, as if considering saying more than he finally
did. "Have it your way, Nadine."
For the
first time, Kahlan felt embarrassed. Whatever the exchange had meant, she felt
like an intruder hearing it. Richard seemed uncomfortable, too. "I'm
sorry, Nadine, but I have things I have to take care of. If you need help
getting home, I'll see what I can do. Whatever you need-a horse, supplies,
whatever. Tell everyone back in Hartland that I'm fine, and I send my best
wishes."
He
turned to the waiting Ulic. "Is General Kerson here?"
"Yes,
Lord Rahl."
Richard
took a step toward the door. ' I'd best go see what his problem is."
General
Kerson instead entered from right around the doorway when he heard his name.
Graying, but muscular and fit, and a head shorter than Richard, he cut an
imposing figure in his burnished leather uniform. His upper arms bore scars of
rank, their shiny white furrows showing through the short chain-mail sleeves.
He
clapped a fist to his heart in salute "Lord Rahl, I need to speak with
you."
"Fine.
Speak."
The
general hesitated. "I meant alone, Lord Rahl."
Richard
looked in no mood to dally with the man. "There are no spies here.
Speak."
"It's
about the men, Lord Rahl. A great many of them are sick."
"Sick?
What's wrong with them?"
"Well,
Lord Rahl, they ... that is ..."
Richard's
brow tightened. "Out with it."
"Lord
Rahl"-General Kerson glanced among the women before clearing his
throat-"I've got over half my army, well, out of commission, squatting and
groaning with debilitating bouts of diarrhea."
Richard's
brow relaxed. "Oh. Well, I'm sorry. I hope they're better soon. It's a
miserable state to be in."
"It's
not an uncommon condition among an army, but to be this widespread it is, and
because it is so widespread, something has to be done."
"Well,
be sure they get plenty to drink. Keep me informed. Let me know how they're
doing."
"Lord
Rahl, something has to be done. Now. We can't have this."
"It's
not like they're stricken with spotted fever, general."
General
Kerson clasped his hands behind his back and took a patient breath. "Lord
Rahl, General Reibisch, before he went south, told us that you wanted your
officers to voice their opinions to you when we thought it important. He said
that you told him that you may get angry if you didn't like what we had to say,
but you wouldn't punish us for voicing our views. He said you wanted to know
our opinions because we've had more experience at dealing with troops and with
command of an army than you."
Richard
wiped a hand back and forth across his mouth. "You're right, general. So
what is it that's so vital?"
"Well,
Lord Rahl, I'm one of the heroes of the Shinavont province revolt. That's in
D'Hara. I was a lieutenant at the time. There were five hundred of us, and we
came upon the rebel force, seven thousand strong, encamped in a scrag wood. We
attacked at first light, and ended the revolt before the day was out. There
were no Shinavont rebels left by sunset."
"Very
impressive, general."
General
Kerson shrugged. ' 'Not really. Nearly all their men had their pants down
around their ankles. You ever try to fight when the grips had your guts?"
Richard admitted that he hadn't. "Everyone called us heroes, but it
doesn't take a hero to split a man's skull when he's so dizzy with diarrhea
that he can hardly lift his head. I wasn't proud of what we did, but it was our
duty, and we ended the revolt, and undoubtedly prevented the greater bloodshed
that would have occurred if their force had gotten well and escaped us. No
telling what they would have done, how many more would have died.
"But
they didn't. We took them down because they were sick with dysentery and
couldn't keep their feet." He swept his arm around, indicating the
surrounding countryside. "I've got over half my men down. We've not a full
force because General Reibisch went off to the south. What's left isn't in
fighting condition. Something has to be done. A sizable enough foe attacks now,
and we're in trouble. We're vulnerable. We could lose Aydindril.
"I'd
be grateful if you knew something we could do to reverse the situation."
"Why
are you bringing this to me? Don't you have healers?"
"The
healers we have are for those kinds of problems caused by steel. We tried going
to some of the herb sellers and healers here in Aydindril, but they couldn't
begin to handle the numbers." He shrugged. "You're the Lord Rahl. I
thought you would know what to do."
"You're
right, the herb dealers wouldn't have anything in that kind of quantity."
Richard pinched his lower lip as he thought. "Garlic will take care of it,
if they eat enough. Blueberries will help, too. Get plenty of garlic into the
men, and supplement it with blueberries. There would be enough of those
around."
The
general leaned in with a dubious frown. "Garlic and blueberries? Are you
serious?"
"My
grandfather taught me about herbs and remedies and such things. Trust me,
general, it will work. They've got to drink plenty of tannin tea from quench oak
bark, too. Garlic, blueberries, and the quench oak tea should take care of
it." Richard looked over his shoulder. "Right, Nadine?"
She
nodded. "That would do it, but it would be easier yet if you gave them
powdered bistort."
"I
thought of that, but we'll never find any bistort this time of year, and the
herb sellers wouldn't begin to have enough."
"It
doesn't take that much in powered form, and it would work best," Nadine
said. "How many men, sir?"
"Last
report was in the neighborhood of fifty thousand," the general said.
"By now? Who knows."
Nadine's
eyebrows lifted in surprise at the number. "I've never seen that much
bistort in my life. They'd be old men before that much could be gathered.
Richard's right, then: garlic, blueberries, and quench oak tea. Comfrey tea
would work, too, but no one will carry that kind of quantity. Quench oak is
your best bet, but it's hard to find. If there aren't quench oaks to be had,
arrowwood would at least be better than nothing."
"No,"
Richard said. "I've seen quench oak up in the high ridges, to the
northeast."
General
Kerson scratched his stubble. "What's a quench oak?"
"An
oak tree. The kind of oak tree that will be what your men need. It has a yellow
inner bark that you use to make the tea."
''A
tree. Lord Rahl, I can identify ten different kinds of steel just from the feel
of it between my fingers, but I couldn't tell one tree from another if I had
extra eyes."
"Surely
you must have men who know trees."
''Richard,''
Nadine said, "quench oak is what we call it in Hartland. I've collected
roots and plants on my way here that I know the names of, but are called
different by the people I've met. If these men drink tea from the wrong tree,
the best you can hope for is that it won't harm them, but it won't solve the
problem. The garlic and blueberries will help their gut, but they need the
liquid for what was drained out of the rest of them; the tea helps stop them
from losing all that water and builds their health back up."
"Yes,
I know." He rubbed his eyes. "General, get a detachment together,
about five hundred wagons, and extra packhorses in case we can't get the wagons
close. I know where the trees are, I'll lead you up there." Richard
laughed quietly to himself. "Once a guide, always a guide."
"The
men will appreciate it that Lord Rahl is concerned about their
well-being," the general said. "I, for sure, appreciate it, Lord
Rahl."
"Thanks,
general. Get everything needed together, and I'll meet you out at the stables
shortly. I'd like to get up there, at least, before dark. Those passes are no
place to be stumbling around in the dark, especially with wagons. The moon is
near full, but even that won't help enough."
"We'll
be ready before you can walk out there. Lord Rahl."
After a
quick fist to his heart in salute, the general was gone. Richard flashed Nadine
another of his empty smiles. "Thanks for the help."
And
then he turned his full attention to the Mord-Sith clad in red leather.
CHAPTER
6
Richard
gripped Cara's jaw and lifted her face. He turned her head so he could better
see the oozing cut on her cheek.
"What's
this?"
She
glanced to Kahlan when he released his hold on her. "A man refused my
advances."
"Is
that so. Maybe he was put off by your choice of red leather."
Richard
looked to Kahlan. "What's going on? We've got a palace full of guards so
jumpy that they even challenged me when I came in. We've got squads of archers
guarding stairwells, and I've not seen so much bared steel since the Blood of
the Fold attacked the city."
His
eyes had that raptor gaze again. "Who's down in the pit?"
"I
told you," Cara whispered to Kahlan. "He always finds out."
Kahlan
had told Cara not to mention Marlin because she feared he might somehow hurt
Richard. But once Marlin had revealed that there was a second assassin,
everything changed; she had to tell Richard that there was a Sister of the Dark
wandering around loose.
"An
assassin showed up to kill you." Kahlan gestured with a tilt of her head
toward Cara. "Little Miss Magic, here, goaded him into using his gift on
her so that she could capture him. We put him down in the pit for
safekeeping."
Richard
glanced at Cara before addressing Kahlan. ''Little Miss Magic, eh? Why did you
let her do that?"
''He
said he wanted to kill you. Cara decided to question him in her own
fashion."
''Do
you think that was necessary?'' he asked Cara. ''We have a whole army. One man
couldn't get to me."
"He
also said he intended to kill the Mother Confessor."
Richard's
expression darkened. "Then I hope you didn't show him your gentle
side."
Cara
smiled. "No, Lord Rahl."
"Richard,"
Kahlan said, "it's worse than that. He was a wizard from the Palace of the
Prophets. He said that he came with a Sister of the Dark. We haven't found her
yet."
"A
Sister of the Dark. Great. How did you manage to discover that this man was an
assassin?"
"He
announced himself, believe it or not. He claims that Jagang sent him to kill
you, and me, and that his orders were to announce himself once inside the
Confessors' Palace."
"Then
Jagang's plan wasn't really for this man to kill us; Jagang isn't that stupid.
What was this Sister of the Dark to do, here in Aydindril? Did he say that she
was here to kill us, too, or that she was here for some other purpose?"
"Marlin
didn't seem to know," Kahlan said. "After what Cara did to him, I
believe him."
"Which
Sister is it? What's her name?"
"Marlin
didn't know her name."
Richard
nodded. "That's possible. How long was he in the city before he announced
himself?"
"I'm
not sure, exactly. I assumed a few days."
"Then
why didn't he come directly to the palace once he arrived?"
"I
don't know," Kahlan said. "I didn't . .. ask him that."
"How
long was he with the Sister? What did they do while they were here?"
"I
don't know." Kahlan hesitated. "I guess I didn't think to ask
him."
"Well,
if he was with her, she must have had something to say to him. She would have
been the one in charge. What did she say to him?"
"I
don't know."
"Did
this Marlin see anyone else while he was in the city? Did he meet with anyone
else? Where did he stay?"
It was
the Seeker questioning her, not Richard. Even though he wasn't raising his
voice, or using a threatening tone, Kahlan's ears burned. "I didn't .. .
think to ask."
"What
did they do while they were together? Did she have anything with her? Did she
buy anything, or pick up anything, or talk to anyone else who could end up
being another part of a team? Was there anyone else they were ordered to
kill?"
"I
... didn't . . ."
Richard
combed his fingers through his hair. "One obviously doesn't send an
assassin and have him announce himself to the guards at the intended victim's
door. That will only get your assassin killed, instead. Maybe Jagang had this
man do something before he came to the palace, and then once the task was done,
he wanted Marlin to come here so we would kill him and eliminate any chance we
would find out what's going on before this Sister carried out the true plot.
Jagang certainly wouldn't care if we killed one of his pawns-he has plenty
more, and he doesn't value human life."
Kahlan
twisted her fingers together behind her back. She was feeling decidedly
foolish. Richard's furrowed brow over his piercing, gray eyes wasn't helping.
"Richard,
we knew that there was a woman up here who was asking to see you, just as
Marlin did. We didn't know who Nadine was. Marlin didn't know the Sister's
name, but he gave us a description: young, pretty, and with long brown hair. We
were worried that Nadine might be the Sister, right here among us, and so we
left Marlin down there and came up here at once to see about Nadine. That was
our priority: stopping a Sister of the Dark if she was in the palace. We'll ask
Marlin all those questions later. He's not going anywhere."
Richard's
raptor gaze softened as he took a contemplative breath. He finally nodded.
"You did the right thing. You're right about the questions being less
important. I'm sorry; I should have realized you would do what was best."
He lifted a cautionary finger. "Leave this Mariln fellow to me."
Richard
turned the raptor gaze on Cara. "I don't want you and Kahlan down there
with him. Understand? Something could happen."
Cara
would offer her life without question to protect his, but by her glare she was
apparently beginning to resent having her ability questioned. "And how
dangerous was a big strong man at the end of Denna's leash as she walked him
with impunity among the public at the People's Palace in D'Hara? Did she have
to do more than tuck the end of her pet's thin chain under her belt to demonstrate
her complete control? Did he ever once so much as dare to let tension come to
that leash?"
The man
at the end of that leash had been Richard.
Cara's
blue eyes flashed with indignation, like sudden lightning from a clear blue
sky. Kahlan almost would have expected Richard to draw his sword in rage.
Instead, he watched her, as if listening dispassionately to her opinion, and
waiting to see if she had anything to add. Kahlan wondered if Mord-Sith feared
being struck dead, or welcomed it.
"Lord
Rahl, I have his power. Nothing can happen."
"I'm
sure you do. I don't doubt your abilities, Cara, but I don't want Kahlan put at
risk, no matter how inconceivable the risk, when it isn't necessary. You and I
will go question Marlin when I get back.. I trust you with my life, but I just
don't want to trust Kahlan's to an ugly twist of fate.
"Jagang
overlooked the ability of the Mord-Sith, probably because he doesn't know
enough about the New World to know what a Mord-Sith is. He's made a mistake. I
simply want to make sure we don't make a mistake, too. All right? When I get
back we'll question Marlin and find out what's really going on."
As
quickly as it had come, the storm in Cara's eyes passed. Richard's calm
demeanor had quelled it, and in seconds it seemed as if nothing had happened.
Kahlan almost wasn't sure Cara had actually said the savage things she had
heard. Almost.
Kahlan
wished she could have thought through the matter of Marlin when she had had the
chance. Richard made it al1 seem so simple to her. She guessed that she was so
worried for him that she just wasn't thinking clearly. That was a mistake. She
knew she shouldn't allow her concern to cloud her thinking, lest she cause the
harm she feared.
Richard
held the back of Kahlan's neck as he kissed her brow. "I'm relieved that
you weren't hurt. You frighten me the way you get it in your head to put your
life before mine. Don't do it again?"
Kahlan
smiled. She didn't promise, but instead changed the subject. "I'm worried
about you leaving the safety of the palace. I don't like you being out there
when a Sister of the Dark is about."
"I'll
be all right."
"But
the Jarian ambassador is here, along with representatives from Grennidon. They
have huge standing armies. There are a few others here, too, from smaller
lands-Mardovia, Pendisan Reach, and Togressa. They're all expecting to meet
with you tonight."
Richard
hooked a thumb behind the wide leather belt. "Look, they can surrender to
you. They're either with us, or against us. They don't need to see me, they just
have to agree to the terms of surrender.''
Kahlan
touched her fingers to his arm "But you are Lord Rahl, the Master of
D'Hara. You made the demands. They expect to see you."
"Then
they'll have to wait until tomorrow night. Our men come first. General Kerson
is right: if the men can't fight, we're in trouble. The D'Haran army is the
main reason the lands are ready to surrender. We can't show any weakness in our
ability to lead."
"But
I don't want us to be separated,"�
she whispered.
Richard
smiled. "I know. I feel the same, but this is important."
"Promise
me you'll be careful."
His
smile widened. "I promise. And you know that a wizard always keeps his
promise."
"All
right, then, but hurry back."
"I
will. You just stay away from that Marlin fellow."
He
turned to the others. "Cara, you and Raina stay here, along with Egan.
Ulic, I'm sorry I yelled at you. I'll make it up to you by letting you come
with me so you can watch me with those big blue eyes and make me feel
guilty." He turned to the last of them. ''Berdine, since I know that you
three will make my life miserable if I don't take at least one of you, you can
come with me."
Berdine
turned a grin on Nadine. "I'm Lord Rahl's favorite."
Nadine,
rather than looking impressed, appeared dumbfounded, as she had throughout most
of the preceding conversation. Nadine finally turned a haughty look on Richard.
She folded her arms across her breasts.
"And
are you going to boss me around, too? Are you going to tell me what to do, like
you seem to enjoy doing to everyone else?"
Richard,
rather than getting angry, as Kahlan thought he might at the insult, looked
more disinterested than ever.
"There
are a lot of people fighting for our freedom, fighting to stop the Imperial
Order from enslaving the Midlands, D'Hara, and eventually Westland. I lead
those willing to fight for their own freedom and on behalf of innocent people
who would otherwise be enslaved. I lead because circumstances have placed me in
command. I don't do it for power or because I enjoy it. I do it because I must.
"To
my enemies, or potential enemies, I deliver demands. To those loyal to me, I
issue orders.
"You
are neither, Nadine. Do as you wish."
Nadine's
freckles disappeared as her cheeks mantled.
Richard
lifted his sword a few inches and let it drop back, unconsciously checking that
the blade was clear in its scabbard. "Berdine, Ulic, get your things and
meet me out at the stables."
Richard
scooped up Kahlan's hand and pulled her toward the door. "I need to talk
to the Mother Confessor. Alone."
Richard
took Kahlan down the passageway crowded with muscular D'Haran guards wearing
dark leather and chain mail and bristling weapons to an empty side hall. He
pulled her around the corner, into the shadow beneath a silver lamp, and backed
her up against a wall paneled in age-mellowed cherry.
With a
finger, he gently squashed the end of her nose. "I couldn't leave without
kissing you good-bye."
Kahlan
grinned. "Didn't want to kiss me in front of an old girlfriend?"
"You're
the only one I love. The only one I've ever loved." Richard's features
distorted in chagrin. "You can understand how it would be if one of your
old boyfriends showed up."
"No,
I can't."
His
face went blank for just an instant and then went crimson. "Sorry. I
wasn't thinking."
Confessors
had no boyfriends as they grew up.
The
deliberate touch of a Confessor destroyed a person's mind, and in its place
left only mindless devotion to the Confessor who had touched him with her
power. A Confessor always had to restrain her grip on her power, lest it be
accidentally released. It generally wasn't difficult; her power grew as she did
and, being born with the power, the ability to restrain it came as naturally as
breathing.
But in
the throes of passion, an experience she hadn't grown up with, it was
impossible for a Confessor to maintain that restraint. A lover's mind would
unintentionally be destroyed in the distracted, unrestrained apex of a
Confessor's passion.
Confessors,
even if they wished it, had no friends save other Confessors. People feared
them, feared their power. Men, especially, feared Confessors. No man wanted to
get within striking distance of a Confessor. Confessors didn't have lovers.
A
Confessor chose her mate for qualities desirable in her daughter, for the father
he could be. A Confessor never chose for love, because the act of loving would
destroy the person she loved. No one willingly wed a Confessor; a Confessor
chose her mate, and took him with her magic before they were wedded. Men feared
a Confessor who had yet to choose a mate. She was a destroyer among them, a
predator, and men her potential prey.
Only
Richard had defeated that magic. His unequivocal love for her had transcended
her power. Kahlan was the only Confessor she had ever heard of who had the love
of a man, and could reciprocate that love. In her whole life, she had never
imagined she would fulfill that most exalted of human desires: love.
She had
heard it said that there was only one true love in a person's life. With
Richard, that was more than a saying: :it was the dead cold truth.
More
than any of it, though, she simply loved him, helplessly and completely. That
he loved her, and they could be together, sometimes left her numb with
disbelief.
She
dragged her finger down his leather baldric. "So, you never think about
her? You never wonder . . . ?''
"No.
Look, I've known Nadine since I was little. Her father, Cecil Brighton, sells
herbs and remedies. I'd bring him rare plants now and again. He'd let me know
if there was something he wanted but couldn't find. When I went out to guide
people. I'd keep an eye out for what he needed.
"Nadine
always wanted to be like her father, to learn what herbs helped people and to
work in his shop. She'd go with me sometimes, to learn how to find certain plants."
"She
only went with you to look for plants?"
"Well,
no. There was a little more :to it than that. I-well-sometimes I'd go visit her
and her parents. I'd go for walks with her, even if her father hadn't asked me
to find some herb. I danced with her at the midsummer festival, last summer,
before you came to Hartland. I liked her. But I never led her to think I wanted
to marry her."
Kahlan
smiled and decided to end his twisting in the wind. She wrapped her arms around
his neck and kissed him. She wondered briefly at something he had said to
Nadine, at what more there had been, but then her mind was spinning from the
feel of his powerful arms around her, and his soft lips against hers. His
tongue glided across the inside of her front teeth, and she sucked it in. A big
hand slid down her back and pulled her hard against him.
Then
she pushed him away. "Richard," she said breathlessly, "what
about Shota? What if she causes trouble?"
Richard
biinked, trying to banish the lust from his eyes. "To the underworld with
Shota."
' 'But
in the past, as much trouble as <!Shota caused, she always seemed to have a
nugget of truth in the trouble she wrapped around it. In her own way, she was
trying to do what needed doing." "She's not going to keep us from
getting married." "I know, but-"
"When
I get back, we'll get married, and that will be that." His smile made a
sunrise seem boring. "I want you in that big bed of yours that you keep
promising me."
"But
how can we get married, now, unless we do it here? It's a long way to the Mud
People. We promised the Bird Man, and Weselan and Savidlin, and all the rest,
that we would be wedded as Mud People. Chandalen protected me on my journey
here, and I owe him my life. Wesslan made me my beautiful blue wedding dress, with
her own hands, out of cloth that probably took her years to earn. They took us
in. They made us Mud People. The Mud People have sacrificed for us. Many have
given their lives for our cause.
"I
know it's not the kind of wedding most women dream of-a whole village of
half-naked people covered in mud dancing around bonfires, calling the spirits
to come join two of their people, having a feast that goes on for days with
those strange drums and ritual dancers acting out stories and all the rest . .
. but it's the most heartfelt ceremony we could ever have.
"Right
now we can't leave Aydindril to go on a long journey to the Mud People just
because we want to. Just for us. Everyone else is depending on us. There is a
war going on."
Richard
pressed a gentle kiss against her forehead. "I know. I want the Mud People
to marry us, too. And they will. Trust me. I'm the Seeker. I'm giving it a lot
of thought. I have a few ideas." He sighed. "But right now I have to
go. Take care of things. Mother Confessor. I'll be back tomorrow.
Promise." She hugged him so tight it made her aims hurt.
He
finally separated from her and looked down into her eyes. "I've got to go,
before it gets any later, or I'll have men getting hurt in the dark up in those
passes." He paused. "If . . . if Nadine needs anything, would you see
that she gets it? A horse, or food, or supplies, or whatever. She's not a bad
person. I don't wish her ill. She doesn't deserve what Shota did to her."
Kahlan
nodded and then laid her head against his chest. She could hear his heart
beating. ' 'Thank you for getting this outfit to be married in. You look more
handsome than ever."
She
closed her eyes against the pain of the words she had heard back in the red
room. "Richard, why didn't you get angry when Cara said those cruel
things?"
"Because
I understand what was done to them. I've been in that world of madness. Hate
would have destroyed me; forgiveness in my heart was the only thing that saved
me. I don't want hate to destroy them. I didn't want to let mere words ruin
what I'm trying to give them. I want them to learn to trust. Sometimes you can
only gain trust by giving it."
"Maybe
you're having an effect. Despite what Cara said back there, earlier today she
said some things that make me think they understand." Kahlan smiled and
tried
to
lighten the subject of the Mord-Sith. "I heard you were outside today with
Berdine and Raina, taming chipmunks."
"Taming
chipmunks is easy. I was doing something considerably more difficult; I was
trying to tame Mord-Sith." His one was grave, leading to the impression
that his thoughts were far away. "You should have seen Berdine and Raina.
They were giggling, just like little girls. I almost wept at the sight."
Kahlan
smiled to herself in wonder "And here I thought you were just out there
wasting time. How many more Mord-Sith are back at the People's Palace in
D'Hara?" "Dozens."
"Dozens."
It was a daunting thought. "At least chipmunks are plentiful." He
stroked a hand down her hair as lie held her head to his chest. "I love
you, Kahlan Amnell. Thanks for being patient."
"I
love you, too, Richard Rahl." She clutched his tunic and pressed herself
against him. "Richard, Shota still scares me. Promise me that you really
will marry me."
He let
out a little, breathy laugh and then kissed the top of her head. "I love
you more than I could ever tell you. There is no one else, not Nadine, not
anyone; I swear an oath on my gift. You are the only one I will ever love. I
promise."
She
could hear her heart drumming in her ears. That was not the promise she had
asked for. He pushed away. "I have to go." "But..."
He
looked back around the comer. "What? I have to go." She shooed him
with a hand. "Go. Hurry back to me." He blew her a kiss and then he
was gone. She leaned a shoulder against the corner as she watched his billowing
gold cape recede down the hall, and listened to the jangle of chain mail and
weapons and thud of boots as a raft of guards trailed in his wake.
CHAPTER������������� 7 The two remaining Mord-Sith
and Egan waited in the red sitting room. The door to the bedroom was closed.
"Raina,
Egan, I want you to go protect Richard," Kahlan announced as she walked
in.
"Lord
Rahl told us to remain with you. Mother Confessor," Raina said. Kahlan
lifted an eyebrow. "Since when have you followed Lord Rahl's orders when
it comes to matters of protecting him?"
Raina
grinned wickedly: a rare sight. "Fine by us. But he will be angry that we
left you alone."
"I
have Cara and a palace packed with guards and surrounded by troops. The biggest
danger to me is that one of those hulking guards will step on my foot. Richard
has only five hundred men, and Berdine and Ulic. I'm worried for him."
"What if he sends us back?" "Tell him . . . tell him . . .
Wait."
Kahlan
crossed the room to the mahogany writing desk and pulled paper, ink, and pen
from under the lid. She dipped the pen, leaned over, and wrote: Stay warm and
sleep snug. It gets cold in the mountains in the spring. I love you-Kahlan.
She
folded the paper and handed it to Raina. "Follow at a distance. Wait until
after they set up camp, then give him this message. Tell him that I told you it
was important. It will be dark, and he won't send you back in the dark."
Raina
unfastened two buttons at the side of her leather outfit and slid the note in
between her breasts. "He will still be angry, but at you."������������������������������� Kahlan smiled.
"The big fellow doesn't scare me. I know how to cool his scowl."
Raina smiled conspiratorially. "I've noticed." She looked over her
shoulder at����������� a pleased-looking
Egan. "Let's do our duty and deliver the Mother Confessor's����������� message to Lord Rahl. We need to
find some slow horses."������������������������������
After
they had departed, Kahlan glanced to a watchful Cara, and then knocked on the
bedroom door.������������������������������������������������������������������
"Come in," came Nadine's muffled voice.��������������������������������������������
Cara followed Kahlan in. Kahlan didn't object; she knew that if she had
asked����������� her to wait outside,
Cara would have ignored the order. The Mord-Sith paid no����������� heed to orders if they thought
protecting her or Richard required that they did so.
Nadine
was rearranging things in her scruffy travel bag. Her head hung low, looking
into the bag, and her thick hair dangled down around her head, hiding her face.
Periodically, she pushed her kerchief in under that veil of hair. "Are you
all right, Nadine?"
Nadine
sniffled, but didn't look up. "II' you call being the biggest fool the
spirits ever saw all right, then I guess I'm just dandy." "Shota has
played me for a fool, too. I know how you feel."
"Sure."
"Is
there anything you need? Richard wanted me to see to it that you have anything
you need. He's concerned about you."
"And
pigs fly. He just wants me out of your fine room, and on the road home."
"That's not true. Nadine. He said that you were a nice person."
Nadine finally straightened and pushed some of her hair back over her shoulder.
She wiped her nose and stuffed the kerchief in a pocket in her blue dress.
"I'm
sorry. You must hate me. I didn't mean to come busting in here and try to take
your man. I didn't know. I swear, I didn't know, or I'd never have done it. I
thought . . . Well, I thought he wanted ..." The word "me" was
drowned in the sound of her tears.
Trying
to imagine the devastation of losing Richard's love stirred Kahlan's sympathy.
She gave Nadine a comforting hug and sat her on the bed. Nadine pulled the
kerchief back out of her pocket and pressed it against her nose as she wept.
Kahlan
sat down on the bed next to the woman. "Why don't you tell me about it,
about you and Richard, if it would make you feel better? Sometimes, it helps to
have someone listen."
"I
feel so foolish." Nadine flopped her arms down in her lap as she made an
effort to control her weeping. "It's my own fault. I always liked Richard.
Everybody liked Richard. He's nice to everyone, I've never seen him like he was
today. He seems so different."
"He
is different, in some ways," Kahlan said. "Even from last autumn,
when I first met him. He's been through a lot. He's had to sacrifice his old
life, and he's been tested by events. He's had to learn to fight, or die. He's
had to face the fact that George Cypher wasn't his real father."
Nadine
looked up in astonishment. "George wasn't his father? Then who was?
Someone named Rahl?"
Kahlan
nodded. "Darken Rahl. The leader of D'Hara." "D'Hara. Until the
boundary came down, I only thought of D'Hara as an evil place."
"It
was," Kahlan said. "Darken Rahl was a violent ruler who sought
conquest through torture and murder. He had Richard captured and tortured
nearly to death. Richard's brother, Michael, had betrayed him to Darken
Rahl."
"Michael?
Well, I guess that really doesn't surprise me. Richard loved Michael. Michael
is an important man, but he has a mean streak. If he wants something, he
doesn't care who it hurts. Though no one had the nerve to voice it, I don't
think anyone was too unhappy when he left .and never came back." "He
died in the fight with Darken Rahl."
Nadine
didn't seem unhappy about this news either. Kahlan didn't say that Richard had
had Michael executed for betraying the people he was supposed to be protecting,
for his responsibility in the deaths of so many.
"Darken
Rahl was trying to use magic that would have enslaved everyone under his rule.
Richard escaped and killed hi< real father, and saved us all. Darken Rahl
was a wizard."
"Wizard!
And Richard defeated him?"
"Yes.
We all owe Richard a great debt for saving us from what his father would have
taken the world into. "Richard is a wizard, too."
Nadine
laughed at what she thought was a joke. Kahlan didn't so much as smile. Cara
stood stone-faced. Nadine's eyes widened. "You're serious, aren't
you?"
"Yes.
Zedd was his grandfather. Zedd was a wizard, as was Richard's real father.
Richard was born with the gift, but he doesn't know very much about how to use
it." "Zedd's gone, too."
"He
came with us. in the beginning, tie's been fighting with us, and trying to help
Richard, but a short time ago, in a battle, he was lost. I fear he was killed
up at the Wizard's Keep. up on the mountain above Aydindril. Richard refuses to
believe Zedd was killed." Kahlan shrugged. "Maybe he wasn't. That old
man was the most resourceful person I've ever met other than Richard."
Nadine
wiped her kerchief across her nose. "Richard and that crazy old man were
best friends. That was what Richard meant, then. when he said that his
grandfather taught him about herbs. Everyone comes to my father for remedies.
My father knows just about everything about !herbs, and I hope someday to know
half of what he knows, but my father always said that he wished he knew half as
much as old Zedd. I never knew Zedd was Richard's grandfather."
"No
one did, not even Richard. It's a long story. I'll tell you a bit of the more
important parts." Kahlan looked down at her own hands nested in her lap.
"After Richard stopped Darken Rahl, he was taken by the Sisters of the
Light to the Old World, so that they could teach him to me his gift. They would
have kept him at the Palace of the Prophets, in a web of magic that slowed
time. They would have had him there for centuries. We thought he was lost to
us.
"The
Palace of the Prophets turned out to be infested with Sisters of the Dark, and
they wanted to free the Keeper of the Underworld. They tried to use Richard to
those ends, but he escaped his confinement and stopped them. In the process,
the Towers of Perdition that kept the Old and New Worlds separated were
destroyed.
"Now,
Emperor Jagang, of the Imperial Order in the Old World, is no longer restrained
by those towers and is trying )to bring all the world under his rule. He wants
Richard dead for thwarting him. Janagang is powerful and has a huge army. We
have been unwillingly cast into a war for our destiny, our freedom, and for our
very existence. Richard leads us in that war.
"Zedd,
acting in his capacity as First Wizard, named Richard the Seeker of Truth. It's
an ancient post, created three thousand years ago in the great war that raged
at that time. It's a solemn assignment of rectitude granted when there is grave
need. A Seeker is above any law but his own, and backs his authority with the
Sword of Truth and its attendant magic.
"Fate
occasionally touches us all in ways we don't always understand, but it
sometimes seems to have a death grip on Richard."
Nadine,
her eyes wide, finally blinked "Richard? Why Richard? Why is he in the
center of all this? He's just a woods guide. He's just a nobody from
Hartland." "Just because kittens are born in the hearth oven, that
doesn't make them muffins. No matter where they're born, it's their destiny to
grow up to go out and kill rats. "Richard is a very special kind of
wizard: a war wizard. He is the first wizard with both sides of the magic.
Additive and Subtractive, to be born in three thousand years. Richard didn't
choose to do all this; he does this because we are all depending on him to help
us remain a free people. Richard isn't one to stand by and watch while people
are hurt."
Nadine
looked away. "I know." She fumbled with the kerchief in her fingers.
"I kind of lied to you before." "About what?"
She
heaved a sigh. "Well, when I told you about Tommy and Lester. I made it
sound like it was me who knocked out their front teeth. The truth is, I was on
my way to meet Richard. We were to go for a walk and look for some maple-leafed
viburnum. My father needed some of the inner bark to make a decoction for a
baby with colic, and he had run out. Richard knew where there was a patch.
"Anyway,
when I was on my way through the woods, to Richard's place, I came across Tommy
Lancaster and his friend Lester on their way back from hunting doves. I'd
fended off Tommy's unwanted advances in front of some of his pals, and made him
look a fool. I guess I kind of slapped him and called him a name.
"He
thought to pay me back when he came across me in the woods. He had Lester hold
me down, and he . . . well, about the time he got his pants pushed down around
his knees, Richard showed up. That took the starch right out of Tommy. Richard
told them to be off, and said that he was going to tell their fathers.
"Instead
of doing the smart thing, and leaving, the two of them decided to put a few
bird arrows in Richard to teach him a lesson to mind his own business. That's
why Tommy and Lester don't have any front teeth. He told them that that was for
what they wanted to do to me. He broke their valuable yew bows, and told them
that that was for what they wanted to do to him. He told Tommy that if he ever
again tried to do that to me, he'd slice off . . . well, you know."
Kahlan
smiled. "That sounds like the Richard I know. It doesn't sound like he's
really changed all that much. The Tommys and Lesters are just bigger, now, and
meaner."
Nadine
gave a little shrug. "I guess." She looked up when Cara held out
Nadine's tin cup, which Cara had filled from the ewer on the washstand. Nadine
took a sip. "I can't believe people are really trying to kill Richard. I
can't believe anyone would want to kill him." She smirked. "Even
Tommy and Lester only want to knock out his teeth." She settled the cup in
her lap. "I can't believe his own father would want to kill him. You said
Darken Rahl had Richard tortured. Why did he do that?"
Kahlan
glanced up at Cara. "It's in the past. I really don't want to stir up the
memories."
Nadine
reddened. "Sorry. I almost forgot that he . . . and you ..." She drew
her fingers across her cheeks, wiping away a fresh tear. "It just doesn't
seem fair.
"You"-Nadine
flicked a hand in frustration-"you've got everything. You have this, this
palace. I never even knew such things existed. It looks like some vision come
from the spirit world. And you have such fine things, and magnificent clothes.
That dress makes you look like; one of the good spirits."
Nadine
looked Kahlan in the eye. "And you're so beautiful. It doesn't seem fair.
You even have beautiful green eyes; I just have dumb brown eyes. You must have
had men lined up around the palace your whole life, wanting you. You must have
had more suitors than most women can even dream of. You have everything. You
could have your pick of any man in the Midlands . . . and you pick a man from
my home."
"Love
isn't always fair; it just is. And your eyes are lovely." Kahlan twined
her fingers together and hooked her hands over a knee. "What did Richard
mean
when he
said to you that 'there is no "us," ' and that you of all people
should know that?"
Nadine's
eyes slid closed as she turned her face away. "Well, I guess a lot of
girls in Hartland wanted Richard, not just me. He wasn't like anyone else. He
was special. I remember one time when he was about ten or twelve and he talked
two men out of fighting. He always had a way about him. He got the two men to
laughing, and they left my pa's shop with an arm over each other's shoulder.
Richard was always a rare person."
"The
mark of a wizard," Kahlan said. "So, Richard must have had a lot of
girlfriends?"
"No,
not really. He was nice to everyone, and polite, and helpful, but he never
seemed to fall for anyone. That only seemed to make them want him all the more.
He didn't have a special person, a love. But a lot of us girls wanted to be the
one. After Tommy and Lester tried to... to. .lay claim to me-" "To
rape you."
"Yeah.
I guess that was what it really was. I never like to think that someone would
really do that to me, like that-holding me down and all. But I guess that
that's what they were trying to do: rape me.
"Some
people don't call it that, though. Sometimes, if a boy does that to a girl,
then he's laid claim to her, and the parents say that it was because the girl
encouraged it, and so they make the girl and boy get married before she turns
up pregnant. I know girls who had to do that.
"Many
younglings, mostly those of the country folk, have it already decided for them
who they're to marry. But sometimes a boy doesn't like who he's supposed to
marry, and so he lays claim to who he wants, like Tommy tried to do to me, in
the hope that either he'll get her pregnant and she'll have to marry him, or
their parents will make them wed because she's been spoiled. Tommy was supposed
to wed skinny Rita Wellington, and he hated her. Sometimes, the girl really
does encourage it, because she doesn't like who her parents picked for her.
Mostly, though, younglings go along as they're told.
"My
parents never decided for me, some parents don't. They say that it's a recipe
for trouble as often as it is one for happiness. They said they figured that
I'd know for myself what I wanted. A lo. of the girls who didn't have it
decided for them wanted Richard. Some of them, like me, waited long past when
we should have been married and mothers two or three times over.
"After
Richard stopped Tommy, Richard kind of always looked out for me. I started to
think it was more than him just watching out for me, at last. I started to
think that he really wanted to be with mi. It seemed like he was really
noticing me, as a woman, not as some kid he knew who he was protecting.
"I
was sure of it at the midsummer festival last year. He danced with me more than
any of the other girls. They were turning green with envy. Especially when he
held me close. Right then and there, I wanted him to be the one. No one else.
"I
thought that after the festival things would change, that he would tell me that
I meant more to him than I had before. I thought he would come around and court
me more serious. He didn't."
Nadine
held the cup of water between her knees with one hand as she worked her
kerchief in the fingers of her other hand. "I had other boys who wanted to
court me, and I didn't want to throw my future away if Richard was never going
to come to his senses, so I got it in my head to give him a shove."
"A
shove?"
Nadine
nodded. "Besides some of the other boys, Richard's brother, Michael, was
always after me, too. I think just because he always was jealous of Richard. At
the time I wasn't exactly against the idea of Michael courting me. I didn't
know him so well, but he was already making somebody of himself. I thought
Richard would never be anything more than a woods guide. Not that that's bad.
I'm nobody special, either. Richard loved the woods."
Kahlan
smiled. "He still does. If he could. I'm sure he would like nothing more
than being a simple woods guide. But he can't. So, what happened, then?"
"Well,
I figured that if I kind of made Richard just a bit jealous, maybe he would get
down off the fence and make; a move for me. Sometimes men need a shove, my ma
always says. So I gave him a good shove."
Nadine
cleared her throat. "I let him catch me kissing Michael. I made sure he
saw that I was having a good time of it."
Kahlan
drew a deep breath as her eyebrows lifted. Nadine may have grown up with
Richard, but she certainly didn't know him.
"He
never even got angry at me, or jealous, or anything," Nadine said.
"He was still nice to me, and he still watched out for me, but he never
came visiting, and he never asked me to go for walks after that. When I tried
to talk to him about it, to explain, he just wasn't interested."
Nadine
stared off. "He had that look in his eyes, like he did today. That look
that means he just doesn't care. I never knew what it meant until I saw it
again, today. I think he really had cared and expected me to show him I cared
by being loyal, but I'd betrayed him."
Nadine
dabbed at her lower lids as <he took labored breaths. "Shota told me
that Richard was going to marry me, and I was so happy that I just didn't want
to believe it when he said it wasn't so. I didn't want to believe that look in
his eyes, so I pretended to myself that it didn't mean anything, but it does.
It means everything."
"I'm
sorry, Nadine," Kahlan said softly.
Nadine
stood and set the tin cup on the side table. Tears streamed down her cheeks and
dripped off the side of her jaw. "Forgive me for coming in here like I
did. He loves you, not me. He never loved me. I'm happy for you. Mother
Confessor; you have a good man who will watch over you and protect you and
always be kind. I know he will."
Kahlan
stood and took Nadine's hand, giving it a comforting squeeze. "Kahlan. My
name is Kahlan."
"Kahlan."
Nadine still couldn't meet Kahlan's eyes. "Does he kiss good? I always
wondered. When I laid awake in bed, I always wondered." "When you
love someone with all your heart, their kisses are always good." "I
guess. I never had a good kiss. One [ really enjoyed like the ones I've dreamed
about, anyway." She smoothed the front of her dress as she made an effort
to compose herself. "I wore this because blue is Richard's favorite color.
You should know that-blue is his favorite color dress." "I
know," Kahlan whispered.
Nadine
pulled her bag closer. "I don't know what I'm thinking, forgetting my
profession, while I ramble on about what's over and done." Nadine rummaged
around in her bag. bringing out a small piece of a sheep's
horn
with a cork stopper in the square-cut end. The horn was marked with scratches
and circles. She pulled the cork stopper aid dipped in a finger, then lifted it
to Cara. Cara backed away. "What do you think you are doing?"
"It's an unguent, made from aum, to take away the sting, and comfrey and
yarrow to help stop the bleeding so the wound can heal smooth. The cut on your
cheek is still oozing. If this doesn't stop the blood, then I have some foxglove,
but I think this will do it. It's not only the ingredients but how much of
each, my pa says, that's the secret that makes the medicine work." "I
don't need it," Cara said.
"You're
very pretty. You don't want to end up with a scar, now do you?" "I
have many scars. You just can't see them." "Where are they?"
Cara
scowled, but Nadine didn't back away.
"All
right," Cara said at last. "Use your herbs, if it will get you away
from me. But I'm not undressing so you can peer at my scars."
Nadine
smiled assurance and then dabbed the brownish paste on Cara's cheek. "This
will take away the pain of the cut, but it's going to sting for just a minute,
and then it will ease."
Cara
didn't so much as blink. It must lave surprised Nadine because she paused and
looked at Cara's eyes before resuming her work. When she was finished, Nadine
replaced the stopper in the horn and placed it back in her bag.
Nadine
glanced around the room. "I've never seen such a beautiful room. Thank you
for letting me use it."
"Of
course. Do you need anything? Some supplies . . . anything?" Nadine shook
her head, wiped her nose a last time, and stuffed the kerchief back in the
pocket. She remembered the cup, downed the rest of the water, and put it in her
bag, too.
"It's
a bit of a journey, but I have some silver left. I'll be fine." She rested
a hand on her bag as she stared down at her trembling fingers. "I never
thought my journey would end like this. I'm going to be the laugh of Hartland,
running off after Richard like I did." She swallowed. "What's Pa
going to say?" "Did Shota tell him, too, that you were going to marry
Richard?" "No. I hadn't met Shota yet."
"What
do you mean? I thought she was the one who told you to come here- that you were
to marry him."
"Well"-Nadine
made a wincing smile-"that wasn't exactly how it happened."
"I
see." Kahlan clasped her hands. "Well, exactly how did it
happen?" "It will sound silly-like I'm some moonstruck girl of
twelve." "Nadine, just tell me."
Nadine
considered a moment before finally sighing. "I suppose it doesn't matter.
I started having these, well, I don't know what to call it. I'd see Richard, or
rather, I thought I saw Richard. I'd see him out of the comer of my eye, and
I'd turn, but he wouldn't be there. Like one day, when I was walking in the
woods looking for new shoots, and I saw him standing beside a tree. so I
stopped, but he was gone.
"Every
time, I knew he needed me. I didn't know how I knew, but I knew. I knew it was
important, that he was in trouble of some sort. I never questioned it. "I
told my parents that Richard needed me and I had to go help him."
"And
they believed you? They had faith in your visions? They simply let you set
out?"
"Well,
I never quite explained it to them. I just told them that Richard had sent me a
message that he needed my help, and I was going to him. I guess that I, well, I
might have kind of made them think I knew where I was going."
Kahlan
was beginning to see that Nadine didn't explain things to anyone very well.
"Then Shota came?"
"No.
Then I left. I knew Richard needed me, and so I started out." "Alone?
You simply thought to march off and search the entire Midlands for him?"
Nadine
shrugged self-consciously. "It never occurred to me to wonder how I would
find him. I knew he needed me, and I felt that it was important, so I left to
go to him." She smiled, as if to reassure Kahlan. "I came right to
him-straight as an arrow. It all worked out exactly right." Her cheeks
flushed. "Except the part about him wanting me, I mean."
"Nadine,
had you been having any . . strange dreams? Then, or now?" Nadine brushed
back a thick strand of hair. "Strange dreams? No, no strange dreams. You
know, I mean no stranger than any dreams. Just regular dreams." "What
kind of 'regular' dreams do you have?"
"Well,
you know, like when you dream that you're little again, and lost in the woods,
and none of the trails lead you where you know they should, or like when you
dream that you can't find all the right ingredients for a pie, and so you go to
a cave and borrow them from a bear that can talk. Things like that. Just
dreams. Dreams that you can fly, or breathe underwater. Crazy things. But just
dreams. Like I've always had. Nothing different." "Have they changed
recently?"
"No.
If I remember them, they're the same sort of things." "I see. I guess
that all sounds pretty normal."
Nadine
pulled a cloak from her bag. "Well, I guess I'd better get a start. With
luck, I'll be home for the spring festival."
Kahlan
frowned. "You'll be lucky to make midsummer festival." Nadine laughed.
"I should think no. It can't take longer back than here. Just two weeks or
so. I only left just after the moon's second quarter; it's not yet full."
Kahlan
stared dumbly. "Two weeks." It had to have taken Nadine months to
travel all the way from Westland, especially in the winter when she would have
had to have started, and especially across the Rang'Shada mountains. "Your
horse must have had wings."
Nadine
laughed, then it died out as her smooth brow puckered. "Funny you should
mention that. I don't have a horse. I walked." "Walked," Kahlan
repeated incredulously.
"Yes.
But since I've left, I've had dreams of flying on a horse with wings."
Kahlan was having to work at keeping track of the shifting pieces of Nadine's
story. She tried to think of how Richard would ask questions. It had made her
feel foolish when Richard put words to all the questions she should have asked
Marlin, but never thought of. Though he had taken the sting out of it by
telling her that she had done the right thing, it still embarrassed her that
she had found out next to nothing important from Marlin when she had had her
chance.
Confessors
didn't need to know much about questioning people; once she had touched a
person with her power, a Confessor simply asked the criminal to confess
if they
had truly committed the crimes they had been found guilty of, and if the answer
was yes-which it always was, except in a couple of rare instances-then to
recount the details.
There
was no art to it, and none needed. It was an infallible way of seeing to it
that political dissenters weren't falsely accused and found guilty of crimes
they didn't commit, simply to have them eliminated through a convenient
execution.
Kahlan
was determined to do a better job of asking Nadine questions. "When did
Shota come to see you? You still haven't told me that part."
"Oh.
Well, she didn't exactly come to see me. I came across her up in the mountains.
She had a lovely palace, but I never had the chance to go inside. I wasn't
there long. I wanted to get to Richard."
"And
what did Shota tell you? What were her words? Her exact words?"
"Let's see ..." Nadine pressed her first finger to her upper lip as
she recollected. "She welcomed me. She offered me tea--she said that I had
been expected-and had me sit with her. She made Samuel leave my bag when he
tried to drag it away, and she told me not to be afraid of him. She asked where
I was traveling, and I told her that I was going to my Richard-that he needed
me. Then she told me things about Richard, things about his past that I would
know about. It astonished me that she would know so much about him, but I
thought that she must know him.
"And
then she told me things about me that she would have no way of knowing. Like
longings and ambitions-being a healer, using my herbs, things like that. That's
when I realized she was a mystic. I don't remember her exact words about any of
that part.
"She
told me that it was true about Richard needing me. She said that we were going
to be married. She said that the sky had told her it was so." Nadine
looked away from Kahlan's eyes. "I was so happy. I don't think I'd ever
been that happy." "The sky. What else?"
"Then
she said that she didn't want to delay my journey to Richard. She said the wind
hunts him-whatever that means-and that I was right that he needed me, and I
should hurry and be on my way. She wished me luck." "That's all? She
must have said something else."
"No,
that's all." Nadine buttoned her bag closed. "Except she said a
prayer for Richard, I think."
"What
do you mean? What did she say? Her exact words." "Well, when she
turned away, to go back to her palace as I was getting up to leave, I heard her
whisper, real solemn-like, 'May the spirits have mercy on his soul.' "
Kahlan
felt her arms under the white satin sleeves of her dress prickle with
gooseflesh. She only remembered to take a breath when she felt her lungs
burning for want of air.
Nadine
hoisted her bag. "Well, I've caused you enough grief. I'd best be on my
way home."
Kahlan
spread her hands. "Look. Nadine, why don't you stay here for a
while." Nadine paused with a bewildered look. "Why?"
Kahlan
desperately searched for an excuse. "Well, I wouldn't mind hearing stories
about Richard when he was growing up. You could tell me about all the trouble
he got himself into." She made herself smile encouragement. "I'd
really like that."
Nadine
shook her head. "Richard wouldn't want me here. He'll be angry if he comes
back and I'm still here. You didn't see the look in his eyes."
"Nadine,
Richard isn't going to throw you out on your ear without letting you have a
chance to rest up for a few days before you start back. Richard isn't like
that. He said 'anything she needs.' I think you could use a rest for a few
days, more than anything else."
Nadine
shook her head again. "No. You've already been more kind to me than I've a
right to expect. You and Richard belong together. You don't need me around.
' 'But
thank you for the offer. I can't believe how kind you are-it's small wonder
Richard loves you. Any other woman in your place would've had me shaved bald
and sent out of town in the back of a manure wagon."
"Nadine,
I'd really like you to stay." Kahlan wet her lips. "Please?" she
heard herself add.
"It
might cause hard feelings between you and Richard. I don't want to be the cause
of that. I'm not that kind of person."
"If
it was a problem, I wouldn't have asked. Stay. At least for a few days. All
right? You could stay right here in this room you like so much. I'd . . .
really like you to stay."
Nadine
studied Kahlan's eyes for a long moment. "You really want me to stay?
Really?"
"Yes."
Kahlan could feel her nails digging into her palms. "Really."
"Well, to tell the truth. I'm not in a hurry to go home and confess my
foolishness to my parents. All right, then, if you really want me to, I'll stay
for a while. Thank you."
Despite
having important reasons for asking Nadine to stay, Kahlan couldn't help
feeling like a moth flying into a flame.
CHAPTER������������ 8
Kahlan
forced a smile. "Good, then. You'll stay. It will be . . . nice, to have
you stay for a visit. We'll talk, you and 1. About Richard. I mean. I'd like to
hear your stories about him growing up." She realized she must sound like
she was babbling, and made herself stop. Nadine beamed. "I can sleep in
the bid?" "Don't be silly. Of course in the bed. Where else?"
"I have a blanket, and could sleep on the carpet so as not to-"
"No. I won't have it. I've invited you to stay. I want you to feel at
home, just like other guests who use this room."
Nadine
giggled. "Then I'd be sleeping on the floor. I sleep on a pallet on the
floor in the back room above our shop."
"Well,"
Kahlan said, "here you will sleep in the bed." Kahlan glanced at Cara
before going on. "Later, I'll show you around the palace, if you'd like,
but for now, why don't you just unpack some of your things and have a rest
while Cara and I go see to some important business." "What
business?" Cara asked.
The
woman is as silent as a stone through all this, Kahlan thought, and now she has
to ask questions. "Marlin business."
"Lord
Rahl told us to stay away from Marlin."
"He's
an assassin sent to kill Richard. There are things I need to know."
"I want to come, too, then." Nadine said. She looked back and forth
between Kahlan and Cara. "I can't imagine anyone wanting to kill a person,
much less Richard. I want to see what such a person looks like. I want to look
into his eyes."
Kahlan
emphatically shook her head. "It's not something you want to see. We need
to question him. and it isn't likely to be pleasant." "Really?"
Cara asked, her voice brightening. "Why?" Nadine asked. "What do
you mean?"
Kahlan
held up a finger. "Enough. I say this for your own good; Marlin is
dangerous and I don't want you down there. You are a guest. Please respect my
wishes while you are a guest in my home." Nadine studied the floor at her
feet. 'Of course. Forgive me." "I will tell the guards that you are a
guest, and if you would like anything-to have some of your things washed, a
bath. anything-just ask and they will see that someone from the staff helps
you. I'll be back after a while and we can have dinner. We'll talk over
dinner."
Nadine
turned to her bag on the bed. "Sure. I didn't mean to meddle. I don't want
to be in the way." Kahlan hesitantly touched a hand to The back of
Nadine's shoulder. "I didn't
mean to
sound like I was ordering you around. This business with someone trying to hurt
Richard just has me on edge, that's all. I'm sorry I nearly bit your head off.
You're a guest. Please enjoy our home as your own." Nadine smiled over her
shoulder. "I understand. Thanks." She really was a beautiful young
woman: attractive figure and face, and an innocent quality, despite what truths
Kahlan feared she danced around. Kahlan could easily see why Richard would have
beer attracted to her.
She
wondered at what random wisp of fate had matched Richard with her, instead of
this one. Whatever the reason, she thanked the good spirits that it was so, and
prayed fervently that it would remain so
More
than anything, Kahlan wanted this perfidious gift from Shota to vanish. She
wanted this tempting, beautiful, dangerous young woman away from Richard, to
just send Nadine away. If only she could do so.
After
telling the guards that Nadine was a guest, and once Kahlan and Cara had
descended the carpeted stairs at the far end of the hall and were alone on the
richly appointed landing, Cara seized Kahlan's arm and spun her around to a
halt. "Are you crazy!" "What are you talking about?"
Cara
gritted her teeth as she leaned closer. "A witch woman sends your man a
wedding gift-it's the bride, and you invite her to stay!"
Kahlan
rubbed a thumb against the round, polished sphere of ironwood topping the newel
post. "I had to. Isn't it obvious?"
"What
is obvious to me is that you should have done as the little strumpet suggested;
you should have shaved her bald and sent her away in the back of a manure
wagon."
"She's
a victim in this, too. She is Shota's pawn."
"Her
tongue has a distaste for the truth. She still wants your man. If you can't see
that in her eyes, then you aren't the wise woman I thought you to be."
"Cara,
I trust Richard. I know he loves me. If there's one thing at the core of
Richard's way of looking at things, it's trust and loyalty. I know my heart is
safe in his hands.
"How
would it look if I acted like a jealous woman and sent Nadine away? If I don't
show my trust in him, then I'm not honoring his loyalty to me. I can't afford
to even appear to betray his trust in me."
Cara's
scowl didn't so much as soften. "That bucket won't carry water for me. All
that may be true, but that isn't why you asked Nadine to stay. You want to
strangle her as much as I do, I can see it in your green eyes."
Kahlan
smiled, trying to see herself in the dark, polished ironwood. She could only
see a blur of a reflection. "Hard to fool a sister of the Agiel. You're
right. I had to ask Nadine to stay because there's something going on,
something dangerous. The danger won't simply go away if I make Nadine
leave."
With a
gloved hand, Cara wiped a strand of blond hair back from her face.
"Dangerous? Like what?"
"Therein
lies the problem: I don't know. And don't you dare even think of hurting her. I
have to find out what's really going on, and in order to do that I may need
Nadine. I don't want to have to go hunting her when I could have kept her at
hand and in sight in the beginning.
"Look
at it this way. Would it have been the right thing to do to simply send Marlin
away when he arrived and announced he wanted to kill Richard? Would
that
have solved the problem? Why are we keeping him around? To find out what's
going on, that's why."
Cara
wiped at the unguent on her check as if it were a smudge of dirt. "I think
you are inviting trouble to your bed."
Kahlan
had to blink at the burning sensation in her eye. "I know. Me, too. The
obvious thing to do, the thing I ache to do, is to send Nadine away on the
fastest horse I can find. But no problem is that easily solved, especially one
sent by Shota." "You mean what Shota told Nadine, about the wind
hunting Lord Rahl?" "That's part of it. I don't know what it means,
but it doesn't sound to me like it's something Shota dreamed up.
"Worse,
though, is Shota's prayer: 'May the spirits have mercy on his soul.' I don't
know what she meant by that, but it terrifies me. That, and that I might be
making the biggest mistake of my life.
"But
what choice do I have? Two people show up on the same day, one sent to kill him
and the other sent to marry him. I don't know which is more dangerous, but I do
know that neither can be simple dismissed. If someone is trying to stick a
knife in your back, closing your eyes doesn't make you safe."
Cara's
face eased from that of a Mord-Sith to the softer features of a woman who
understood another woman's fears. 1 will watch your back. If she crawls into
Lord Rahl's bed, I will throw her out before he ever finds her there."
Kahlan squeezed Cara's arm. "Thanks. Now, let's get down to the pit."
Cara didn't budge. "Lord Rahl said he does not want you down there."
"And since when have you started following orders?"
"I
always follow his orders. Especially the ones I know he means. He means this
one."
"Fine.
You can watch over Nadine while I go down there." Cara snatched Kahlan's
elbow as she started to turn away. "Lord Rahl does not want you in
danger."
"And
I don't want him in danger. Cara, I felt a fool when Richard asked me all those
questions that we failed to ask Marl in. I want the answers to those
questions." "Lord Rahl said he would ask them. '
"And
he's not going to be back until tomorrow night. What happens in the meantime?
What if something is going on and it's too late to stop it by then? What if
Richard is killed because we sat on our hands following his orders?
"Richard
is afraid for me, and that's keeping him from thinking clearly. Marlin has
information about what's going on, and it's foolhardy to let time pass while
the danger grows.
"What
was it that you said to me, before? Something about hesitation being the end of
you? Or the end of those you care about?" Cara's face went slack, but she
didn't answer.
"I
care about Richard, and I'm not going to risk his life by hesitating. I'm going
to get the answers to those questions."
Cara
smiled at last. "I like your thinking. Mother Confessor. But then, you are
a sister of the Agiel. The orders were 'ill-advised, if not foolish. Mord-Sith
only follow Lord Rahl's foolish orders when his male pride is at stake, not his
life.
"We
will go have a little discussion with Marlin, and get the answer to every one
of those questions, and more. When Lord Rahl comes back, we will be able to
give him the information he needs-if we haven't already ended the threat."
Kahlan
popped the palm of her hand against the round newel post. "That's the Cara
I know."
As they
went lower in the palace, below the levels with carpets and paneling, down to
the narrow, low-ceilinged halls where light came only from lamps, and even
lower, where only torches lit the way, the air went from light and spring-fresh
to stale, and then to rank with the heavy smell of damp, moldy stone.
Kahlan
had walked those confining halls more times than she wished to recall. The pit
was where they took confessions of the condemned. She had taken her first
there, from a man who had killed his neighbor's daughters after committing
unspeakable acts on them. Of course, each of those times she had been
accompanied by a wizard. Now, she was going to see a wizard being held there.
When
they had passed out of earshot of a squad of soldiers guarding an intersection
with two stairwells, and before they reached the turn that would take them to
the pit hall that would be crowded with all the soldiers she had stationed
there, Kahlan glanced over. Cara was an attractive woman, but a woman with an
air of menace about her as she swept the empty hall with vigilant gazes.
"Cara, can I ask you a personal question?''
Cara
clasped her hands behind her back as she strode along. "You are a sister
of the Agiel. Ask."
"Before,
you told me that hesitation can be the end of you, or those you care about. You
were talking about yourself, weren't you?"
Cara
slowed to a stop. Even in the hissing torchlight, Kahlan could see that her
face had paled.
"Now
that is truly a personal question."
"You
don't have to tell me. I don't mean it to sound like an order, or anything. I
was just wondering, woman to woman. You know so much about me, and I hardly
know anything about you, except that you are Mord-Sith."
"I
wasn't always Mord-Sith," Cara whispered. Her eyes had lost the menace,
and she looked like nothing so much a" a frightened little girl. Kahlan
could tell that Cara was no longer seeing the empty stone hall.
"I
guess that there is no reason not to tell you. As you said, I am not to blame
for what was done to me. Others were responsible.
"Every
year, in D'Hara, they would select a few girls to be trained as Mord-Sith. It
is said that the greatest cruelty is. drawn from those with the kindest hearts.
Rewards were paid for the names of gills who fit the requirements. I was an
only child, one of the requirements, and of tie right age. The girl, and her
parents, are taken, the parents to be murdered in the training of a Mord-Sith.
My parents didn't know that our names had been sold to I he hunters."
Cara's
face and tone had lost their emotion. She had gone blank, as if she were
telling of last year's beet harvest. But her words, if not her tone, carried
more than enough emotion.
"My
father and I were out back of the house, butchering chickens. When they came, I
had no idea what it meant. My father did. He saw them coming down the hill,
through the trees. He surprised them. But there were more than he had seen, or
could handle, and he had the advantage for only a few moments.
"He
screamed at me, 'Cari, the knife! Cari, get the knife!' I snatched it up
because he said to. He was holding three of the men. My father was big.
"He screamed again. 'Cari, stab them! Stab them! Hurry!' " Cara
looked into Kahlan's eyes. "I just stood there. I hesitated. I didn't want
to
stab
someone. To hurt someone. I just stood there. I couldn't even kill the
chickens. He did that part."
Kahlan
didn't know if Cara was going to go on. In the dead silence, she decided that
if she didn't, the questions would end there. Cara looked away from Kahlan's
eyes, staring off into the visions, and then she did go on.
"Someone
walked up beside me. I'll never forget it as long as I live. I looked up, and
there was this woman, this beautiful woman, the most beautiful woman I had ever
seen, with blue eyes and blond hair in a long braid. The sunlight coming
through the leaves danced in little patches across her red leather outfit.
"She
smiled down at me as she took the knife out of my hand. Not a pretty smile, but
a smile like a snake. That's what I always called her, in my mind, after
that-Snake. When she straightened, she said, 'Isn't that sweet? Little Cari
doesn't want to hurt anyone with her knife. That hesitation just made you a
Mord-Sith, Cara. It begins.' "
Cara
stood rigid, as if turned to stone. "They kept me in a little room, with
little grates in the bottom of the door. I couldn't get out. But the rats could
get in. At night, when I finally could stay awake no longer, and fell asleep,
the rats would sneak into my empty little room and bite my fingertips, and my
toes. ''Snake beat me nearly to death for blocking the grate. Rats like blood.
It excites them. "I learned to sleep in a ball, with my hands in fists and
tucked in against my belly, where they couldn't get at my fingers. But they
could usually get at my toes. I tried taking my shirt off and wrapping it
around my bare feet, but then if I didn't sleep on my stomach, they would bite
my nipples. Laying bare-chested on the cold stone, with my hands under my
stomach, was a torture in itself, but it usually kept me awake longer. If the
rats couldn't get a; my toes, they would bite me somewhere else-my ears, or
nose, or legs-until I woke with a start and scared them away.
' In
the night, I could hear the other girls cry out when a rat bit them awake. I
could always hear one of them weeping in the night, calling for her mother.
Sometimes, I realized it was my own voice I heard.
"Sometimes,
I would wake when rats scratched my face with their little claws, their
whiskers brushing my cheeks as their cold little noses pressed against my lips,
sniffing for a crumb. I thought to stop eating what they brought me, and left
the bowl of gruel and slab of bread on the floor, hoping the rats would eat my
dinner and leave me alone.
"It
didn't work. The food only brought hordes of rats, and then, when it was gone.
...I always ate every scrap of dinner, after that, when Snake brought it.
"Sometimes
she would taunt me when she brought my dinner. She would say, 'Don't hesitate,
Cara, or the rats will get your dinner.' I knew what she meant by saying,
'Don't hesitate.' It was her way of reminding me what my hesitation had cost me
and my parents. When they tortured my mother to death in front of me. Snake
said, 'See what happens, Cara, because you hesitated? Because you were too
timid?'
"We
were taught that Darken Rahl was 'Father Rahl.' We had no father but he. At my
third breaking, when they told me to torture my real father to death, Snake
told me not to hesitate. I didn't. My father begged for mercy. 'Cari, please,'
he wept. 'Cari, spare yourself becoming what they want.' But I never hesitated.
After that, my only father was Father Rahl."
Cara
brought her Agiel up and stared at it as she rolled it in her fingers. "I
earned my Agiel for that. The very same Agiel they trained me with. I earned the
appellation Mord-Sith."
Cara
looked back into Kahlan's eyes, as if from a great distance, not merely the two
steps that separated them. From the other side of madness. A madness others had
put there. Kahlan felt as if she, too, was turned to stone by what she saw in
the depths of those blue eyes.
"I
have been Snake. I have stood in the dappled sunlight, over young girls, and
taken the knife from their hands when they hesitated, not wanting to hurt
anyone." Kahlan had always hated snakes. She? hated them more now. Tears
tickled her face as they ran down her cheeks leaving wet tracks. "I'm
sorry, Cara," she whispered. Her stomach roiled. She wanted nothing more
than to put her arms around the woman in red leather before her, but she
couldn't make herself move so much as a finger.
Torches
hissed. In the distance, she heard muffled snippets of conversation from the
guards. A soft ripple of laughter floated up the hall. Water weeping from the
stone ceiling echoed as it splashed in a little green puddle not far away.
Kahlan could hear her own heart pounding in her ears. "Lord Rahl freed us
from that."
Kahlan
remembered Richard telling her that he had almost wept at the sight of the
other two Mord-Sith giggling like little girls as they fed seeds to chipmunks.
Kahlan understood the leap that was a simple giggle. Richard understood the
madness. Kahlan didn't know if these women could ever return from it, but if
they were to have a chance, it was only because of Richard.
The
iron returned to Cara's grim expression. "Let's go find out how Marlin
planned to harm Lord Rahl. But don't expect me to be gentle if he hesitates in
confessing every detail."
Under
Sergeant Collins's watchful eye, a D'Haran soldier unlocked the iron door and
backed away, as if the rusty lock was the only thing protecting everyone in the
palace from the sinister magic below, in the pit. Two more big soldiers
effortlessly dragged the heavy ladder closer.
Before
Kahlan could pull open the door, she heard approaching voices and footsteps.
Everyone turned to look up the hall. It was Nadine, with four soldiers
escorting her.
Nadine
rubbed her hands together, as if to warm them, as she stepped through the ring
of hulking, leather-clad guards. Kahlan didn't return the woman's bright smile.
"What are you doing down here?"
"Well,
you said I was a guest. As pretty as your rooms are, I wanted to go for a walk.
I asked the guards to show me the way down here. I want to see this
killer."
"I
told you to wait upstairs in your room. I told you that I didn't want you
coming down here."
Nadine's
dainty brow drew together. "I'm getting just a little tired of being
treated like a backwater bumpkin." She lifted her delicate nose. "I'm
a healer. I'm respected, where I come from. People listen when I speak. When I
tell someone to do something, they do it. If I tell a councilman to take a
potion three times a day and to stay in bed, he very well drinks his medicine
three times a day from his bed until I tell him he can leave it."
"I
don't care who jumps when you speak," Kahlan said. "Here, you jump
when I speak. Do you understand?"
Nadine
pressed her lips together as she slanted her fists on her hips. "Now, you
look here. I've been cold and hungry and scared. I've been played for a fool by
people I don't even know. I was minding my own business, going about my life,
when I was sent on this pointless journey only to arrive at a place where
people treat me like a leper as my thanks for coming to help. I've been yelled
at by people I don't know and humiliated by a boy I grew up with.
"I
thought I was going to marry the man I wanted, but I had that rug yanked out
from under my feet. He doesn't want me, he wants you. Well, so be it. Now
someone is trying to kill the man I traveled all this way to see, and you tell
me it isn't any of my business!"
She
shook a finger at Kahlan. ' 'Richard Cypher saved me from Tommy Lancaster
laying claim to me. If it wasn't for Richard, I'd be married to Tommy, now.
Instead, Tommy had to marry Rita Wellington. If it wasn't for Richard, I'd be
the one with black eyes all the time. I'd be barefoot buck at his shack and
pregnant with the offspring of that pig-faced bully.
"Tommy
ridiculed me for fixing herbs to help people. He said it was stupid for a girl
to mix herbs. He said my father should have had a boy, if he wanted someone to
work in his shop touching herbs that sick people needed. I'd never have any
hope of being a healer if it wasn't for Richard.
"Just
because I'm not the one to be his wife, that doesn't mean that I don't care about
him. I grew up with him. He's still a boy from my home. We take care of our
own, like they're family, even if they aren't. I've a right to know what danger
he's in! I've a right to see what sort of man from your world would want to
kill a boy from my home who's helped me!"
Kahlan
was in no mood to argue. She was also in no mood to spare the woman what she
might see.
She
studied Nadine's brown eyes, trying :to tell if what Cara had said, that Nadine
still wanted Richard, was true. If it was, Kahlan couldn't tell simply by
looking into her eyes.
"You
want to see a man who wants to kill us, Richard and me?" Kahlan gripped
the lever and threw open the door. "Fine. You shall have your wish."
She
gestured to the men with the ladder. They pushed it through the opening and
down into the darkness until it thudded in place. Kahlan yanked a torch from a
bracket and thrust it in Cara's hand. "Let's show Nadine what she wishes
to see."
Cara
checked Kahlan's resolve, found it rock solid, and then started down the
ladder. Kahlan held her arm out in invitation. "Welcome to my world,
Nadine. Welcome to Richard's world."
Nadine's
determination faltered for only an instant before she huffed and started down
the ladder after Cara.
Kahlan
glanced around at the guards. "Sergeant Collins, if he comes up through
this door before us, he had better not get out of this hall alive. He wants to
kill Richard."
"On
my word as a D'Haran soldier, Mother Confessor, harm won't get a glimpse of
Lord Rahl."
With a
hand signal from Sergeant Collins, soldiers drew steel. Archers nocked arrows.
Big hands unhooked crescent-bladed axes from weapons belts.
Kahlan
gave the sergeant a nod of approval, took another torch, and started down the
ladder.
CHAPTER
9
Dank,
heavy air wafted up from the pit as Kahlan followed Nadine down the ladder.
Using the hand with the torch to also hold the side of the ladder made her have
to endure the heat of the flame near the side of her face, but she was almost
happy for the smell of pitch because it covered the stink of the air in the
pit. Lower down, the wavering light from the torches lit more than the stone
walls; they lit the dark figure in the center of the room.
Kahlan
stepped off the ladder as Cara rammed her torch into a bracket on the slime-covered
wall. Kahlan slipped hers into one on the opposite wall. Nadine stood
transfixed, looking at the man covered in dried blood hunched before them.
Kahlan stepped past her to stand beside Cara. Cara's brow drew down as she
peered at Marlin.
His
head hung forward, and his eyes were closed. His breathing was deep, slow, and
even. "He's asleep," Cara whispered.
"Asleep?"
Kahlan whispered back. "How can he be asleep while he's standing up like
that?"
"I
. . . don't know. We always make new prisoners stand, sometimes for days. With
no one to talk to and nothing to do but consider their doom, it drains their
resolve-takes the fight right out of them. It's an insidious form of torment. I
have had men beg to be beaten, rather than have to stand, alone, hour after
hour."
Marlin
was snoring softly. ' 'How often does this happen-that they simply fall
asleep?'
Cara
put one hand on a hip as she wiped her mouth with the other. "I've had
them fall asleep, but that wakes them for sure. If they move from the spot where
we've told them to stand, the link brings on the pain. We don't have to be
there; the link works no matter where we are. I have never even heard of a man
falling asleep and remaining on his feet."
Kahlan
looked over her shoulder, past Nadine, and up the long ladder to the light
coming through the doorway. She could see the tops of soldiers' heads, but none
were so bold as to stare down into the pit, where there were apt to be deeds of
magic.
Nadine
stuck her head between them. ''Maybe it's a spell. Magic, of some sort."
She straightened, pulling her head back, when she received only glares in
answer. More out of curiosity than an attempt to wake him, Cara lightly jabbed
Marlin's shoulder. She pushed her finger into his chest, and his stomach. "Hard
as a rock. His muscles are all locked rigid."
"That
must be how he's able to stand there like that. Maybe it's some sort of trick
he learned as a wizard." Cara didn't seem convinced. With a twitch of her
hand so slight Kahlan almost missed it, Cara spun her Agiel up into her fist.
The pain Kahlan knew it caused her to hold her Agiel didn't show on her face.
It never did.��
Kahlan
snatched Cara's wrist. "You don't need to do that. Just wake him. And
don't use your link with his mind, his magic, to give him pain, unless it's
absolutely necessary. Unless I tell you so."
Displeasure
registered on Cara's face "I think it's necessary. I can't have this. I
can't hesitate to exert my control."
"Cara,
there is a great gulf between prudence and hesitation. This whole thing with
Marlin has been more than odd from the first. Let's just take it one step at a
time. You've said that you have control over him; let's not be impetuous. You
do have control, don't you?"
A slow
smile spread on Cara's lips. "Oh, I have control, no doubt of that. But if
you insist, I will wake him the way we sometimes wake our pets, then."
Cara
bent forward at the waist, slipped her left arm around his neck, tilted her
head, and gently gave Marlin a long kiss on the mouth. Kahlan felt her face go
red. She knew that Denna sometimes awakened Richard like that, before torturing
him again.
With a
satisfied smirk, Cara drew back. Like a cat coming awake from a nap, Marlin's
lids slid open. His eyes had that quality in them again-that quality that made
Kahlan's very soul want to shrink back.
This
time, she saw more than she had before. These eyes were not merely those of
great age. These were eyes unvisited by fear.
As he
regarded the three of them with slow, unflinching, calculating deliberation, he
bent his fisted hands back at the wrists and arched his back in a feline
stretch. A depraved grin spread onto his face, a taint of wickedness expanding
like blood seeping through white linen.
"So.
My two darlins have returned." His disquieting eyes seemed to see more
than they should, to know more than they should. "And they've brought a
new bitch with 'em."
Marlin's
voice had been almost boyish, before. Now, it was deep and gravelly, as if
coming from a muscled man weighing twice as much-a voice steeped with
unquestioned power and authority. It exuded invincibility. Kahlan had never
heard such a dangerous voice.
She
retreated a step, clutching Cara's arm and pulling her back with her. Though
Marlin didn't move, she felt the coiling of menace. ''Cara'' -Kahlan put a hand
behind, forcing Nadine back as she withdrew another step-"Cara, tell me
you've got him. Tell me you have control." Cara was staring, mouth agape,
at Marlin. "What . . . ?" She abruptly unleashed a powerful strike.
Her armored fist only snapped his head a few inches to the side. It should have
taken him from his feet. Marlin regarded her with a bloody smile. He spit out
broken teeth. "Nice try, darlin," Marlin said in a rough voice.
"But I've got control of your link with Marlin."
Cara
rammed her Agiel in his gut. His body flinched with the jolt, his arms flopping
ineffectually. His eyes, though, never lost the deadly look. The smile didn't
falter as he watched her. Cara took two steps back on her own.
"What's
going on?" Nadine whispered. "What's wrong? I thought you said he was
helpless."
"Get
out," Cara whispered urgently to Kahlan. "Now." She glanced up
the ladder. "I'll hold him off. Lock the door."
"Wanting
to leave?" Marlin asked in the grating voice as they moved toward the
ladder. "So soon? And before we've had a little talk. I've enjoyed
listening to the talks you two have had. I've learned so much. I never knew
about Mord-Sith. But I do, now."
Kahlan
halted. "What are you talking about?"
His
predatory gaze moved from Cara to Kahlan. "I learned of your touching love
for Richard Rahl. It was so thoughtful of you to reveal the limits of his gift.
I suspected much of it, but you confirmed the extent. You also confirmed my
suspicion that he would be able to recognize another with the gift, and that it
would raise his suspicions. Even you were able to see something wrong in
Marlin's eyes."
"Who
are you?" Kahlan asked as she pushed Nadine back with her toward the
ladder.
Marlin
shook with a belly laugh. "Why, none other than your worst nightmare, my
little darlins."
"Jagang?"
Kahlan whispered incredulously. "Is that it? Are you Jagang?" The
belly laugh boomed around the stone walls of the pit. "You have me
cornered. I confess. It is I, the dream walker himself. I've borrowed this poor
fellow's mind, just so I could pay you a little visit."
Cara
slammed her Agiel against the side of his neck. A puppet arm swept her aside.
Cara
returned almost instantly, crashing into his kidneys, trying to take him down.
He didn't budge. With jerky movements, he reached down, caught her braid, and
flung her back against the wall behind him as if she were a stick doll. Kahlan
winced at the sound of Cara smacking the stone. She rolled facedown on the
floor, blood soaking into her blond hair. Kahlan shoved Nadine toward the
ladder. "Get out!'' Nadine seized a rung on the ladder. "What are you
going to do?" "I've seen enough. This ends now."
Kahlan
went for Marlin, or Jagang, or whoever it was. She had to end it with her
power.
Screaming,
Nadine shot past Kahlan and across the floor as if she were sliding across ice.
Marlin caught the flailing woman, spun her around, and gripped her by the
throat in one hand. Nadine, her eyes wide, choked for air.
Kahlan
skidded to a halt as Marlin twitched up a cautionary finger. "Tut-tut.
I'll crush her throat.''
Kahlan
retreated a step. Nadine gulped air when he released the pressure.� ''One life, for all those you will otherwise
kill? Do you think the Mother Confessor would be unwilling to make such a
choice?"
At Kahlan's
words, Nadine, in renewed panic, writhed in his grip, her fingers digging
frantically at his hands. Even if Marlin didn't crush her throat, he was
touching her, and if Kahlan took him with her power, Nadine would be lost, too.
"Perhaps
you would, but don't you want to know what I'm doing here, darlin? Don't you
want to know my plans for your love, the great Lord Rahl?"
Kahlan
turned and screamed up the shaft of light. "Collins! Shut the door! Lock
it!"
Above,
the door slammed shut. Only the spitting torches remained to light the����� pit. The sound of the door clanging shut
added its echo to the hissing torches.
Kahlan
turned back to Marlin. Keeping her eyes on him, she began slowly edging around
the room. "What are you? Who are you?"
"Well,
actually, that's a difficult philosophical question to answer in terms you
would understand. A dream walker is able to slip into the infinite spaces of
time between thoughts, when a person, who they are, their very essence, doesn't
exist, and inhabit that person's mind. What you see before you is Marlin, a
loyal little lapdog of mine. I'm the flea on his back that he brought into your
house with him. He is a host, which I thought to use for . . . certain
things."
Nadine
thrashed against her captor, causing him to squeeze tighter to maintain his
grip. Kahlan pursed her lips and urged her to shush. If she continued fighting
him, she would get herself strangled. As if snatching the lifeline of Kahlan's
command, Nadine stilled in his grip, and was able at last to pull breaths.
"Your host will shortly be a dead best," Kahlan said.
"He's
expendable. Unfortunately, for' you, the damage has already been done, thanks
to Marlin."
With a
furtive glance to the side, Kahlan checked her slow progress toward the
facedown Cara. "Why? What has he done?"
"Why,
Marlin has brought you and Richard Rahl down for me. Of course, you have yet to
suffer what I have wrought, but he has done it. I had the privilege of
witnessing the glory of it."
"What
have you done? What are you doing here in Aydindril?" Jagang chuckled.
"Why, I've been enjoying myself. Yesterday, I even went to watch a Ja'La
game. You were there. Richard Rahl was there. I saw you both. I wasn't pleased
to see that he changed the broc, replacing it with a lightweight one. He's
turned it into a game for the weak. It's meant to be played with a heavy ball,
and by the strongest, the most aggressive and brutish players-those with the
true lust to win.
"Do
you know what Ja'La means, darlin?"
Kahlan
shook her head as she ran through a list of her options and priorities.
Foremost on the list was using her power to stop this man before he escaped the
pit, but first she had to find out all she could, if they were to stop his
plans. She had already failed once at that task. She wouldn't fail again.
"It's
from my native tongue. The full and proper name is Ja'La dh Jin-The Game of
Life. I don't like the way Richard Rahl corrupted it."
Kahlan
had almost reached Cara. "So you infested this man's mind so that you
could come and watch children play a game? I thought that the great and
all-powerful Emperor Jagang would have better things to do."
"Oh,
I've had better things to do. Much better." His grin was maddening.
"You see, you thought I was dead. I wanted you to know that you failed to
kill me at the Palace of the Prophets. I wasn't even there. I was enjoying the
charms of a young woman, at the time, actually. One of my newly captured
slaves."
"So
you aren't dead. You could have sent us a letter, and not have to go to all
this trouble. You came for some other reason. You were here with a Sister of
the Dark."
"Sister
Amelia had a little task to perform, but I'm afraid she's no longer a Sister of
the Dark. She betrayed her oath to the Keeper of the underworld, so that I
could destroy Richard Rahl."
Kahlan's
foot touched Cara. "Why didn't you tell us all this before, when we first
captured Marlin? Why wait until now?"
"Ah,
well, I had to wait until Amelia returned with what I sent her for. I'm not one
to take chances, you see. Not anymore." "And what did she steal from
Aydindril for you?" Jagang chuckled derisively. "Oh, not from
Aydindril, darlin." Kahlan squatted down beside Cara. ''Why would she no
longer be sworn to the Keeper? Not that I'm unhappy about it. but why would she
betray her oath?"
"Because
I placed her in a double bind. I gave her the choice of being sent to her
master, where she would suffer for eternity at his merciless hands for her past
failure with your love, or to betray him, and escape his grasp for now, only to
intensify his anger for later.
"And,
darlin, you should be unhappy about it, very unhappy, as it will be the
downfall of Richard Rahl."
Kahlan
forced herself to speak. "An empty threat."
"I
don't make empty threats." His smile widened. "Why do you think I
went to all this trouble? To be there at its doing, and to let you know that it
is I, Jagang, who has brought it upon you. I'd hate to have you think it was
simply chance."
Kahlan
shot to her feet and took an angry stride toward him. "Tell me, you bastard!
What have you done!"
Marlin's
hand jerked up, raising one finger. Nadine made a strangling sound. l����������� "Careful, Mother Confessor,
or you'll be denying yourself hearing the rest of it."
Kahlan
stepped back. Nadine gasped for air. "That's better, darlin.
"You
see, Richard Rahl thought that by destroying the Palace of the Prophets, he
kept me from gaining the knowledge it contained." Marlin's puppet finger
waggled. "Not so. Prophecies were not unique to the Palace of the
Prophets. There have been prophets about, elsewhere, and there are prophecies
elsewhere. Here, for example, there are prophecies in the Wizard's Keep. In the
Old World, there are prophecies, too. I found a number of them when I excavated
an ancient city that once thrived at the time of the great war
"Among
them, I found one that will be Richard Rahl's undoing. It is an extraordinarily
rare type of prophecy, called a bound fork. It enforces a double bind on its
victim.
"I
have invoked the prophecy."
Kahlan
didn't have the slightest idea what he was talking about. She quickly squatted
and lifted Cara's head. Cara scowled up at her.
"You
idiot," Cara whispered under her breath, "I'm fine. Leave me. Get
answers. Then signal, and I will use my link to kill him."
Kahlan
dropped Cara's head and stood. She started inching back toward the ladder.
''You're
talking babble, Jagang. '' She moved more quickly, hoping Jagang would think
she had found Cara dead. She was halfway to the ladder, although she had no
intention of trying to escape. She intended to unleash her power on him.
Nadine, or no Nadine. "I don't know anything about prophecy. You're making
no sense." "Well, darlin, it's like this, either Richard Rahl lets
the firestorm of what I have wrought rage out of control, fulfilling one fork
of the prophecy, in which case it kills him, too, or he tries to stop what I
have done, fulfilling the other fork of the prophecy. On that fork, he is
destroyed. See? He can't win, no matter which he chooses. Only one of two
events can now evolve, only one of the two forks. He has the power to choose
which one, but either will be his doom."�
"You are a fool. Richard will choose neither." Jagang roared
with laughter. "Oh, but he will. I've already invoked the prophecy,
through Marlin. Once invoked, there is no turning back from a bound fork
prophecy. But enjoy your delusions, if it will please you. It will make the
fall all that much more painful."
Kahlan
paused in her tracks. "I don't believe you." "You will. Oh, yes,
you will." - "Empty threats! What proof have you?" "Proof
will come on the red moon." "There is no such thing. You are full of
empty threats." Kahlan lifted a finger toward him as her fear dissolved in
the heat of rage. "But I want you to know of my threat, Jagang, and it is
not empty. I have seen the bodies of the women and children you ordered
slaughtered in Ebinissia, and I swore undying vengeance on your Imperial Order.
Even prophecy will not stop us from defeating you."
If
nothing else, she needed to at least provoke him into revealing the prophecy.
If they knew it, perhaps they could thwart it. "That is my prophecy to
you, Jagang. Unlike your pretend prophecy, it has words to it."
His
belly laugh echoed around the pit. ''Pretend? Let me show you the prophecy,
then."������������� ��������������������������
One of
Martin's hands lifted. Lightning exploded in the pit. Kahlan covered her�� ears as she ducked, hunching to protect
tier head. Stone chips howled through the air. She felt a sharp pain as one
sliced across her arm and another speared the side of her shoulder. She felt
the sickening feeling of warm blood soaking down her sleeve.
Above
their heads, the lightning jumped and leaped across the wall, incising the
stone, leaving in its wake lettering she could just see through the blinding
flashes. The crash of lightning cut off, leaving jagged afterimages across her
vision, the smell of dust and smoke choking her lung;, and the cacophony
echoing in her head. "There you go, darlin."
Kahlan
rose to her feet, squinting up at the wall. "Gibberish. That's all it is.
It means nothing."
"It's
in High D'Haran. According to the records, in the last war we had captured a
wizard, a prophet, and of course since he was loyal to the House of Rahl, my
ancestor dream walkers were denied access to his mind.
"So,
they tortured him. In a delirious state, and missing half his intestines, he
gave forth this prophecy. Have Richard Rahl translate it." He leaned
toward her with a venomous sneer. "Though I doubt he will want to tell you
what it says."
He
pressed a kiss against Nadine's cheek. "Well, it's been delightful, my
little journey, but I'm afraid Marlin must be going. Too bad, for you, that the
Seeker wasn't here with his sword. That would have ended it for Marlin."
"Cara!"
Kahlan went for him, mentally beseeching the good spirits' forgiveness for what
she was going to have to do to Nadine, too.
Cara
sprang up. With impossible strength, Jagang heaved Nadine through the air. The
woman cried out as she tumbled violently into Kahlan. Kahlan landed with a
grunt onto her back on the stone. Her vision prickled with floating dots of
light. She couldn't feel anything. She feared it might have broken her back.
But sensation returned with tingling pain when she twisted to the side. She
gasped to get her wind back as she struggled to sit up.
Cara,
on the far side of the room, let out a shrill, piercing scream. She crumpled to
her knees, covering her ears with her forearms as she shrieked.
Marlin
leaped onto the ladder as she and Nadine wrestled to untangle themselves from
each other.
Marlin,
hands and feet to each side of the ladder, sprang up in spurts, like a cat
going up a tree.
The
torches puffed out, plunging them into darkness.
Jagang
laughed as he ascended. Cara screamed as if she were being torn limb from limb.
Kahlan finally managed to shove Nadine aside and shuffle on her hands and knees
toward the sound of Jagang's mocking laughter. She could feel blood soaking all
the way down her sleeve.
The
iron door exploded outward, clanging against the stone on the other side of the
hall, the sound resonating with a boom through the halls. A man cried out as it
crushed him. With the door gone, a shaft of light bathed the ladder. Kahlan
scrambled to her feet and went for it.
As she
stretched up for the ladder, the pain in her shoulder caused her to recoil with
a cry. She reached up and yanked out the sharp shard of stone. The blood dammed
behind it gushed from the wound.
Fast as
she could, Kahlan scuttled up the ladder in pursuit of Marlin. She had to stop
him. There was no one else who could do it. With Richard gone, she was the
magic against magic for all these people. Her wounded arm shook with the
effort, and she could barely grasp the ladder. "Hurry!" Nadine called
out from right behind. "He'll get away!" From below, Cara's shrieks
seared Kahlan's nerves.
Kahlan
had once felt the awesome agony of an Agiel for a fraction of a second.
Mord-Sith endured the same pain whenever they held their Agiel, yet not the
slightest grimace ever registered on their faces. Mord-Sith lived in a world of
pain; years of torture had disciplined them in their ability to disregard it.
Kahlan
couldn't imagine what it would take to cause a Mord-Sith to scream like that.
Whatever
was happening to Cara, it was killing her, there was no doubt in Kahlan's mind.
Kahlan's
foot slipped through a rung. Her shinbone whacked painfully against the rung
above. She yanked her leg back in a rush to get to Jagang. Her flesh grazed the
side, catching and driving a long splinter into her calf. She cursed in pain
and charged up the ladder.
Clambering
through the opening at the top, she slipped and fell to her hands and knees in
a chaos of viscera. Sergeant Collins stared up at her with dead eyes. Jagged
white ends of rib bones stuck up, holding back the ripped leather and mail of
his uniform. His entire torso was rent from his throat to his groin.
A dozen
or so men writhed in agony on the floor. Others were still as death. Swords
were embedded to their hilts in the stone walls. Axes lodged there, too, as if
stuck in soft wood.
An
enemy with magic had scythed through these men, but not without cost; close by
lay an arm, severed above the elbow, By what it was wearing, she
recognized� it as Marlin's. The fingers
of the hand clenched and unclenched with measured regularity.
Kahlan
pushed herself up and turned to the door. She clasped wrists with Nadine and
helped her up into the hall. "Careful."
Nadine
gasped at the bloody sight. Kahlan expected her to faint, or scream
hysterically. She didn't.
Men
bristling swords, axes, pikes, and bows were charging up the hall from the
left. The hall to the right was empty, silent, and dark beyond a lone torch.
Kahlan went right. To her credit, Nadine chased right after her. The screams
coming from the pit sent shivers up Kahlan's spine.
CHAPTER��� 10
Beyond
the last, hissing torch, the hall disappeared into blackness. A soldier lay in
a crumpled heap to the side, like dirty laundry waiting to be collected. His
blackened sword lay in the center of the hall, its blade fractured into a
tangled fray of twisted steel strips.
Kahlan
paused and studied the still silence ahead. Just as there was nothing to be
seen, there was nothing to be heard. Marlin could be anywhere, hiding around
any intersection, crouched in any comer, with Jagang's self-satisfied smirk on
his face as he lingered in the darkness to put an end to the pursuit.
"Nadine, stay here."
"No.
I told you, we protect our own. He wants to kill Richard. I'll not let him get
away with it, not as long as I have a chance to help." "The only
chance you will have is to get yourself killed." "I'm going."
Kahlan
had neither the time nor desire to argue. If Nadine was going to go, at least
she could make herself useful; Kahlan needed her hands free. "Then grab
that torch."
Nadine
yanked it from the bracket and waited expectantly. "I have to touch
him," Kahlan told her. "If I touch him, I can kill him."
"Who, Marlin or Jagang?"
Kahlan's
heart pounded against her ribs. "Marlin. If Jagang could get into his mind,
I expect he can get out. But who knows? If nothing else, at least Jagang will
be gone, and his minion will be dead. That will end it. For now."
"That's
what you were trying to do back in the pit? What did you mean about making a
choice, one life for all the others?"
Kahlan
grabbed her face, squeezing her cheeks. "You listen to me. This isn't just
some Tommy Lancaster wanting to rape you; this is a man who is trying to kill
us all. I have to stop him. If anyone else is touching him when I do, they will
be destroyed along with him. If you or anyone else is touching him, I won't
hesitate. Do you understand? I can't afford to hesitate. Too much is at
stake." Nadine nodded. Kahlan released her. She redirected her anger to
the task at hand. She could feel blood dripping from the ends of the fingers of
her left hand. She didn't think she could lift her left arm, and she needed her
right arm to touch Marlin. At least Nadine could hold a torch for her. Kahlan
hoped that she wasn't making a mistake, hoped that Nadine wouldn't slow her.
She hoped she wasn't letting Nadine come for the wrong reasons. Nadine took
Kahlan's right hand and placed it to her bleeding left shoulder. "We don't
have time to fix this, now. Hold that wound closed as tight as you can, until
you need your hand, or you'll lose too much blood and not be able to do what
you must."
A bit
chagrined. Kahlan squeezed the wound. "Thanks if you're going to come,
then stay behind me, and just light the way. If soldiers can't stop him, you
can't������ hope to do better. I don't
want you getting hurt for nothing." "Got it. Right behind you."
"Just
remember what I said, and don't get in my way." Kahlan stretched up,
looking back behind Nadine to the soldiers. "Use arrows or spears if you
get a shot, but stay behind me. Get some more torches. We need to corner
him."
Some of
them trotted back to retrieve torches as Kahlan started away. Nadine held her
torch out ahead of her as she trotted to keep up. The flame fluttered and
roared in the wind of their flight, illuminating the walls, ceiling, and floor
for a short distance around them, creating an undulating island of light in a
sea of blackness. Close behind, men with torches created their own islands of
light. Heavy breathing echoed through the hall as they ran, along with the thud
of boots, the jangle of chain mail, the clang of steel, and the roar of flame.
Above it all, in her mind, Kahlan could still hear Cara's screams. Kahlan
halted at an intersection, panting to get her breath as she looked ahead, and then
down the corridor that branched to the right. "Here!" Nadine pointed
to blood on the floor. "He went this way!" Kahlan looked up the dark
hall ahead. It led to the stairwells and up into the palace. The other corridor
that branched off to the right led under the palace in a labyrinth of
storerooms, abandoned areas once used in the excavation of the bedrock the
palace was built atop, access tunnels to inspect and maintain the foundation
walls, and drainage tunnels for the springs the builders had encountered. At
the ends of the drainage tunnels, massive stone grates let the water out
through the foundation walls, but prevented anyone from getting in.
"No," Kahlan said. "This way-to the right." "But the
blood," Nadine protested. "He went this way." "We've seen
no blood until this place. The blood is a diversion. That way leads up into the
palace. Jagang went this way, to the right, where there are no people."
Nadine
followed after as Kahlan started down the corridor to the right. "But why
would he care if there are people? He killed and wounded all those soldiers
back there!"
"And
they managed to take off an arm. Now Marlin is wounded. Jagang won't care if we
kill Marlin, but, on the other hand, if he can escape, then he can use Marlin
to cause more harm."
"What
more harm could he cause than hurting people? Hurting all those people upstairs
and the soldiers?"
"The
Wizard's Keep," Kahlan said. ''Jagang doesn't have command of magic, other
than his ability as a dream walker, but he can use a person with the gift. From
what I've seen so far, though, he doesn't know much about using another's
magic. The things he did back there, simple use of air and heat, are far from
inventive for a wizard. Jagang only thinks to do the simplest of things with
their magic, things of brute force. That is to our advantage.
"If
I were him, I would try to get to the Keep, and use the magic there to cause
the most destruction I could."
Kahlan
turned down an ancient stairwell carved from rock, taking the steps two at a
time. At the bottom, the rough, tunnel-like hall ran in two directions. She
turned to the soldiers still racing down the stairs behind. "Split up-half
each way. This is the lowest level. When you encounter more junctures, cover
them all. Remember which way you went at each turn, or you could be lost down
here for days.
"You've
seen what he can do. If you find him, don't take a chance trying to take him.
Post sentries so we know if he backtracks, and then send runners to come get
me."
"How
will we find you?" one asked.
Kahlan
looked to the right. "At every choice, I'll take the one to the right, so
you can follow where I went. Now hurry. I think he's headed for any opening out
of the palace he can find. We can't let him get out. If he gets to the Keep, he
can get through shields there that I can't."
With
Nadine and half the men, Kahlan rushed on through the dank hall. They
encountered several rooms, all empty, and before long, several more corridors.
At every branch, she divided the men and took her continually dwindling force
to the right.
"What's
the Wizard's Keep?" Nadine asked as they moved on through the darkness.
"It's
a massive fortress, a stronghold, where wizards used to live. It predates the
Confessors' Palace." Kahlan lifted a hand, indicating the palace above
them. '' In ages long forgotten, nearly everyone was born with the gift. Over
the last three thousand years the gift has been dying out in the race of
man." "What's in the Keep?"
"Living
quarters, long abandoned, libraries, rooms of every sort. And things of magic
are stored there. Books, weapons, things like that. Shields protect important
or dangerous parts of the Keep. Those without magic can't pass through any of
the shields. Since I was born with magic, I can pass through some of them, but
not all.
"The
Keep is vast. It makes the Confessors' Palace look like a cramped cottage, by
comparison. In the great war, three thousand years ago, the Keep was filled
with wizards and their families. Richard says it was a place filled with
laughter and life. At that time, the wizards had both Subtractive and Additive
Magic." "And now they don't?"
"No.
Only Richard has been born with both sides.
"There
are places in the Keep that I, and the wizards I grew up with, could not enter
because the shields are so powerful. There are other places that have not been
entered in thousands of years because they are shielded with both sides of the
magic. No one could get past the shields. "But Richard can. I fear Marlin
can, too." "Sounds a dreadful place."
"I've
spent a good portion of my life there, studying books of language, and learning
from the wizards. I never though, of it as anything but part of my home."
"Where are these wizards now? Can't they help us?"
' 'They
all killed themselves, at the end of last summer, in the war with Darken
Rahl."
"Killed
themselves! How awful. Why would they do that?" Kahlan was silent for a
moment as they moved relentlessly onward into the darkness. It all seemed a
dream from another life.
"We
needed to find the First Wizard, to have him appoint the Seeker of Truth to
stop Darken Rahl. Zedd was the First Wizard. He was in Westland, on the other
side of the boundary. The boundary was linked to the underworld, the world of
the dead, so no one was able to cross it.
"Darken
Rahl was also hunting Zedd. It took all the wizards to conjure magic to get me
through the boundary to go after Zedd. If Darken Rahl had captured the�� wizards, he might have used his vile magic
to make them confess what they knew.
"To
give me the time to have a chance to succeed, the wizards killed themselves.
Darken Rahl still managed to send assassins after me. That was when I met
Richard. He protected me."
"Blunt
Cliff?" Nadine said in questioning amazement. "There were four huge
men found dead at the bottom of the cliff. They had leather uniforms, and
weapons of every sort. No one had ever seen men like them before."
"That
was them."� "What
happened?"
Kahlan
gave her a sidelong glance. "Something like you and your experience with
Tommy Lancaster." "Richard did that? Richard killed these men?"
Kahlan
nodded. "Two of them. I took another with my power, and he killed the
last. Those were probably the first men Richard had ever encountered who wanted
to do more to him than simply give him a beating when he chose to protect
someone. To protect me. Richard has had to make a lot of hard choices since
that day on Blunt Cliff."
For
what seemed hours, but she knew couldn't be more than fifteen or twenty
minutes, they continued on into the dark, stinking halls. The stone blocks were
larger, some so huge that single blocks ran from floor to ceiling. They were
roughly cut, but fit with no less precision than the other mortarless jointwork
elsewhere in the palace.
The
halls were wetter, too, with water running down the walls in places, draining
into small tiled weep holes at the edges of the floor that had a crown to
direct the water to the drains. Some of the drains were plugged with debris,
allowing shallow pools to form.
Rats
used the tiled drains as tunnels. They squeaked and scurried away at the
approach of light and sound, some taking to the drains, some running on ahead.
Kahlan thought again of Cara, and wondered if she was still alive. It seemed
too cruel that she should die before having a chance to taste life without the
madness that shadowed her.
A
series of connecting tunnels finally reduced Kahlan's company to Nadine and two
men. The way was so narrow that they had to proceed single-file. The low,
arched ceiling forced them to trot in a crouch.
Kahlan
saw no blood-Jagang probably used his control of Marlin's mind to cut the
flow-but in several places she did see that the slime on the wall was smeared
in horizontal streaks. As low and narrow as the passageway was, it would be
difficult to avoid grazing the close walls. Kahlan brushed against the wall
more than she wished to; it hurt her shoulder when the knuckles of her hand
over the wound struck the slimy stone. Marlin-Jagang-had to have been through
the passageway and brushed against the same wall.
She
felt both a rush of heady relief that she was on his tail, and terror at the
prospect of catching him.
The
arched passageway narrowed again, and the ceiling became even lower. They had
to hunch into a deep crouch to proceed. The flames from the torches folded to
lap at the stone close overhead, and the smoke billowed along the ceiling,
burning their eyes.
As the
passageway started into a steep descent, they all slipped and fell more than
once. Nadine skinned her elbow as she fell on it while maintaining a grip on
the torch. Kahlan slowed, but didn't stop, as one of the soldiers helped Nadine
regain her feet. The other three quickly caught up. Ahead, Kahlan heard the
rush of water.
The
narrow passageway opened into a large, tubular tunnel. Water rushed in a torrent
down the round tunnel that was part of the drainage system below the palace.
Kahlan paused at the edge.
"What
now, Mother Confessor?'' ore of the soldiers asked. "Stick to the plan.
I'll go with Nadine downstream, to the right. You two go upstream to the
left."
"But
if he's trying to get out, he would have gone to the right," the soldier
said. "He would hope to get out where the water does. We should go with
you."
"Unless
he knows we're after him, end he's trying to send us the wrong way. You two go
left. Come on, Nadine." "In there? The water must be
waist-deep."
"A
little more. I'd say. It's run-off from the spring melt. It's usually no more
than a foot or two deep. There are stepping stones along the other side, but
they're just underwater now. In the center of where this passageway opens into
the drain tunnel there will be an oblong stone to step across on."
Kahlan
stretched and stepped out, putting a foot into the center of the torrent and
onto the flat stone just under the surface of the water. She lifted her other
leg across the rushing water, testing until he ' foot found one of the stones
against the far wall. She clasped a hand with Nadine and boosted herself
across. Standing on the stone, the water was only ankle-deep, but it quickly
soaked through the lacing and filled her boots. It was ice cold.
'
'See?" Kahlan's voice echoed, and she hoped it didn't carry far. "But
be careful; it isn't an unbroken walkway. The stones are spaced apart."
Kahlan
moved to the next stepping stone and gave Nadine a hand across. She gestured to
the men to go up the tunnel. They crossed and moved quickly off into the
darkness. Soon, the light from the men's torches vanished around a bend, and
Kahlan was left with Nadine in the dim light of a single torch. Kahlan hoped it
would last long enough. "Careful, now," she said to Nadine.
Nadine
cupped her ear. It was hard to hear over the roar of the water. Kahlan put her
mouth close and repeated the admonition. She didn't want to yell, and alert
Jagang, if he was close.
Even if
the torch had been brighter, they wouldn't have been able to see far. The
drainage tunnel twisted and turned on its way down and out of the palace
underground. Kahlan had to put a hand to the cold, slimy stone wall in order to
keep her balance.
In
several places the tunnel took a steep descent, the stones along the side
following it down like a stairway down through a roaring rapid. Icy water
misted the air and soaked them to the skin.
Even in
the flatter sections, running was impossible, as they had to step carefully
from stone to stone. If they went too fast and missed a step, they could break
an ankle. Down in the tunnel, in the water, with Jagang somewhere about, would
be a very bad place to be hurt. The blood running afresh down Kahlan's arm reminded
her that she was already hurt. But at least she could walk.
That
was when Nadine squealed from behind and went into the water,� "Don't lose the torch!" Kahlan
screamed. Nadine, chest-deep in the rushing water, thrust the torch up in the
air to keep it from being doused. Kahlan snatched her wrist and strained
against the drag of the water as the current swept Nadine past. There was
nothing for Kahlan to grab hold of with her other hand. She hooked the heels of
her boots over the edge of the stepping stone to keep from being pulled off.
Nadine
thrashed with her other hand, searching for one of the stepping stones. She
found one and grasped it. With Kahlan's help, she pulled herself back up.
"Dear
spirits, that water is cold."�
"I told you to be careful!"
"Something,
a rat, I think, grabbed my leg," she said, trying to catch her breath.
"I'm sure it was dead. I've seen others float past. Now be careful."
Nadine nodded in embarrassment. I because she had been swept past Kahlan,
Nadine was now in the lead. Kahlan didn't see how they could change places
without a struggle, so she motioned Nadine on.
Nadine
turned to start out. Suddenly a huge shape erupted from the black depths. Water
sluiced from Marlin as he bobbed up and snatched Nadine's ankle with his one
hand. She shrieked as she was yanked feet-first into the inky water.
CHAPTER
11
On her
way down, Nadine swung the torch and caught Marlin square across the bridge of
his nose. He let go of her as he madly groped to wipe the burning pitch from
his eyes. The current swept him away.
Kahlan
gripped Nadine's arm, still holding the torch above the water, and helped her
back up on the stepping stone for a second time. They flattened themselves
against the wall, gulping air and shaking in shock. "Well," Kahlan
said at last, "at least we know which way he went." Nadine was
shivering violently from her second dunking. Her hair was plastered to her head
and neck. "I can't swim. Now I know why I never wanted to learn. I don't
like it."
Kahlan
smiled to herself. The woman had more pluck than she would have thought. Her
smile wilted when she remembered why Nadine was there, and who had sent her.
Kahlan
realized that in the surprise of the ambush she had missed her chance to get
Jagang. "Let me go first."
Nadine
held the torch up with both hands. Kahlan put her arms around Nadine's waist as
they twisted around on tiptoes to change places on the stone. The woman was as
cold as a fish in winter. Kahlan wasn't much warmer from being in the frigid
tunnels with the icy water lapping around her ankles. Her toes were numb.
"What if he swims upstream and escapes?" Nadine asked, her teeth
chattering. "I don't think that likely, with only on? arm. He was probably
holding a stone, keeping just his face above the surface as he lurked in the
water, waiting for us." "And what if he does it again?"
"I'm
in front now. It will be me he grabs hold of, and that will be the last mistake
he makes."
"And
what if he waits until you pass, and pops up and grabs me again?"
"Then hit him harder the next time." "I hit him as hard as I
could!"
Kahlan
smiled and gave Nadine a reassuring squeeze on her arm. "I know you did.
You did the right thing. You did well "
They
inched along the wall, passing several more gentle turns, watching the water
the whole time for Marlin's face peering up at them. Both started at things
they saw in the water, but it always turned out to be nothing more than pieces
of flotsam.
The
torch was sputtering more, and looked to be near its end. The drains all led
outside, and they had traveled a goodly distance in this one. Kahlan knew that
the tunnel must end soon. She realized the thought was more hope than
knowledge; as a girl she had explored the tunnels and drains down here, though
not when they had been so swollen with run-off, and although she had a good
idea of where she was, she didn't�� know
their exact location. She remembered that some drainage tunnels seemed to go on
forever.
As they
moved along, the sound of the roaring water seemed to change pitch. Kahlan
wasn't sure what that meant. Ahead, the tunnel bent to the right.
A thump
that she could feel in her chest more than hear made her stop. She held out a
hand, not only to halt Nadine, but' to signal silence.
The wet
stone of the walls ahead brightened, glistening with a reflected bluish glow
from something beyond the bend, A low howl rose in pitch until they could hear
it clearly over the rush of the water.
A
boiling ball of flame exploded from around the bend. Raging yellow and blue
flame, filling the entire tunnel, tumbled as it raced toward them with a wail.
Liquid fire seething with all-consuming menace. Wizard's fire.
Kahlan
snatched Nadine by the hair. "Hold your breath!" Pulling Nadine with
her, Kahlan dived into the water just ahead of the angry fury of roiling flame.
The icy water was such a shock that she almost gasped it in.
Under
the churning water, it was difficult to tell up from down. Kahlan opened her
eyes. She saw the wavering glow of the inferno overhead. Nadine was struggling
to get to the surface. Kahlan jammed her left hand against the underside of a
stepping stone to hold herself under, and with her good arm held Nadine under
with her. Nadine, in the panic of drowning, fought to escape. Panic clawed at
Kahlan, too.
When
everything went black, Kahlan her lungs burning for air, thrust her head above
the water, pulling Nadine up with her. Nadine choked and coughed as she gasped.
Long sodden strands of hair covered both their faces. Another tumbling ball of
wizard's fire raced up the tunnel. "Get a big breath!" Kahlan
screamed.
She
sucked a deep breath herself and went under, dragging Nadine down with her.
They went under without an instant to spare. Kahlan knew that, given a choice,
Nadine would have chosen to die in the fire rather than drown, but the water
was�� their only chance. Wizard's fire
burned with deadly determination, with the resolve� of the wizard who conjured it.
They
couldn't keep doing this. The water was so cold she was shivering
uncontrollably� already. She knew that
cold water, by itself, could kill a person. They couldn't stay in the water: it
would end up killing them as sure as the wizard's fire.�
They
couldn't get to Jagang through Marlin's wizard's fire. If they were to
reach�� him in time, there was only one
way: they would have to go under the fire. Under the water.�����������������������������������������������������������������������
Kahlan
repressed her panic at the thought of drowning, made sure she had a good grip
around Nadine's waist, and then pushed away from the stepping stone she had
been gripping for dear life. The wet wrath of water swept them away in its
frigid flux. She could feel herself tumbling under the water as she scraped and
bumped along the stone. When her shoulder hit on something, she almost
screamed, but the thought of losing her breath instantly locked her throat shut
even tighter.
With
frenzied need of air, and blackness disorienting her, she knew she had to come
up. She was holding Nadine in a death grip with her good arm. With her
other
hand, she managed to hook a stone. With Nadine's weight in addition to her own,
it felt as if the rush of water would rip her arm from its socket.
When
her head cleared the surface, there was light. Not twenty feet away was a stone
lattice. Late afternoon light poured in through the openings above the water
level.
As
Kahlan pulled Nadine's head above the water, she clamped a hand over the
woman's mouth.
On one
of the stepping stones to the side, near the stone grate, facing away, stood Marlin.
Kahlan
could see the broken shafts of least a half dozen arrows sticking from his
back. By the way Marlin was staggering as he stepped to the next stone, she
knew he couldn't live much longer.
The
stump of his left arm wasn't bleeding. If only she could count on him dying
before he reached the Keep. Jagang was obviously driving the wounded man
relentlessly onward. She had no idea what Jagang was capable of, in controlling
the man's mind, to keep him alive and moving. He had no concern for the life he
occupied, and she knew he would be willing to let Marlin suffer any damage to
accomplish Jagang's wishes.
Marlin
lifted a hand, fingers spread, toward the stone grate. Kahlan had grown up
around wizards; Marlin was conjuring air. A section of the lattice grate
exploded outward in a cloud of dust and stone fragments. More light poured in
through the blasted opening.
The
suddenly wider spillway let the water flood out with yet greater force.
Kahlan's injured arm had no strength, an I the mounting might of the discharge
tore her away from the stone step. She lost her grip on Nadine.
In the
powerful clutch of the water, Kahlan grasped frantically for a handhold, but
found none. She twisted and tumbled under the water, trying with her arms and
legs to grapple something. She hadn't had a chance to get a good breath, and
she struggled, too, to fight her terror at her exigent need for air.
Her
fingers caught the sharp stone at the edge of the blasted hole. The water
sucked her under and jammed her hard against the lower part of the grate. She
could only force her head and part of one shoulder above the surface. It seemed
she was breathing more water than air.
Kahlan
looked up. Jagang's wicked smile greeted her. He was only a few feet away.
The
force of the water ramming against her crushed her tight to the broken grate.
She didn't have the muscle to overcome the pounding weight of the water. Try as
she might, she couldn't get to him. It was> all she could do to get a
breath.
She
glanced over her shoulder. What she saw took the breath for which she had
fought so hard. They were on the east side of the palace-the high side of the
foundation. The water roared out of the drainage gateway to plunge for a good
fifty feet before crashing to the rocks below.
Jagang
chuckled. "Well, well, darlin, how nice of you to drop by to witness my
escape."
"Where
are you going, Jagang?" she managed. "I thought I'd go up to the
Keep."
Kahlan
gasped for air and caught a mouthful of water instead. She coughed and choked
it out. "Why do you want to go to the Keep? What's there that you
want?"
"Darlin,
you're deluding yourself if you think I would reveal anything I don't want you
to know." "What did you do to Cara?"
He
smiled but didn't answer. He lifted Marlin's hand. A blast of air shattered
more of the grate to the side.
The
stone she was holding gave way. Her back scraped over the broken edge. Kahlan
snatched for a solid piece and just caught it with her fingers before she was
ejected from the drain. When she looked down, she was looking at the rocks
below the foundation. Water thundered above her.
She
worked her fingers over the sharp stone, struggling desperately to pull herself
back behind what was left of the grate. Panic powering her effort, she regained
the inside of the stone lattice, but she couldn't get away from it. The water
kept her pinned. "Problem, darlin?"
Kahlan
wanted to scream at him, but ;she could only gasp for air as she fought to keep
from being swept through the opening. Her arms burned with the effort. She
could think of nothing to do to stop him. She thought of Richard.
Jagang
lifted Marlin's hand again, spreading his fingers.
Nadine
popped up from the water right behind him. With one hand she held a stone step.
In her other, she still gripped the dead torch. Looking as if she was at the
ragged edge of madness, she took a mighty swing, clubbing him across the back
of his knees.
Marlin's
legs folded under him and he toppled into the water right in front of Kahlan.
He caught himself on the broker grate with his one hand. When he saw what
waited outside, he frantically tried to push himself back. Apparently, he
hadn't anticipated that there might be no way down from the drain tunnel.
Nadine clutched a stepping stone and held on for dear life. Kahlan reached
behind with her injured arm, stuffed her left hand through a grate opening
under the water, and made a fist to lodge it fast. With her other hand, she
seized Marlin by the throat.
"Well,
well," she said through gritted teeth. "Look what I have here: the
great and all-powerful Emperor Jagang."
He
grinned, showing broken teeth. "Actually, darlin," he said in
Jagang's grating, impudent voice, "you have Marlin."
She
pulled herself close to his face. "Think so? Do you know that a
Confessor's magic works faster than thought? That's why once we're touching
someone, they have no chance. None. The magic bond of my loyalty to Richard
Rahl denies a dream walker access to my mind. Marlin's mind is our field of
battle now. Do you suppose that my magic might work faster than yours? What do
you think? Do you think I can take you, along with Marlin?"
"Two
minds at once?" he said with a smirk. "I don't think so,
darlin." "We'll see. Maybe I'll get you, too. Maybe we'll end the
war, and the Imperial Order, right here and now."
"Oh,
darlin, you are a fool. Man is destined to free his world from the shackles of
magic. Even if you could kill me here and now, which you can't, you will not
end the Order. It will survive any one man, even me, because it is the struggle
of all mankind to inherit our world."
"Do
you really expect me to believe that you don't do this for yourself? For naked
power?"
"Not
at all. I relish rule. But I simply ride a horse already in full charge. It
will run you down. You are a fool who follows the dying religion of
magic."
"A
fool who has you by the throat-the great Jagang, who professes to want man to
triumph over magic, yet uses magic!"
"For
now. But when magic dies, I will be the one with the daring, and the muscle, to
rule-without magic."
Fury
erupted through Kahlan. This was the man who had ordered the deaths of
thousands of innocent people. This was the butcher of Ebinissia. This was the
man who would enslave the world. This was the man who wanted to kill Richard.
In the
silence of her mind, in the core of her power, where there was no cold, no
exhaustion, no fear, she had all the time in the world. Though he made no
attempt to escape, even if he had, it would have been hopeless. He was hers.
Kahlan did as she had done countless times before-she released her restraint.
For an imperceptible twitch of time, something was different. There was
resistance where there had been none before. A wall. Like hot steel through
glass, her power crashed through it. The magic exploded through Marlin's mind.
Thunder without sound.
Stone
chips fell from the ceiling at the concussion. Water droplets danced. Despite
the water's rush, a ring of ripples raced outward around the two of them,
driving a wall of mist and dust.
Nadine,
clinging to the stepping stone, cried out in the pain of being so close to a
Confessor's power unleashed.
Marlin's
mouth went slack. Once a person's mind had been destroyed by a Confessor, they
became a vessel needing her command. Marlin offered no such abdication.
Blood
streamed from his ears and nose. His head lolled to the side in the rushing
torrent. His dead eyes started.
Kahlan
released her grip of his throat when his hand went slack on the grate and the
water tore him away. Marlin's body tumbled out through the broken stone lattice
and plummeted to the rocks below.
Kahlan
knew: she had almost had Jagang, but she failed. His thoughts, his ability as a
dream walker, had been too fast for her Confessor's magic to catch. Nadine was
reaching toward her. "Grab my hand! I can't hold on forever!" Kahlan
locked wrists with her. Using her power drained a Confessor of strength. After
using her magic, it took even Kahlan, the Mother Confessor, and perhaps the
strongest Confessor ever born, several hours before she could use her power
again, but longer than that to fully recover her strength. She was exhausted,
and couldn't fight the torrent any longer. Without Nadine's hold on her, she
would have gone over the edge, too.
With
Nadine's help, Kahlan managed to regain the stepping stones. Shivering with the
cold, they both dragged themselves up.
Nadine
wept at the crest of terror that had passed and had almost taken them. Kahlan
was too exhausted to weep, but she knew how Nadine felt. "I wasn't
touching him, when you used magic, but I thought every one of my joints had
popped apart. It didn't . . . do anything to me, did it? Anything magic?�� Am I going to die, too?"�������
"No,
you're fine," Kahlan assured her. "You simply felt the pain because
you were too close, that's all. If you had been touching him, though, it would
have been inconceivably worse-you would have been destroyed."
Nadine
nodded in mute reply. Kahlan put an arm around her and whispered a thank you in
her ear. Nadine smiled the tears away. "We have to get back to Cara."
Kahlan said. "We have to hurry." "How? The torch is gone.
There's no way down the outside, and as soon as we try to go back, it will be
pitch black. I don't want to go back there in the dark. It's impossible until
the soldiers come with torches to light our way."
"Nothing
is impossible," Kahlan said wearily. "We took every turn to the
right, so we have only to put a hand on the left wall and follow it to find our
way back."
Nadine
threw her hand out, pointing back into the blackness. "That may be all
fine and good in the halls, but when we came into this drainage tunnel, we
crossed over to the other side. There aren't steps on that side. We'll never
find the opening."
"The
water rushing over the step stone in the center of the tunnel had a different
sound. Didn't you notice? I'll remember it." Kahlan took Nadine's hand to
give her encouragement. "We have to try. Cara needs help."
Nadine
stared in wordless worry for a moment, and then said, "All right, but wait
a moment."
She
tore a strip from the shredded hem of Kahlan's dress and wound it around
Kahlan's upper arm, closing the wound as best she could. Kahlan winced when
Nadine drew the knot tight.
"Let's
go," Nadine said. "But be careful until I can sew it closed and put a
poultice on it."
CHAPTER
12
They
made excruciatingly slow process back up the drainage tunnel. The blind trek,
groping along the cold, slimy stone, with the water coursing about their
ankles, and the constant fear of falling into the raging water in the darkness,
was at least devoid of the terror that Marlin might pop up, grab their legs,
and pull them in. When Kahlan heard the sound of the water change, and its echo
into the hall, she held Nadine's hand and probed with a foot until she found
the step stone across the channel.
Partway
back through the dark labynnth of tunnels and halls, the soldiers found them
and led the way with torches. In a numb haze, Kahlan followed the wavering
flames of the torches as they plunged ever onward into the black nothingness.
It was an effort to put one foot in front of the other. Kahlan wished for
nothing more than to lie down, even if it were on the cold, wet stone.
Outside
the pit, the halls were crowded with hundreds of grim soldiers. Archers all had
arrows nocked. Spears were at the ready, as were swords and axes. Other
weapons, from the fight with Marlin, were still embedded in the stone. She
doubted that anything short of magic would remove them. The dead and wounded
had been cleared away, but blood boasted where they had lain. Screams were no longer
coming from the pit.
Kahlan
recognized Captain Harris, who had been up in Petitioners' Hall earlier in the
day. "Has anyone gone down there to help her, captain?" ''No, Mother
Confessor. ''
He
didn't even have the decency to look sheepish about it. D'Harans feared magic,
and felt no loss of pride admitting it. Lord Rahl was the magic against magic;
they were the steel against steel. It was as simple as that.
Kahlan
couldn't bring herself to reprimand the men in the hall for leaving Cara alone.
They had shown their bravery in the fight with Marlin. Many of them had been
killed or seriously injured. Going down into the pit was different from
fighting something that came out; defending their selves was different, in
their minds, from going out and looking for trouble with magic.
For
their part of the bargain, the steel against steel, D'Haran soldiers fought to
the death. They expected their Lord Rahl to do his part, and his part was
dealing with magic.
Kahlan
read the apprehension in all the waiting eyes. "The assassin, the man who
escaped the pit, is dead. It's over."
Soft
sighs of relief could be heard up and down the hall, but by the anxious
expression still on the captain's face, she knew she must look quite a mess.
"I think we should get you some help. Mother Confessor."
"Later." Kahlan started for the ladder. Nadine followed. "How
long has she been silent, captain?"
"Maybe
an hour."
"That
was about when Marlin died. Come with us, and bring a couple more men so we can
get Cara out of there."
Cara
was on the far side of the room, near the wall where Kahlan had seen her last.
Kahlan knelt on one side, Nadine or the other, as the soldiers held torches so
they could see.
Cara
was in convulsions of some sort. Her eyes were closed, and she was no longer
screaming, but she shook violently, her arms and legs thrashing against the
stone floor.
She was
choking on her own vomit.
Kahlan
gripped the shoulder of Cara's red leather and yanked her onto her side.
"Open her mouth!"
Nadine
leaned over from behind and pushed her thumb against the back of Cara's jaw,
forcing it forward. With her other hand, she pressed down on her chin, keeping
her mouth open. Kahlan swept two fingers through Cara's mouth several times
until she had cleared her airway.
"Breathe!"
Kahlan yelled. "Breathe, Cara, breathe!"
Nadine
slapped the prone woman on the back, eliciting gurgling, wet, choking coughs
that finally brought a semblance of clear, if gasping. breathing.
Although
she was able to breathe, it didn't halt the convulsions. Kahlan felt helpless.
"I
better go get my things," Nadine said. "What's wrong with her?"
"I
don't really know. A paroxysm of some sort. I'm no expert, but I think we need
to stop it. I might be able to help. I might have something in my bag."
"You two, go show her the way. Leave a torch."
Nadine
and the two soldiers raced up the ladder after one of them shoved a torch in a
bracket on the wall.
"Mother
Confessor," Captain Harris said, "just a little while ago a Raug'Moss
showed up in Petitioners' Hall." "A what?" "A Raug'Moss.
From D'Hara." "I don't know much about D'Hara. Who are they?"
"They're
a secret sect. I don't know much about them myself. The Raug'Moss keep to
themselves, and are rarely seen-" "Get to the point. What's he doing
here?"
"This
one is the Raug'Moss High Priest himself. The Raug'Moss are healers. He says he
sensed that a new Lord Rahl had become Master of D'Hara, and he came to offer
his services to his new master."
"A
healer? Well, don't just stand there-go get him. Maybe he can help.
Hurry." Captain Harris clapped a fist to his hear) before racing up the
ladder. Kahlan pulled Cara's shoulders and head into her lap and held her
tight, trying to calm her convulsions. Kahlan didn't know what else to do. She
knew a lot about hurting people, but little about healing them. She was so sick
of hurting people. She wished she knew more about helping people. Like Nadine.
"Hold
on, Cara," she whispered as she rocked the shaking woman. "Help is
coming. Hold on."
Kahlan's
eyes were drawn to the top of the opposite wall. The words incised in the stone
stared back. She knew nearly every language in the Midlands, all Confessors
did,
but she knew nothing about High D'Haran. High D'Haran was a dead language; few
people knew the ancient tongue.
Richard
was learning High D'Haran He and Berdine worked together translating the
journal they had found in the Keep -Kolo's journal, they called it-which had
been written in High D'Haran, in the great war three thousand years before.
Richard would be able to translate the prophecy on the wall.
She
wished he couldn't. She didn't want to know what it said. Prophecy was never
anything but trouble.
She
didn't want to believe that Jagang had unleashed some unknown festering plague
of torment on them, but she couldn't find a good reason to doubt his word.
She
pressed her cheek to the top of Cara's head and closed her eyes. She didn't
want to see the prophecy. She wanted it gone.
Kahlan
felt tears running down her face. She didn't want Cara to die. She didn't know
why she should feel so much for his woman, except perhaps because no one else
did. The soldiers wouldn't even come down to see why she had stopped screaming.
She could have choked to death on her own vomit. Something as simple as that,
not magic, could have killed her because they were afraid, or perhaps because
no one cared if she died.
"Hold
on, Cara. I care." She smoothed the Mord-Sith's hair back from her clammy
forehead. "I care. We want you to live."
Kahlan
squeezed the quaking women, as if trying to squeeze her words, her concern,
into her. It occurred to her that Cara wasn't so different from herself; Cara
was trained to hurt people.
When it
all came down to it, Kahlan was much the same. She used her power to destroy a
person's mind. She knew that she was doing it to save others, but it was still
hurting people. Mord-Sith hurt people, but to them, it was to help their
master, to preserve his life, and that in turn was to save the lives of the
D'Haran people.
Dear
spirits, was she no more than this Mord-Sith she was trying to bring back from
madness?
Kahlan
could feel the Agiel hanging around her neck pressing against her chest as she
held Cara. Was she a sister of the Agiel in more ways than one?
If
Nadine had been killed in the beginning, would she have cared? Nadine helped
people; she didn't make a life of hurting them. No wonder Richard had been
attracted to her.
She
wiped her cheek as the tears ran more freely.
Her
shoulder throbbed. She hurt all over. She wanted Richard to hold her. She knew
he was going to be angry, but she needed him so badly at that moment. It was
hurting her shoulder to hold the trembling woman in her lap, but she refused to
let go. "Hold on, Cara You're not alone; I'm With you. I won't leave you.
I promise."
"Is
she any better?" Nadine asked, as she scurried down the ladder. "No.
She's still unconscious and sharing like before."
As she
knelt, Nadine let her bag drop to the floor beside Kahlan. Things inside banged
together with muffled sounds.
"I
told those men to wait up there. We don't want to move her until we can bring
her out of it, and they'll just be in the way."
Nadine
started pulling things out of her bag, little folded cloth packages, leather
pouches with markings scratched on them, and stoppered horn containers,
likewise scratched with symbols. She briefly inspected the markings before
setting each item aside.
"Blue
cohosh," she mumbled to herself as she squinted at the cryptic marks on
one of the leather pouches. "No, I don't think it would do, and she'd have
to drink cups of it." She took out several more leather pouches, before
pausing at another. "Pearly everlasting. Might work, but we'd have to get
her to smoke it, somehow." She sighed irritably. "That won't
do." She considered a horn. "Mugwort," she muttered as she set
it aside. "Feverfew"?" She put that horn in the damp sling of
her dress in her lap. "Yes, betony might be of some good, too," she
said as she considered another. She added the horn lo her lap.
Kahlan
picked up one of the horns Nadine had set aside and pulled its cork. The
pungent smell of anise made her pull back. She pushed the cork back in and set
it down.
She
picked up another. Two circles were deeply scratched into the patina of the
horn. A horizontal line ran through both circles. Kahlan wiggled the carefully
carved wooden stopper, trying to pull it free. Nadine slapped the horn out of
Kahlan's hands. "Don't!" Kahlan looked up in surprise. "Sorry. I
didn't mean to snoop in your things. I was-"
"No,
it's not that." She picked up the horn with the two circles struck through
with a line and held it up. "This is powdered canin pepper. If you aren't
careful when you open it, you could get it on your hands, or worse, in your
face. It's a powerful substance that will immobilize a person for a time. If
you had opened it carelessly, you would have been on the floor, blind and
gasping for air, convinced you were about to die.
"I
thought about using it on Cara, to stop her shaking by paralyzing her, but I
decided it best not to. It immobilizes a person partly by interfering with
their breathing. It feels like it's burning your eyes out of your head; it
blinds you. Your nose feels on fire, you're sure your heart is going to burst,
and you can't get your breath. You're helpless. Trying to wash it off only
makes it worse, because the powder is oily and just spreads.
"It
doesn't cause any real harm, and you'd recover completely in a short time, but
until then, you're disabled and totally helpless. I don't think immobilizing
Cara in that fashion would be good, since she's already having trouble
breathing. In her state, it might make her worse, instead of helping her."
"Do
you know what to do, to help her? You do know what to do, don't you?"
Kahlan asked, trying not to sound critical.
Nadine's
hand paused on the edge of her bag. "Well, I . . . I think I do. It's not
so common a problem that I'm sure, but I've? heard of it. My father has
mentioned it in passing."
Kahlan
wasn't reassured. Nadine found a small bottle in her bag and held it up in the
torchlight. She pulled the cork and turned the bottle upside down on a finger.
"Hold her head up."
"What
is it?" Kahlan asked as she turned Cara over. She watched Nadine rub the
substance on Cara's temples. "Oil of lavender. It helps with headaches."
"I think she has more than a simple headache."
"I
know, but until I find something else, it might help ease the pain, and that
might help calm her. I don't think I have any one thing that by itself will do
it. I'll need to try to add things together.
"The
problem is that with the convulsions we can't get her to drink decoctions or
teas. Motherwort and linden help calm people, but we can't get her to drink a
whole cup of it in water. Black horehound would help stop the vomiting, but
she'd have to drink five cups a day. I don't see how we can get her to drink
the first until we stop the convulsions. Maybe we could get her to swallow some
feverfew. But there is one thing I'm hoping ..."
Nadine's
long, damp hair hung around her face as she pawed through her bag. She came up
with another small, brown bottle. ''Yes! I did bring it." "What is
it?"
"Tincture
of maypop. It's a strong sedative and also a painkiller. I've heard my pa say
that it settles people who are in a state of nervous shakes. I think he may
have meant shakes like convulsions. Since it's a tincture, we can put some on
the back of her tongue; she'll swallow it, that way."
Cara
shuddered violently in Kahlan's arms. Kahlan embraced her tighter until she
settled a bit. She didn't know if she liked the idea of having to rely on
Nadine's "I think," but Kahlan had no better solution. Something had
to be done.
Nadine
was working her thumbnail at the wax seal on the little brown bottle of
tincture of maypop when the shaft of light coming from the doorway above
darkened. Nadine's hands stilled.
A
motionless, silhouetted figure filled the doorway, seeming to consider them at
length. With nary a flutter of his long cloak, he wheeled and started down the
ladder. In the silence, but for the hissing torch, Kahlan absently stroked a
protective hand over Cara's brow as she watched the man in a hooded cloak
descend the ladder.
CHAPTER
13
Nadine
paused at her work on the wax seal. "Who . . . ?"
"He's
some kind of healer," Kahlan whispered as she watched the man's methodical
descent. "From D'Hara. I was told he came to offer his services to
Richard. I think he's an important person."
Nadine
grunted dismissively. "What's he going to do without any herbs or
things?" She leaned closer while watching him. "He doesn't seem to
have anything with him."
Kahlan
shushed her. Stone dust crunched under his boots as he turned, the sound
echoing in the hush of the pit. He approached in measured strides. The torch
was on the wall behind him, so Kahlan couldn't see his features in the deeply
cowled hood of the voluminous, coarse flaxen cloak that hung to the floor. He
was as tall as Richard, with shoulders just as wide.
"Mord-Sith,"
he observed in a voice hat was smooth and authoritative, some thing like
Richard's, too.
He
brought a hand out of his cloak and gestured. Kahlan complied, laying Cara on
her back on the stone floor. With the way he seemed to study Cara's shivering,
Kahlan didn't want to interrupt for introductions. She just wanted someone to
help Cara.
"What
happened to her?" he asked from the shadow of the cowl, in a voice just as
deep and dark. "She had control of a man who-" "He had the gift?
She was linked with him?"
"Yes,"
Kahlan said. "That's what she called it." He made a sound in his
throat, as if mentally assimilating the information. "It turned out that
the man was possessed by a dream walker and-" "What's a dream
walker?"
"A
person, as I understand it, who can invade another person's mind by slipping
into the spaces between their thoughts. He gains control of them in this way.
He was covertly possessing this man that she linked with." He considered a
moment. "I see. Go on." "We came down here to question the
man-" "To torture him."
Kahlan
pulled an irritated breath. "No. I told Cara that we were simply going to
question him to get answers, if we could. The man was an assassin sent to kill
Lord Rahl, and if he didn't answer the questions, then Cara was prepared to do
what she must to get those answers-to protect Lord Rahl. "But it never got
that far. We discovered that this dream walker had control of
him,
control of his gift. The dream walker used the man's gift to write a prophecy
in the stone behind you." The healer didn't turn to look. "Then
what?"
"Then
he was going to escape and start killing people. Cara tried to stop him-"
"With her link?"
"Yes.
She let out a scream like I've never heard before and fell to the ground
holding her ears." Kahlan inclined her head. "Nadine here, and I,
went after the man when he tried to escape. Fortunately, he was killed. When we
got back, we found Cara on the floor, in convulsions."
"You
shouldn't have left her alone. She could have choked to death on her own
vomit."
Kahlan
pressed her lips together and remained silent. The man just stood there,
watching Cara shudder.
Finally,
Kahlan could bear it no longer. "This is one of Lord Rahl's personal
guards. She's important. Do you intend to help her, or you just going to stand
there?"
"Quiet,"
he commanded in a distracted tone. "One must observe before one acts, or
more harm than help can be the result."
Kahlan
glowered at the shadowed form. At last he sank to his knees and sat back on his
heels. He lifted Cara's wrist in one of his big hands, working a finger between
her glove and sleeve. He flicked his other hand out over the items on the
floor. "What's all this?"
"They're
my things," Nadine said. Her chin rose. "I'm a healer." Still
holding Cara's wrist, the man picked up a leather pouch with his other hand,
looking at its markings He set it down and then scooped the two horns from
Nadine's lap.
"Feverfew,"
he said as he tossed it back in Nadine's lap. He looked at the symbols on the
other. "Betony." He tossed it back in her lap with the first.
"You're not a healer." he said. "You re an herb woman."
"How dare you-"
"Did
you give her any of your medicines, besides the oil of lavender?"
"How did ... I've not had time to give her anything else."
"Good," he proclaimed. "The oil of lavender won't help her, but
at least it won't harm her."
"Well,
of course I know it's not going to stop the convulsions. It was just to help
ease some of her pain. I was going to give her tincture of maypop for
that." "Were you now? Fortunate that I arrived in time, then."
Nadine folded her arms across her breasts. "Why's that?" "Because
tincture of maypop would likely have killed her." Nadine scowled as she
unfolded her arms and planted fists on her hips. "Maypop is a powerful
sedative. It would likely have halted her convulsions. If you hadn't
interfered, I'd have her recovered by now.'' "Is that so? Did you feel her
pulse?"
"No."
Nadine paused warily. "Why? What difference could that possibly make?''
"Her
pulse is weak, staggering, and labored. This woman is struggling with all her
strength to keep her heart beating. Had you given her your maypop, it would
have done as you said: sedated her. Her heart would have stopped."
"I
. . . I can't see how . . ."
"Even
a simple herb woman should know to use more caution when dealing with
magic."
"Magic."
Nadine wilted. "I'm from Westland. I've never seen magic before. I didn't
know magic had any effect on healing herbs. I'm sorry."
He
ignored the apology and pointed. "Undo the buttons and open the top of her
outfit." "Why?" Nadine asked.
"Do
it! Or do you favor watching her die? She can't hold on much longer."
Nadine leaned forward and began undoing the row of little red leather buttons
along the side of Cara's ribs. When she finished, he gestured for her to open
it. Nadine glanced up at Kahlan. Kahlan gave her a nod, and she pulled back the
supple leather, exposing Cara's chest. "May I ask your name?" Kahlan
asked him.
"Drefan."
Instead of asking hers, he put an ear to the center of Cara's chest, listening.
He
shifted around, forcing Kahlan to scoot out of the way, until he was at Cara's
head. He briefly inspected the bloody wound above her left ear, and then,
seeming to dismiss it as unimportant, went on to systematically probe the base
of her neck.
Kahlan
could only see the side of his deep cowl, and nothing of his face. The single torch
didn't provide much light, anyway. Drefan leaned forward and gripped Cara's
breasts in his big hands. Kahlan sat up straighter. "What do you think
you're doing?" "Examining her." "Is that what you call
it." He sat back on his heels. "Feel her breasts."
"Why?" "To see what I discovered."
Kahlan
finally turned from the shadow of his cowl and, rather than grabbing her as he
had, put the back of her fingers against the side of Cara's left breast. It was
hot-burning with a fever. She felt the other. It was ice cold. When Drefan
gestured, Nadine followed suit. "What does it mean?" she asked.
"I'd like to reserve judgment until I've finished examining her, but it's
not good."
He put
his fingers to the side of her neck, feeling her pulse again. He ran his thumbs
outward along her forehead. He tent and put his ear to each of hers. He smelled
her breath. He carefully lifted her head and rotated it. He spread her arms out
to the sides, pulled the red leather outfit open further so that Cara's torso
was naked to her waist, and then bent over her and palpated her abdomen and up
under her ribs.
With
his head bent as if in concentration, he touched his fingers to the front of
her shoulders for a moment, the sides of her neck, the base of her skull, her
temples, several places on her ribs, and lastly to the palms of her hands.
Kahlan
was getting impatient. She was seeing a lot of probing and prodding, but very
little healing. "Well?"
"Her
aura is seriously snarled," he said, as he brazenly thrust a big hand
under the red leather at Cara's waist.
Kahlan
watched in stunned disbelief as his hand slid down to her crotch. She could see
his fingers under the tight leather as he worked them into her sex.
Hard as
she could, Kahlan fisted him on the nerve at the side of his upper arm. He
recoiled in pain. He fell to the side of his hip with a groan, covering his arm
where she had clouted him.
"I
told you, this is an important woman! How dare you grope her like that! I won't
have it, do you understand?" "I wasn't groping her," he growled
The
heat was still in Kahlan's voice "Then what do you call it?" "I
was trying to determine what this dream walker has done to her. He's greatly
disturbed her auras, her energy flows, confusing her mind's control of her
body.
''She's
not in convulsions, precisely. She's having uncontrolled muscular contractions.
I was checking to make sure that he hadn't triggered the part of her brain that
controls excitement. I was making sure that he hadn't put her in a state of
continual orgasm. I have to know the extent of the blocks and triggers he's
disturbed so that I know how to reverse it."
Nadine,
eyes widening, leaned forward. "Magic can do such a thing? Make a person
have . . . continual ..."
He
nodded as he flexed his sore arm. "If the practitioner knows what he's
doing." "Can you do such a thing?" she breathed.
''No. I
don't have the gift, or any other form of magic, but I know how to heal- if the
damage isn't too great." The cowl turned toward Kahlan. "Now, do you
wish me to continue, or do you want to watch her die?"
"Continue.
But if you put your hand down there again, you are going to be a one-handed
healer."
"I've
already learned what I needed to know." Nadine leaned in again. "Is
she . . . ?" "No." He flicked his hand irritably. "Pull off
her boots." Nadine shuffled around and did as he had ordered. He turned a
bit toward Kahlan, as if peering at her from the depths of his cowl. "Did
you know to hit that particular nerve in my arm with deliberate knowledge, or
did you simply get lucky?"
Kahlan
studied the shadow, trying to see his eyes. She couldn't. "I was trained
to do such things: to defend myself, and others."
"I'm
impressed. With such understanding of nerves, you could learn to heal instead
of hurt." He turned his attention to Nadine. "Depress the third
anterior axis of the dorsin meridian." Nadine made a face.
"What?"
He
waggled his hand, pointing. "Between the tendon at the back of her ankles
and the prominent bone sticking out to the sides. Squeeze there with a thumb
and one finger. Both ankles."
Nadine
did as she was told while Drefan pressed behind Cara's ears with his little
fingers and at the same time on the tops of her shoulders with his thumbs.
"Harder, woman." He put both palms, one hand atop the other, on
Cara's sternum. "Second meridian," he murmured. "What?"
"Move
down half an inch and do it again. Both ankles." He moved his fingers on
Cara's skull, concentrating on what he was doing. "All right. First
meridian." "Another half inch down?" Nadine asked. "Yes,
yes, hurry."
He held
Cara's elbows between a thumb and finger as he lifted them a few inches.
Finally,
he sat back on his heels with a sigh. "This is astounding," he
muttered to himself. "This is not good."
"What
is it?" Kahlan asked "Are you saying that you can't help her?"
He waved dismissively, as if too distracted to answer. "Answer me,"
Kahlan insisted. "If I wish you to bother me, woman, I will ask."
Nadine leaned forward, cocking her head. "Do you have any idea who you're
talking to?" She pointed with her chin, indicating Kahlan.
He was
feeling Cara's earlobes. "By the looks of her. I'd say some mucker on the
cleaning staff. One in need of a bath," "I've just had a bath,"
Kahlan said under her breath.
Nadine's
voice lowered with import. ''You'd better show some respect. Mister Healer.
She's the one who owns this palace. The whole thing. She's the Mother Confessor
herself."
He ran
a finger down the inside of Cara's upper arms. "Is that so? Well, good for
her. Now, be quiet, the both of you.' "She's also the betrothed of Lord
Richard Rahl himself." Drefan's hands froze. His whole body stiffened.
''And
since Lord Richard Rahl is the Master of D'Hara, and you're from D'Hara,' '
Nadine went on, "I reckon that makes him the boss of you. If I were you,
I'd be showing a lot more respect for Lord Richard Rahl's future wife. He
doesn't like it when people don't show respect for women. I've seen him knock
out people's teeth for being disrespectful." Drefan hadn't moved a muscle.
Kahlan
thought Nadine had put it very crudely, but she doubted it could have been any
more effective.
"Not
only that," Nadine added, "but she's the one who killed the assassin.
With magic."
Drefan
finally cleared his throat. "Forgive me, mistress-" "Mother
Confessor," Kahlan corrected.
"I
most humbly beg your forgiveness . . . Mother Confessor. I had no idea. I had
no intention to cause-"
Kahlan
cut him off. "I understand. You were more concerned with healing Cara,
here, than with formalities. So am I. Can you help her?" "I
can." "Please, get on with it then."
He
immediately turned back to Cara. Kahlan frowned as she watched his hands
gliding in patterns over the supine woman, keeping just above her flesh. His
hands paused occasionally, fingers trembling with effort at an invisible task.
From
Cara's feet, Nadine folded her arms again. "You call this healing? My
herbs would have had a better effect than this piffle, and a lot sooner,
too."
He
looked up. "Piffle? Is that what you think this is? Just some nonsense? Do
you have the slightest idea, young lady, what we're dealing with?" "A
paroxysm. It must be ended, not prayed over."
He rose
up on his knees. "I am the Raug'Moss High Priest. I am not given to
praying for my healings." Nadine snorted derisively. He nodded, as if
deciding something. "You wish to see what we're dialing with? You want
proof your simple herb woman eyes can understand?"
Nadine
scowled. "In view of the lack of results, a little proof would be a fine
dish."
He
pointed. "I saw a horn of mugwort. Give it here. I presume you have a
taper in that bag; bring it, too, after you light it."
As
Nadine took the candle to the torch to light it, Drefan opened his cloak and
took several items from a pouch. Nadine handed him the lit candle. He dripped
hot wax on the floor to the side and stuck the taper in it.
Drefan
reached under his cloak arid pulled out a long, thin-bladed knife. He leaned
over and pressed it between Cara's breasts. A ruby drop grew under the point.
He set the knife aside and leaned over her. With a long-handled spoon, he
skimmed the blood from her flesh.
He sat
back, unstopped the horn Nadine had given him, and dumped some mugwort atop the
blood in the spoon. "You call this mugwort! You're only supposed to
collect the fluffy underside of the leaf. You've got the whole leaf mixed in
with it."
"It
doesn't matter. It's all mugwort "
"A
very low grade, this way. You ought to know to use a high-grade mugwort. What
sort of herb woman are you, anyway?"
Nadine
squinted in indignation. "It works just fine. Are you trying to find an
excuse to get out of showing us that you know what you're doing? Are you trying
to blame your failure on the grade of mugwort?"
"The
grade is more than good enough for my purpose, but not for yours." His
tone turned instructional, if not polite. ''Next time, purify the sample you
collect, and you will find it to be of more help to those who need it."
He
hunched over, holding the spoor to the point of the candle flame until the
mugwort ignited, giving off a copious amount of smoke and a heavy, musky odor.
Drefan circled the smoking spoon over Cara's stomach, letting the layer of
smoke build.
He
handed the spoon of smoking mugwort to Nadine. "Hold this between her
feet."
He put
his fingers to his temples as he murmured a chant under his breath. He took his
hands from his head. "Now, watch, and you will see what I can see, what I
can feel, without the smoke."
He put
his thumbs to Cara's temples and his little fingers to the sides of her throat.
The
thick layer of mugwort smoke jumped.
Kahlan
gasped as she saw ropy lines of smoke coiling and snaking all over Cara. Drefan
removed his hands and the smoke trails snapped into a still web of lines. Some
arched from her sternum to her breasts, her shoulders, her hips, and her
thighs. A tangle of lines went from the top half of her head to points all over
her body.
Drefan
traced one with a finger. "See this one? From her left temple to her left
leg? Watch." He pressed his fingers to the base of her skull on the left
side, and the line of smoke crossed to her right leg. "There. That's where
it belongs." "What is all that?" Kahlan asked in astonishment.
"Her
meridian lines: the flow of her force, her life. Her aura. It's more than that,
too, but it's hard to put it all into a few words for you. What I have done is
nothing more than the way a shaft of sunlight shows you the dust motes floating
in the air."
Nadine,
her mouth hanging open, sat frozen, holding the smoking spoon. "How did
you make the line move?"
"By
using my life force to compel a healing energy shift where it was needed."
"Then you have magic," Nadine breathed. "No, training. Squeeze
her ankles, where you did the first time." Nadine set the spoon down and
squeezed Cara's ankles. The tangle of lines going down Cara's legs twisted and
untangled, moving from her hips to her feet in straight lines.
"There,"
Drefan said. "You have just corrected her legs. See how they've
stilled?"
"I
did that?" Nadine asked incredulously.
"Yes.
But that was the easy part. See here?" He indicated the web of lines
coming from her head. "This is the dangerous part of what this dream
walker did. It has to be undone. These lines indicate that she can't control
her muscles. She can't speak, and she's been blinded. Look here. This line
going from her ears outward and then back to her forehead? That's the only one
that's correct. She can hear and understand everything we say; she just can't
react to it." Kahlan's jaw dropped. "She can hear us?"
"Every
word. Rest assured, she knows, we're trying to help her. Now, if you please, I
need to concentrate. This all has to be done in the correct order or we'll lose
her."
Kahlan
whisked her hands toward him. "Of course. Do what you need to do to help
her."
Drefan
hunched to his task, working his way around Cara's body, pressing fingers or
the flats of his hands to various places on her. At times he used the knife
point. He never drew more than a drop of blood is he pressed it into her flesh.
At nearly each thing he did, some of the ropy lines of smoke moved, untangling,
some laying down against Cara's body and others curving outward in a smooth
arch before returning to a spot he had attended.
When he
compressed the flesh between her thumb and first finger, not only did the smoke
lines over her arms straighten, but Cara moaned in relief as she twisted her
head and rolled her shoulders. It was the first normal response of any kind
Cara had given. When he pierced the tops of her ankles with his knife, she
gasped and began to breathe with a steady, if rapid, rhythm. Relief and hope
flooded through Kahlan.
He at
last had moved all the way around her, and was working at her head, pressing
his thumbs along the bridge of her nose and across her forehead. Her whole body
was still, no longer shaking and quivering. Her chest rose and fell without
effort.
He
pressed the knife point between her eyebrows. "That should take care of
it," he murmured to himself.
Cara's
blue eyes opened. They searched about until they found Kahlan. "I heard
your words," she whispered. "Thank you, my sister."
Kahlan
smiled her relief. She knew what Cara meant. Cara had, after all, heard Kahlan
tell her that she wasn't alone. "I got Marlin."
Cara
smiled. "You make me proud to serve with you. I regret that you have gone
to all this effort healing me for nothing."
Kahlan
frowned, not knowing what she meant. Cara rolled her head back, looking up at
Drefan as he hunched over her. "How do you feel?" he asked. "Is
everything feeling normal now?"
Her
brow drew together with a look of foggy confusion bordering on alarm.
"Lord Rahl?" she asked incredulously. "No, I'm Drefan."
With
both hands, he laid back his cowl. Kahlan's eyes went wide, along with
Nadine's.
"But
my father, too, was Darken Rahl. I am Lord Rahl's half brother." Kahlan
stared in wonder. Same size, same muscular build as Richard. Blond hair, like
Darken Rahl's, although shorter and not so straight. Richard's hair was darker,
and coarser. Drefan's eyes, piercing blue like Darken Rahl's, rather than gray
like Richard's, nonetheless bore the same cutting, raptor rake. His features
possessed that impossibly handsome perfection of a statue that Darken Rahl's
had; Richard hadn't inherited that cruel perfection. Drefan's looks, somewhere
in the middle, leaned more toward Darken Rahl than Richard.
But while
no one would mistake Drefan for Richard, they would have no trouble telling
that they were brothers.
She
wondered why Cara had made that mistake. Then she saw the Agiel in Cara's fist.
That wasn't what Cara had meant by "Lord Rahl." In a confused state,
looking at him upside down as she regained consciousness, she hadn't thought he
was Richard. She had thought he was Darken Rail.
CHAPTER������������ 14
The
only sound in the otherwise dead silence was the click, click, click of
Richard's thumbnail on one of the points of the recurved cross guard on his
sword The elbow of his other arm rested on the polished tabletop while he
cradled his head between a thumb under his chin and his first finger along his
temple With a calm face, he did his best to control his anger He was furious
This time, they had crossed the line, and they knew it
In his
mind he had gone over a whole list of possible punishments, but had rejected
them all, not because they were too harsh, but because he knew they wouldn't
work In the end, he settled on the truth. There was nothing harsher than the
truth, and nothing else as likely to get through to them
Before
him, in a row, stood Berdine, Raina, Ulic, and Egan They stood stiffly, their
eyes focused at some point over his head and behind him as he sat at the table
in the small room he used for meeting with people, reading, and various other
work.
To the
side of the table hung small landscape paintings of idyllic country scenes, but
from the window behind, from which streamed the low angled rays of morning
sunlight, the massive, baleful stone face of the Wizard's Keep glared down on
him
He had
been back in Aydindril for only an hour-long enough to discover what had
happened after he had left the evening before All four of his guards had been
back since before dawn, he had ordered them to return to Aydindril after Raina
and Egan had sauntered into camp the night before They had thought he wouldn't
make them return in the dead of night They had been wrong. As brazen as they
ordinarily were, the look in his eyes had insured that none of the four dared
disobey that order
Richard
had also returned much earlier than he had planned He had pointed out the
quench oak to the soldiers, told them what to collect, and then, instead of
overseeing the task, had started back alone for Aydindril before the sun was up
After what he had seen in the night, he'd been too troubled to get any sleep,
and had wanted to be back in Aydindril as soon as possible
Drumming
his finger on the tabletop, Richard watched his guards sweating Berdine and
Raina wore their brown leather outfits, their long, braided hair disheveled
from their hard ride
The two
great, blond-headed men, Ulic and Egan, wore uniforms of dark leather straps,
plates, and belts The thick leather plates were molded to fit like a second
skin over the conspicuous contours of their muscles Incised in the leather at
the center of their chests was an ornate letter "R," for the House of
Rahl, and beneath that, two crossed swords Around their arms, just above their
elbows, they wore golden bands brandishing razor-sharp projections-weapons for
close combat
No
D'Haran but the Lord Rahl's persona bodyguards wore such weapons They were more
than simply weapons, they were the rarest, the highest badges of honor, earned
he knew not how.
Richard
had inherited the rule of a people he didn't know, with customs that were
mostly a mystery to him, and expectations he only partly fathomed.
Since
they had returned, these four, too, had discovered what had happened with
Marlin the night before. They knew why they had been summoned, but he hadn't
said anything to them, yet. He was trying to get a grip on his rage, first.
"Lord Rahl?" "Yes, Raina?"
"Are
you angry with us? For disobeying your orders and coming out to you with the
Mother Confessor's message?"
The
message had been a pretense, and they knew it as well as he. Click, click,
click, went his thumbnail. "That will be all. You may go. All of
you."
Their
postures relaxed, but none made a move to leave. "Leave?" Raina
asked. "Aren't you going to punish us?" A smirk spread on her face.
''Maybe clean out the stables for a week, or something?''
Richard
pushed back from the table as he ground his teeth. He was not in the mood for
their impish humor. He rose behind the table. "No, Raina, no punishment.
You may go."
The two
Mord-Sith smiled. Berdine loaned toward Raina, speaking in a whisper, but loud
enough for him to hear. "He realizes that we know best how to protect
him." They all started for the door.
"Before
you go," Richard said, as he strolled around the table, "I just want
you to know one thing." "What's that?" Berdine asked.
Richard
walked past them, pausing long enough to look each in the eye. "That I'm
disappointed in you."
Raina
made a face. "You're disappointed in us? You're not going to yell or
punish us, you're simply disappointed?'
"That's
right. You've disappointed me. I thought I could trust you. I can't."
Richard turned away. "Dismissed."
Berdine
cleared her throat. "Lord Rahl, Ulic and I went with you by your
command."
"Oh?
So if it had been you I'd left here to protect Kahlan, instead of Raina, you
would have done as I asked and stayed?" She didn't answer. "I've
counted on all of you, and you've made me feel a fool for trusting you."
He flexed his fists instead of yelling. "I would have seen to Kahlan's
protection if I'd known I couldn't trust you."
Richard
leaned an arm against the window frame and stared out at the cold spring
morning. The four behind him shifted their feet uneasily. "Lord Rahl,"
Berdine said at last, "we would lay down our lives for you." Richard
rounded on them. "And let Kahlan die!" He carefully quieted his tone.
"You can lay down your lives for me all you want. Play your games all you
want. Pretend you're doing something important. Play at being my guards. Just
stay out of my way, and out of the way of people helping me in this effort to
stop the Imperial Order."
He
flicked his hand toward the door. "Dismissed."
Berdine
and Raina shared a look. "We will be outside, in the hall, if you need us,
Lord Rahl."
Richard
gave them such a cold look that it drained the color from their faces. "I
won't be needing you. I don't need people I can't trust." Berdine
swallowed. "But-" "But what?"
She
swallowed again. "What about Kolo's journal? Don't you want me to help you
with the translation?" "I'll manage. Anything else?" Each of
them shook their heads.
They
began filing out. Raina, at the end of the line, paused and turned back. Her
dark eyes fixed on the floor.
"Lord
Rahl, will you be taking us out, later, to feed the chipmunks?" "I'm
busy. They'll manage just fine without us." "But . . . what about
Reggie?" "Who?"
"Reggie.
He's the one missing the end of his little tail. He... he... sat in my hand.
He'll be looking for us."
Richard
watched her for a silence-filled eternity. He teetered between wanting to hug
her and wanting to yell at her. He had tried the hugging, or its equivalent,
anyway, and it had nearly gotten Kahlan killed. "Maybe another day.
Dismissed."
She
wiped the back of her hand across; her nose. "Yes, Lord Rahl." Raina
quietly pulled the door closed behind her. Richard raked back his hair as he
flopped down in his chair again. With a finger, he slowly spun Kolo's journal
around and around as he ground his teeth. Kahlan could have died while he was
off looking for trees. Kahlan could have died while the people he thought were
protecting her were instead following their own agenda.
He
shuddered to think what the added magic, the added rage, of the sword would do
were he to draw it at that moment. He couldn't recall being this angry, without
the Sword of Truth in his hand. He couldn't imagine the wrath of the sword's
magic on top of this.
The
words of the prophecy from the stone wall in the pit ran through his mind with
haunting, mocking finality.
A soft
knock silenced the hundredth, whispered sound of the prophecy in his head.
This
was the knock he had been waiting for. He knew who it was. "Come in,
Cara."
The
tall, muscular, blond-haired Mord-Sith slunk in through the door. She pushed it
closed with her back. Her head was bent, and she looked as miserable as he had
ever seen her.
"May
I speak with you. Lord Rahl?" "Why are you wearing your red
leather?"
She
swallowed before answering. "It's a . . . Mord-Sith thing. Lord
Rahl." He didn't ask for an explanation; he didn't really care. This was
the one he had been waiting for. This was the one who was at the core of his
wrath. "I see. What do you want?"
Cara
approached the table and stood with her shoulders slumped. She had a bandage
around her head but he had been told that her head wound wasn't serious. By the
red-rimmed look of her eyes, it was obvious that she hadn't slept the night
before. "How is the Mother Confessor this morning?"
"When
I left her, she was resting, but she's going to be fine. Her wounds weren't
serious, as serious as they easily could have been. She's lucky to be alive,
considering what happened. Considering that she wasn't supposed to have been
down there with Marlin in the first place, considering that I specifically told
you that I didn't want either of you down there ''
Cara's
eyes closed. "Lord Rahl, it was my fault entirely. I'm the one who talked
her into it I wanted to question Marlin.�
She tried to convince me to stay away, but I went anyway.� She only went to try to make me leave him
be, as you had instructed."
Had
Richard not been so angry, he might have laughed. Even if Kahlan hadn't
admitted the truth to him, he knew her well enough to recognize Cara's
confession as pure fiction.� But he also
knew that Cara hadn't put in much of an effort to keep Kahlan away from the
assassin.
"I
thought that I had control of him. I made a mistake." Richard leaned
forward "Didn't I specifically tell you that I didn't want either of you
down there?"
Her
shoulders trembled as she nodded without looking up. His fist hitting the table
made her flinch. "Answer me! Didn't I specifically tell you that I didn't
want either of you down there?" "Yes, Lord Rahl "
"Was
there any doubt in your mind what I meant?" "No, Lord Rahl "
Richard
leaned back in his chair. ' That was the mistake, Cara. Do you understand? Not
that you didn't have control of him- that was beyond your power.� Going down there was a choice you made. That
was the mistake you made.
''I
love Kahlan more than anything in this world, or anything in any other world.
Nothing else is so precious to me. I trusted you to protect her, to keep her
out of harm's view."
The
sunlight coming through the patterned shears played across her red leather in
dappled patches like sunlight coming through leaves.
"Lord
Rahl," she said in a small voice, "I fully understand the dimensions
of my failure, and what it means. "Lord Rahl, may I be granted a
request?" "What is it?"
She
sank to her knees, bending forward in supplication. She took up her Agiel,
holding it in both trembling fists. "May I choose the manner of my
execution?" "What?"
''A
Mord-Sith wears her red leather at her execution. If she has previously served
with honor, she is allowed to choose the manner of execution " "And
what would you choose?"
"My
Agiel, Lord Rahl I know how I have failed you-I have committed an unforgivable
transgression-but I have served with honor in the past. Please Allow it to be
with my Agiel It's my only request Either Berdine or Raina can carry it out.
They know how "
Richard
walked around the table.� He leaned back
against its edge, looking down at Cara's slumped, quivering form. He folded his
arms "Denied "
Her
shoulders shuddered with a sob "May I ask what Lord Rahl will
choose?"
"Cara,
look at me," he said in a soft voice. Her tear-stained face came up.
"Cara, I'm angry. But no matter how angry I was, I would never, ever, have
you, any of you, executed."
"You
must. I have failed you. I have disobeyed your orders to protect your love. I
have made an unforgivable mistake."
Richard
smiled. "I don't know that there are unforgivable mistakes. There may be
unforgivable betrayals, but not mistakes. If we were going to start executing
people for mistakes. I'm afraid I'd have been dead long ago. I make mistakes
all the time. Some of them have been pretty big."
She
shook her head as she gazed into his eyes. "A Mord-Sith knows when she has
earned execution. I have earned it." In those blue eyes he saw the iron of
her resolution. "Either you carry it out, or I will."
Richard
stood for a time, judging the demand of duty to which a Mord-Sith was bound.
Judging the madness in those eyes. "Do you wish to die, Cara?"
"No,
Lord Rahl. Since you have been our Lord Rahl, never. That is why I must. I have
failed you. A Mord-Sith lives and dies by a code of duty to her master. Neither
you nor I can alter what must be. My life is forfeit. You must carry out the
execution, or I will."
Richard
knew that she wasn't making a play for sympathy. Mord-Sith didn't bluff. If he
didn't somehow change her mind, she would do as she promised.
With
comprehension, and the resulting, sickening realization of his only choice, he
made the mental leap off the rim of sanity and into the madness, where dwelt
part of this woman's mind and, he feared, part of his. As irretrievable as a
heartbeat, the decision had been made. Muscles flexing with the call, he drew
his sword. It sent the soft, matchless ring of steel through the room, through
his bones.
With
that seemingly simple act, the wrath of the sword's magic was loosed. The lock
on the door to death was slipped free. It took his breath like a wall of an
acid wind. Storms of rage lifted on that biting wind. "Magic, then,"
he told her, "will be your judge, and executioner." Her eyes squeezed
shut. "Look at me!"
The
sword's rage twisted through him, trying to carry him away with it. He fought
to maintain his grip of control, as he always had to do when he held the fury
unleashed.
"You
will look into my eyes when I kill you!"
Her
eyes opened. Her brow wrinkled together, tears streaming down her cheeks. Any
good she had done, any bravery in the face of danger, any sacrifice to her
duty, had been stripped away in the face of her disgrace. She had been denied
the honor of a death by her Agiel. For that, and that alone, she cried.
Richard
pressed the razor-sharp edge to his forearm, drawing for the blade its taste of
blood. He brought the Sword of truth to his forehead, touching the cold steel,
the warm blood, to his flesh. He whispered his invocation. "Blade, be true
this day." This was the person who, for her presumption, and but for luck,
would have cost him Kahlan. Cost him everything.
She
watched as the blade rose above him. She saw the fury, the righteous rage, in
his eyes. She saw the magic dancing there.
She saw
death, dancing there.
The
knuckles of both fists were white as he gripped the hilt He knew he couldn't
deny the magic its will-if he was to have a chance. He loosed his wrath at this
woman for abandoning her responsibility to protect Kahlan. Her arrogance could
have ended Kahlan's life, ended his future, ended his reason for living He had
entrusted his dearest love to her care, and she had failed in her duty to honor
his faith
He
could have returned to find Kahlan dead because of this woman on her knees
before him. For no other reason.
Their
eyes shared the madness of what they were doing, of what they each had become,
of knowing that there was no other way-for either of them He committed to
cleave her in two. The sword's wrath demanded it. He would accept no less. He
envisioned it. He would have it. Her blood.
With a
scream of rage, with all his strength, with all his fury and anger, he swung
the blade down toward her face. The sword's tip whistled
In
every detail, he could see the light glint off the polished blade as it swept
through a streamer of sunlight He could see drops of his sweat sparkle in the
sunlight, as if frozen in space He could have counted them.� He could see where the blade would hit
her.� She could see where the blade was
going to hit her.� His muscles screamed
with the effort as his lungs screamed with rage.
Between
her eyes, an inch from her flesh, the blade stopped as solidly as if it had
thunked into an impenetrable wall.
Sweat
rolled down his face.� His arms shook.
The room echoed with the lingering sound of his cry of fury. At last, he
withdrew the blade from over Cara.
She
stared up with big, round, unblinking eyes She was panting in rapid, short
breaths through her mouth.� A long, low
whine came from her throat. "There will be no execution," Richard
said in a hoarse voice "How��
" she whispered, "how . . . could it do that?� How could it stop like that?"
"I'm
sorry, Cara, but the sword's magic has made the choice.� It has chosen that you live You will have to
abide by its decision "
Her
eyes finally turned to look into his "You were going to do it. You were
going to execute me " He slid the sword slowly into its scabbard.
"Yes " "Then why am I not dead?"
"Because
the magic decided otherwise. We can't question its judgment We must abide by it
"
Richard
had been reasonably sure that the sword's magic wouldn't harm Cara. The magic
wouldn't let him harm one who was an ally.�
He had been counting on that
But
there had been doubt.� Cara had brought
Kahlan within danger's grasp, though not intentionally.� He wasn't entirely sun that doubt wouldn't
cause the blade to take her. That was the way with the Sword of Truth's
magic-one wasn't always entirely sure.
Zedd
had told Richard when he had given him the sword that therein lay the danger.
The sword destroyed an enemy, and spared a friend, but the sword's magic worked
as a result of the view of its holder, not the truth. Zedd had told him that
doubt could possibly cause the death of a friend, or allow the escape of a foe.
But he
did know that if it was to work, he had to commit his entire being to the
effort, otherwise Cara wouldn't believe the magic had spared her, and she would
have credited it to him. Then she would have been obligated to do as she had
promised.
His
insides felt as if they were twisted into knots. His knees trembled. He had
been sucked into a world of dread; he hadn't been positive that it would work
as he had planned.
Worse,
he wasn't entirely sure he hadn't made a mistake by sparing her. Richard cupped
Cara's chin. "The Sword of Truth has made its choice. It chose for you to
live, for you to have another chance. You must accept its decision." Cara
nodded in his hand. "Yes, Lord Rahl."
He
reached under her arm and helped her to her feet. He could hardly stand
himself, and wondered if he had been in her place if he would be able to get to
his feet as steadily as she. "I will do better in the future. Lord
Rahl."
Richard
pulled her head to his shoulder and held her tight for a moment, something he
had been aching to do. Her arms slipped around him in grateful surrender.
"That's all I ask, Cara."
As she
headed for the door, Richard called her name. She turned back. "You still
must be punished." Her eyes turned down. "Yes, Lord Rahl.''
"Tomorrow afternoon. You will have to learn to feed chipmunks." Her
gaze came back up. "Lord Rahl?" "Do you wish to feed
chipmunks?" "No, Lord Rahl."
"Then
that's your punishment. Bring Berdine and Raina. They, too, are due some punishment."
Richard
closed the door after her, leaned against it, and shut his eyes. The inferno of
the sword's rage had consumed his anger. He was left empty and weak. He shook
so badly he could hardly stand.
He was
almost sick at the vivid memory of looking into her eyes as he brought the
sword down with all his strength, expecting that he was going to kill her. He
had been prepared for the spray of blood and bone. Cara's blood and bone. A
person he cared about.
He had
done what he had to, to save her life, but at what cost? The prophecy reeled
through his head, and the nausea took him to his knees in a flash of cold sweat
and dread.
CHAPTER������������� 15
The
soldiers he had stationed in the halls around the Mother Confessor's rooms
stepped aside, each clapping a fist to the chain mail over his heart as Richard
went by. He absently returned the salute as he swept past them, his gold cape
billowing out behind. The soldiers crossed their pikes before the three
Mord-Sith and two big bodyguards trailing him at a distance. When he had
previously stationed the soldiers, he had given them a very short list of who
was to be allowed through their positions. His five guards weren't on the list.
He
glanced back to see Agiel come up into fists. He met Cara's eyes. The three
Mord-Sith reluctantly released their weapons.
His
five guards backed away from the challenge and set up their own guard post
beyond the soldiers. With a hand signal from Cara, Raina and Ulic swiftly
disappeared back down the hall. No doubt she had sent them to find another way
around to guard the opposite end of the hall.
When he
rounded the next to last corner before Kahlan's room, he saw Nadine sitting on
a gilt-legged chair to the side of the hall. She was swinging her legs like a
bored child waiting to go outside and play. When she saw him coming, she
bounded up out of the chair.
She
looked scrubbed and fresh. Her thick hair glistened. His brow twitched; her
dress looked tighter than it had the day before. It seemed to fit closer to her
ribs and hips, showing her alluring shape more than he remembered. He knew it
was the same dress; he thought he must be imagining things. Seeing her figure
displayed to such advantage reminded him that there had been a time . . .
She
schooled her enthusiasm, twisting a strand of hair with a finger as she
affected a smile. Her delight at seeing him faltered as he approached. She took
a step back toward the wall as he stopped before her.
Nadine's
gaze left his eyes. "Richard Good morning. I thought I heard someone say
you were back already. I was"-she gestured toward Kahlan's room for an
excuse to look away-''I came . . . to see how Kahlan was doing this morning. I,
well, I need to put on a new poultice. I was just waiting until I was sure she
was up, and-"
"Kahlan
told me how you helped her.� Thanks,
Nadine. I appreciate it more than you could know."
She
shrugged one shoulder. "We're hartlanders, you and I." In the thick
silence she twisted a thread between her fingers. ' 'Tommy and skinny Rita
Wellington got married."
Richard
watched the top of her bowed head as she played with the thread. "I guess
that was to be expected. That was what their parents wanted."
Nadine
didn't look up from her thread. "He beats the stuffing out of her. I had
to give her poultices and herbs one time when he made her bleed . . . you know,
down
there. People say it's none of their business and pretend not to know it's
happening."
Richard
wasn't sure what she was getting at; he certainly wasn't going back to Hartland
to rattle a conscience into Tom Lancaster's head. "Well, if he keeps at
it, her brothers might end up giving him a lesson in cracked skulls."
Nadine
didn't look up. "That could have been me." She cleared her throat.
"I could have been married to Tommy, crying to anyone who'd listen about
how . . . well, it could have been me. It could have been me pregnant,
wondering if he'd beat me till I lost this one, too.
"I
reckon I owe you, Richard. And you being a boy from Hartland and all . . . I
just wanted to help if you were in trouble." She shrugged her one shoulder
again. "Kahlan's real nice. Most women would have . . . I guess she's
about the prettiest woman I ever saw.�
Nothing like me."
"I
never figured you owed me anything, Nadine; I'd have done the same no matter
who Tom had caught alone that day but you have my sincere gratitude for helping
Kahlan."
"Sure.
I guess that was stupid of me to think you stopped him because . . ."
Richard realized by the way she sounded on the verge of tears that he hadn't
put it very well, so he laid a hand tenderly on her shoulder. "Nadine,
you've grown into a beautiful woman, too."
She
peered up with a growing smile, "You think I'm beautiful?" She
smoothed her blue dress at her hips.
"I
didn't dance with you at the midsummer festival because you were still clumsy
little Nadine Brighton."
She
started winding the string again, ''I liked dancing with you. You know, I
carved the initials 'N.C.' on my betrothal trunk. For Nadine Cypher."
"I'm sorry. Nadine. Michael is dead."
She
looked up with a frown. "Michael? No . . . that's not what it meant. It
meant you."
Richard
decided that this conversation had gone far enough. He had more important
things to worry about.
"I'm
Richard Rahl now. I can't live in the past. My future is with Kahlan."
Nadine caught his arm as he started turning away. "I'm sorry. I know that.
I know I made a big mistake. With Michael, I mean."
Richard
caught himself just in time to bite off a caustic retort. What would be the
purpose? "I appreciate that you helped Kahlan. I suppose you'll want to be
heading home. Tell everyone I'm well. I'll be back for a visit when-"
"Kahlan invited me to stay a while."
Richard
was caught off guard; Kahlan had neglected to tell him that part of it.
"Oh. And you wish to stay for a day or two?"
"Sure.
I thought I'd like that. I've never been away from home before. If it's all
right with you, I mean. I wouldn't wan to . . ."
Richard
gently pulled his arm from her hand. "Fine. If she invited you, then it's
fine with me."
She
brightened, as if oblivious to the disapproval on his face. "Richard, did
you see the moon last night? Everyone is abuzz about it. Did you see it? Was it
as extraordinary, as remarkable, as they say?'' "That, and more," he
whispered, his mood darkening. Before she could get in another word, he marched
off.
His
soft knock on the door produced a rotund woman in a staff uniform. Her ruddy
face peered out through the narrow crack.
"Lord
Rahl. Nancy is just helping the Mother Confessor get dressed. She'll be finished
in a minute."
"Dressed!"
he called to the closing door. The latch clicked into place. "She's
supposed to be in bed!" he called through the heavy, ornately carved door.
Getting
no response, he decided to wait rather than cause a scene. Once, when he looked
up, he saw Nadine peeking around the corner. Her head swiftly disappeared back
around the corner. He paced before the door until the rubicund woman finally
opened it wide and held an arm out in invitation.
Richard
stepped into the room, feeling as if he was entering another world. The
Confessors' Palace was a place of splendor, power, and history, but the Mother
Confessor's quarters were the place that, more than anywhere else in the
palace, reminded him that he was really just a woods guide. It made him feel
out of his element.
The
Mother Confessor's rooms were a majestic, quiet sanctuary befitting the woman
to whom knelt kings and queens. If Richard had seen this room before he came to
know Kahlan, he wondered if he would have ever had the nerve to speak to her.
Even now, it embarrassed him to recall teaching her to build snares and dig
roots when he didn't know who, or what, she was.
It made
him smile, though, to remember her eagerness to learn. He was thankful he had
come to know the woman before he came to understand the post she filled, and
the magic she wielded. He thanked the good spirits she had come into his life,
and prayed she would be a part of it forever. She meant everything to him.
The
three marble fireplaces in the Mother Confessor's sitting room were ablaze. The
heavy drapes on the ten-foot-tall windows hung open slightly, forming tall
slits, letting in only enough light, muted by the sheer panels behind, to make
lamps unnecessary. He guessed that bright sunlight was inappropriate in a
sanctuary. There were only a few houses in Hartland that wouldn't fit in this
room alone.
On a
glossy, gold-embellished mahogany table to the side sat a silver tray with tea,
soup, biscuits, sliced pears, and brown bread. None of it had been touched. The
sight reminded him that he hadn't eaten since noon the day before, but failed
to summon his appetite.
The
three women in crisp gray dresses with white lace collars and cuffs watched him
expectantly, as if waiting to see if he would dare to simply walk in on the
Mother Confessor, or fall into a show of some other scandalous behavior.
Richard
glanced at the door at the far end of the room, his sense of propriety making
him ask the obvious. "Is she dressed?"
The one
who had cracked the door before reddened. "I wouldn't have let you in,
sir, had she not been."
"Of
course." He headed soundlessly across the plush, dark-hued carpets. He
stopped and turned back. They watched like three owls. "Thank you, ladies.
That will be all."
They
bowed and reluctantly took their leave. He realized as the last one stole a
quick glance over her shoulder while pulling the door closed that they probably
considered it the height of indecency for a man engaged to a woman to be alone
with her in her bedroom. Doubly so for the Mother Confessor.
Richard
forced out an annoyed breath; whenever he was anywhere near the Mother
Confessor's rooms, some member of the staff always managed to show up every
other minute checking to see if she needed anything. The variety of things they
suspected she might be needing never failed to surprise him. He sometimes
expected one of them to come right out and ask her if she might need her virtue
protected. Outside her rooms the staff was friendly, even joking with him when
he put them at ease, or helped them carry things. A few were afraid of him. But
not in her rooms. In her rooms, they all turned into bold, protective mother
hawks.
Inside
the bedroom, against the far paneled wall, stood the huge bed, its four great
dark polished posts rising up like columns before a palace. The thick,
embroidered bedcover cascaded down the sides of the bed like a colorful
waterfall frozen in place. A slash of sunlight cut across the dark, sumptuous
carpets and over the lower half of the bed.
Richard
remembered Kahlan describing her bed to him, telling him how she couldn't wait
to have him in it, when they were married. He very much wanted to be in bed
with her; it had been since that night between worlds that he had been alone
with her-in that way-but he had to admit that he was intimidated by that bed of
hers. He thought he might lose her in it. She had promised there would be no
chance of that.
Kahlan
was standing at the row of glassed doors before the expansive balcony, looking
out past the open curtain. She was staring out over the stone railings and up
toward the Keep on the mountainside. The sight of her in her satiny white dress
flowing smoothly over her ravishing curves, with her dazzling mane cascading
down her back, nearly took his breath. The sight of her made him ache. He
decided that the bed would be just fine.
When he
tenderly touched her shoulder, she started.
She
turned, a beaming smile on her face as she looked up at him. "I thought
you were Nancy, come back in."
"What
do you mean, you thought I was Nancy? You didn't know it was me?"
"How would I know it was you?"
He
shrugged. "Because. I always can tell when it's you who's walked into a
room. I don't have to see you." Her brow furrowed in disbelief. "You
cannot." "Of course I can." "How?"
"You
have a unique fragrance. I know the sounds you make, the sound of your
breathing, the way you move, the way you pause. They're all unique to
you." Her frown grew. "You're not kidding" You mean it? You're
serious?" "Of course. Can't you tell me by those things?"
''No.
But I guess you've spent much of your life in the woods, watching, smelling,
listening." She slipped her good arm around his. "I still don't know
if I believe you."
"Then
test me some time." Richard stroked his fingers down her hair. "How are
you feeling? How's your arm?"
"I'm
all right. It's not so bad. Not as bad as that time elder Toffalar cut me.
Remember? That was worse than this."
He
nodded. "What are you doing out of bed? You were told to rest." She
pushed at his stomach. "Stop. I'm fine." She looked him up and down.
"And
you look more than fine. I can't believe you had that made for me. You look
magnificent. Lord Rahl."
Richard
tenderly met her lips. She tried to pull him into a more passionate kiss, but
he pulled back. "I'm afraid I'll hurt you," he said.
"Richard,
I'm fine, really. I was exhausted before because I used my power, along with
all the rest of it. People mistook that for me being hurt worse than I
was."
He
appraised her for a long moment, before bending to the kind of kiss he had been
longing to give her.
"That's
better," she breathed on parting. She pushed back. "Richard, did you
see Cara? You left so quickly, and you had that look in your eye. I didn't have
time to really talk to you. It wasn't her fault." "I know. You told
me." "You didn't yell at her, did you?" "We had a
talk."
She
squinted. "Talk. What did she have to say for herself? She didn't try to
tell you that she was . . . ?" "What's Nadine still doing here?"
She was
looking at him. She snatched his wrist. "Richard, you have blood on you .
. . your arm . . ."
She
looked up in alarm. "What did you do? Richard . . . you didn't hurt her,
did you?" She lifted his arm higher into the light. "Richard, this
looks like ... like when you..."
She
seized his shirt. "You didn't hurt her? Tell me that you didn't hurt
her!" "She wanted to be executed. She gave me the choice of doing it,
or she would. So I used the sword, like that time with the Mud People
elders." "She's all right? She's all right, isn't she?"
"She's all right."
Kahlan,
concern in her expression, looked into his eyes. "And you? Are you all
right?"
"I've
been better. Kahlan, what is Nadine still doing here?" "She's just
staying for a visit, that's all. Have you met Drefan yet?" Richard held
her away when she moved to lay her head to his chest. "What is she doing
here? Why did you invite her to stay?"
"Richard,
I had to. Trouble from Shota isn't so easily dismissed. You ought to know that.
We have to know what's going on before we can do something to make sure Shota
can't cause us trouble."
Richard
went to the glassed door and stared out at the mountain towering over the city.
The Wizard's Keep stared back. "I don't like it. Not one bit."
"Neither
do I," she said from behind him. "Richard, she helped me. I didn't
think she would have the guts to keep her head, but she did. She's confused by
all this, too. Something more than we're seeing is going on, and we have to use
our heads, not hide under the blankets."
He
heaved a sigh. "I still don't like it, but you have a point. I only marry
smart women."
He
could hear Kahlan absently smooth her dress behind him. The fragrance of her
calmed him.
"I
can see why you liked her. She's a lovely woman, besides being a healer. It
must have hurt you."
The
Keep seemed to absorb the morning sunlight in its dark stone. He should go up
there. "What must have hurt me?"
"When
you caught her kissing Michael. She told me how you caught her kissing your
brother."
Richard
wheeled around, staring in slack-jawed disbelief. "She told you
what?" Kahlan gestured back toward the door, as if Nadine might appear to
speak for herself. "She said that you caught her kissing your
brother."
"Kissing
him." "That's what she said."
Richard
turned his glare back to the window. "Did she, now?" "What was
she doing, then? You mean you caught-" "Kahlan, we have sixteen men
who died down by the pit last night, and a dozen more who may not live the day.
I've got guards I can't trust to protect the woman I love. We've got a witch
woman who has made it her life's mission to cause us trouble. We've got Jagang
sending us messages in walking dead men. We've got a Sister of the Dark loose
somewhere. We've got half the army in Aydindril sick and unable to fight if
they have to. We've got representatives waiting to see us. I've got a half
brother I never knew I had downstairs under guard. I think we have more
important things to discuss than Nadine's . . . than Nadine's difficulty with
the truth!"
Kahlan's
green eyes watched him tenderly for a moment. 'That bad. Now I understand what
put that look in your eyes."
"Remember
what you told me one time? 'Never let a beautiful woman pick your path for you
when there's a man in her line of sight.' "
She put
a hand over his shoulder. "Nadine isn't picking my path. I asked her to
stay for my own reasons."
"Nadine
sticks to what she wants like a hound on scent, but I'm not talking about
Nadine. I'm talking about Shota. She's pointing down a path, and you're walking
right down it."
"We
have to find out what's down that path, and Shota's reasons for pointing to
it."
Richard
turned back to the glassed door. "I want to know what else Marlin-
Jagang-had to say. Every word. I want you to try to remember every word."
"Why don't you just yell at me and get it over with?" "I don't
want to yell at you. You scared me to death, going down there. I just want to
hold you, to protect you. I want to marry you." He turned back and looked
into her green eyes. "I think I have a way for it to work. With the Mud
People, I mean."
She
stepped closer. "Really? How?" "First, you tell me everything
Jagang said."
Richard
idly watched the Keep as she went through the whole story: how Jagang said he
watched the Ja'La game and that in his native tongue the name meant the Game of
Life; that he wanted to witness the glory of what Marlin had done; how he
wanted Sister Amelia to return to him before he revealed himself; that he had
found prophecies other than those Richard had destroyed, and that he had
invoked one called a bound fork prophecy. ''That's all I remember," she
said. "Why are you watching the Keep so intently?"
"I'm
wondering why Sister Amelia went there. And what Marlin was going to do there.
Any ideas?"
"No.
Jagang wouldn't say. Richard, have you seen the prophecy in the pit?" His
stomach roiled. "Yes." "And? What does it say?" "I
don't know. I'll have to translate it."
"Richard
Rahl, you may be able to tell it's me who has walked into a room without seeing
me, but I can tell when you're not telling me the truth without even having to
look into your eyes."
Richard
couldn't manage to smile. "Prophecies are more complicated than their
words. You know that. Just hearing their words doesn't mean it's what it sounds
like. Besides, just because Jagang found a prophecy, that doesn't mean he can
invoke it."
"Well,
that's all true enough. I told him as much myself. He said that proof he had
invoked the prophecy would come on a red moon. Not much chance of that-"
Richard
spun around. "What did you say? You didn't tell me that before. What did
Jagang say?"
Her
face paled. "I forgot . . . until you said . . . I told Jagang that I
didn't believe him-about invoking the prophecy. He said that proof would come
on the red moon. Richard, do you know what that means?" Richard's tongue
felt thick. He made himself blink.
"The
moon was red last night. I've been outdoors my whole life. I've never seen
anything even remotely like it. It was like looking at the moon through a glass
of red wine. It gave me goose bumps. That was why I came back early."
"Richard, what did the prophecy say? Tell me."
He
stared at her, trying to think of a lie he could make her believe. He couldn't.
"It said," he whispered, " 'On the red moon will come the
firestorm. The one bonded to the blade will watch as his people die. If he does
nothing, then he, and all those he loves, will die in its heat, for no blade,
forged of steel or conjured of sorcery, can touch this foe.' "
Silence
rang through the still room. Kahlan's face was white. "What's the rest of
it? Jagang said it was a bound fork prophecy. What's the rest of it"-her
voice broke-"the other fork? You tell me, Richard. Don't you lie to me.
We're in this together. If you love me, then you tell me."
Dear
spirits, let her hear the words, and not my dread. Let me at least spare her
that.
His
left hand clutched the hilt of his sword. The raised letters of the word TRUTH
bit into his flesh. He blinked his vision clear. Show no fear.
"
'To quench the inferno, he must seek the remedy in the wind. Lightning will
find him on that path, for the one in white, his true beloved, will betray him
in her blood.' "
CHAPTER������������ 16
Kahlan
could feel tears falling down her cheeks.
"Richard."
She sucked back a sob. ''Richard, you know I would never . . . You don't
believe I could ever . . . I swear on my life. I would never . . . You have to
believe me..."
He
swept her into his arms as she lost control over a wail of anguish.
"Richard," she sobbed against his chest, "I would never betray
you. Not for anything in this world. Not to spare myself eternal torment in the
underworld at the Keeper's hands."
"I
know. Of course I know that. You know as well as I that you can't understand a
prophecy by its words. Don't let it hurt you. That's what Jagang wants. He
doesn't even know what it means; he just put it down there because the words
sounded like what he wanted to hear." "But ...I..." She couldn't
halt her weeping. "Shhhh." His big hand held her head against him.
The
terror of the night before, and the worse terror of the prophecy, came out in
uncontrollable tears. She had never cried in the face of battle, but in the
safety of his arms she couldn't control herself She was swept away by a flood
of tears no less powerful than the torrent in the drainage tunnel.
"Kahlan, don't let yourself believe it. Please don't." "But it
says ...I will . . ."
"Listen
to me. Didn't I tell you not to go down there to question Marlin? Didn't I tell
you that I would do it when I got back, and that it was dangerous and I didn't
want you down there?"
"Yes,
but I was afraid for you and I just wanted-"
"You
went against my wishes. No matter your reasons, you went against my wishes,
didn't you?" She nodded against him. "That could be the betrayal in
the prophecy. You were wounded, you were bleeding. You betrayed me, and you had
blood on you. Your blood."
"I
wouldn't call what I did a betrayal. I was doing it for you, because I love you
and I was afraid for you."
"But
don't you see? The words of prophecy don't always work the way they sound. At
the Palace of the Prophets, in the Old World, both Warren and Nathan warned me
that prophecies aren't meant to be understood by the words. The words are only
obliquely connected to the prophecy." "But I don't see how-"
"I'm
just saying that it could be something as simple as that. You can't let a
prophecy gain control of your fears. Don't let it."
"Zedd
told me that, too. He said that there were prophecies about me that he wouldn't
tell me because the words weren't to be trusted. He said you were right
to
ignore the words of prophecy. But this is different, Richard. This says I will
betray you."
"I
already told you how it could be something simple." "Lightning isn't
simple. Being struck by lightning is a symbol for being killed, if not an
outright declaration of the manner of your death. The prophecy says I will
betray you, and because of that, you will die."
"I
don't believe it. Kahlan, I love you. I know it isn't possible. You wouldn't
betray me and bring me harm. You wouldn't."
Kahlan
clutched his shirt as she gasped a sob. "That's why Shota sent Nadine. She
wants you to marry someone else because she knows I will be the death of you.
Shota is trying to save you-from me."
"She
thought that once before, and she turned out to be wrong. Remember? If Shota
had had her way, we wouldn't have been able to stop Darken Rahl. He would rule
us all right now, if we had given in to her reading of the future. Prophecy is
no different." Richard gripped her shoulders and held her at arm's length
so that he could look into her eyes. "Do you love me?"
His
grip on her wounded shoulder made it sing with pain, but she refused to pull
away from his touch. "More than life itself."
"Then
trust in me. I won't let it destroy us. I promise. It will all fall into place
for the best in the end. You'll see. We can't think of the solution if we're
focused on the problem."
She
wiped at her eyes. He sounded so sure of himself. His confidence calmed her and
bolstered her spirits. "You're right. I'm sorry." "Do you want
to marry me?"
"Of
course, but I don't see how we can leave our responsibility for such a long
time to travel-" "The sliph." She blinked. "What?"
"The
sliph, up in the Wizard's Keep. I've been thinking about it; we traveled all
the way to the Old World and back in her, with her magic, and it took less than
a day each way. I can wake the sliph, and we can travel in her."
"But
she would take us to the Old World, to the city of Tanimura. Jagang is
somewhere near Tanimura."
"That's
still a lot closer to the Mud People than Aydindril is. Besides, I think the
sliph can go other places, too. She asked me where I wished to travel. That
means she can go other places. Maybe she can get us a lot closer than
Tanimura."
Kahlan,
her tears forgotten at the prospect of their wedding being possible, glanced up
at the Keep. "We might be able to go to the Mud People, be married, and be
back in a matter of a few days. We could be gone that long, surely."
Richard smiled as his arms circled her from behind. "Surely." Kahlan
wiped the last of the tears away as she turned in his arms. "How do you
always manage to figure things out?"
He
nodded toward her bed. "I had a great deal of motivation." Kahlan, a
grin spreading on her face, was just about to reward him with something
positively indecent, when there was a knock at the door. It immediately opened
without benefit of an answer. Nancy stuck her head in.
"Are
you all right, Mother Confessor?" She glanced meaningfully to Richard.
"Yes. What is it?" "Lady Nadine is asking if she could change
the poultice."
"Is
she now?" Kahlan said in a dark tone.
"Yes,
Mother Confessor. But if you are . . . indisposed, I could ask her to wait
until-"
"Send
her in. then," Richard said.
Nancy
hesitated. "We will have to take the top of your dress down. Mother
Confessor. To get at the bandage."
"It's
all right," Richard whispered in Kahlan's ear. "I have to go talk to
Berdine. I have some work for her." "I hope it doesn't involve horse
manure." Richard smiled. "No. I want her to work on Kolo's
journal." "Why?"
He
kissed the top of her head. ' 'Knowledge is a weapon. I intend to be formidably
armed." He glanced to Nancy. "Need me to help with her dress?"
Nancy managed to scowl and turn red at the same time. "I guess that means
you will manage.'' At the door, he turned back to Kahlan. "I'll wait until
Nadine's finished with you, and then we better go see this Drefan fellow. I
have a task for him. I'd . . . like you to be with me."
When he
had closed the door, Nancy brushed back her short brown hair and moved around
behind Kahlan to help with her dress. "Your Mother Confessor's dress, the
one you were wearing yesterday, was ruined beyond repair."
"I
expected as much." Confessors had a collection of dresses, all the same.
Confessors all wore black dresses; only the Mother Confessor wore white. She
thought about the blue wedding dress she would wear. "Nancy, do you
remember when your husband was courting you?" Nancy paused. "Yes,
Mother Confessor."
"Then
you must know how it would have made you feel if someone were to keep popping
in on you when you were alone with him."
Nancy
eased the dress over Kahlan's shoulder. "Mother Confessor, I was never
allowed to be alone with him until we were married. I was young, and ignorant.
My parents were right to watch over me and the impulses of youth."
"Nancy,
I'm a grown woman. I'm the Mother Confessor. I can't have you and the other
women popping your heads into my room whenever Richard is with me. Ow!"
"Sorry.
That was my fault. It isn't proper. Mother Confessor." "That's for me
to decide." "If you say so. Mother Confessor."
Kahlan
held her arm out as Nancy slipped the sleeve over her hand. "I say
so." Nancy glanced to the bed. "You were conceived in that bed. Who
knows how many Mother Confessors before you conceived their daughters in that
bed. It holds a legacy of tradition. Only wedded Mother Confessors took their
men to that bed to conceive a child."
''And
not one of them because of love. I was not conceived through love, Nancy. My
child, if I have one, will be."
"All
the more reason that it should be by the grace of the good spirits-in the
sanctity of marriage."
Kahlan
didn't say that the good spirits had taken them to a place between worlds to
sanctify their union. "The good spirits know what's in our hearts; there
is no one else for either of us, nor will there ever be."
Nancy
busied herself at the bandage. "And you are eager to get to it. Like my
daughter and her young man are." If Nancy only knew how eager.
"That's
not it. I'm just saying that I don't want you coming in on me when Richard is
here with me. We will be wedded soon. We are irreversibly committed to one
another.
"There
is more to being in love than just jumping into bed, you know. Like just being
close, in one another's arms. Can you understand? I can't very well kiss my
future husband and have my injuries comforted by him if you keep popping your
head in every two minutes, now can I?" "No, Mother Confessor."
Nadine
knocked at the open door. "May I come in?"
"Yes,
of course. Here, set your bag on the bed. I can manage, now, Nancy. Thank
you."
With a
deprecating shake of her head, Nancy shut the door behind herself. Nadine sat
on the bed next to Kahlan and worked at finishing unwrapping the bandage.
Kahlan frowned at Nadine's dress.
"Nadine,
that dress . . . it is the same one yon were wearing yesterday, isn't it?"
"Sure." "It seems-"
Nadine
looked down at herself. "The ladies washed it for me but it's . . . Oh, I
know what you're talking about. It was torn in the tunnels, when we went for a
swim. Some of the fabric at the seams was mined, so I had to take it in to save
it.
"I
haven't had much of an appetite since I left home, thinking about . . . I mean,
what with my travels, I was busy, and I've slimmed down a bit, so I was able to
take in the seams and save the dress. It's not too tight. It's fine."
"In
view of your aid, I will see to it that you get another dress that would be
more comfortable." "No. This one's fine." "I see."
"Well,
your cut looks no worse this morning. That's encouraging." She carefully
wiped at the old poultice. "I saw Richard on the way out. He looked upset.
You two haven't had a fight, I hope?"
Kahlan's
forbearance evaporated. "No. He was upset because of something else."
Nadine
paused at her work. She turned to her bag and brought back a horn. The
fragrance of pine pitch filled the air when she opened it. Kahlan winced as
Nadine dabbed on the poultice. When she was satisfied, she began winding the
bandage back around Kahlan's arm.
"There's
no need to be embarrassed," Nadine said in a casual tone. "Lovers
sometimes have spats. They don't always end a relationship. I'm sure Richard
will come to his senses. Eventually."
"Actually,"
Kahlan said, "I told him that I understood about you and him. About what
happened. That was why he was so upset." Nadine's wrapping slowed.
"What do you mean?"
"I
told him what you said about letting him catch you kissing his brother. The
little 'shove' you gave him. Remember?"
Nadine
brought the tails of the bandage around, her fingers suddenly working swiftly
at tying them. "Oh, that."
"Yes,
that."
Nadine
avoided looking up. She slipped the sleeve of the dress over Kahlan's hand. As
soon as she had pulled the dress up over Kahlan's shoulder, she dropped the
horn back in her bag.
"That
should do it. I should replace the poultice later today." Kahlan watched
as Nadine hefted her bag and scurried for the door. Kahlan called her name.
Nadine reluctantly paused and turned partway back. "Seems you lied to me.
Richard told me what really happened." Nadine's freckles vanished in a
crimson glow. Kahlan stood and gestured toward a tufted velvet chair.
"Care
to set things right? To tell me your side of it?"
Nadine
stood woodenly for a moment, then sank into the chair. She folded her hands in
her lap and stared down at them. "I told you, I had to give him a
shove." "You call that a shove?"
Nadine
turned even redder. "Well." She flicked a hand. "I knew how boys
lost their heads over . . . over their lust. I figured that was my best chance
of getting him to . . . to lay claim to me."
Kahlan
was confused, but she didn't let it show. "Seems it would have been a
little late for that."
"Well,
not necessarily. I was bound to end up with one of them when I let Richard
catch me like that, naked, atop Michael, having a good time of it. Michael was
game for me, that was for sure." Kahlan's brow rose. "How did you
figure that-"
"I
had it worked out. Richard would come in behind me. He'd see me on Michael's
lance, crying out with the pleasure of it, and he'd be taken with lust by the
sight, and by my willingness. Then he'd lose his head, his inhibition, and at
last he'd have to have me, too."
Kahlan
stared dumbly. "How was that going to get you Richard?" Nadine
cleared her throat. "Well, it was like this; I figured that Richard would
enjoy having me. I'd make sure of that. Then, I'd tell him no the next time he
wanted me, and he'd want me so much, after he'd had a sampling, that he'd claim
me. If Michael wanted to claim me, too, then it's my choice, and I'd choose
Richard.
"If
Richard didn't claim me, and I got pregnant, then I'd say it was his and he'd
marry me because it could be his. If I didn't get pregnant, and he wouldn't
claim me, well, then, there was still Michael. I figured second best was better
than none."
Kahlan didn't
know what had happened, Richard hadn't said. She feared Nadine would stop her
story right there. Kahlan couldn't very well admit she didn't know what
happened next, and worse, she feared to hear just how successful Nadine's
bizarre plan had been. In the first version, the kissing version, Richard had
turned away. But Kahlan now knew that version wasn't true.
She
watched the vein in the side of the Nadine's neck throb. Kahlan folded her arms
and waited.
At
last, Nadine collected her voice and continued. "Well, that was my plan,
anyway. It seemed to make sense. I figured I'd get Richard out of it, at best,
and Michael at worst.
"It
didn't work the way I thought. Richard walked in and froze. I smiled over my
shoulder. I invited him to come join the fun, or else to come to me later and
I'd see to him, too." Kahlan held her breath.
"That
was the first time I saw that look in Richard's eyes. He didn't say a word. He
just turned and walked out."
Nadine
stuck a hand in under the hair hanging around her face and wiped it across her
nose as she sniffled. "I thought I'd at least have Michael. He laughed at
me when I told him he'd claimed me. He just laughed. He never wanted to be with
me again after that. He'd gotten what he wanted. I was no use to him after
that. He moved on to other girls."
"But,
if you were willing to ... Dear spirits, why didn't you simply seduce
Richard?"
"Because
I was worried he might expect that and have his resistance built up for it. I
wasn't the only girl he danced with. I was afraid he wouldn't want to commit,
and that if I simply tried to seduce him, he might be ready for that and turn
me down. I'd heard a rumor that Bess Pratter tried that. It didn't seem to have
worked for her. I was afraid it wouldn't be enough of a shove.
"I
figured that jealousy would be the thing that pushed him off the fence. I
figured my plan would take him by such surprise that he'd just lose his head
with jealousy and lust, and then I'd have him. I've heard tell there's nothing
more powerful in a man than jealousy and lust."
With
both hands, Nadine pushed her hair back on her head. "I can't believe
Richard told you. I didn't think he would ever tell anyone."
"He
didn't," Kahlan whispered. "Richard only stared at me when I told him
that you said he caught you kissing his brother. He didn't tell me the story.
You just did that all by yourself." Nadine's face sank into her hands.
"You
may have grown up with Richard, but you didn't know him. Dear spirits, you
didn't know the first thing about him."
"It
might have worked. You don't know as much as you think. Richard is just a boy
from Hartland who never had anything and has had his head turned by fine things
and people doing his bidding. That's why it might have worked-because he just
wants what he sees. I was just trying to make him see what I have to
offer." Kahlan's head throbbed. She pinched the bridge of her nose as she
shut her eyes. "Nadine, as the good spirits are my witness, you have got
to be just about the stupidest woman I have ever met."
Nadine
sprang up from the chair. "You think I'm so stupid? You love him. You want
him." She jabbed her finger at her own chest. "You know how it feels,
in here, to want him. I wanted him no less than you. If you had to, you would
do the same thing. Right now, as well as you know him, you'd do the same if you
thought it was your only chance. Your only chance! Tell me you wouldn't!"
"Nadine,"
Kahlan said in a calm voice, "you don't know the first thing about love.
Love isn't about taking what you want; it's about wanting happiness for the one
you love."
Nadine
leaned in with a venomous expression. "You'd do the same as I did, if you
had to!"
The
words of the prophecy whisperer through Kahlan's head. Lightning will find him
on that path, for the one in white, his true beloved, will betray him . . .
"You're
wrong, Nadine. I wouldn't. Not for anything in this world would I chance
hurting Richard. Not for anything. I would live a life of lonely misery before
I would hurt him. I would even let you have him before I would hurt him."
CHAPTER������������� 17
A
breathless, beaming Berdine lurched to a halt as Kahlan watched Nadine storm
off down the hall. "Mother Confessor, Lord Rahl wants me to stay up all
night and do work for him. Isn't that wonderful?" Kahlan's brow twitched.
"If you say so, Berdine." Grinning, Berdine ran on down the hall in
the direction Nadine had gone. Richard was talking to a knot of soldiers just
up the hall in the other direction. Beyond the soldiers, a ways further up the
hall, Cara and Egan stood watching. When Richard saw Kahlan, he left the guards
and came to meet her. When he was close enough, she twisted a fistful of his
shirt and pulled him close. "Answer me one thing, Richard Rahl." she
hissed through gritted teeth. "What's that?" Richard asked in
innocent bewilderment. "Why did you ever dance with that whore!"
"Kahlan, I've never heard you use such language." Richard glanced
down the hall in the direction Nadine had gone. "How did you get her to
tell you?" "I tricked her into it." Richard smiled a sly smile.
"You told her that I told you the story, didn't you." His smile
widened when she nodded. "I've been a bad influence on you," he said.
"Richard, I'm sorry I asked her to stay. I didn't know. If I ever get my
hands on Shota, I'm going to strangle her. Forgive me for asking Nadine to
stay." "Nothing to forgive. My emotions just got in the way of seeing
that. You were right to ask her to stay." "Richard, are you
sure?" "Shota and the prophecy both mentioned 'the wind.' Nadine
plays some part in this; she has to stay, for now. I'd better have her guarded,
so she doesn't leave." "We don't need guards. Nadine won't
leave." "How can you be so sure?" "Vultures don't give up.
They circle as long as they think there are bones to pick." Kahlan looked
back down the empty hall. "She actually had the nerve to tell me that I
would do what she had done, if I had to." "I feel a bit sorry for
Nadine. She has a lot of good in her, too, but I doubt she will ever truly
experience love." Kahlan felt the heat of him at her back. "How could
Michael do that to you? How could you ever have forgiven him?" "He
was my brother," Richard whispered, ''I would have forgiven anything he
did against me. Someday I will stand before the good spirits; I didn't want to
give them a reason to say I was no better. "It was what he did to others
that I couldn't forgive."
She put
a comforting hand to his arm. "I guess I see why you want me to go with
you to meet Drefan. The spirits tested you with Michael. I think you will find
Drefan a better brother. He may be a bit arrogant, but he's a healer. Besides,
it would be hard to find two that wicked." "Nadine is a healer,
too."
"Not
compared to Drefan. His talent borders on magic." "Do you think he
wields magic?" "I don't think so, but I have no way of telling."
"I will know. If he does have magic, I will know."
Guards
at their post near the Mother Confessor's room saluted after Richard gave them
instructions. Kahlan walked close at his side as they moved on down the hall.
Cara stood up straighter when Richard paused before her. Even Egan perked up
expectantly. Kahlan thought Cara looked tired and miserable.
"Cara,"
Richard finally said, "I'm going to see this healer who helped you. I hear
he's another bastard son of Darken Rahl, like me. Why don't you come along. I
wouldn't mind having a . . . friend, with me."
Cara's
brow wrinkled together in near tears. "If you wish, Lord Rahl."
"I wish. You, too, Egan. Egan, I told the soldiers that you all are
permitted to pass. Go get Raina and Ulic and bring them along, too."
"Right behind you, Lord Rahl," Egan said with a rare smile.
"Where did you ask Drefan to wait?" Kahlan asked. "I told the
guards to take him to a guest room in the southeast wing." "The
opposite end of the palace? Why all the way over there?" Richard gave her
an unreadable look. "Because I wanted him to remain here, under guard, and
that's as far from your rooms as I could get him."
Cara
was still wearing her red leather; she hadn't had time to change. The soldiers
guarding the southeast wing of the Confessors' Palace saluted with fists to
hearts and moved aside for Richard, Kahlan, Ulic, Egan, and Raina in her brown
leather, but they backed away an extra step for Cara. No D'Haran wanted the
attention of a Mord-Sith in red leather.
After
the brisk march across the palace, they all came to a halt before a simple door
flanked by leather and muscles and steel. Richard absently lifted his sword and
let it drop back, checking that it was clear in its scabbard.
"I
think he's more afraid than you," Kahlan whispered up to him. "He's a
healer. He said he came to help you."
"He
showed up to help on the same day as Nadine and Marlin. I don't believe in
coincidence."
Kahlan
recognized the look in his eyes; he was bleeding a lethal flux of magic from
his sword without even touching it. Every inch of him, every ripple of hard
muscle, every fluid movement, bespoke the calm coiling death.
Without
knocking, Richard threw open the door and stepped into the small, windowless
room. Sparsely furnished with a bed, small table, and two simple wooden chairs,
it was one of the more utilitarian guest rooms. To the side, the eyes of knots
in a plain, pine wardrobe watched then. A small brick hearth provided a modicum
of heat to the chill, scented air.
Holding
Richard's left arm from a half step behind, knowing better than to get in the
way of his sword, Kahlan stayed close. Ulic and Egan stepped to each side,
their
blond hair nearly brushing the low ceiling. Cara and Raina swept around them.
screening Richard and Kahlan.
Drefan
knelt before the table against the far wall. Dozens of candles were set
randomly about the table. At the sound of all the commotion, he rose smoothly
to his feet and turned.
His
blue-eyed gaze took in Richard, as if no one else had entered the room with
him. Each absorbed in silent thoughts she could only imagine, they appraised
one another.
And
then Drefan went to his knees, putting his forehead to the floor. "Master
Rahl guide us. Master Rahl teach us. Master Rahl protect us. In your light we
thrive. In your mercy we are sheltered. In your wisdom we are humbled. We live
only to serve. Our lives are yours."
Kahlan
saw Richard's two huge body guards and both Mord-Sith almost drop reflexively
to their knees to join in the devotion to the Master of D'Hara. She had seen
countless D'Haran's in Aydindril give the devotion. She had stood at Richard's
side when the Sisters of the Light had knelt and sworn fidelity to him. Richard
had told her that at the People's Palace in D'Hara, when Darken Rahl had been
there, everyone went to devotion squares twice a day, for two hours each time,
and said those same words over and over while touching foreheads to the tiled
floors.
Drefan
stood once more, assuming a relaxed, self-assured stance. He was dressed nobly
in a ruffled white shirt open to mid-chest, high boots turned down just below
his knees, and tight, dark trousers that displayed enough of the swell of his
manhood that Kahlan could feel her cheeks flush. She forced her eyes to move.
She could see at least four leather pouches attached to his wide leather belt,
their flaps held closed with carved bone pins. Draped loosely over his
shoulders was the simple flaxen cloak she had seen him in before.
The
same height and build as Richard, and with the handsome cast of Darken Rahl's
features, he cut a striking figure. His tumbledown blond hair made his tanned
face look all the better. Kahlan couldn't help staring at the flesh-and-blood
twist of Richard and Darken Rahl.
Richard
gestured toward all the candles. "What's this?" Drefan's blue-eyed
gaze stayed locked on Richard. "I was praying. Lord Rahl. Making my peace
with the good spirits, should I be joining them this day."
There
was no timidity in his voice; it was a simple, self-confident statement of
fact.
Richard's
chest grew with a deep breath. He let it out. "Cara, you stay. Raina,
Ulic, Egan, please wait outside." He glanced to them as they were leaving.
"Me first."
They
returned grim nods. It was code: if Richard didn't come out of the room first,
then Drefan died on his way out-a precaution Kahlan used herself.
"I
am Drefan, Lord Rahl. At your service, should you find me worthy." He
bowed his head to Kahlan. "Mother Confessor." "What did you mean
about joining the good spirits?" Richard asked. Drefan slid his hands into
the opposite sleeves of the cloak. "There is a bit of a story to it, Lord
Rahl."
"Take
your hands out of your sleeves, and then tell me the story." Drefan pulled
his hands out. "Sorry." He lifted his cloak back with a little finger
to reveal the long, thin-bladed knife sheathed at his belt. He pulled the knife
free
with
one finger and a thumb, flipped it in the air, and caught it by the point.
"Forgive me. I meant to set it aside before your visit."
Without
turning, he tossed the knife over his shoulder. The knife stuck solidly in the
wall. He bent, pulled a heavier knife from his boot, and tossed that over his
shoulder with his other hand as he straightened, sticking it, too, in the wall
an inch from the first. He reached behind his back, under the cloak, and came
out with a wickedly curved blade. Without looking, he stuck it, too, in the
wall behind, between the two blades already there.
"Any
other weapons?" Richard asked in a businesslike manner. Drefan spread his
arms. "My hands. Lord Rahl, and my knowledge." He continued to hold
his hands out. "Though even my hands wouldn't be quick enough to defeat
your magic. Lord Rahl. Please search my person to assure yourself that I am
otherwise unarmed."
Richard
didn't act on the offer. "So, what's the story?" "I am the
bastard son of Darken Rahl." "As am I," Richard said.
"Not
exactly. You are the gifted heir of Darken Rahl. A distinct difference. Lord
Rahl."
"Gifted?
Darken Rahl raped my mother. I have often had reason to consider my magic a
curse."
Drefan
nodded deferentially. "As you would have it, Lord Rahl. But Darken Rahl
didn't view offspring the way you seem to. To him, there was his heir, and
there were weeds. You are his heir; I am but one of his weeds.
"Formalities
associated with conception were irrelevant to the Master of D'Hara. Women were
. . . simply there to bring, him pleasure and to grow his seed. Ones who
conceived inferior fruit-those without the gift-were barren soil, in his eyes.
Even your mother, having produced his prized fruit, would have been no more
important to him than the dirt in his most coveted orchard."
Kahlan
squeezed Richard's hand. "Cara told me much the same. She said that Darken
Rahl . . . that he eliminated those he found without the gift." Richard
stiffened. "He killed my siblings?"
"Yes,
Lord Rahl," Cara said. "Not in a methodical fashion, but rather on
whim, or ill mood."
"I
don't know anything about his other children. I didn't even know he was my
father until last autumn. How is it that you're alive?" he asked Drefan.
"My
mother wasn't . . ." Drefan paused, searching for an inoffensive way to
put it. "She wasn't treated as unfortunately as your cherished mother,
Lord Rahl.
"My
mother was a woman of ambition and cupidity. She saw our father as a means to
gain status. As I have heard it told, she was fair of face and figure, and was
one of a few who was called to his bed repeatedly. Most were not. Apparently,
she succeeded in cultivating his . . . appetite for her charms. To put it
bluntly, she was a talented whore.
"She
hoped to be the one who bore him a gifted heir, so as to raise her status in
his eyes to something more.
"She
failed." Drefan's cheeks mantled. "She had me."
"That
may be a failure in her eyes," Richard said in a quiet tone, "but not
in the eyes of the good spirits. You are no less than I, in their eyes."
The corners of Drefan's mouth curled in a small smile. "Thank you. Lord
Rahl.
Very
magnanimous of you to cede to the good spirits that which was always theirs.
Not all men do. 'In your wisdom we are humbled,' " he quoted from the
devotion.
Drefan
was managing to be courteously respectful without being servile. He seemed
honestly deferential, but without losing his air of nobility. Unlike the way he
had been in the pit, he was scrupulously polite, but he nonetheless exuded the
bearing of a Rahl: no amount of bowing could alter his aplomb. Like Richard, he
carried himself with inherent authority. "So, what happened then?"
Drefan
took a deep breath. "She took me, as an infant, to a wizard to have me
tested for the gift, hoping to present Darken Rahl with the gifted heir that
would bring her riches, station, and the fawning adoration of Darken Rahl. Did
I also mention that she was a fool?" Richard didn't answer, and Drefan
went on.
"The
wizard broke the bad news to her: I was born without the gift. Instead of
bearing a pass to a life of ease, she had given birth to a liability. Darken
Rahl was known to pull the intestines out of such women-an inch at a time."
"Obviously," Richard said, "you managed not to draw his
attention. Why not?" "My dear mother was responsible for that. She
knew that she might be able to raise me, and never be noticed by him, never be
killed, but she also knew it would be a hard life of hiding and worry over
every knock at the door.
"Instead,
she took me, when I was but an infant, to a remote community of healers, hoping
that they would raise me in anonymity so that my father would have no reason to
come to know of me, and kill me." "That must have been hard for her
to do," Kahlan said. His piercing blue eyes turned on her "For her
grief, she prescribed herself a potent cure, which was in turn provided by the
healers: henbane." "Henbane," Richard said in a flat tone.
"Henbane is poison." "Yes. It acts quickly, but has the
unfortunate quality of being exquisitely painful at its task."
"These
healers provided her with poison?" Richard asked incredulously. Drefan's
raptor gaze, shadowed with admonition, returned to Richard. "The calling
of a healer is to provide the remedy that is warranted. Sometimes, the remedy
is death."
"That
doesn't fit my definition of healer," Richard said. returning the raptor
gaze in kind.
"A
person who is dying, with no hope of recovery, and in great suffering, can be
no better served than by the benevolent act of assisting them in ending their
suffering."
"Your
mother wasn't dying with no hope of recovery."
"Had
Darken Rahl found her, her suffering would have been profound, to say the
least. I don't know how much you knew about our father, but he was known for
his inventiveness at giving pain, and making it last. She lived in shuddering
fear of that fate. She was driven nearly insane with dread. She fell to tears
at every shadow. The healers could do nothing to prevent that fate, to protect
her from Darken Rahl. Had Darken Rahl wanted to find her, he would have. Had
she remained with the healers, and been found, he would have slaughtered them
all for hiding her. She gave up her life to give me the chance at one."
Kahlan started when a log in the fire popped. Drefan didn't start, nor did
Richard. "I'm sorry," Richard whispered. "My grandfather took
his daughter, my mother, to Westland to hide her from Darken Rahl. I guess that
he, too, understood the danger she was in. The danger I was in."
Drefan
shrugged. "Then we are much the same, you and I: exiles from our father.
You, however, would not have been killed." Richard nodded to himself.
"He tried to kill me."
Drefan's
brow twitched with curiosity. "Really? He wanted a gifted heir, and then
he tried to kill him?"
"He
didn't know, as I didn't, that it was he who fathered me." Richard turned
the subject back to the matter at hand. "So, what's this about you making
peace with the good spirits in case you are to join them today?"
"The
healers who raised me never kept from me the knowledge of who I was. I have
known since I can remember that I was the bastard son of our master, of Father
Rahl. I always knew that he could come at any moment and kill me. I prayed each
night, thanking the good spirits for another day of life free from my father
and what he would do to me."
"Weren't
the healers afraid that he would come and kill them, too, for hiding you?''
"Perhaps.
They always discounted it. They said that they were not in fear for themselves,
that they could always say I was a babe abandoned to them and they didn't know
my paternity." "Must have been a hard life."
Drefan
turned his back on them and seemed to stare into the candles for a time before
he went on.
"It
was life. The only life I knew. But I do know that I was woefully tired of
living each day in fear that he might come." "He's dead,"
Richard said. "You no longer have to fear him." "That is why I'm
here. When I felt the bond break, and it was later confirmed that he was dead,
I decided that I would end my private terror. I've been guarded since the
moment I arrived. I knew I wasn't free to leave this room. I know the
reputation of the guards you surround yourself with. That was all part of the
chance I took to come here.
"I
didn't know if the new Lord Rahl would want me eliminated, too, but I decided
to end the constant death sentence hanging over my head. I've come to offer my
services to the Master of D'Hara if he will have me; or, if it is his will,
that my life be forfeit for my crime of birth. "Either way, it will be
over. I want it over." Drefan, his eyes watering, turned to face Richard.
"There
you have it. Lord Rahl. Either forgive me, or kill me. I don't know that I much
care which anymore, but I beg you to end it-one way or the other." His
chest rose and fell with labored breaths.
Richard
appraised his half brother in the dragging silence. Kahlan could only imagine
what Richard must be thinking, at the emotions of those deliberations, at the
painful shadows of the past, and the light of hope for what might be. At last,
he held his hand out.
"I'm
Richard, Drefan. Welcome to the new D'Hara, a D'Hara that fights for freedom
from terror. We fight that none have to live in fear, as you have done."
The two men clasped wrists. Their big, powerful hands were the same size.
"Thank you," Drefan whispered. "Richard."
CHAPTER������������� 18
I heard
that you saved Cara's life," Richard said. "I want to thank you. It
must have been hard, knowing that she was one of my guards who might end up
harming you . . . if things didn't go right for you.''
"I'm
a healer. It's what I do-Richard. I'm afraid I may have trouble calling you
anything but Lord Rahl-for a time, anyway. I feel the bond to you, to you as
the Lord Rahl."
Richard
shrugged self-consciously. "I'm still having trouble getting used to
people calling me Lord Rahl." He stroked a finger along his lower lip.
"Do we . . . do you know if we . . . have any other half brothers, or
sisters?"
"I'm
sure we must. Some must have survived. I've heard a rumor that we have a
younger sister, at least."
"Sister?"
Richard grinned. "Really? A sister? Where do you think she is? Do you know
her name?"
"I'm
sorry, Lord . . - Richard, but all I know is the name: Lindie. The words passed
on to me said that if she is still alive, she would be perhaps as much as
fourteen years. The person who told me her name said that all he knew was her
first name, Lindie, and that she was born in D'Hara, to the southwest of the
People's Palace." "Anything else?"
"I'm
afraid not. You have now heard everything I know." Drefan turned to
Kahlan. "How are you feeling? Did the herb woman, what was her name,
stitch you up properly?"
"Yes,"
Kahlan said, "Nadine did fine. It hurts some, and I have a headache, I
guess from everything that's happened. I didn't sleep well last night with the
ache of my shoulder, but that's to be expected. I'm fine."
He
moved toward her, and before she knew it, he had her arm in his hand. He lifted
it, twisted it, and pulled it, asking each time where it hurt. When he had
satisfied himself, he moved around behind her and gripped her collarbone with
his fingers while pressing his thumbs to the base of her neck. Pain shot up her
spine. The room swam.
He
pressed under her arm, and at the back of her shoulder. "There. How's
that?" Kahlan rotated her arm, finding the pair greatly diminished.
"Much better. Thank you."
"Just
be careful with it; I've numbed some of the pain, but it still must heal before
you put it to heavy use. Do you still have the headache?" Kahlan nodded.
"Let me see what I can do for that."
He
pulled her by the hand back toward the table and sat her in a chair. He lowered
over her, blocking her view of Richard. Drefan pulled her arms out toward
himself, squeezing and manipulating the webs
between
her first fingers and thumbs. His hands made hers seem so small. He had hands
like Richard: big, and powerful though less callused. He was hurting her, he
was pressing so hard, but she didn't voice a complaint, thinking he must know
what he was doing.
With
him standing right in front of her, she had to turn her eyes up lest she be
forced to stare at his tight trousers. Kahlan watched his hands kneading
hers-his fingers working over her flesh. She remembered his hand on Cara. She
vividly recalled those strong fingers working their way down under Cara's red
leather and between her legs. Working into her. Kahlan abruptly jerked her
hands away. "Thank you, that's much better," she lied.
He
smiled down at her with a penetrating, hawklike, blue-eyed, Rahl gaze.
"I've never healed a headache so quickly. Are you sure it's better?"
"Yes. It was just a little headache. It's gone now. Thank you."
"Glad to help," he said. He watched her for a long moment, the little
smile still on his lips. Finally, he turned to Richard.
"I
was told that you are to be wedded to the Mother Confessor, here. You are a
very different sort of Lord Rahl from our father; Darken Rahl would never have
considered marriage for himself. Of course, he probably was never tempted into
marriage by one so beautiful as your betrothed. May I offer my congratulations?
When's the wedding?"
"Soon,"
Kahlan interjected as she moved to Richard's side. "That's right,"
Richard said. "Soon. We don't know the exact date, yet. We . . . have a
few things to work out.
''Look,
Drefan, I could use your help. We have a number of wounded men, and some of
them are in grave condition. They were wounded by the same man who hurt Cara.
I'd really appreciate it if you'd see what you could do to help them."
Drefan
retrieved his knives, slipping them away without having to look at what he was
doing. "That's what I'm here for: to help." He headed for the door.
Richard
caught his arm. "You'd better let me go first. Until I change the orders,
you will die if you step out of a room before me. We don't want that."
As
Richard took Kahlan's arm and turned toward the door, she met Cara's eyes for
an instant. Her hearing wasn't affected, Drefan had said. She could hear every
thing, even though she couldn't react. She had to have heard Kahlan warn him
not to put his hand on her there again. She had to have known what Drefan had
been doing, but she had been unable to do anything to stop him. Kahlan's face
heated at the memory. She turned and hugged Richard's waist as they went
through the door.
Richard
looked up and down the quiet hall, and when he saw no one, he backed her to the
paneled wall outside her rooms and pressed a kiss to her lips. She was glad
that Drefan had eased the pain in her arm earlier in the day; it hardly hurt to
circle both arms around Richard's neck.
She
moaned against his mouth. She was tired from the long day, and her arm did
still hurt just a bit, but it wasn't weariness or discomfort that drove out the
moan-it was longing.
He drew
her into his arms and turned so that he was leaning his back against the wall
instead. His powerful arms crushed her to him, almost lifting her toes from the
floor as his kiss became more insistent. She returned it in kind. She pulled
his lower lip through her teeth and then backed away for a breath.
"I
can't believe Nancy or one of her women isn't here, waiting for us,"
Richard said.
He had
left their guards farther up the hall, around the corner. They were at last
alone-a rare luxury. Even though she had grown up with people always around,
she now found their constant presence wearing. There was great value in simply
being alone.
Kahlan
gave his lips a quick lick and a kiss. "I don't think Nancy will be
bothering us."
"Really?"
Richard asked with a sly grin. "Why, Mother Confessor, who will protect
your virtue?"
Her
lips brushed his. "Dear spirits, no one, I pray."
He
surprised her with an abrupt change of topic. "What do you think of
Drefan?" That was a question she was not prepared to answer. "What do
you think of him?"
"I'd
like to have a brother I could trust and believe in. He's a healer. The surgeon
was impressed with the way he helped some of those men. He said that at least
one of them will live only because of what Drefan did for him. Nadine was more
than a little curious about some of the compounds he carries in the leather
pouches at his belt. I'd like to think that I have a brother who helps people.
Nothing seems so noble as that." "Do you think he has magic?"
"I
didn't see any trace of it in his eyes. I'm sure I would have been able to
tell. I can't explain how I can sense magic, now, how I can see it sometimes
sparkle in the air about a person, or show in their eyes, but I didn't see any
of that with Drefan. I think that he is simply a talented healer.
"I'm
grateful that he saved Cara. At least he said he saved her. What if she had
recovered on her own after Marlin was dead and her link with him was
broken?" Kahlan hadn't thought of that. "So, you don't trust
him?" "I don't know. I still don't believe in coincidence." He
sighed in frustration. "Kahlan, I need you to be honest, and not let me be
blinded because he's my brother and I want to trust him. I haven't proven a
very good judge of brothers. If you have any reason to doubt him, I want to
hear about it." "All right. That seems fair."
He
tipped his head toward her. "For example, you can tell me why you lied to
him."
Kahlan
frowned. "What do you mean.'"
"About
your headache being gone. I could see that he didn't make it any better. Why
did you tell him that it was gone?" Kahlan cupped a hand to the side of
his face.
"I'd
like you to have a brother you could be proud of, Richard, but I want it to be
real. I guess what you said about coincidence has made me wary, that's all."
"Anything other than simply what I said, about coincidence?"
"No. I hope he can bring a little brotherly love to your heart. I pray
that it is nothing more than simple coincidence." "Me, too." She
gave his arm an affectionate squeeze. "I know he has the women on the
staff all aflutter. I suspect he will soon be breaking hearts, what with all
the swooning looks I've seen.
"I
promise to let you know if he gives me reason to suspect something amiss."
"Thanks."
He
didn't smile at what she said about the women all liking Drefan. Richard had
never displayed any jealousy, he didn't have reason to, even if she hadn't been
a Confessor, but still, there was a painful history with Michael that she
realized could make reason less than relevant. She wished she hadn't mentioned
it.
He ran
his fingers back into her hair, holding the sides of her head as he kissed her.
She pulled back.
"Why
did you take Nadine with you this afternoon?" "Who?"
He
leaned toward her again. She pulled back. "Nadine. Remember her? The woman
in the tight dress?" "Oh, that Nadine."
She
poked his ribs. "So, you noticed her dress."
His
brow drew together. "Did you think there was something different about it,
today?"
"Oh
yes, there was something different about it. So, why did you take her with
you?"
"Because
she's a healer. She's not an evil person-she has good qualities. I thought that
as long as she was going to be here, she might as well make herself useful. I
thought that that might make her feel better about herself. I had her check that
the men were making the quench Oak tea properly, that it was strong enough. She
seemed happy to help."
Kahlan
remembered Nadine's smile when Richard had asked her to go with him. She had
been happy, all right, but not simply to help. The smile was for Richard, as
was the dress.
"So,"
Richard said, "you think Drefan is handsome, as all the other women
do?"
She
thought his trousers were too tight. She pulled Richard into a kiss, hoping he
wouldn't notice her face flushing and misunderstand the reason for it.
"Who?" she breathed dreamily.
"Drefan.
Remember him? The man in the tight pants?"
"Sorry,
I don't remember him," she said as she kissed his neck, and she nearly
didn't. She ached for Richard and nothing else.
There
was no room in her mind for Drefan. Almost the only thing in her thoughts was
the time she had been with Richard in that strange place between worlds where
they had been together, truly together, as never before or since. She wanted
him that way again. She wanted him that way now.
With the
way his hands were slipping down her back, and the urgency of his lips on her
neck, she knew he wanted her the same way, and just as badly.
But she
also knew that Richard didn't want to even appear to be like his father. He
didn't want anyone to think she was no more than Darken Rahl's women had been:
an amusement for the Master of D'Hara. That was why he always let the women on
the staff so easily keep him a bay; despite his frustrated objections, he never
overruled them when they shooed him away.
The
three Mord-Sith, too, always seemed to be protecting Kahlan from being seen as
less than the true betrothed to the Master of D'Hara. Whenever she and Richard
thought to go to his room at night, even just to talk, either Cara, or Berdine,
or Raina was always there, asking some pointed question that seemed to keep
them apart. When Richard scowled, they reminded him that he had instructed them
to protect the Mother Confessor: he never countermanded the orders.
Today,
the three Mord-Sith were scrupulously following his orders, and when he had
told Cara and Raina to guard him from around the corner and down the hall, they
had remained there without objection.
With
their wedding so soon. Kahlan and Richard had decided to wait, even though they
had already been together once. That time seemed somehow unreal- in a place
between worlds, in a place with no heat, no cold, no source of light, no
ground, and yet they could see. and they had lain in dark space firm enough to
support them.
More
than anything, she remembered the feel of him. They had been the source of all
heat. all light, all feeling, in that 'strange place between worlds where the
good spirits had taken them.
She was
feeling that heat. now, as she ran her hands over the muscles of his chest and
stomach. She could hardly get her breath with the feel of his lips on her. She
wanted his mouth everywhere on her. She wanted hers everywhere on him. She
wanted him on the other side of her door.
"Richard,"
she whispered in his ear, "please, stay with me tonight." His hands
were making her lose all sense of restraint. "Kahlan, I thought . .
."
"Please.
Richard. I want you in my bed. I want you in me." He moaned helplessly at
her words, and at her hands. "I hope I'm not interrupting," came a
voice.
Richard
jerked up straight. Kahlan spun around. With the thick carpets, they hadn't
heard Nadine's silent approach. "Nadine," Kahlan said, catching her
breath. "What . . . ?" Kahlan self-consciously clasped her hands
behind her back, wondering if Nadine had seen where they had just been. She had
to have seen where Richard's had been. Kahlan felt her face going red.
Nadine's
cool gaze moved from Richard to Kahlan. "I didn't mean to interrupt. I
just came to change your poultice. And to apologize."
"Apologize?" Kahlan asked, still gulping air.
"Yes.
I said some things to you earlier, and I guess I was a bit . . . out of sorts
at the time. I thought I may have said some things I shouldn't have. I thought
I should apologize."
"That's
all right." Kahlan said. "I understand how you felt at the
time." Nadine lifted her bag and her eyebrow:;. "The poultice?"
"My arm is fine for tonight. You could change the poultice for me
tomorrow, though." Kahlan sought to fill the dragging silence.
"Drefan did some of his healing on it earlier . . . so it's fine for
tonight." "Sure." She lowered her bag. "You two off to bed.
then?" "Nadine," Richard said in a restrained tone, "thanks
for checking on Kahlan. Good night."
Nadine
regarded him with a cold glower. "Don't even plan to get married first?
Just going to throw her down on the bed and lay claim to her, like some girl
you come across in the woods? Seems a bit crude for the high and mighty Lord
Rahl. And here you were pretending you were better than us common folk."
She
glanced down at Richard and then turned her glare on Kahlan. "Like I said
before, he wants what he's shown. Shota told me about you. I guess you know
about what pushes men off the fence, too. It seems you would do anything to
have him, after all. Like I said before, you're no better than me." Bag in
hand, she turned and marched off down the hall. Kahlan and Richard stood in the
uncomfortable silence, watching the empty hall. "Out of the mouths of
whores," Kahlan said.
Richard
wiped his hands back across his face. "Maybe she has a point."
"Maybe she does," Kahlan admitted reluctantly. "Well, good
night. Sleep well."
"You,
too. I'll be thinking about you in that little guest room you use." He
bent and kissed her cheek. "Not going to bed right off." "Where
are you going?"
"Oh,
I thought I'd go dunk myself in a horse trough."
She
caught him by the wide, leather-padded band around his wrist. "Richard, I
don't know if I can stand this much longer. Are we ever going to get married
before something else happens?"
"We'll
go wake the sliph just as soon as we make sure everything here is in order. I
promise. Dear spirits, I promise." "What things?"
"Just
as soon as we know that the men are getting better, and I'm satisfied about a
few other things. I want to make sure that Jagang can't make good on his
threats. A couple of days and the men should be better. A couple days. I
promise."
She
held one of his fingers in each of' her hands as she stared longingly into his
gray eyes. "I love you," she whispered. "In a few days, or after
an eternity. I'm yours. Words spoken over us or not, I'm forever yours."
"We
are already one, in our hearts. The good spirits know the truth of that. They
want us to be together, they've already proven it, and will watch over us.
Don't worry, we'll have the words said over us."
He
started away, but turned back win a haunted look in his eyes. "I only wish
Zedd could be there when we're married. Dear spirits, I wish he could. And that
he was here to help me, now."
When he
looked back from the comer at the end of the hall, Kahlan threw him a kiss. She
shuffled into her empty, lonely rooms and threw herself on her big bed. She
thought about what Nadine said: "Shota told me about you." Kahlan
wept in frustration.
"So,
you're not going to be sleeping ... up here, tonight," Cara said when he
walked past.
"And
what would make you think I was?" Richard asked. Cara shrugged. "You
made us wait around the corner." "Maybe I just wanted to kiss Kahlan
good night without you two passing judgment on my skill."
Cara and
Raina both smiled, the first he had seen from them all day. "I have
already seen you kiss the Mother Confessor," Cara said. "You appear
quite talented at it. It always leaves her breathless and wanting more."
Even though he didn't feel like smiling, he did anyway because he was glad to
see them smiling. "That doesn't mean I'm talented, it just means she loves
me."
"I've
been kissed," Cara said, "and I've seen you kiss. I believe I can say
with some authority that you are talented at the task. We watched you from
around the corner tonight."
Richard
tried to look indignant as he felt his face going red. "I gave you orders
to stay down here."
"It
is our responsibility to watch over you. To do that, we can't let you out of
our sight. We can't follow such orders."
Richard
shook his head. He couldn't be; angry over the violation of orders. How could
he, when they were risking his anger to protect him? They hadn't endangered
Kahlan in doing so. "What do you two think of Drefan?"
"He
is your brother. Lord Rahl," Raina said. "The resemblance is
obvious." "I know the resemblance is obvious. I mean, what do you
think of him." "We don't know him. Lord Rahl," Raina said.
"I
don't know him, either. Look, I'm not going to be angry if you tell me you
don't like him. In fact. I'd really like to know if you don't. What about you,
Cara? What do you think of him?"
She
shrugged. "I've never kissed either of you, but from what I have seen, I
would rather kiss you."
Richard
put his hands on his hips. "What does that mean?" "I was hurt,
yesterday, and he helped me. But I don't like the fact that master Drefan came
now, when Marlin and Nadine came."
Richard
sighed. "My thoughts, too. I ask people not to judge me because of who my
father was, and I find myself doing that with him. I'd really like to trust
him. Please, both of you, if you have any reason for concern, don't be afraid
to come and tell me."
"Well,"
Cara said, "I don't like his hands." "What do you mean?"
"He
has hands like Darken Rahl. I have already seen them caressing fawning women.
Darken Rahl did that, too."
Richard
threw his hands up. "When did he have time to do that? He was with me most
of the day!"
"He
found the time, when you were talking to soldiers and when you were out
checking on the men with Nadine. It didn't take him long. The women found him.
I have never seen so many women batting their lashes at a man. You have to
admit, he is fine to look upon."
Richard
didn't see what was so especially fine about his looks. "Have any of these
women not been willing?"
Her
answer was a long moment in coming. "No, Lord Rahl." "Well, I
guess I've seen other men who acted like that. Some of them have been my
friends. They liked women, and women liked them. As long as the women are
willing, I can't see that it's any of my business. I'm more concerned about
other things." "Like what?" "I wish I knew."
"If
you learn that he is here innocently, and only means to help, as he says, then
you can be proud of him. Lord Rahl. Your brother is an important man."
"He is? How important is he?" "Your brother is the leader of his
sect of healers."
"He
is? He never told me that."
''No
doubt he did not wish to vaunt himself. Humility before the Lord Rahl is the
way of D'Harans, and one of the tenets of that ancient sect of healers."
"I suppose. So he leads these healers?" "Yes." Cara said.
"He is the High Priest of the Raug'Moss." "The what?"
Richard whispered. "What did you call them?" "The Raug'Moss,
Lord Rahl." "Do you know the meaning of the words?"
Cara
shrugged. "Just that it means 'healers,' that's all. Does it have some
meaning to you. Lord Rahl?" "Where's Berdine?" "In her bed,
I would suppose."
Richard
started down the hall, calling orders back to them as he went. "Cara, post
a guard for the night around Kahlan's room. Raina, go wake Berdine and ask her
to meet me in my office." "Now, Lord Rahl?" Raina asked. 'This
late?" "Yes, please."
Richard
took the steps two at a time on the way to his office where waited the journal,
Kolo's journal, written in High D'Haran. In High D'Haran, Raug'Moss meant
"Divine Wind."
Both
Shota's warning to Nadine for Richard, "the wind hunts him," and the
words from the prophecy down in the pit, "he must seek the remedy in the
wind," spun through his mind.
CHAPTER������������ 19
This
time," Ann warned, "you had better let me do the talking.
Understand?"
Her
eyebrows drew so tight together Zedd thought they might touch. She leaned close
enough that he could smell the lingering aroma of sausage on her breath. With a
fingernail she tapped his collar-another warning, albeit a wordless one.
Zedd
blinked innocently. "If it would please you. by all means, but my tales
always have your best interest, and our purpose, at heart." "Oh, of
course, and your clever wit is always a delight, too." Zedd felt that her
affected smile was overdoing it; the sardonic praise would have been quite
enough. There were accepted customs to such things. The woman really did need
to learn where the line was.
Zedd's
gaze again focused beyond her, to the problem at hand. He passed a critical eye
over the inn's dimly lit door. It was across the street and at the end of a
narrow, board walk. Above the alleyway that ran between two warehouses hung a
small sign: "Jester's Inn."
Zedd
didn't know the name of the large town they had come to in the dark, but he did
know that he would have preferred to pass it by. He had seen several inns in
the town; this wasn't the one he would have chosen, had he a choice.
Jester's
Inn looked as if it had either been an afterthought meant to use available
space in the back, or else its proprietors wanted to shelter it from the
scrutiny of honest people and the critical eye of authority. From the customers
Zedd had already seen, he was leaning in the direction of the second guess.
Most of the men looked to be mercenaries or highwaymen. "I don't like
it," he muttered to himself.
"You
don't like anything." Ann snapped. "You're the most disagreeable man
I've ever met."
Zedd's
eyebrows went up in true surprise. "Why would you say that? I've been told
that I'm a most pleasant traveling companion. Do we have any of that sausage
left?"
Ann
rolled her eyes. "No. What is it you don't like this time?" Zedd
watched a man look both ways before going to the door at the back of the dark
alleyway. "Why would Nathan go in there?"
Ann
looked over her shoulder, across the deserted street of rutted, frozen slush.
She fingered a stray wisp of graying hair into the loose knot tied at the back
of her head.
"To
get a hot meal and some sleep." She scowled back at Zedd. "That is,
if he's even in there."
"I've
shown you how to sense the thread of magic I used to hook the tracer cloud to
him. You've felt it, felt him."
"True
enough," Ann admitted. ''Yet now that we finally catch him, and know that
he's in there, you suddenly don't like it." 'That's right," he said
distantly. ' I don't like it."
The
scowl on Ann's face lost its heat and turned serious. "What is it that
bothers you?"
"Look
at the sign. After the name.' A pair of woman's legs pointed up in the shape of
a V. She turned back and peered at him is if he were daft. "Zedd, the man
has been locked up in the Palace of the Prophets for almost a thousand
years."
"You
just said it: he's been locked up." Zedd tapped the collar, called a
Rada'Han, around his own neck, the collar she had put on him to capture him and
make him do her bidding. "Nathan is not inclined to be locked up in a
collar again. It probably took him hundreds of years of planning, and the right
turn of events, to get out of his collar and to escape. I dread to consider how
that man may have influenced or even directly altered events through prophecy
to bring to pass the turn of fate that allowed him the opportunity to get off
his collar.
"Now
you expect me to believe he would go in there just to be with a woman? When he
has to know you're chasing after him?"
Ann
stared in stunned disbelief, "Zedd, are you saying that you think Nathan
may have influenced events-prophecies-just to get his collar off?"
Zedd
looked across the road and shook his head. "I'm just saying I don't like
it."
"He
probably wanted what's in there enough that it distracted him from worrying
about me. He simply wanted some female companionship, and ignored the dangers
of being caught."
"You
have known Nathan for over nine centuries. I've only known him a short
time." He leaned down closer to her and lifted an eyebrow. "But even
I know better than that. Nathan is anything but stupid. He is a wizard of
remarkable talent. You make a serious mistake if you underestimate him."
She
watched his eyes a moment. ' 'You're right; it may be a trap. Nathan wouldn't
kill me to escape, but beyond that . . . You may be right." Zedd
harrumphed.
"Zedd,"
Ann said, after a long, uncomfortable silence, "this business with Nathan
is important. He must be caught. He's helped me in the past when we have
discovered danger in the prophecies, but he is still a prophet. Prophets are
dangerous. Not because they deliberately wish to cause trouble, but because of
the nature of prophecy."
"You
don't need to convince me of that. I know well the dangers of prophecy."
"We have always kept prophets confined at the Palace of the Prophets
because of the potential for catastrophe should they roam free. A prophet who
wanted mischief could have it. Even a prophet who doesn't wish mischief is
dangerous, not only to others but to himself; people usually extract vengeance
on the bringer of truth, as if knowing the truth is its cause. Prophecy is not
meant to be heard by untrained minds, those having no understanding of magic,
much less prophecy. "One time, as we sometimes did at his request, we let
a woman visit Nathan." Zedd frowned at her. "You took prostitutes to
him?"
Ann
shrugged self-consciously. "We knew the loneliness of his confinement. It
wasn't the most desirable solution, but yes, we brought him companionship from
lime to time. We weren't heartless."
"How
magnanimous of you."
Ann
glanced away from his eyes. "We did what we had to, by locking him in the
palace, but we felt sorrow for him. It wasn't his choice to be born with the
gift of prophecy.
"We
always warned him not to tell the women any prophecy, but one time he did. The
woman ran screaming from the palace. We never knew how she escaped before we
could stop her.
"She
spread word of the prophecy before we could find her. It started a civil war.
Thousands died. Women and children died.
"Nathan
sometimes seems crazy, out of his senses. Sometimes he seems to me to be the
most dangerously unbalanced person I've ever known. Nathan views the world not
only by what he sees around him, but through the filter of prophecy that visits
his mind.
"When
I confronted him, he professed not to remember the prophecy, or having told the
young woman anything. I only found out much later, when I was able to link
several prophecies, that one of the children who died was a boy named in
prophecy as one who would go on to rule through torture and murder. Untold tens
of thousands would have died had that boy lived and grown into a man, but
Nathan had choked off that dangerous fork in prophecy. I have no idea how much
that man knows but won't disclose.
"A
prophet has the potential to just as easily cause great harm. A prophet who
wished power would have a fair chance of ruling the world." Zedd was still
watching the door. "So you lock them away." "Yes."
Zedd
picked at a thread on his maroon robes. He looked down at her squat form in the
dim light. "Ann, I am First Wizard. If I didn't understand, I wouldn't be
helping you." "Thank you," she whispered.
Zedd
considered their options. There weren't many. "What you are saying, if I
understand you, is that you don't know if Nathan is sane, but even if he is, he
has the potential to be dangerous."
"I
guess so. But Nathan has often helped me to spare people suffering. Hundreds of
years ago, he warned me about Darken Rahl, and told me of a prophecy that a war
wizard would be born-that Richard would be born. We worked together to see to
it that Richard would be safe from interference as he grew, so that you would
have the time to help raise your grandson into the kind of man who would use
his ability to help people."
"For
that, you have my gratitude," Zedd offered. "But you put this collar
around my neck, and I don't like that one bit."
"I
understand. It's not something I liked doing, nor am I proud of what I did.
Sometimes, desperate need calls for desperate acts. The good spirits will have
the final say on my actions.
"The
sooner we get Nathan, the sooner I will take the Rada'Han from your neck. I
don't enjoy holding you prisoner by that collar and making you help me, but in
view of the dire consequences should I fail to get Nathan. I do as I feel I
must."
Zedd
aimed a thumb over his shoulder. "I also don't like that." Ann didn't
look; she knew what he was pointing at. "What does a red moon have to do
with Nathan? It's most peculiar, but what does one have to do with the
other?"
"I'm
not saying it has anything to do with Nathan. I just don't like it." With
the thick clouds of the last few days, they had been slowed at night, both by the
darkness and also by the difficulty of seeing the tracer cloud he had hooked to
Nathan. Fortunately, they had been close enough to sense the link of magic
without having to see the tracer cloud; the tracer cloud was only used to get
its tracker close enough to sense the link.
Zedd
knew they were very near to Nathan-within a few hundred feet. This close to the
object of the trace, the link's magic distorted Zedd's senses, his ability to
judge with the aid of his magic, his capacity to access his familiar ability
with his gift. This close, his magic was like a bloodhound on scent, so
concentrated on the object of its search that it disregarded anything else but
the trail. It was an uncomfortable form of blindness, and another reason for
his unease.
He could
break the link, but that was risky before they actually had Nathan; once
broken, it couldn't be reestablished without physical contact.
The
snow flurries of the last few days had slowed them and made the going cold and
miserable. Earlier in the day the clouds had at last cleared away, even if they
had left behind the bitter wind to vex them. They had been looking forward to
the moonrise, and the light it would provide as they closed in on Nathan.
They
had both watched in stunned silence when the moon had risen: It had risen red.
At
first, they thought that it might be a lingering haze that was causing it, but
with the moon well overhead, Zedd knew it was not being caused by some innocent
atmospheric event. Worse, with the recent cloud cover, he didn't know how long
it had been since the moon had turned rid.
"Zedd,"
Ann finally asked into the breeding silence, "do you know what it
means?"
Zedd
looked away, pretending to scan the shadows. "Do you? You've lived a lot
longer than I. You must know something about such a sign."
He
could hear her fussing with her wool cloak. "You are a Wizard of the First
Order. I would defer to your expertise in such matters." "You all of
a sudden think my judgment worthwhile?" "Zedd, let's not joust with
words about this. I know that such a sign is without precedent in my
experience, but I do recall a reference to a red moon in an ancient text, a
text from the great war. The book didn't say what it meant, only that it
brought great alarm. ''
Zedd
squatted in the shadow of the comer of the building they hid behind. He leaned
his back against the clapboards and held a hand out in invitation. Ann sat
beside him, deeper in the shadow
"In
the Wizard's Keep there are dozers of libraries, huge libraries, most at least
as large as the vault of books at the Palace of the Prophets, many a great deal
larger. There are also many books of prophecy there."
There
were books of prophecy at the Keep that were considered so dangerous that they
were kept locked behind the powerful shields protecting the First Wizard's
private enclave. Not even the old wizards who had lived at the Keep when Zedd
was young were allowed to read those prophecies. Even though he had access to
them after he became First Wizard, Zedd had not read nearly all of them; the
ones he had read left him in sleepless sweats.
"Dear
spirits," he went on. "there an; so many books at the Keep that I've
not even read all the titles. There used to be staffs of curators for each
library. Each knew the books in his section of the stacks. Long ago, well
before my time, these curators were gathered when an answer was sought. Each
knew his own books and could speak up if his particular books held information
on the subject in question. In this way it was a relatively simple task to locate
the reference volumes or prophecies that might help with the problem at hand.
"When
I was very young, there were only two wizards left acting as curators. Two men
could not begin to tap the knowledge held there. A plethora of information is
held in those books, but finding a specific bit of it is a formidable
challenge. The guidance of the gift is needed to even begin to narrow the
search.
"Needing
information from the libraries is like being adrift in the ocean and needing a
drink of water. Information is in overabundance, yet you can die of thirst for
it before you can locate it. When I was young, I was guided as to what were the
more important books of history, magic, and prophecy. I mostly confined my
studies to those books."
"What
about the red moon?" Ann asked. "What did the books you read say of
it?"
"I
only recall once reading about a red moon. What I read wasn't very explicit,
mentioning it only obliquely. I wish I had thought to inquire into the subject
further, but I didn't. There were other matters in the books that were of
greater importance at the time and demanded my attention-matters that were
real, and not hypothetical." "What did this book say?"
"If
I recall correctly, and I'm not saying that I do, it said something about a
breach between worlds. It said that in the event of such a breach, the warning
would be three nights of a red moon."
"Three
nights. For all we know, with the clouds we've had, we could already have had
our three nights. What if there were clouds all the time? The warning would be
missed."
Zedd
squinted in concentration as he tried to recall what he had read. "No . .
. no, it said that the one to whom the warning was directed would see all three
nights of the warning-all three nights of the red moon."
"What
exactly is meant by such a warning? What kind of breach could there be between
worlds?''
"I
wish I knew." Zedd thumped his head of wavy white hair back against the
wall. "When the boxes of Orden were opened by Darken Rahl, and the Stone
of Tears came into this world from another, and the Keeper of the underworld
was near to coming into our world through the breach, there was never a red
moon."
"Then,
maybe the red moon doesn't mean that there is a breach. Perhaps you recall it
wrongly."
"Perhaps.
What I recall most vividly are my thoughts at the time. I remember picturing a
red moon in my mind, and telling myself to remember such an image, and that if
I ever saw it for real, I must remember that it was grave trouble, and I must
at once search out the meaning of the sign."
Ann
touched his arm, an act of compassion she had never done before. "Zedd, we
almost have Nathan. We'll have him tonight. When we do, I'll take the Rada'Han
from your neck so that you can hurry to Aydindril and see to this matter. In
fact, as soon as we have Nathan, we will all go. Nathan will understand the
seriousness of this, and will help. We'll go to Aydindril with you and
help."
Although
Zedd didn't like that this woman had insisted he come with her to capture
Nathan, he had come to understand how afraid she was of what could happen with
Nathan free, and that she needed his help. At times he had difficulty
maintaining his indignation. He knew how desperate she was to keep the
prophecies from being loosed along with Nathan.
Zedd
knew how dangerous it could he if people were exposed to raw prophecy. He had
been lectured since he was a boy on the dangers of prophecy, even for a wizard.
"Sounds
like a worthwhile bargain to me; I help you get Nathan back, and you two help
me find the meaning of the red moon."
"A
bargain, then-we work together willingly. I must admit, it will be a pleasant
change of affairs."
"Is
that so?" Zedd asked. "Then why don't you take this collar off
me?" "I will. Just as soon as we have Nathan." "Nathan
means more to you than you have admitted."
She was
silent a moment. "He does. We have worked together for centuries. He can
be trouble on two legs, but somewhere in all that bluster, Nathan has a noble
heart." Her voice lowered as she turned her head away. Zedd thought she
wiped a hand at her eyes. "I care greatly for that incorrigible, wonderful
man." Zedd peeked around the corner at the inn's silent door.
"I
still don't like it," he whispered. "Something about this is wrong. I
wish I knew what it was."
"So,"
she finally asked, "what are we going to do about Nathan?" "I
thought you wanted to do the talking."
"Well,
I guess you have convinced me that we should be careful. What do you think we
should do?"
"I'll
go in there alone and ask for a room. You wait outside. If I find him before he
leaves, I'll surprise him and put him down. If he comes out before I find him,
or if something . . . goes wrong, you seize him."
"Zedd,
Nathan is a wizard; I'm only a sorceress. If he had his Rada'Han around his
neck I could easily control him, but he is without it."
Zedd
mulled it over for a moment. They couldn't take a chance on his getting away.
Beyond that, Ann could be hurt. They would have a difficult time of finding
Nathan again; once he knew they were onto him, he might figure out the tracer
cloud and possibly unhook it. That was not likely, though.
"You're
right," he said at last. "I'll cast a web outside the door, so that
if he comes out it will hobble him, and then you can snap that infernal collar
around his neck."
"That
sounds a good idea. What sort of web will you use?" "As you've said
yourself, we can't fail." He studied her eyes in the dim light.
"Bags! I can't believe I'm actually doing this," he muttered.
"Give me the collar for a moment."
Ann
searched under her cloak for the pouch at her waist. When her hand came out,
the light of the red moon glinted dully off the Rada'Han. "This is the
same one he wore?" Zedd asked. "For almost a thousand years."
Zedd
grunted. He took the collar in his hands and let his magic flow into the cold
object of subjugation, let it mingle with the magic of the collar. He could
feel he warm hum of the Additive Magic the collar possessed, and he could feel
the icy tingle of its Subtractive Magic.
He
handed back the collar. "I've keyed the spell to his Rada'Han."
"What spell are you going to weave" she asked in a suspicious tone.
He considered the resolve in her eyes. "A light spell. If he comes out
without me . . . You will have twenty of his heartbeats to get that around his
neck, or the light web will ignite."
If she
didn't get the collar around his neck in time to extinguish the spell, Nathan
would be consumed by it. Without the collar, there would be no escape for
Nathan from such a spell. With it, he would escape the spell but then there
would be no escape from her. A double bind. At that moment, Zedd didn't much
like himself.
Ann
took a deep breath. "Someone else coming out won't trigger it, will
they?" Zedd shook his head. "I will link it to the tracer cloud. The
spell will recognize him and only him by that and that alone."
His
voice lowered in warning. "If you don't get it around him in time, and it
ignites, then others beside Nathan will be hurt or killed if they're close
enough. If you can't get that around his neck for any reason, then you make
sure you get away in time. He may prefer death over having that around his neck
again.
CHAPTER
20
As he
ambled in, surveying the gloomy room, Zedd realized that his heavy maroon robes
with black sleeves and cowled shoulders were out of place. The mellow lamplight
showed off the three rows of silver brocade at each cuff, and the thicker gold
brocade running around the neck and down the front. A red satin belt set with a
gold buckle cinched the waist of the rich robes.
Zedd
missed his simple robes, but they were long gone-at Adie's insistence. The old
sorceress had chosen his new disguise; for powerful wizards, simple
accoutrements were the equivalent of military dress. Zedd suspected she just
didn't like his old robes, and preferred him in this
He
missed Adie, and felt sorrow for the heartache she must feel at believing him
dead. Nearly everyone thought he was dead. When they had time, maybe he would
have Ann write a message in her journey book, letting Adie know he was alive.
He felt
the most sorrow, though, for Richard. Richard needed him. Richard had the gift,
and without proper instruction he was as helpless as an eaglet fallen from the
nest. At least Richard had the Sword of Truth to help protect him, for now.
Zedd intended to go to Richard just as soon as they had Nathan. It wouldn't be
long, and then he could hurry on his way to Richard.
The
innkeeper eyed Zedd's flashy outfit, his gaze snagging on the gold belt buckle.
A collection of scraggy patrons dressed in furs, tattered leather, and ragged
wool watched from a few booths at the wall to the right. The two plank tables
sat empty on the straw-covered floor, waiting for diners, or drinkers.
"Rooms
are a silver," the innkeeper said in a disinterested tone. "If you'd
like company, it's an extra silver."
"It
would appear that my choice of outfits has turned out to be rather
costly," Zedd observed.
The
burly innkeeper smiled with one side of his mouth as he held out a meaty hand,
palm up. "The price is the price. You want a room, or not?" Zedd
dropped a single silver in the man's hand.
"Third
door on the left." He nodded his head of curly brown hair toward the hall
in the back. "Interested in company, old man?"
"You'd
have to share it with the lady who called. I was thinking you might be
interested in a bit more profit. A considerable bit more."
The
man's brow twitched with curiosity as he closed his fist around the silver
coin. "Meaning?"
"Well,
I heard a dear old friend of mine has been known to stop here. I've not seen
him in quite a while. If he were here, tonight, and you could direct me to his
room. I'd be so overwhelmed with joy and happiness to see him again that I'd
foolishly part with a gold piece. A full gold piece."
The man
looked him up and down again. "This friend of yours have a name?"
"Well,"
Zedd said in a low voice, "like many of your other patrons, he has a
problem with names-he can't seem to remember them for very long, and has to
keep thinking up new ones. But I can tell you that he's tall, older, and with
white hair down to his broad shoulders."
The man
stroked his tongue across the inside of his cheek. "He's . . . busy at the
moment."
Zedd
produced the gold piece, but pulled it back when the innkeeper reached for it.
"So you say. I'd like to decide for myself just how busy he is."
"Then it's another silver."
Zedd
forced himself to keep his voice down. "For what?" "For the
lady's time and company." "I've no intention of availing myself of
your lady."
"So
you say. When you see her with him, you might have a change of mood, and decide
to try to rekindle your . . . youth. It's my policy to collect the money first.
If she tells me you gave her no more than a smile, then you can have the silver
back."
Zedd
knew there was no chance of that. It would be his word against hers, and her
word would carry the sweet ring of extra profit, if not the truth. But in the
scheme of things, the price was of no consequence, no matter how much it irked
him. Zedd dug into an inner pocket and handed over the silver coin.
"Last
room on the right," the innkeeper said as he turned away. He turned back
to Zedd. "And we have a guest in the next room who doesn't want to be
disturbed." "I won't bother your guests."
He gave
Zedd a cunning grin. "Plain as she is, I offered her a little
companionship-no extra charge-and she told me that if anyone disturbed her
rest, she'd skin me alive. A woman with enough brass to come in here alone, I
believe her. I'm not giving her her silver piece back if you wake her. I'll
take it out of your hide. Understand?"
Zedd
nodded absently as he gave brief consideration to asking for a meal-he was
hungry-but reluctantly dismissed the thought.
"Would
you happen to have a back door, in case I . . . need some night air?" Zedd
didn't want Nathan slipping out the wrong door. "I'd understand if it cost
extra."
"We're
backed up to the blacksmith's shop," the innkeeper said as he walked away.
"There's no other door."
Last
room on the right. Only one way in. One way out. Something about this was
wrong. Nathan wouldn't be so foolish. Yet Zedd could feel the air crackling
with the magic of his link.
As
dubious as he was that Nathan would be so conveniently bedded down for them, he
moved silently down the dark hall. He listened intently for anything out of the
ordinary, but heard only the well-practiced, feigned sounds of passion from a
woman in the second room to the left.
The end
of the hall was lit by a single candle on a wooden bracket to the side. From
the next to last room Zedd could hear the soft snores of the brassy lady who
didn't want to be disturbed. He hoped it wouldn't come to that, and that she
would sleep through the whole thing. Zedd put his ear close to the last door on
the right. He heard soft, throaty laughter from a woman. If this went wrong, she
might be hurt. If it went very wrong, she might be killed.
He
could wait, but having Nathan distracted would certainly be convenient. The man
was a wizard, after all. Zedd didn't know how strongly Nathan felt about being
captured.
Zedd
knew how he would feel about it. That decided him. He couldn't afford not to
take the opportunity of the distraction.
Zedd
threw open the door, casting a hand out, igniting the air with silent,
confusing flashes of heat and light.
The
naked couple on the bed cringed away, covering their eyes. With a fist of air,
Zedd threw Nathan off the woman and over the far side of the bed. With Nathan
grunting and flailing at the air, Zedd seized the woman's wrist and threw her
back out of the way. She snatched a sheet with her.
As the
flashes of light sparked out, and before she was even able to throw the sheet
around herself, Zedd loosed a web, paralyzing her where she stood. Almost
simultaneously, he cast a similar web at the man behind the bed, except this
web was laced with serious consequences should he try to fend it off with magic
of his own. This was no time to be polite, or indulgent.
With
hardly a sound, other than a bit of thumping onto the floor, the gloomy room
was suddenly silent. Only a single candle on a washstand flickered weakly. Zedd
was relieved it had gone so well, and he hadn't had to hurt the woman.
He
rounded the bottom of the bed to see the man on the floor, frozen in place, his
mouth opened in the beginning of a scream, his hands clawed to defend himself.
It wasn't Nathan.
Zedd
stared in disbelief. He could feel the magic of the hook in the room. He knew
this was who he had been chasing.
He
leaned over the man. "I know you can hear me, so listen carefully. I'm
going to release the magic holding you, but if you cry out I will put it back
on and leave you like that forever. Think carefully before you dare to call for
help. As you may have already surmised, I'm a wizard, and anyone who comes will
not be able to do anything to save you, should you displease me."
Zedd
passed his hand before the man pulling back the veil of the web. The man
scooted back to the wall, but he remained silent. He was older, but not as old
as Nathan appeared. His hair was white, but wavy, rather than Nathan's straight
hair. It wasn't as long, either, but the short description Zedd had given the
innkeeper would have been close enough for him to think this was the man Zedd
sought. "Who are you?" Zedd asked. "William's my name. You'd be
Zedd." Zedd straightened. "How do you know that?"
"The
fellow you'd be looking for told me." He gestured toward the nearby chair.
"Mind if I pull on my trousers? I have a feeling I'll not be needing them
off anymore tonight."
Zedd
tilted his head toward the chair, signaling for William to go ahead. "Talk
while you do it. And keep in mind what I told you about my being a wizard. I
know when a man is telling me a lie. Keep in mind, too, that I'm suddenly in a
very foul mood."
Zedd
wasn't exactly telling the truth about being able to detect a lie, but he reasoned
that the man didn't know that. He was, however, telling the truth about his
mood.
"I
ran into the man you were chasing. He didn't tell me his name. He offered me
..." William glanced to the woman as he pulled the trousers up. "Can
she hear this?"
"Don't
you worry about her. Worry abut me." Zedd gritted his teeth.
"Talk." "Well, he offered me ..." He peered at the woman.
Her wrinkled face was frozen in a startled expression. "He offered me a .
. . purse, if I'd do him a favor." "What favor?"
"Taking
his place. He told me to ride like the Keeper himself was after me until I got
at least this far. He said that when I got here, I could slow, rest, or stop,
whatever my choice. He told me that you'd be catching up with me."
"And he wanted that?"
William
buttoned his trousers, plopped back into the chair, and started pulling on his
boots. "He said I wouldn't be able to lose you, that sooner or later you'd
catch up with me, but he didn't want that to happen until at least after I
arrived here. Fast as I was moving, I must admit that I didn't think you'd be
so close on my heels, so I thought to enjoy some of my profits."
William
stood and stuffed an arm into his brown wool shirt. "He told me that I was
to give you a message." "Message? What message?"
William
tucked in his shirt and then reached into a trouser pocket and pulled out a
leather purse. It looked to be heavy with coins. William fingered open the
purse. "It's in here, with what he gave me." Zedd snatched the purse
from the man. "I'll take a look." The purse held mostly gold coins,
with a few silver. Zedd felt one of the gold coins between a finger and thumb.
He could feel the slight after-tingle of magic. The coins had probably started
out as Coppers, and Nathan had changed them to gold with magic.
Zedd
had been hoping that Nathan didn't know how to do that. Changing things to gold
was dangerous magic. Zedd only did it himself if there was no other choice.
Inside
the purse, besides the coins, was a folded piece of paper. He pulled it out and
turned it over in his fingers, giving it a good look in the dim light, wary of
any form of magic snare that might be attached to it.
William
pointed. "That's what he gave me. He told me to give it to you when you
caught me."
"Anything
else? Did he tell you anything else, besides to give me this message?"
"Well, as we were parting, he paused and looked up at me. He said, 'Tell
Zedd it's not what he thinks.' "
Zedd
mulled this over for a moment. "Which way did he go?" "I don't
know. I was atop my horse, and he was still afoot. He told me to ride, then he
slapped my horse's rump and I rode."
Zedd
tossed the purse to William. While keeping a wary eye on the man, he unfolded
the paper. He squinted in the dim light of the single candle as he scanned the
message.
Sorry,
Ann, but I have important business. One of our Sisters is going to do something
very stupid. I must stop her, if I can. In case I die, I want you to know I
love you, but I guess you knew that. I could never say it as long as I was your
prisoner. Zedd. if the moon rises red, as I expect it to, then we are all in
mortal danger. If the moon rises red for three nights, it means Jagang has
invoked a bound fork prophecy. You must go to the Jocopo treasure. If you
instead waste precious time coming after me, we will all die, and the emperor
will have the spoils. The bound fork prophecy enforces a double bind on its
victim. Zedd, I am sorry', but the victim named is Richard. May the spirits
have mercy on his soul. If I knew the meaning of the prophecy, / would tell
you, but I don't-the spirits have denied me access to it. Ann, go with Zedd. He
will need your help. May the good spirits be with you both.
As Zedd
blinked, trying to clear his watery vision, he noticed a smudge. He turned the
message over and realized that the smudge was wax residue. The message had been
sealed, but in the poor light lie hadn't noticed before.
Zedd
looked up to see William's club. He flinched back, but felt the stunning pain
of a blow. The floor crashed against his shoulder. William pounced atop him,
holding a knife to his throat. "Where's this Jocopo treasure, old man!
Talk, or I'll slit your throat!" Zedd tried to hold on to his vision as he
felt the room spinning and tilling. Nausea gagged him. He was in an instant
sweat. William's eyes were wild above him. "Talk!"
The man
stabbed him in the upper arm. "Talk! Where's the treasure?" A hand
reached down and snatched William by the hair. It was a middle-aged woman in a
dark cloak. Zedd couldn't seem to make sense of who she was, or what she was
doing there. With surprising strength, the woman threw William back. He crashed
against the wall beside the open door and slumped to the floor.
She
sneered down at Zedd. "You have made a big mistake, old man, letting
Nathan get away. I suspected that following that old crone would net me the
prophet, so I've followed you two until I could sense your link with him. Yet
what do I find at the end of your magic hook but this fool here, instead of
Nathan? So, now I have to make things unpleasant for you. I want the
prophet."
She
turned and cast a hand out toward the naked woman frozen in place. The room
erupted with thunder as a midnight-black discharge of lightning arced from her
hand. The deathlike bolt of lightning sliced the woman and the sheet she held
cleanly in half. Blood splattered the wall. The top half of her toppled to the
floor like a statue cleaved in two. Her insides spilled across the floor as her
torso hit the ground, but her limbs remained frozen in the same pose. The woman
hovering above him turned back. Her eyes were molten rage. "If you would
like a taste of Subtractive Magic, one limb at a time, then just give me a
reason. Now, let me see the message."
Zedd
opened his hand to her. She reached out. He focused his mind through the dizziness.
Before she could snatch the paper, he ignited it. It went up in a bright yellow
flash.
With a
cry of fury, she spun to William. "What did it say, you little worm!"
William, until that instant rigid in panic, flung himself through the door and
bolted down the hall.
Her
stringy hair whipped around her face as she spun back to Zedd. "I'll be
back to get answers from you. You will confess everything before I kill
you."
As she
lunged for the door, Zedd felt an unfamiliar composition of magic ram through
his hasty shield. Pain erupted in his head.
Trying
to gather his senses, he fought through the grip of blinding agony. He wasn't
paralyzed, but he was unable to think of how to make himself get up. His arms
and legs battled the air as ineffectively as a turtle on its back. The searing
pain made it difficult to do much more than maintain consciousness.
He
pressed his hands against the sides of his head, feeling as if it was going to
come apart and he had to hold it together. He could hear himself gasping for
breath.
The
sudden thud of a concussion jolted the air and briefly lifted him clear of the
floor.
A
blinding flash lit the room as the roof tore open, the ripping roar of
splintering wood and snapping beams was nearly lost in a deafening boom of thunder.
The pain extinguished. The light web had ignited.
Dust
billowed through the air as smoking debris rained down around him. Zedd drew
into a ball and covered his head as boards and bits of rubble peppered him. It
sounded like being under a kettle in a hailstorm.
When
silence settled over the scene, Zedd finally took his hands from his head and
looked up. To his surprise, the building was still standing-after a fashion.
The roof was mostly gone, letting the wind pull the dust away into the dark
night above. The walls were holed like moth-eaten rags. Nearby lay the gory
remains of the woman.
Zedd
took assessment of himself, and was surprised to find he was in remarkably good
condition, considering. Blood was running down the side of his head from where
William had clubbed him. and his arm was throbbing where he had been stabbed,
but other than that, he seemed uninjured. Not a bad bargain, in view of what
could have been, he decided.
Moans
drifted in from outside. A woman screamed hysterically. Zedd could hear men
throwing wreckage aside, calling out names as they searched for the injured or
dead.
The
door, hanging crookedly from one hinge, suddenly exploded open as someone
kicked it in.
Zedd
sighed in relief as he saw a familiar, squat form rush in, her red face etched
with concern. "Zedd! Zedd, are you alive?" "Bags, woman, don't
you think I look alive?"
Ann
knelt beside him. "I think you look a mess. Your head is bleeding."
Zedd grunted in pain as she helped him sit up. "I can't tell you how glad I
am to see you alive. I feared you might have been too close to the light spell
when it ignited."
She
pawed through his blood-matted hair, inspecting the wound. "Zedd, that
wasn't Nathan. I almost snapped the collar around that man's neck when he ran
into the spell. Then Sister Roslyn came flying out the door. She threw herself
on him, screaming something at him about a message.
"Roslyn
is a Sister of the Dark. She didn't see me. My legs aren't what they used to
be. but I ran like a girl of twelve when I saw her trying to use Subtractive
Magic to undo the spell."
"I
guess it didn't work," Zedd muttered. "I guess she never encountered
a spell cast by a First Wizard. But I certainly didn't make it that big. Using
Subtractive Magic on the light spell expanded its power. It cost innocent
people their lives." "At least it cost that evil woman hers
too." "Ann, heal me, and then we have to help these people."
"Zedd, who was that man? Why did he set off the spell? Where is Nathan?"
Zedd held out his hand and opened his tightly closed fist. He let the warmth of
magic flow into the ashes in his hand. The powdery black residue began clumping
together as the inky ashes lightened to gray. When the charred ruins
reconstituted itself into the paper it had been, it finally returned to pale
brown. ' I've never seen anyone able to do such a thing," Ann whispered in
astonishment. "Be thankful that Sister Roslyn hadn't, either, or we would
be in even more trouble than we are. Being First Wizard has its advantages."
Ann
lifted the crumpled paper from his palm. Her lower lids brimmed with tears as
she read the message from Nathan. By the time she had finished, silent tears
were running down her round cheeks. "Dear Creator," she breathed at
last.
His own
eyes stung with tears. "Indeed," he whispered in response.
"Zedd, what is the Jocopo treasure?"
He
blinked at her. "I was hoping you would know. Why would Nathan tell us to
go protect something, and not tell us what it is?"
People
outside were crying in pain and calling for help. In the distance, a wall, or
perhaps a piece of roof, crashed to the ground. Men were yelling directions as
they dug through the rubble.
"Nathan
forgets that he is different from other people. Just as you recall things from
a few decades ago, he also recalls what was, except what he recalls is
sometimes not a couple of decades ago, but a couple of centuries." "I
wish he would have told us more."
"We
have to find it. We will find it I have a few ideas." She shook her finger
at him. "And you are coming with me! We still haven't got Nathan. That
collar stays on for now. You're going with me, do you understand? I'll hear
none of your arguing! ''
Zedd
reached up and unsnapped the collar around his neck. Ann's eyes went wide and
her jaw dropped.
Zedd
tossed the Rada'Han into her lap. "We have to find this Jocopo treasure
that Nathan spoke of. Nathan is not playing games about this. This is deadly
serious. I believe what he wrote in that message. We are in a lot of trouble.
I'm going with you, but this time we must be more careful. This time we must
cover our trail with magic."
''Zedd,"
she finally whispered, "how did you get that collar off? It's
impossible." Zedd scowled at her to keep himself from weeping at the
thought of the prophecy trapping Richard. "Like I said, being First Wizard
has its advantages."
Her
face flushed crimson. "Did you just . . . How long have you been able to
take off the Rada'Han?"
Zedd
shrugged a bony shoulder. "It took me a couple of days to figure it out.
Since then. Since after the first two or three days." "Yet you went
with me? You still went with me? Why?" "I guess I like women who do
things out of desperation. Shows character." He balled his trembling hands
into fists. "Do you believe everything Nathan said in that message?"
"I
wish I could say no. I'm sorry, Zedd." Ann swallowed. "He said, 'May
the spirits have mercy on his soul,' meaning Richard. Nathan didn't say 'good
spirits,' he just said 'spirits.' "
Zedd
wiped his sticklike fingers across his face. "Not all spirits are good.
There are evil spirits, too. What do you know about double fork prophecies?
About prophecy that enforced a double bind?' ' "Unlike your collar, there
is no escape from one. The cataclysm named has to be brought about to invoke
the prophecy. Whatever it is, the event has already happened. Once invoked, the
nature of the cataclysm is self-defining, meaning that the victim has only the
choice of one of the two forks in the prophecy. The victim can choose only
which way he would rather . . . Surely you must know this? As First Wizard, you
would have to know."
"I
had been hoping you would tell me I was wrong," Zedd whispered. "I
wish Nathan would have at least written the prophecy for us to see."
"Be thankful he didn't."
Chapter
21
Clarissa
gripped the weathered sill of the window in the stone tower of the abbey in an
effort to control her quaking. She clutched her other hand over her thundering
heart. Even with the acrid smoke burning her eyes, she had to force herself to
blink as she stood transfixed, watching the tumult in the city, and the square
below.
The
noise was deafening. The invaders screamed battle cries as they charged ahead,
swinging swords, axes, and flails. Steel clashed and rang. The air hissed with
arrows. Horses screamed in panic. Balls of light and flame wailed in from the
distant countryside and exploded through the stone walls. The grisly invaders
blew shrill horns and bellowed like beasts as they poured through the rents in
the city walls, their impossible numbers darkening the streets in a sooty
flood. Flames whooshed and roared and snapped.
Townsmen
wept unashamedly as they begged for mercy, their hands outstretched, imploring,
even as they were put to the sword. Clarissa saw the bloody body of one of the
assembly of seven being dragged down the street on a rope behind a horse.
The
shrill screams of women pierced through it all as their children, their
husbands, their brothers and fathers were murdered before their eyes.
The hot
wind carried the jumbled smells of a burning city, pitch and wood, oil and
cloth, hide and flesh, but laced through it all, in every breath she pulled,
was the gagging stench of blood.
It was
all happening, just as he had said it would. Clarissa had laughed at him. She
didn't think she would ever be able to laugh again as long as she lived. At the
thought of how short a time that might be, her legs nearly gave way.
No. She
wouldn't think that. She was safe here. They wouldn't violate the abbey. She
could hear the throng seeking safety in the great room below weeping and crying
out in terror. This was a sacred place, devoted to the worship of the Creator
and the good spirits. It would be blasphemy even for these beasts to spill
blood in such a sanctuary.
Yet, he
had told her they would.������������� ��������������������������' Below, out in the
streets, the army's resistance had been crushed. The Renwold defenders had
never before let an invader set foot inside the walls. It was said the city was
as safe as if the Creator Himself defended it. Invaders had tried before, and
had always departed bloodied and dispirited. No horde from the wilds had ever
breached the city walls. Renwold had always stood safe. This day, as he had
said it would, Renwold had fallen.
For
their audacity at refusing to surrender the city and its spoils peacefully,
without a fight, the people of Renwold were being shown no mercy. Some had
urged surrender, arguing that the red moons of the previous three nights had
been an ill omen. But those voices were few; the city had always been held safe
before.
The
good spirits, and the Creator Himself, had turned away from the people of
Renwold this day. What their crime was, she couldn't fathom, but, surely, it
must be terrible indeed to warrant no mercy from the good spirits.
From
her vantage point at the top of the abbey, she could see the people of Renwold
being herded into clusters in the streets, the market district, and courtyards.
She knew many of the people being forced at the point of steel into the square
below. The invaders, clad in foreign outfits of studded metal, and spiked
leather straps and belts, and layers of hides and fur, looked to her the way
she imagined savages from the wilds.
The
invaders began sorting through the men, pulling aside those with trades:
smiths, bowyers, fletchers, bakers, brewers, butchers, millers,
carpenters-anyone of a craft or trade who might be put to use. Those men were
chained together, to be marched off as slaves. The very old, young boys, and
those seemingly without useful trades, like valets, yeomen, innkeepers, city
officials, and merchants, were slaughtered on the spot-a sword hacked to the
side of the neck, a spear through the chest, a knife in the gut, a flail across
the skull. There was no system to the slaughter.
Clarissa
stared as an invader clubbed the head of a man on the ground who wouldn't seem
to die. It reminded her of a fisherman, clubbing a catfish on the bank-thunk,
thunk, thunk. The man doing the clubbing didn't seem to think any more of it
than a fisherman would. Dumb Gus, the poor half-wit who ran errands for
merchants, shopkeepers, and inns, his work paid for with food and a bed and
watered ale, kicked one last time as his thick skull gave way with a resounding
crack.
Clarissa
put trembling fingers over her mouth as she felt the contents of her stomach
lurch up into the back of her throat. She swallowed it back down and gasped for
air.
This
wasn't happening, she told herself. She was dreaming. She repeated the lie over
and over in her head. This isn't happening. This isn't happening. This isn't
happening. But it was. Dear Creator, it was.
Clarissa
watched as the women were culled from the men. The old women were summarily put
to death. The women judged worth keeping were shoved, screaming and crying for
their men, into a group. Invaders sorted through them, further winnowing them
according to age and, apparently, looks.
Laughing
invaders held the women as others of the beasts methodically went from woman to
woman, seized them by their lower lip, and poked it through with a thin spike.
A ring was pushed through each woman's lip, its split opening efficiently
closed with the aid of the invader's teeth.
He had
told her this, too: the women would be marked into slavery. This, too, she had
laughed at. And why not? He seemed to her as daft as dumb Gus, expounding his
crazy, preposterous ideas and nonsense.
Clarissa
squinted, trying to see better It appeared that the different groups of women
had different-colored rings put through their lips. One group of older women of
every shape looked to have copper-colored rings. Another group of younger women
screamed and fought as silver rings were put upon them. They stopped
fighting
and meekly submitted after a few who fought the hardest were run through with
swords.
The
smallest group of the youngest, prettiest women were in the grip of the
greatest terror as they were surrounded by a gang of burly invaders. These
women received gold rings. Blood ran down their chins and onto their fancy
dresses.
Clarissa
knew most of these young women. It was hard not to remember people who
regularly humiliated you. Being in her early thirties, and unmarried, Clarissa
was the object of scorn among many women, but these young women were the
crudest, giving her smirking sidelong glances as they passed, referring to her
as "the old maid," or "the hag," among themselves, but just
loud enough that she could hear them.
Clarissa
had never planned to be this age and without a husband. She had always wanted a
family. She wasn't entirely sure how life and time had rolled on without
providing her with the opportunity for a husband.
She
wasn't ugly, she didn't think, but she knew she was no more than plain, at
best. Her figure was satisfactory; she had meat on her bones. Her face wasn't
twisted, or shriveled, or grotesque. Whenever she looked at her reflection
while passing a window at night, she didn't think an ugly woman stared back at
her. She knew it wasn't a face that inspired ballads, but it wasn't repulsive.
Yet
with more women than men to be had, being merely "not ugly" wasn't
adequate. The pretty, younger women didn't understand; they had men in
abundance courting them. The older women understood, and were kinder; but still
she was an unfortunate in their eyes, and they feared to be overly friendly,
lest they catch the unseen, unknown taint that kept her unwed.
No man
would want her now; she was too old. Too old, they would fear, to give them
sons. Time had trapped her, alone and an old maid. Her work filled her time,
but it never made her happy the way she suspected a family would have.
As much
as the sting of those young women's words hurt, and as much as she had often
wished them to experience humiliation, she would never wish them this.
The
invaders laughed as they ripped the bodices of the fine dresses, inspecting the
young women like livestock.
"Dear
Creator," she wept in prayer, "please don't let this be because I
wished them to feel the shame of degradation. I never wished them this. Dear
Creator, I beg you forgive me ever wishing them ill. I didn't want this for
them, I swear on my soul."
Clarissa
gasped and leaned out the little window for a better view when she saw a band
of invaders running forward with a log. They disappeared beneath an overhang
below.
She
felt the building reverberate with a dull thud. People in the great room
screamed. Another thud. And another, followed by splintering wood. The
underworld's own pandemonium broke out below. They were violating the sanctity
of the Creator's abbey. Just as the prophet had said they would.
Clarissa
clutched her dress over her heart in both hands as she heard the slaughter
begin anew below. She shuddered uncontrollably. They would soon come up the
stairs, and find her.
What
was to happen to her? Was she to be marked with a ring through her lip, and
cast into slavery? Would she have the courage to fight, and be killed, rather
than submit?
No. She
knew the answer would be no. In the face of it, she wanted to live. She didn't
want to be butchered like one of the people in the square had been, or like
poor dumb Gus. She feared death more than life. She gasped as the door banged
open.
The
Abbot burst into the small room. "Clarissa!" Neither young nor fit,
he huffed from running up the stairs. His portly shape could not be disguised
beneath his dull brown robes.
His
round face was as ashen as a three-day-dead corpse. "Clarissa! The
books," he panted. "We must run away. Take the books with us. Take
them and hide!"
She
blinked dumbly at him. The room of books would take days to pack, and several
wagons to lug them away. There was nowhere to hide. There was nowhere to run.
There was no way to escape through the throng of invaders. It was a ludicrous
command born of mad terror. "Abbot, there is no way we can escape."
He
rushed to her and took her hands, he licked his lips. His eyes darted about.
"They won't notice us. Pretend we are just going about our business. They
won't question us."
She
didn't know how to answer such delusion, but was denied an attempt. Three men
in blood-splattered leather and hides and fur stepped through the door. They
were so big, and the room so small, that it took them only three strides to
close the distance to the Abbot.
Two had
greasy, curly, matted hair. The third was shaved bald, but had a thick beard
like the other two. Each wore a gold ring through his left nostril.
The one
with the shiny head snatched the Abbot by his fringe of white hair and yanked
his head back. The Abbot squealed. "Trade? Do you have a trade?"
The
Abbot, his head bent back so that he could look only at the ceiling, spread his
hands in supplication.
"I
am the Abbot. A man of prayer." He licked his lips and added in a shout,
"And books! I care for the books!" "Books. Where are they?"
"The
archives are in the athenaeum." His head tilted back, he pointed blindly.
"Clarissa knows. Clarissa can show you. She works with them. She can show
you. She cares for them." "No trade, then?"
"Prayer!
I'm a man of prayer! I'll pray to the Creator, and the good spirits, for you.
You'll see. I'm a man of prayer. No donation required. I'll pray for you. No
donation."
The man
with the shaved head, his sweat-slicked muscles bulging, pulled the Abbot's
head back further and with a long knife sliced down through his throat.
Clarissa felt warm blood splatter her face as the Abbot exhaled through the
gaping wound.
"We
don't need a man of prayer," the invader said as he tossed the Abbot
aside. Clarissa stared in wide-eyed horror as she saw blood spread under the
Abbot's brown robes. She had known him for nearly her whole life. He had taken
her in years ago, and kept her from starving by giving her work as a scribe. He
had taken pity on her because she could find no husband, and she had no skill,
except that she could read. Not many could read, but Clarissa could read, and it
provided her with bread.
That
she had to endure the Abbot's pudgy hands and slobbering lips was an onus she
had to abide if she wanted to keep her work and feed herself. It hadn't been
that way right from the first, but after she came to know her work and feel
safe in being able to meet her needs, she came to understand that she had to
tolerate things she didn't like.
Long
ago, when she had begged him to stop and that hadn't worked, she had threatened
him. He told her that she would be banished if she made such scandalous
accusations against a respected Abbot. How would a single woman, alone in the
countryside, survive? he had asked. What truly terrible things would she suffer
then?
She
supposed it wasn't the worst of things. Others went hungry, and pride didn't
fill their bellies. Some women suffered worse at the hands of men. The Abbot
never struck her, at least.
She had
never wished him harm. She only wished him to leave her be. She never wished
him harm. He had taken her in, and given her work and food. Others gave her
only scorn.
The
brute with the knife stepped to her, startling her from her shock at seeing the
Abbot murdered. He slid the knife behind a belt.
He
gripped her chin with callused, bloodstained fingers and turned her head side
to side. He looked her up and down. He pinched her waist in evaluation. She
felt her face burn with humiliation at being scrutinized so. He swung to one of
the others. "Ring her."
For a
moment, she didn't understand. Her knees began trembling as one of the burly
men came forward, and she realized what he had meant. She feared to cry out.
She knew what they would do to her if she resisted. She didn't want her throat
slit like the Abbot, or her head bashed in like poor dumb Gus. Dear Creator,
she didn't want to die. "Which one. Captain Mallack?" The bald man
looked into her eyes. "Silver." Silver. Not copper. Silver.
A
maniacal laugh cavorted through the back of her mind as the man gripped her
lower lip between a thumb and knuckle. These men, these men who were experienced
at judging the worth of flesh, had just valued her more highly than her own
people. Even if it was as a slave, they had given her value.
She
clenched shut the back of her throat to hold in the scream as she felt the pick
stab into the margin of her lip. He twisted the pick until it poked through.
She blinked, trying to see through the tears of pain.
Not
gold, she told herself, of course rot gold, but not copper, either. They
thought her worth a silver ring. Some part of her was disgusted at her vainglory.
What else did she have, now?
The
man, stinking of sweat, blood, and soot, shoved the split silver ring through
her lip. She grunted in helpless pain. He leaned in and closed the ring with
his crooked yellow teeth.
She
made no effort to wipe the dripping blood from her chin as Captain Mallack
looked her in the eyes again. "You are now the property of the Imperial
Order."
CHAPTER������������ 22
Clarissa
thought she might faint. How could a person be the property of anyone? With
shame, she realized that she had let herself be little more to the Abbot. He
had been kind to her, after a fashion, but in return, he had viewed her as his
property.
She
knew these beasts were not going to be kind. She knew what they were going to
do with her, and it was going to be something considerably worse than the
Abbot's drunken, impotent affections. The look of steel in the man's eyes told
her that they were men who would have no difficulty following through with what
they wanted.
At
least it was silver. She didn't know why that mattered to her, but it did.
"You have books here," Captain Mallack said. "Are there
prophecies among them?"
The
Abbot should have kept his mouth closed, but she didn't want to die to protect
the books. Besides, these men would tear the place apart and find them anyway;
the books weren't hidden. The city had been thought safe from invasion, after
all. "Yes."
"The
emperor wants all books brought to him. You will show us where they are."
Clarissa
swallowed. "Of course."
"How's
it going, boys?" came an amicable voice from behind the men.
"Everything in order? You look to have matters well in hand."
The
three men turned. A vigorous older man filled the doorway. A full head of
straight white hair hung to his broad shoulders. He was wearing high boots,
brown trousers, and a ruffled white shirt under an open dark green vest. The
hem of his heavy, dark brown cape hovered just above the floor. A sword was
sheathed in an elegant scabbard at his hip. It was the prophet.
"Who
are you?" Captain Mallack growled. The prophet casually flipped his cape
back over a shoulder. "A man in need of a slave." He shouldered one
of the men out of his way as he strode up to Clarissa. He grasped her jaw in a
big hand and turned her head this way and that. "This one will do. How
much do you want for her?"
The
bald-headed Captain Mallack snatched a fistful of white shirt. "The slaves
belong to the Order. They are all the property of the emperor."
The
prophet scowled down at the hand on his shirt. He slapped it away. "Mind
the shirt, friend; your hands are dirty."
"They're
going to be bloody in a moment! Who are you? What's your trade?" One of
the other men put a knife to the prophet's ribs. ''Answer Captain Mallack's
question, or die. What's your trade?"
The
prophet dismissed the question with a flip of a hand. "Not one you would
be interested in. Now, how much for the slave? I can pay handsomely. You boys
might as well make something for yourselves out of it. I never begrudge a man
his profit."
"We
have all the plunder we want. It's here for the taking." The captain
glanced to the man who had put the ring through her lip. "Kill him."
The
prophet casually swept a staying hand before them. "I mean you no harm,
boys." He leaned down a little closer to their faces. "Won't you
reconsider?"
Captain
Mallack opened his mouth, but then he paused. No words came out. Clarissa heard
distressed, liquid rumbling from the guts of the three men. Their eyes widened.
"What's
wrong?" the prophet asked. "Is everything all right? Now, how about
my offer, boys? How much do you want for her?"
The
three men's faces twisted with discomfort. Clarissa smelled an unpleasant odor.
"Well,"
Captain Mallack said in a strained voice, "I think . . ." He
grimaced. "We, ah, we have to go."
The prophet
bowed. "Why, thank you, boys. Off with you, then. Give my regards to my
friend. Emperor Jagang, won't you?"
"But
what about him?" one of the men asked the captain as they edged away.
"Someone else will be along shortly and kill him," the captain said,
as all three of them shuffled bow-legged through the door.
The
prophet turned to her, his smile evaporating as he regarded her with a hawklike
gaze.
"Well,
have you reconsidered my offer?"
Clarissa
stood quivering. She wasn't sure who she feared more, the invaders or the
prophet. They would hurt her. She didn't know what the prophet would do to her.
He might tell her how she was to die. He had told her how a whole city was
going to die, and it was coming to pass. She feared that if he said something, he
could make it happen. Prophets commanded magic. "Who are you?" she
whispered.
He
bowed dramatically. "Nathan Rahl. I have already told you that I am a
prophet. Forgive me for overlooking the introductions, but we don't exactly
have a great deal of time."
His
penetrating blue eyes frightened her, but she made herself ask, "Why do
you want a slave?" "Well, not for the same as they." "I
don't want-"
He
snatched her arm and forced her to the window. "Look out there.
Look!" For the first time, she lost control of the tears, and they poured
out in forlorn sobs. "Dear Creator..."
"He's
not coming to help you. No one can help those people, now. I can help you, but
you have to agree to help me in return. I'll not risk my life and lives of tens
of thousands of others on you if you are of no use to me. I'll find another who
would rather go with me than be a slave to these beasts." She made herself
look into his eyes. "Will it be dangerous?" "Yes."
"Will I die helping you?"
"Maybe.
Maybe you'll live. If you die, you will die doing something noble: trying to
prevent suffering worse than this." "Can't you help them? Can't you
stop this?"
''No.
What is done is done. We can only strive to shape the future-we cannot alter
the past.
"You
have an inkling of the dangers in the future. You once had a prophet living
here, and he wrote down some of his prophecies. He was not an important
prophet, but he left them here, where you fools view them as revelation of
divine will.
"They
are not. They are simply the words of potential. The same as if I tell you that
you have it within your power to choose your destiny. You can stay and be a
whore to this army, or you can risk your life doing something worthwhile."
She trembled under his powerful grip on her arm. "I . . . I'm afraid."
His azure eyes softened. "Clarissa, would it help if I told you that I am
terrified?" "You are? You seem so sure of yourself."
"I
am only sure of what I can try to do to help. Now, we must go to your archives
before these men get a look at the books."
Clarissa
turned, glad for the excuse to withdraw from his gaze. "Down here. I'll
show you the way."
She led
him down the spiral stone steps at the back of the room. They weren't often
used because they were so narrow and hard to negotiate. The prophet who had
constructed the abbey was a slight man, and the stairs were built to suit him.
As tight as they were for her, she couldn't imagine how this prophet could pass
down them, but he did.
On the
dark landing below, he lit a little flame above his palm. She paused in
astonishment, wondering at why it did not burn his flesh. He urged her to hurry
on. The low wooden door opened into a short hall. The stairs at the center led
down to the archives. The door at the end of the hall led to the main room of
the abbey. Beyond that door, people were being murdered.
She
turned down the stairs, taking them two at a time. Nathan caught her arm when
she slipped, keeping her from a fall.�
He made a gentle joke about that not being the danger he'd warned her
about.
In the
dark room below he cast out a hand, and the lamps hanging on wooden pilasters
sprang to flame. His brow drew down as he surveyed the shelves lining the walls
of the room. Two sturdy but unexceptional tables provided a place to read and
to write.
While
he strode to the shelves on the left, she frantically tried to think of a place
she could hide from the men of the Order. There must be some place. Surely the
invaders would leave, sooner or later, and hen she could come out and be safe.
She was
afraid of the prophet. He expected things of her. She didn't know what those
things were, but she didn't think she had the courage to do them. She just
wanted to be left alone.
The
prophet strode past the shelves, stopping here and there to put a finger atop a
spine and pull out a volume. He didn't open the books he removed, but tossed
them on the floor in the center of the room and went on to the next. The books
he pulled out all contained prophecies. He didn't select all the books of
prophecy, by any means, but prophecies were the only ones he chose. "Why
me?" she asked as she watched him. "Why do you want me?" He
paused with a finger on a large leatherbound volume. He watched her, the
way a
hawk watched a mouse, as he withdrew the book. He took it to the pile of eight
or ten already on the floor, set it down, and picked up one already there. He
paged through it after he stopped before her. "Here. Read this."
She
lifted the heavy book from his hands and read where he pointed: Should she go
freely, one ringed will be able to touch that long trusted into the winds
alone.
Long
trusted into the winds alone, the very idea of such an incomprehensible thing
made her want to run. "One ringed," she said. "Does that mean
me?" "If you choose to go freely." "What if I choose to
stay, and hide? Then what?"
He
lifted an eyebrow. "Then I will find another who wants to escape. I
offered you the chance first for my own reasons, and because you can read. I'm
sure there are others who can read. If I have to, I will find another."
"What is it 'one ringed' can touch?"
He took
the book from her tremulous hands and snapped it shut. "Don't try to
understand what the words mean. I know that you people try to do that, but I am
a prophet, and I can tell you with a great deal of authority that such an
endeavor is futile. No matter what you think, what you fear, you will be
wrong."
Her
resolve to leave with him weakened. Despite his seeming kindness in saving her
up in the tower, the prophet frightened her. A man who knew things such as he
could know frightened her.
They
had put a silver ring through her lip. Not copper. Maybe that meant she would
be treated better. At least she would live. They would feed her, and she would
live. She wouldn't have to fear some terrifying, unknown death. She started
when he spoke her name.
"Clarissa,"
he said again. "Go get some of the soldiers. Tell them that you are to
lead them to the archives, down here. '' "Why? Why do you want me to get
them?"
"Do
as I say. Tell them that Captain Mallack said you were to lead them down to the
books. If you have any trouble, tell them he also said to 'get their sorry
hides down to the books right now or the dream walker would pay them a visit
they would regret.'" "But, if I go up there . . ."
Her
words trailed off in the grip of his gaze. ''If you have trouble, tell them
those words, and you will be all right. Lead them down here."
She
opened her mouth to ask why he wanted them to come down to the books, but his
expression changed her mind. She dashed up the stairs, glad to be away from the
prophet, although she realized that she would have to face the brutes.
She
paused before the door to the great room. She could run away. She remembered
the Abbot suggesting the same thing, and she remembered knowing how foolish the
idea was. There was nowhere to run. She had a silver ring; maybe that would be
good for something. These men valued her at least that much.
She
opened the door and took one step before the sight brought her to a wide-eyed
halt. The double door to the street was splintered and broken in. The floor was
strewn with the bodies of men who had run to the abbey for shelter.
The
great room was packed with invaders. Among the bloody bodies of the dead, the
women were being raped. Clarissa stood frozen, her mouth agape.
Men
stood in groups, waiting their turn. The largest groups were for the women with
gold rings. The things being done to those women brought vomit up into
Clarissa's mouth. She covered her mouth and forced herself to swallow it.
She
stood transfixed, unable to turn her eyes away from a naked Manda Perlin, one
of the young women who had frequently tormented her. Manda had married a
wealthy, middle-aged man who lent money and invested in cargos. Her husband,
Rupert Perlin, lay close by, his throat so viciously cut that his head had been
nearly severed from his body.
Manda
wailed in terror as the brutes held her down. The men roared with laughter at
her wails, but they could hardly be heard above all the noise. Clarissa felt
her eyes water. These were not men. They were wild animals.
A man
snatched Clarissa by the hair. another hooked her leg with an arm. They laughed
as her scream joined all the others. Before she landed on her back, they had
her dress up. "No!" she cried out.
They
laughed at her, as the others were laughing at Manda. "No-I was
sent!"
"Good,"
one man said. "I was tired of waiting my turn." He smacked her when
she fought off his hands. The pain of the wallop stunned her, and made her ears
hum.
She had
a silver ring. That meant something. She had a silver ring. She heard a woman
not two feet away grunt as a man flopped down on her back. Her silver ring did
her no good. either. "Mallack!" Clarissa screamed. "Captain
Mallack sent me!" The man put a fist in her hair and crushed a grimy, bristly
kiss to her lips. Her wound, from the ring through her lip, sang with pain and
she could feel blood gush anew across her chin.
"My
thanks to Captain Mallack," he "aid. He bit her ear, making her
scream again as the other man pawed at her smallclothes. She tried desperately
to remember what the prophet had told her to say.
"Message!"
she cried out. "Captain Mallack sent me with a message! He said I'm to
lead you down to the books. He said to tell you to get your sorry hides down to
the books right now or the dream walker would pay you a visit you would
regret."
The men
cursed obscenely, then pulled her to her feet by her hair. She smoothed her
dress down with trembling hands. The half dozen men around her laughed. One
slid a hand back up between her legs.
"Well,
don't just stand there enjoying it, bitch. Get going. Lead the way." Her
legs had all the starch of wet rope and she had to hold the rail on the way
down the stairs. Visions of what she had seen flashed through her mind in a
jumble as she led the half dozen men down to the archives. The prophet met them
at the door, as if he were about to leave. "There you are. About
time," the prophet said in an irritable voice. He gestured back to the
room. "Everything is in order. Start packing them up before anything
happens, or the emperor will be using us as firewood."
The men
frowned in confusion. They glanced about the room. In the center, where
Clarissa had seen the prophet stack the books he had taken from the shelves,
there was only a stain of white ash. The empty places where he had pulled out
books had been closed up, so it didn't appear that any had been removed.
"I
smell smoke," one of the men said.
The
prophet thunked the man's skull. "Idiot? Half the city is ablaze. At last,
you begin to smell smoke? Now, get to it! I have to report on the books I
found."
One of
them snatched Clarissa's arm as the prophet started leading her out.
"Leave her. We'll be needing some entertainment."
The
prophet glared at them. "She's a scribe, you fool! She knows all the
books. We have more important work for her than amusing you lazy oafs. There
are women enough when you finish your work, or would you rather have me report
you to Captain Mallack?"
Even
though they were confused by who Nathan was, they decided to get to work.
Nathan closed the door behind him. He pushed Clarissa on ahead.
On the
steps, alone with him in the silence, she halted, leaning against the railing
for support. She felt lightheaded and sick to her stomach. He put his fingers
to her cheek.
"Clarissa,
listen to me. Slow your breathing. Think. Slow it down, or you will
faint."
Tears
coursed down her face. She lifted a hand toward the room she had gone to to get
the men. "I . . . I saw ..." "I know what you saw," he said
in a soft voice.
She
slapped him. "Why did you send me up there? You didn't need those
men!" "You think you will be able to hide You won't. They will search
every hole in this city. When they are finished, they will burn it all to the
ground. There will be nothing of Renwold left. ''
"But
I . . . I could . . . I'm afraid of going with you. I don't want to die."
"I wanted you to know what will happen to you should you choose to stay
here. Clarissa, you are a lovely young woman." He pointed with his chin
toward the great hall. "Believe me, you do not want to be here to
experience what is going to happen to the women here over the next three days,
and then as slaves to the Imperial Order. Please believe me, you don't want
that." "How can they do such things? How can they?"
"This
is the unspeakable reality of war. There are no rules of conduct except those
the aggressor makes, or those the winner can enforce. You can either fight
against this, or submit to it."
"Can't
. . . can't you do anything to help these people?" "No," he
whispered. "I can only help you, but I'm not going to waste precious time
doing it unless you are worth saving. The dead here died a quick death.
Terrible as it was, it was quick.
"Vast
numbers of people, many times as many people as lived in this city, are about
to die horrible, suffering, lingering deaths. I can't help these people, but I
can try to help those others. Is freedom worth having, life worth living, if I
don't try?
"It
is time for you to decide if you will help, if your life is worth living, worth
the Creator's gift of your soul."
Visions
of what was happening up in the great hall, out in the streets, and to her
whole city flashed chaotically through her mind. She felt as if she were
already dead. If she could have a chance to help others, and to live again, she
must take it. This was the only chance she would get. She knew it was. She
wiped the tears from her eyes, and the blood from her chin. "Yes. I'll
help
you. I
swear on my soul that I will do what you ask, if it means a chance to save
lives, and a chance at my freedom."
"Even
if I ask you to do something that you fear? Even if you think you will die
doing it?" "Yes."
His
warm smile made her heart lift. Surprisingly, he drew her to him and gave her a
comforting hug. She had been a child the last time she had been comforted with
a hug. It made her weep.
Nathan
put his fingers to her lip, and she felt a warm sensation of succor. Her terror
eased. Her memories of what she had seen now gave her the determination to stop
the men who did this, to prevent them from visiting suffering on others. Her
mind filled with hope that she might do something important that would help
other people to be free, too.
Clarissa
felt her lip after Nathan had taken his hand away. It no longer throbbed. The
wound was healed around the ring. "Thank you-Prophet."
"Nathan."
He ran a hand down her hair. "We must go. The longer we stay here, the
greater the chance of never getting away." Clarissa nodded. "I'm
ready."
"Not
yet." He cupped his big hands to her cheeks. "We must walk through
the city, through it all, to get away. You have seen too much already. I don't
want you to see any more, or hear any more. I would spare you that much, at
least." "But I don't see how we can ever get past the Order."
"You let me worry about that. For now, I am going to put a spell over you.
You will be blind, so that you don't have to see any more of what is happening
to your city, and you will be deaf, so that you don't have to hear any more of
the suffering and death that now possesses this place."
She
suspected that he feared she might panic and get them caught. She didn't know
that he might not be right. "If you say so, Nathan. I will do as you
say."
Standing
there in the dim light, two steps below her so that his face was closer to
hers, he gave her a warm smile. For as old as he was, he was a strikingly
handsome man.
"I
have chosen the right woman. You will do well. I pray the good spirits grant
you freedom in return for your help."
Holding
his hand as they walked was her only connection to the world. She couldn't see
the slaughter. She couldn't hear the screams. She couldn't smell the fires. Yet
she knew that those things had to be happening around her.
In her
silent world, she prayed as she walked, prayed that the good spirits would keep
safe the souls of those who had died here this day, and for those who still
lived she prayed for the good spirits to give them strength.
He
guided her around rubble, and around the heat of fires. He held her hand tight
when she stumbled over debris. It seemed they walked for hours through the
ruins of the vast city.
Occasionally
they stopped, and she lost the connection to his hand as she stood still and
alone in her silent world. She could neither see nor hear, so she didn't know
the exact reason for the stop, but she suspected that Nathan was having to
talk
their way out. Sometimes those stops dragged on and on, and her heart raced at
the thought of what unseen danger Nathan warded. Sometimes, the stop was
followed by his arm around her waist pulling her into a run. She felt confident
in his care, and comfort, too.
Her hip
sockets ached from walking, and her weary feet throbbed. He at last placed both
hands on her shoulders, turned her, and helped her sit. She felt cool grass
under her.
Her
vision suddenly returned, along with her hearing and sense of smell. Rolling
green hills spread away before her. She looked around and saw only countryside.
There were no people anywhere. The city of Renwold was nowhere to be seen.
She
dared to feel the budding of sweet relief, not only at having escaped the
slaughter but at having escaped her old life.
The
terror had burned so deep into her soul that she felt as if she had been recast
in a furnace of fear, and had come out a shiny new ingot, hardened for what lay
ahead.
Whatever
she had to face, it could be no worse than what she would have faced had she
stayed. If she had chosen to stay, it would have been a turning away from
helping others, and from herself.
She
didn't know what he was going to ask her to do, but every day of freedom she
had was one she wouldn't otherwise have had if not for the prophet. "Thank
you, Nathan, for choosing me." He was staring off in thought, and didn't
seem to hear her.
CHAPTER������������ 23
Sister
Verna turned to the commotion and saw a scout leaping from his lathered horse
before it had skidded to a stop in the near darkness. The scout panted, trying
to catch his breath, at the same time as he relayed his report to the general.
The general's tense posture visibly relaxed at the report. He gestured in a
jaunty fashion for his officers to stand down their concern, too.
She
couldn't hear the scout's report, but she knew what it would be. She didn't
have to be a prophet to know what the scout would have seen. The fools. She had
told him as much.
The
smiling General Reibisch approached her, his heavy eyebrows arched with his
good humor. When he came into the ring of firelight, his grayish-green eyes
searched her out. "Prelate! There you are. Good news!'
Verna,
her mind on other, more important matters, loosened the shawl around her
shoulders.
"Don't
tell me, general; my Sisters and I won't have to spend the whole night calming
nervous soldiers and casting spells to tell you where panicked men have run off
to hide while they await the end of the world."
He
scratched his rust-colored beard. "Ah, well, I do appreciate your help.
Prelate, but no, you won't. You're right, as usual." She snorted an
I-told-you-so.
The
scout had been watching from atop the hill, and from there could see the
moonrise before any of them down in the valley.
"My
man said that the moon didn't rise red, tonight. I know you told me it
wouldn't, and that three nights of it was all there would be, but I can't help
being relieved to know things are back to normal. Prelate." Back to
normal. Hardly.
"I'm
glad, general, that we will all get a good night's sleep for a change. I hope,
too, that your men have learned a lesson, and that in the future, when I tell
them that the underworld isn't about to swallow us all, they will have a little
more faith."
He
smiled sheepishly. "Yes, Prelate. I believed you, of course, but some of
these men are more superstitious than is healthy for their hearts. Magic scares
them." She leaned a little closer to the man and lowered her voice.
"It should." He cleared his throat. "Yes, Prelate. Well, I guess
we better all get some sleep." "Your messengers haven't returned yet,
have they?"
"No."
He traced a finger down the lower part of the white scar running from his left
temple to his jaw. "I don't expect they've even reached Aydindril
yet."
Verna
sighed. She wished she could have heard word first. It might have made her
decision easier. "I suppose not."
"What
do you think. Prelate? What's your advice? North?" She stared off,
watching the sparks from the fire spiral up into the darkness, and feeling its
heat on her face. She had more important decisions to make.
"I
don't know. Richard's exact words to me were, 'Head north. There's an army of a
hundred thousand D'Haran soldiers heading south looking for Kahlan. You'll have
more protection with them, and they with you. Tell General Reibisch that she is
safe with me.' "
"It
would have made things easier if he would have said for sure." "He
didn't say for us to go north, back to Aydindril, but it was implied. I'm sure
he thought that's what we would do. However, I take seriously your advice in
matters such as this."
He
shrugged. "I'm a soldier. I think like a soldier."
Richard
had gone to Tanimura to rescue Kahlan, and had managed to destroy the Palace of
the Prophets, along with its vault of prophecies, before Emperor Jagang could
capture it. Richard had said that he had to return to Aydindril at once, and
that he didn't have time to explain, but only he and Kahlan had the magic
required that would allow their immediate return. He said he couldn't take the
rest of them. He had told her to go north to meet up with General Reibisch and
his D'Haran army.
General
Reibisch was reluctant to return north. He reasoned that with a force this
large already this far south, it would be strategically advantageous to blunt
an invasion of the New World before it could drive into the populous areas.
''General,
I have no argument with your motives, but I fear that you underestimate the threat.
From the information I've managed to gather, the Imperial Order's forces are
large enough to crush even an army of this size without losing stride. I don't
doubt your men's ability, but by sheer numbers alone the Order will swallow you
whole.
"I
understand your reasoning, but even with as many men as you have, it won't be
enough, and then we wouldn't have them to lend their weight to a gathering of a
larger force that might have a chance against the Order."
The
general smiled reassuringly. ''Prelate, what you say makes sense. I've listened
to reasoned arguments like yours my whole career. The thing is, war isn't a
reasonable pursuit. Sometimes, you simply have to take advantage of what the
good spirits give you and throw yourself into the fray." "Sounds like
a good way to be annihilated."
"Well,
I've been doing it a long tine, and I'm still alive. Just because you choose to
meet the enemy, that doesn't mean you have to stick your chin out and let him
have a good swing at it." Verna squinted at the man. "What have you
in mind?" "Seems to me that we're already here. Messengers can move a
great deal faster than an army. I think we should move to a more secure
location, one more defendable, and sit tight." "Where?"
"If
we go east, into the high country of southern D'Hara, then we could be in a
better position to react. I know the country there. If the Order tries to come
up into the New World through D'Hara, the easy way through the Kern River
valley, then we are there to stop them. We can fight on more equal terms in
tighter country like that. Just because you have more men, that doesn't mean
you can use them all. A valley is only so wide."
"What
if they go more to the west as they move north, skirt the mountains and head up
through the wilds?"
"Then
we have this army to sweep in behind them when our other forces are sent south
to meet them. The enemy would have to split their force and fight against us on
two fronts. On top of that, it would limit their options by making it difficult
for them to move freely."
Verna
considered his words. She had read of battles in the old books, and understood
the sense of his strategy. It seemed more prudent than she had thought at
first. The man was bold, but he was no fool.
"With
our troops in a strategic location," he went on, "we can send
messengers to Aydindril and the People's Palace in D'Hara. We can get
reinforcements from D'Hara, and from the lands of the Midlands that join with
us, and Lord Rahl can send us his instructions. If the Order invades, well, then,
we're already here to know about it. Information is a valuable commodity in
war."
"Richard
may not like it that you hunker down here, instead of returning to protect
Aydindril." "Lord Rahl is a reasonable man-"
Verna
interrupted with a guffaw. "Richard, reasonable? Now you stretch my
credulity, general."
He
frowned at her. "As I was saying, Lord Rahl is a reasonable man. He told
me that he wants me to speak up with my advice, when I think it important. I
think it's important. He considers my advice on matters of war. The messengers
are already on their way with my letter. If he doesn't like my advice, then he
can say so and order me north and I will go; but until I know for sure that he
wishes it, I think we should do our job and defend the New World from the
Imperial Order.
"I
asked your advice. Prelate, because you command magic. I don't know anything
about magic. If you or the Sisters of the Light have something to say that
would be important to us in our struggle, then I'm listening. We're on the same
side, you know."
Verna
relented. "Forgive me, general I guess I sometimes forget that." She
offered him a smile. "The last few months have turned my life upside
down."
"Lord
Rahl has turned the whole world upside down. He has reordered everything."
She
smiled to herself. "That he has." She looked back at the general's
grayish-green eyes. "Your plan makes sense-at the very worst it would slow
the Order, but I'd like to talk to Warren first. He . . . he sometimes has
surprising insights. Wizards are like that."
The
general nodded. "Magic is not my part. We have Lord Rahl for that. And
you, too, of course."
Verna
repressed a laugh at the idea of Richard being the one to wield magic for them.
The boy could hardly get out of his own way where magic was concerned.
No,
that wasn't entirely true; Richard often did surprising things with his gift.
The problem was that it usually surprised him, too. Still, he was a war wizard,
the only to be born in the last three thousand years, and all their hopes hung
on his leadership in this war against the Imperial Order.
Richard's
heart, and his determination, were in the right place. He would do his best. It
was up to the rest of them to help him, and to keep him alive. The general
shifted his weight and scratched under his chain-mail sleeve. ''Prelate,
the
Order claims to want to end magic in this world, but we all know that they use
magic in their attempt to crush us." "That they do."
She
knew Emperor Jagang had most of the Sisters of the Dark at his beck and call.
He had young wizards to do his bidding, too. He had also captured a number of
the Sisters of the Light, and dominated them through his ability as a dream
walker. It was this that nettled her conscience; as Prelate, it was ultimately
up to her to see to the safety of the Sisters of the Light. Some of her Sisters
were anything but safe in the hands of Jagang.
"Well,
Prelate, seeing as how their troops are likely to be accompanied by those with
magic. I'm wondering if I can count on you and your Sisters to be the counter
to them. Lord Rahl said: 'You'll have more protection with them, and they with
you.' That sounds to me like he intended you to use your magic to help us
against the Order's army."
Verna
would like to think the general wrong. She would like to think that Sisters of
the Light, those charged with doing the Creator's work, would be above bringing
harm to anyone.
"General
Reibisch, I don't like it; however, I'm afraid that I concur. If we lose this
war, we all lose, not simply our troops on the field of battle; all free people
will be slaves to the Order. If Jagang wins, the Sisters of the Light will be
executed. We all must fight or die.
"The
Order would not want to fall into your plans so conveniently. They may try to
sneak past undetected-farther to the west, possibly even to the east of you.
The Sisters can be of use in detecting the movements of the enemy, should they
advance into the New World and try to slip past you.
"If
those with magic mask the Order's movements from you, our Sisters will know it.
We will be your eyes. If fighting comes, the enemy will use magic to try to
defeat you. We will have to use our power to thwart that magic."
The
general considered the flames for a moment. He glanced off toward the men
bedding down for the night.
"Thank
you. Prelate. I know that decision can't be easy for you. Since you've all been
with us, I've come to know the Sisters as gentle women."
Verna
barked a laugh. "General, you have not come to know us at all. The Sisters
of the Light are many things, but gentle is not one of them." She flicked
her wrist. Her dacra sprang into her hand. A dacra resembled a knife but had a
sharpened rod instead of a blade.
Verna
twirled the dacra. "I have had to kill men before." Reflected flashes
of firelight sparkled and danced as she spur the weapon with graceful ease,
walking it over her knuckles and back. "I can assure you, general, I was
anything but gentle."
He
lifted an eyebrow. "A knife in talented hands, such as yours, is trouble,
but it's hardly a match for the weapons of war."
She
smiled politely. "This is a weapon possessing deadly magic. If you see one
of these coming for you, run. It only must penetrate your flesh-even if it's
your little finger-and you will be dead before you can blink."
He
straightened, and his chest grew with a deep breath. "Thanks for the
warning. And thanks for your help. Prelate. I'm glad to have you on our
side."
"I
regret that Jagang has some of our Sisters of the Light under his control. They
can do the same as I, maybe more." She gave him a reassuring pat on the
shoulder
when she saw that his face had paled. "Good night, General Reibisch. Sleep
well-the red moons are gone."
Verna
watched the general make a zigzag course through his officers, speaking with
them, checking on his men, and issuing orders. After he had disappeared into
the darkness, she turned to her tent.
Deep in
thought, she idly cast her Han and lit the candles inside the small field tent
the men had provided for her use. With the moon up, Annalina-the real
Prelate-would be waiting.
Verna
pried the little journey book from its secret pouch in her belt. Journey books
had magic that allowed a message written in one to appear simultaneously in its
twin. Prelate Annalina had the twin to Verna's. She sat cross-legged on her
blankets and opened the book in her lap.
There
was a message waiting. Verna pulled a candle closer and bent in the dim light
to better see the writing in the journey book.
Verna,
we have trouble here. We finally caught up with Nathan, at least who we thought
was Nathan. The man we had been pursuing turned out not to be Nathan. Nathan
tricked us. He is gone, and we don't know where he went.
Verna
sighed. She had thought it had sounded too good to be true when Ann told her
that they were closing in on the prophet.
Nathan
left us a message. The message is more trouble than the thought of Nathan being
on the loose. He said that he had important business-that one of "our
Sisters" was going to do something very stupid, and that he must stop her
if he could. We have no idea where he went. He also confirmed what you told me
Warren said, that the red moon means Jagang has invoked a bound fork prophecy.
Nathan said that Zedd and I must go to the Jocopo treasure, and that if we
wasted time going after him instead, we would all die.
I
believe him. Verna, we must talk. If you are there, reply. I will be waiting.
Verna pulled the stylus from the spine of the journey book. Moonrise was the
time they had agreed upon to communicate through the journey books if they
needed to. She bent closer and wrote in her book: / am here, Ann. What
happened? Are you all right? In a moment, words began appearing in the book.
It's a
long story, and I don't have time for it now, but Sister Roslyn was hunting
Nathan, too. She was killed, along with at least eighteen innocent people. We
can't be sure of the true number consumed in the light spell.
Verna's
eyes widened at hearing that people were killed so. She wanted to ask what they
were doing casting such a dangerous web, but decided not to ask as she read on.
First
of all, Verna, we need to know if you have any idea what the ' 'Jocopo treasure
'' is. Nathan didn't explain.
Verna
put a finger to her lips as she squeezed her eyes closed, trying to remember.
She had heard the name before. She had been on her journey to the New World for
twenty years, and she had heard of it there.
Ann, I
think I recall hearing that the Jocopo were a people living somewhere in the
wilds. If I recall correctly, they are all dead-exterminated in a war. I
believe all traces of them were destroyed.
The
wilds, you say. Verna, are you sure it was the wilds? Yes. Wait a moment while
I tell Zedd this news.
The
minutes dragged by as Verna watched the blank place at the end of the writing.
At last, words began to appear.
Zedd
has succumbed to a bout of loud cursing and arm flailing. He is swearing oaths
about what he intends to do to Nathan. I am quite sure that he will find most
of his intentions to be physically impossible. The Creator is humbling me for
complaining to him that Nathan was incorrigible. I think I am being taught a
lesson as to the true meaning of incorrigible.
Verna,
the wilds are a big place. Any idea where in the wilds? No. Sorry. I only
recall hearing the Jocopo mentioned once. Somewhere in southern Kelton I once
admired a pottery relic in a shop of curiosities. It was purported by the
proprietor to have been made by a disappeared culture from the wilds. He called
them the Jocopo. That's all I know. I was hunting Richard at the time, not
vanished cultures. I will check with Warren. He might know something from the
books.
Thank
you, Verna. If you find anything, send word at once. Now, do you have any idea
what stupid thing it is that Nathan thinks a Sister is going to do?
No. We
are all here with the D'Haran army. General Reibisch wants to stay to the south
so as to thwart the Order should they invade. We await word from Richard. But
there are Sisters of the Light being held captive by Jagang. Who can tell what
he will make them do?
Ann,
did Nathan say anything of the bound fork prophecy? Warren might be able to
help if you would tell me the words of the prophecy. There was a pause before
Ann's writing began again.
Nathan
didn't tell us the words. He said that the spirits denied him access to its
meaning. He did say, though, that the victim of the double bind in the prophecy
is Richard.
Verna
gasped in some saliva. She coughed violently trying to get it back out of her
lungs. Her eyes watering as she coughed, she held the book up and read the last
message again. She finally got her lungs and throat clear. Ann, you wrote
''Richard.'' Did you really mean Richard? Yes.
Verna
closed her eyes with a whispered prayer, fighting down the flutter of panic.
Anything else? Verna wrote.
Not for
now. Your information about the Jocopo will help. We will be able to narrow our
search now, and know the questions to ask. Thank you. If you learn more, let me
know. I had better go. Zedd is complaining of life-threatening hunger. Ann, is
everything all right with you and the First Wizard? Ducky. He has his collar
off.
You
took off his collar? Before you find Nathan? Why would you do such a thing? I
didn't. He did.
Verna's
eyes widened at this news. She feared to ask how he could accomplish such a thing,
so she didn't. Verna thought she could read in Ann's message that it was a sore
subject. And yet he is going with you?
Verna,
I am not quite sure who is going with whom, but for now we both understand the
dire nature of Nathan's warning. Nathan isn't always irrational. I know. No
doubt that old man is right now smiling at a woman, trying to make
her
swoon and fall into his bed. Verna wrote. May the Creator hold you safely in
his care. Prelate.
Ann was
really the Prelate, but had named Verna Prelate when she and Nathan had faked
their deaths and gone on an important mission. For now, everyone thought Ann
and Nathan dead, and that Verna was the Prelate.
Thank
you, Verna. One other thing. Zedd is concerned for Adie. He wishes you to take
her aside and let her know that he is alive and well, but "in the hands of
a crazy woman. ''
Ann, do
you wish me to tell the Sisters that you are alive and well? The message took a
moment to resume.
No,
Verna. Not just now. It helps you, and them, that they have you as Prelate.
With what Nathan has told us, and what we must do, it would be inadvisable to
tell them that I live, only to have to turn around and tell them that I am
dead, after all. Verna understood. The wilds were a dangerous place. That was
where Verna had had to kill people. And she hadn't been trying to get
information out of them; she had been trying to avoid contact with people
there. Verna had been young and fast at the time. Ann was nearly as old as
Nathan. But she was a sorceress, and she did have a wizard with her. While Zedd
was not young, either, he was far from helpless. The fact that he had managed
to remove his Rada'Han spoke volumes about his ability.
Ann,
don't say that. You be careful. You and Zedd must protect each other. We all
need you back.
Thank
you, child. Take care of the Sisters of the Light, Prelate. Who knows, I may
want them back, someday.
Verna
smiled at the comfort of consulting with Ann, and at her humor in dire
circumstance. Verna wished she had a sense of humor like Ann. The smile faded
when she remembered that Ann had told her that Richard was the victim named in
the deadly prophecy.
She
thought about what Nathan had warmed, that one of the Sisters was going to do
something stupid. She wished that Nathan had been more specific. He could mean
almost anything by "stupid." Verna wouldn't be inclined to believe
just anything Nathan said, but Ann knew him much better than did Verna.
She
thought about the Sisters Jagang was holding. Some were Sisters of the Light,
and a few were Verna's dear friends and had been since they were novices. The
five of them-Christabel, Amelia, Janet, Phoebe, and Verna-had grown up together
at the palace.
Of
those, Verna had named Phoebe one of her administrators. Only Phoebe was with
them, now. Christabel, Verna's dearest friend, had turned to the Keeper of the
Underworld; she had become a Sister of the Dark, and had been captured by
Jagang. The last two of Verna's friends, Amelia and Janet, had been taken by
Jagang, too. Janet had remained loyal to the Light, Verna knew, but she wasn't
sure about Amelia. If she was still loyal . ..
Verna
pressed trembling fingers to her lips at the thought of her two friends, two
Sisters of the Light, being slaves to the dream walker. In the end, that
decided her.
Verna
peeked into Warren's tent. Unbidden, a smile came to her lips when she saw his
shape on his blankets in the darkness, probably pondering some young prophet's
thoughts. She smiled at how much she loved him, and at knowing how much he
loved her.
Verna
and Warren, having both grown up at the Palace of the Prophets, had known each
other nearly their whole lives. Her gift as a sorceress was destined to be used
to help train young wizards, while his gift as a wizard destined him toward
prophecy.
Their
paths didn't cross in a serious way until after Verna returned to the palace
with Richard. Because of Richard and his huge impact on life at the palace,
events brought Verna and Warren together, and their friendship grew. After
Verna was named Prelate, during their struggle against the Sisters of the Dark,
she and Warren had depended on each other for their very lives. It was during
that struggle that they had become more than friends. After all those years in
the palace, only now had they really found each other, and found love. At the
thought of what she had to tell him, her smile faded. "Warren," she
whispered, "are you awake?" "Yes," came a quiet reply.
Before
he could have a chance to rise and take her into his arms and she lost her
nerve, she stepped into his tent and blurted it out.
"Warren,
I've made my decision. I'll have no argument from you. Do you understand? This
is too important." He was silent, so she went on. "Amelia and Janet
are my friends. Besides being Sisters of the Light in enemy hands, I love them.
They would do the same for me, I know they would. I'm going after them, and any
others I can rescue." "I know," he whispered.
He
knew. What did that mean? Silence dragged on in the darkness. Verna frowned. It
wasn't like Warren not to argue about such a thing. She had been ready for his
argument, but not his calm acceptance.
Using
her Han, the force of life and spirit through which the magic of the gift
worked, Verna lit a flame in her palm arid passed it to a candle. He was
huddled on his blanket, his knees pulled up and his head resting in his hands.
She knelt down before him. "Warren? What's wrong?" His face came up.
His blue eyes were rimmed with red. His face was sickly pale. Verna clutched
his arm. "Warren, you don't look well. What's wrong?"
"Verna," he whispered, "I have come to realize that being a
prophet is not the wonder I had imagined."
Warren
was the same age as Verna, but looked younger because he had remained at the
Palace of the Prophets, under its spell that retarded aging, while she went on
her twenty-odd-year journey to find Richard. Warren didn't look so young at the
moment.
Warren
had only recently had his first vision as a prophet. He had told her that the
prophecy came as a vision of events, accompanied by words of the prophecy. The
words were what were written down, but it was the vision that was the true
prophecy. That was why it took a prophet to truly understand the meaning of the
words; they invoked the vision that was being passed on from another prophet.
Hardly
anyone knew this; everyone tried to understand prophecy by the words. Verna now
knew, from what Warren had told her, that this method was inadequate at best
and dangerous at worst. Prophecy was meant to be read by other prophets.
She
frowned. "Have you had a vision? Another prophecy?" Warren ignored
the question, and asked one of his own. "Verna, do we have any Rada'Han
with us?"
"The
collars around the young men who escaped with us are the only ones. We didn't
have time to bring any extras. Why?" He put his head back in his hands.
Verna
shook a finger at him. "Warren, if this is some trick to try to get me to
stay here with you, it won't work. Do you hear me? It won't work. I'm going,
and I'm going alone. That's final."
"Verna,"
he whispered, "I have to go with you."
"No.
It's too dangerous. I love you too much. I won't risk anyone else. If I have
to, I will order you, as Prelate, to stay here. I will. Warren." His head
rose again. "Verna, I'm dying." Icy goose bumps tingled across her
aims and thighs. "What? Warren-"
"I'm
having the headaches. The headaches from the gift." Verna was choked
silent with the realization of the deadly nature of what he had just said.
The
whole reason the Sisters of the Light took boys born with the gift was to save their
lives. Unless schooled, the gift could kill him. The headaches were a
manifestation of the fatal nature of the gift going awry. Besides providing the
Sisters with control over the young wizards, the most important function of the
collar was its magic, which protected the life of the boy until he could learn
to control his gift.
Because
of all that had happened, Verna had taken Warren's collar off long before it
was customary.
"But,
Warren, you've studied a long lime. You know how to control your gift. You
shouldn't need the Rada'Han for protection any longer."
"If
I was an ordinary wizard, that may be true, but my gift is for prophecy. Nathan
was the only prophet at the palace in centuries. We don't know how the magic
works in a prophet. I only recently had my first prophecy. It signifies a new
level of my ability. Now, I'm having the headaches."
Verna
was suddenly in a panic. Her eyes were tearing. She threw her arms around him.
"Warren,
I'll stay. I won't go. I'll help you. We'll do something. Maybe we could take a
collar off one of the boys and you could share it. That might work. We'll try
that first."
His
arms pulled her tight. "That won't work, Verna."
A
sudden thought flashed into her mind, making her gasp with relief. It was so
simple.
"Warren,
it's all right. It is. I just realized what we can do. Listen to me."
"Verna, I know what-"
She
shushed him. She held him by the shoulders and looked into his blue eyes. She
brushed back his wavy blond hair. "Warren, listen. It's simple. The reason
the Sisters were founded was to help boys born with the gift. We were given
Rada'Han to protect them while we teach them to control their gift."
"Verna, I know all that, but-"
"Listen.
We have the collars to help them because we don't have wizards who can do what
is needed. In the past, greedy wizards refused to help those born with
the
gift. An experienced wizard can join with your mind and pass on the protection-
show you how to put the gift right. It's simple for a wizard to do, but not a
sorceress. We need only to visit a wizard."
Verna
pried the journey book from her belt and held it before his eyes. "We have
a wizard-Zedd. All we have to do is talk to Ann, and have her and Zedd meet us.
Zedd can help you, and then you'll be all right." Warren stared into her
eyes. "Verna. it won't work." "Don't say that. You don't know.
You don't know. Warren." "Yes I do. I have had another
prophecy." Verna sat back on her heels. "You have? What was it?"
Warren pressed his fingertips to his temples. She could see that he was in
pain. She knew that the pain of the headaches from the gift were excruciating.
In the end, if not corrected, they were fatal.
"Verna,
now you listen to me for a change. I have had a prophecy. The words aren't
important. The meaning is." He; took his hands away from his head and
looked her in the eye. In that moment, he looked very old to her. "You
must do what you plan, and go after the Sisters. The prophecy didn't say
whether you will succeed, but I must go with you. If I do anything else, I will
die. It's a forked prophecy-an 'either-or' prophecy."
She
cleared her throat. "But . . . surely, there must be something . . ."
"No. If I stay, or if I try to go to Zedd, I will die. The prophecy
doesn't say that if I go with you I will live, but it does say that going with
you is my only chance. End of discussion. If you make me stay, I will die. If
you try to take me to Zedd, I will die. If you want me to have a chance to
live, then you must take me with you. Choose, Prelate."
Verna
swallowed. As a Sister of the Light, a sorceress, she could tell by the
distinctive murky cast to his eyes that he was in the pain of a headache from
the gift. She also knew that Warren would not lie to her about a prophecy. He
might pull some trick to go with her, but he would not lie about a prophecy. He
was a prophet. Prophecy was his life. Maybe his death. She took his hand up in
hers. "Get some supplies together. Get two horses. I have to go tell Adie
something, and then I must talk to my advisors, let them know what to do while
we're gone."
Verna
kissed his hand. "I won't let you die. Warren. I love you too much. We'll
do this together. I'm not sleepy. Let's not wait till morning. We can be on our
way in an hour." Warren drew her to him in a thankful embrace.
CHAPTER������������ 24 From the solace of the
shadows, he watched as the middle-aged man closed the
door
and stood in the dim hall a moment to tuck in his shirt over his potbelly. The
man chortled to himself and then thumped off down the hall to disappear as he
descended the stairs.
It was
late. It would be several hours yet before the sun was up. With the walls
painted red, the candles set before silvered reflectors at either end of the
narrow hall were able to provide precious little useful light. He liked it that
way-the way the comforting cloak of shadows in the pit of the night lent its
mood to such nefarious needs.
Debauchery
was best indulged in the right. In the darkness. He stood awhile in the quiet
obscurity of the hall, savoring his desire. It had been too long. He let his
lust have rein, and felt its glorious, wanton ache fill him.
He
closed his mouth and breathed through his nose to better experience the range
of aromas, both transcendent and abiding He put his shoulders back and used his
abdominal muscles to draw slower, deeper breaths.
He
counted a variety of scents, from tie smells men carried in and took away with
them back to their own lives, the smells of their work-horse, clay, grain dust,
the lanolin soldiers used in the care of leather uniforms, and the oil they
used for sharpening their weapons, to a redolent wisp of almond oil, and the
stale dirt and wet wood of the building.
It was
an afferent feast that was only just beginning.
He
glanced the length of the hall again, checking. He heard no sounds of lust
coming from any of the other rooms. It was late, even for an establishment like
this. The fat, potbellied man was probably the last of them, except for
himself.
He
liked to be last. The evidence of the events before he arrived, and the
lingering smells, gave him a rush of sensation. Hi? senses were always
heightened in his aroused state, and he valued all the details.
He
closed his eyes for a moment, feeling the throbbing of his need. She would help
him. She would sate his desire; that was what they were here for. They offered
themselves willingly.
Other
men, like the potbellied man, simply threw themselves on a woman, grunted in a
moment of satisfaction, and it was over. They never gave thought to what the
woman was feeling, to what she needed, to giving her satisfaction. Those men
were no more than rutting beasts, ignorant of all the details that could add to
the climax for both. Their mind's eye was too focused on the object of their
lust; they didn't see the integral parts of the wider setting that led to true
satisfaction.
It was
the fleeting, the ephemeral, that created a transcendent experience. Through
uncommon perception, and his singular awareness, he could net such evanescent
events
and commemorate them forever in his memory, thus giving the transient nature of
satisfaction permanence.
He felt
fortunate that he could see such things, and that he, at least, could bring
fulfillment to women.
At
last, he took a settling breath and then advanced silently down the hall, marking
the way the shadows and tiny lays of light mirrored off the silvered candle
reflectors slipped across his body. He thought that if he was mindful, he might
someday be able to feel the touch of the light, and of the dark.
Without
knocking, he opened the door the potbellied man had come from and stepped into
her room, gratified to see that it was nearly as dim as the hall. With a
finger, he shut the door.
Behind
the door, the woman was just pulling her panties up her legs. She spread her
knees and squatted a bit, drawing them up tight against herself. When her
sky-blue eyes finally turned up to look at him, her only reaction was to toss
the sides of her robe together over the rest of her bare body and casually flip
the silk belt together into a loose knot.
The air
carried the odor of the hot coals in the warming pan under the bed, the weak
but clean aroma of soap, the light fragrance of body powder, and the cloying
scent of a sickly sweet perfume. But pervading it all, like the darkness that
shaped shadows, was the lingering smack of lust, pointed with the arresting
scent of semen.
The
room had no windows. The bed, covered with stained, rumpled sheets, was pushed
into the far corner. Even though it wasn't large, the bed took up a good part
of the room. Against the wall, beside the head of the bed, sat a small, simply
made pine chest, probably for personal items. On the wall over the head of the
bed hung an ink drawing of two people coupled in passion. It left nothing to
the imagination.
A
washbasin sat centered on a wobbly-looking cabinet beside her, behind the door.
In its edge, the white washbasin had a stained, kidney-shaped chip, with a
crack that looked like an artery coming from the kidney. The cloth hanging over
the side of the basin still dripped. The milky water in the basin gently
sloshed from side to side. She had just washed herself.
They
each had their own habits. Some didn't bother to wash, but they were usually
the older, unattractive ones who were paid little, and cared little. He had noticed
that the younger, prettier, more expensive women washed after each man. He
preferred the ones who washed before he came to them, but in the end, his lust
overrode such trivial matters.
He idly
wondered if those he had been with who were not professionals ever gave thought
to such things. Probably not. He doubted that others pondered such curious
particulars. Others gave little thought to the texture of details.
Other
women, women looking for love, satisfied him, but not in the same way. They
always wanted to talk, and to be wooed. They wanted. He wanted. In the end, his
want overrode what he would prefer, and he gave them some of what they wanted
before his needs could be satisfied.
"I
thought I was finished for the night," she said. Her words came out silky
smooth, with a pleasant, pert lilt, but bore no real interest at the prospect
of another man this late.
"I
think I'm the last," he said, trying to sound apologetic so as not to
anger her. It wasn't as satisfying if they were angry. He liked nothing more
than when they were eager to please. She sighed. "All right, then."
She
showed no fear at having a man simply walk into her room without knocking, even
though she was hardly wearing anything, nor did she make any demands for money.
Silas Latherton, downstairs, with his cudgel and a long knife in his belt, made
sure the women had nothing to fear. He also didn't let anyone go up the stairs
unless they paid in advance, so the women didn't have to be bothered with the
trouble of collecting money. It insured that he, rather than they, kept control
of the income, and its distribution.
Her
short, straight blond hair was disheveled, from mister potbelly, no doubt, but
he found its disorder alluring. It was< a suggestive indication of what she
had just been doing. It lent her an erotic look-a look he very much liked.
Her
body was shapely and firm, with long legs and wonderfully formed breasts, at
least what he had seen of her body before she had thrown closed her robe. He
would see it again, and could wait.
The
anticipation added to his excitement. Unlike her other men, he was in no rush
to have it over. Once it began, it would be over all too quickly. He could
never stop himself, once it began. For the moment, he would relish all the
little details, so that he could capture them in his memory for all time.
She was
more than simply pretty, he decided. She was a creature possessed of features
that would fire men's minds with obsessive memories of her, and make them
return time and time again to try, if only for fleeting moments, to possess
her. The confidence with which she carried her body told him that she knew
this. The frequency with which men spent money to have her was a constant
reinforcement of that confidence.
Those
features, though, no matter their grace and haunting beauty, had an acidic edge
to them, a harshness that betrayed her true character. No doubt other men saw
only the sweet face and never noticed.
He
noticed. He noticed such subtle things, and he had seen this detail often. It
always looked the same. It was a baseness her fair features couldn't hide from
one such as himself.
"Are
you new?" he asked, even though he knew she was. "First day
here," she said. He knew that, too. "Aydindril is big enough to mean
clients for me, but with a huge army here, it's all the better. Blue eyes
around here aren't all that common; my blue eyes remind the D'Haran soldiers of
girls from home. So many extra men mean women like me are in greater
demand." "And it insures a better wage."
She
allowed herself a small, smug, knowing smile. "If you couldn't afford it,
you wouldn't be up here, so cut the complaints."
He had
only meant to make an observation, and regretted the way she took it. Her voice
betrayed an underlying, acerbic temperament. He sought to smooth away the
ripple of her displeasure with him.
"Soldiers
can sometimes get rough with a young woman as attractive as you." The
compliment didn't register in her sky-blue eyes. She had probably heard it so
often that she was numb to such praise. "I'm glad you came to Silas
Latherton," he went on. "He doesn't let any of his clients rough up
the young ladies. You'll be safe, here, under his roof. I'm glad you came
here."
''Thanks."
Her tone carried no warmth, but the ripple, at least, had been smoothed.
"I'm glad to hear his reputation is known to his clients. I got slammed
around, once. I didn't like it. Besides the pain, I couldn't work for a
month." "That must have been terrible. The pain, I mean."
She
tilled her head toward the bed. "You going to take off your clothes, or
what?''
He said
nothing, but gestured to her robe. He watched her slip loose the knot from the
satin belt.
"Have
it your way," she said, as she shrugged the robe open just enough to tempt
him into getting on with it. "I'd like . . . I'd like you to enjoy it,
too."
She
lifted an eyebrow. "Darling, don't you worry about me. I'll enjoy it just
fine. You'll no doubt thrill me. But you're the one who paid for it. Let's just
worry about your pleasure."
He
liked to hear the tempered thread of sarcasm in her voice. She cloaked it well
with a breathy tone, and others might have missed it, but he had been listening
for it.
Carefully,
slowly, one at a time, he placed four small gold coins on the washstand beside
her. It was ten times what Silas Latherton, downstairs, charged for his women's
company, and probably thirty times what he gave her for each man. She watched
the coins as he withdrew his hand, as if counting them to herself to make sure
she was seeing what she thought she was seeing. It was a great deal of money.
She gave him a questioning look.
He
liked the twitch of confusion in her eyes. Women like this weren't often
confused by money, but she was young, and probably never had a man bestow such
largess on her before. He liked it that it impressed her. He knew that few
things would.
"I'd
like you to enjoy yourself. I'm wiling to pay to see you enjoying
yourself." "Darling, for that much, you'll remember my screams until
you're an old man." Of that, he was sure.
She
smiled her best smile, and slipped off the robe. Gazing at him with her big,
sky-blue eyes, she blindly hung the robe on a peg in the back of the door.
She
stroked his chest and then circled her arms around his waist. Gently but
deliberately, she squashed her firm breasts against him.
"So
what is it you want, darling? Some nice clawmarks down your back to make your
young lady jealous?"
"No,"
he said. "No, I just want to see you enjoying it. You're so fair of face
and figure. I think that if you're paid will enough, you'll enjoy your part,
that's all. I want to know that you're enjoying yourself."
She
eyed the coins and then smiled up at him. "Oh, I will, darling. I promise.
I'm a very talented whore." "That was what I was hoping."
"I
want you to be so pleased with my charms that you will want to return to my
bed."
"You
seem to be reading my mind." "My name is Rose," she whispered in
her breathy voice. "A name as beautiful as you are." And as
unoriginal. "And yours? What should I call you when you call on me
regularly, as I'm already aching for you to do?"
"I
like the name you've already given me. I like the sound of it on your
lips." She licked her lips for him. "Glad to meet you, darling."
He slipped a finger under the waist of her panties. "Can I have
these?"
She ran
her fingers down his belly, performing a moan at the feel of him. "It's
the end of a long day. These aren't exactly . . . clean. I have some clean ones
in my trunk. For what you've paid, you can have as many of them as you wish.
Darling, you can have them all, if you wish." "These will do fine. I
only need these." She smirked up at him. "I see. Like that, is
it?" He didn't answer.
"Why
don't you take them off me," she teased. "Take your prize."
"I'd like to watch you do it."
Without
hesitation, she slipped them down her legs as dramatically as she could. She
pressed herself up against him again and, looking into his eyes, stroked his
cheek with her panties. She smiled wickedly and then pushed them into his hand.
"Here
you go. Just for you, darling. Just the way you like them-with the scent of
Rose."
He
worked them in his fingers, feeling the warmth of her still in them. She
stretched up to kiss him. If he hadn't known better, known what she was he
might have thought she wanted him more than anything else in life. But he would
please her.
"What
do you want me to do for you?" she whispered. "Name it, and it's
yours-and I don't make that offer to my other men. But I want you so badly.
Anything. Just tell me."
He
could smell the sweat of the other men on her. He could smell the stink of
their lust on her.
"Let's
just see how things work out, shall we. Rose?" "Anything you say,
darling." She smiled dreamily. "Anything." She winked at him as
she swept the four gold coins from the washstand. She swayed provocatively as
she went to the small trunk. She squatted down before it. He had been wondering
if she would squat, or bend at the waist. He was satisfied at the detail, at
the remnant of a demure past.
As she
pushed the coins under some of her clothes in the chest, he saw atop her things
a small pillow decorated with a dash of red. Such a detail intrigued him. It
seemed out of place.
"What's
that?" he asked, knowing that the money had earned her indulgence. She
held it up for him to see. It was small pillow, an item of decoration, a
frivolity. It had a red rose embroidered on it.
"I
made it, when I was younger. I staffed it with cedar shaving, so it would smell
nice." She glided her fingers lovingly over the rose. "My namesake-a
rose. For Rosa. My father named me. He was from Nicobarese. Rosa means 'rose'
in his language. He always called me his little Rosa, and said that I grew in
the garden of his heart."
The
detail astonished him. He was thrilled to know something so intimate about her.
He felt as if he already possessed her. The pleasure of knowing such a small,
seemingly insignificant thing pounded through his veins.
As he
watched her replace the little packet of her past into her trunk, he wondered
at her father, wondered if he knew where she was, or if perhaps he had sent her
away in revulsion, his rose wilted in his heart. He imagined an angry scene. He
wondered at her mother-if her mother understood her choice in life, or cried at
a daughter lost. Now he, too, was playing a part in who she was, in her life.
"May
I call you Rosa?" he asked, as she closed the lid of her trunk. "It's
such a lovely name."
She
looked back over her shoulder. Her eyes watched his fingers working her
underpants into a tight ball.
She
returned to him, smiling as she came. "You're my special man, now. I've
never told another man my true name. It would give me pleasure to hear my given
name on your lips."
His
heart pounded, and he swayed on his feet with his need. "Thank you,
Rosa," he whispered, and he truly meant it. "I want so much to please
you." "Your hands are trembling."
They
always did, until he started. Then, they were rock steady. Once he started, he
would be steady. It was just the anticipation. "I'm sorry."
A
throaty, lusty laugh came from deep in her throat. "Don't be. It excites
me that you would be nervous."
He
wasn't nervous, not in the least, but he was excited. Her hands found that he
was. "I want to taste you." She licked his ear. "I have no one
else tonight. We have all the time we want to enjoy this." "I
know," he whispered back. "That's why I wanted to be last."
"Yes," she teased, "I want it to last, too. Can you make it
last, darling?" "I can, and I will," he promised. "A long
time."
She let
out a purr of satisfaction at his promise, and turned in his arms, pressing her
bottom against him. She arched her back and rocked her head against his chest
as she moaned again. He kept the smirk from his face as he looked down into her
sky-blue eyes. Yes, she was a talented whore.
He slid
his hand down her lower spine, counting her vertebrae, fingering the spaces
between them. She moaned urgently at his touch. Because of the way she swayed
her bottom, he missed the spot he wanted. She staggered.
The
second time he slammed the knife into her lower back, he hit the right spot,
between the vertebrae, severing her spinal cord.
He
swept an arm around her middle to hold her up. The shocked, grunting moan was
real, this time. Anyone in the other rooms wouldn't think it any different from
the sounds she regularly made for men. Others didn't notice such details. He
did, and savored the difference.
As her
mouth widened to scream, he stuffed it full with the wadded ball of her dirty
underpants. He timed it just right, so only the cry of the gasp sounded, before
the pitch rose. He yanked the silk tie from her robe on the peg beside him and
whirled it around her head four times to hold the gag in her mouth. With one
hand, and the aid of his teeth, he drew it tight and knotted it.
He
would have liked to have listened to her heartfelt screams, but that would
bring a premature end to their pleasure. He loved the screams, the cries. They
were always sincere.
He
pressed his mouth against the side of her head. He could smell the sweat of men
in her hair.
"Oh,
Rosa, you are going to please me so. You are going to give me more pleasure
than you've ever given any man before. I want you to enjoy it, too. I know
this is
what you always wanted. I'm the man you've been waiting for. I've come at
last."
He let
her slip to the floor. Her legs were useless, now. She wasn't going anywhere.
She
tried to punch him between his legs. He caught her dainty little fist in his
hand. He watched her wide, sky-blue eyes as he pressed open her fist. He held
her palm between his thumb and a finger, and bent it down until the bones in
her wrist snapped.
He used
the arms of her robe to bind her hands, so that she couldn't pull the gag from
her mouth. His heart hammered as he listened to her muffled wails. He couldn't
understand the words against the gag, but they heightened his excitement
because he could feel their pain.
A storm
of emotion rampaged through his mind. At least the voices were silent, for now,
leaving him to his lust. He wasn't sure what the voices were, but he was sure
that he was only able to hear them because of his singular intellect; he was
able to seine such evanescent messages from the ethers because of his
incomparable perception, and because he minded the details.
Tears
flooded down her face. Her perfectly plucked brows bunched together, lifting in
the middle, furrowing the skin on her forehead into neat rows. He counted them,
because he was special.
With
wide, anguished, sky-blue eyes, she watched as he removed his clothes and set
them aside. It wouldn't do to have them soaked in blood.
The
knife was rock steady in his hand now. He stood above her, naked and erect, to
show her what a good job she was doing for him, so far. And then he began.
CHAPTER������������� 25
Kahlan,
with Cara following behind, came to the door of the small room Richard used as
an office at the same lime as a young woman with short, black hair arrived
carrying a small silver tray with hot tea. Raina, standing guard beside the
door along with Ulic and Egan, yawned. "Richard ask for tea, Sarah?"
The
young woman curtsied, as best she could holding the tray. "Yes, Mother
Confessor."
Kahlan
lifted the tray from the woman's hands. "That's all right, Sarah. I'm
going in-I'll take it in to him."
Sahara
blushed, trying to hold on to the tray. "But, Mother Confessor, you
shouldn't have to do that."
"Don't
be silly. I'm perfectly capable, of carrying a tray for ten feet." Kahlan
backed away a step, gaining full possession of the tray. Sarah didn't know what
to do with her hands, so she bowed.
"Yes,
Mother Confessor," she said before departing. Rather than being pleased to
have been relieved of a small task, she looked as if she had just been ambushed
and robbed. Sarah, like most of the staff, was fiercely vigilant about her
duties. "Has he been up long?" Kahlan asked Raina.
Raina
gave her a sullen look. "Yes. All night. I finally left a squad of guards
and went to bed. He had Berdine up with him all night, too." The reason,
no doubt, for the sullen look.
"I'm
sure it was important, but I'll she if I can't get him to stop at night for
some sleep, or at least let Berdine get hers."
"I
would appreciate it," Cara muttered. "Raina gets grumpy when Berdine
doesn't come to bed."
"Berdine
needs her sleep," Raina said defensively.
"I'm
sure it was important, Raina, but you're right; if people don't get enough
sleep, they won't be any good to him. I'll remind him-he sometimes gets lost in
what he's doing and forgets about what other people need." Raina's dark
eyes brightened. "Thank you. Mother Confessor." Kahlan balanced the
tray in one hand as she opened the door. Cara took up station beside Raina,
peering after Kahlan, to make sure she didn't have any trouble with the tray,
and then closed the door.
Richard
had his back to her as he stared out the window. A low fire in the hearth did a
poor job banishing the chill from the room.
Kahlan
smirked to herself. She would put the lie to his boast. Before she had a chance
to set the tray on the table, and let the cup ping against the pot to catch his
attention and make him think it was the serving woman, Richard spoke without
turning.
"Kahlan,
good. I'm glad you came." Frowning, she set down the tray.
"You
have your back to the door. How could you know it was me, and not the woman
bringing the tea you ordered?"
Richard
turned around with a puzzled look. "Why would I think it was the woman
with the tea, when it was you bringing it in?" He truly looked bewildered
by her question.
"I
swear, Richard, sometimes you give me the shivers." She decided that he
had to have seen her reflection in the window. He lifted her chin with a finger
and kissed her. "I'm glad to see you. It's been lonely without you."
"Sleep well?"
"Sleep?
I ... I guess not. But at least the riots seem to have ceased. I don't know
what we would have done if the moon had risen red again. I can't believe people
would go wild simply because of something like that." "You have to
admit that it was odd . . . frightening."
"I
do, but that didn't make me want to run screaming through the streets breaking
windows and setting fires."
"That's
because you're Lord Rahl, and you have more sense." "I'll have some
order, too. I'll not have people doing that kind of damage, to say nothing of
injuring innocent people. The next time it happens I'm going to have the soldiers
put it down immediately, rather than wait, hoping people will be suddenly
stricken with reason. I have more important matters to worry about than
childish reactions to superstition."
Kahlan
could tell by his smoldering tone that he was on the verge of losing his
temper.
His
eyes were bleary. She knew that if a person didn't get enough sleep,
forbearance could quickly evaporate. One night was one thing, but three in a
row was quite another. She hoped it wasn't affecting his judgment. "More
important matters. You mean your work with Berdine?" He nodded. Kahlan
poured a cup of tea and held it out to him. He stared at the cup a moment
before taking it.
"Richard,
you have to let the poor woman get more sleep. She'll be no good to you if you
don't let her have enough sleep."
He took
a sip. "I know." He turned to the window and yawned. "I had to
send her over to my room to take a nap. She was making mistakes."
"Richard, you need to get some sleep, too."
He
stared out the window toward the massive stone walls of the Wizard's Keep up on
the mountain. "I think I may have found out what the red moon meant."
The somber quality in his voice gave her pause. "What?" she finally
asked.
He
turned to the table and set down the cup. "I had Berdine looking for
places where Kolo used the word moss, or maybe mentioned a red moon, hoping
that we might find something to help us."
He
flipped open the journal on the table. He had found the journal up in the Keep,
where it had been sealed in for three thousand years, along with the man who
had written it. Kolo had been keeping watch over the sliph, the strange
creature that could take some people great distances, when the towers
separating the Old
and New
Worlds were completed. When the towers were activated, Kolo had been sealed in,
trapped, and had died there.
The
journal had already proven an invaluable source of information, but it was
written in High D'Haran, which complicated matters. Berdine understood High
D'Haran, but not such an ancient form of it. They had to use another book
written in almost the same ancient form of High D'Haran to aid them. Richard's
childhood memory of that book's story helped Berdine to translate words, which
they used as a cross reference in order to work out the translation of the
journal.
As they
went along, Richard was learning much of both the vernacular High D'Haran and
also the much older, argot form, but it was still frustratingly slow going.
After
Richard had brought Kahlan back to Aydindril, he told her how he had used the
information in the book to find a way to rescue her. He said that sometimes he
could seem to read with ease, but then at other places he and Berdine became
bogged down. He said that at times he was able to unravel a page in a few
hours, and then they would spend a whole day trying to translate one sentence.
"Moss? You said you had her checking for the word moss. What's that
mean?" He took a sip of tea and set the cup tack down. "Moss? Oh, it
means 'wind' in High D'Haran." He opened the pages to a marker.
"Since it was taking so much time to translate the journal, we've just
been looking for key words, and then concentrating on those passages, hoping to
get lucky."
"I
thought you said that you were translating it in order, to better understand
the way Kolo uses the language."
He
sighed in annoyance. "Kahlan, I don't have the time for that. We had to
change our tactics." Kahlan didn't like the sound of that.
"Richard,
I was told that your brother is the High Priest of an Order called the
Raug'Moss. Is that High D'Haran?" "Means 'Divine Wind,' " he
muttered
He
tapped the book, not seeming to want to discuss it. "See here? Berdine
found where Kolo was talking about a red moon. He was really upset about it.
The whole Keep was in an uproar. He writes that they were betrayed by the
'team.' He said that the team was to be put on trial for their crimes. We
haven't had time to look into that, yet. But ..."
Richard
flipped the book back toward the front where one of their written translations
was inserted, and read her the passage:
"
'Today, one of our most coveted desires, possible only through the brilliant,
tireless work of a team of near to one hundred, has been accomplished. The
items most feared lost, should we be overrun, have been protected. A cheer went
up from all in the Keep when we received word today that we were successful.
Some thought it was not possible, but to the astonishment of all, it is done:
The Temple of the Winds is gone.' "
"Gone?"
Kahlan asked. "What's the Temple of the Winds? Where did it go?"
Richard shut the book. "I don't know. But later in the journal, Kolo says
that this team who had done it had betrayed then all. High D'Haran is an odd
language. Words have different meanings depending on how they're used."
"Most languages are that way. Our own is." "Yes, but sometimes,
in High D'Haran, a word that ordinarily has different
meanings
according to its usage is intended to have multiple meanings. You can't have
one meaning without all the rest. That makes translating it all the more
difficult.
"For
example, in the old prophecy that names me the bringer of death, the word
'death' means three different things, depending on how it's used: the bringer
of the underworld, the world of the dead; the bringer of spirits, spirits of
the dead; and the bringer of death, meaning to kill. Each meaning is different,
but all three were intended. That was the key.
"The
prophecy was in the book we brought with us from the Palace of the Prophets.
Warren was only able to translate the prophecy after I told him that all three
meanings were true. He told me that because of that, he was the first in
thousands of years to know the true meaning of the prophecy, as it was
written." "What does this have to do with the Temple of the
Winds?" "When Kolo says 'winds,' I think that he sometimes just means
the wind, like when you say that the wind is blowing today, but sometimes when
he says 'winds,' I think he means the Temple of the Winds. I think he used it
as a short way of referring to the Temple of the Winds, and at the same time as
a way to differentiate it from other temples."
Kahlan
blinked. "Are you saying that you think Shota's message, that the wind
hunts you. means that the Temple of the Winds is really somehow hunting
you?" "I don't know, for sure."
"Richard,
that's a pretty big leap of reasoning, if that's what you're really thinking-to
take Kolo's short way of referring to the Temple of the Winds and infer that
Shota is talking about the same place."
"When
Kolo talks about how everyone was in an uproar, and these men were to be put on
trial, he makes it sound as if the winds have a sense of perception."
Kahlan
cleared her throat this time. "Richard, are you trying to tell me that
Kolo claims that this place, the Temple of the Winds, is sentient?"
She
wondered how long it had been since he had gotten any sleep. She wondered if he
was thinking clearly. "I said I wasn't sure." "But that's what
you mean."
"Well,
it sounds . . . absurd, when you ;;ay it like that. It doesn't sound the same
when you read it in High D'Haran. I don't know how to explain the difference,
but there is one. Maybe it's just a difference of degree."
"Difference
of degree or not. how can a place have a sense of perception? Be
sentient?"
Richard
sighed. "I don't know. I've been trying to figure that out myself. Why do
you think I've been up all night?" "But such a thing is not
possible."
His
defiant gray eyes turned to her. "The Wizard's Keep is just a place, but
it knows when someone violates it. It reacts to that violation by stopping the
person, even killing them if it must, to prevent an unauthorized person from
entering a place they don't belong."
Kahlan
made a face. "Richard, that's the shields. Wizards placed those shields to
protect important or dangerous things from being stolen, or to prevent people
from going where they could be hurt."
"But
they react without anyone having to tell them to, don't they?" "So
does a leg-hold trap. That doesn't make them sentient. You mean that the
Temple
of the Winds is protected by shields. That's all you're saying, then-that it
has shields."
"Yes,
and no. It's more than simple shields. Shields only ward. The way Kolo talks
about it makes it sound like the Temple of the Winds can . . . I don't know,
like it can think, like it can decide things when it must." "Decide
things. Like what?"
"When
he wrote how everyone was? in a panic about the red moon, that was when he said
that the team who had sent the Temple of the Winds away had betrayed
them." "So . . . what?"
"So
I think that the Temple of the Winds made the moon turn red." Kahlan
watched his eyes, transfixed by the look of conviction in them. "I won't
even ask how such a thing would be possible, but for the moment, let's just say
you're right. Why would the Temple of the Winds make the moon turn red?"
Richard held her gaze. "As a warning." "Of what?"
"The
shields in the Keep react by warding. Almost no one can pass through them. I
can, because I have the right kind of magic. If someone who wants to do harm
has enough magic, and knowledge, they too can get by the shields. What happens,
then?" "Well, nothing. They get through."
''Exactly.
I think the Temple of the Winds can do more. I think it can know if someone has
violated its defenses, and lend a warning." "The red moon," she
whispered. "It makes sense."
She put
a hand tenderly to his arm. ''Richard, you need to get some rest. You can't
infer all this from Kolo's journal alone. It was just one journal, written a
long time ago."
He
yanked his arm away. "I don't know where else to look. Shota said the wind
was hunting me! I don't need to go to sleep to have nightmares."
In that
instant, Kahlan knew that it wasn't Shota's message that was driving him. It
was the prophecy down in the pit.
The
first part of the prophecy said: On the red moon will come the firestorm. It
was the second part that truly terrified her.
To
quench the inferno, he must seek the remedy in the wind. Lightning will find
him on that path, for the one in white, his true beloved, will betray him in
her blood.
She
realized that the prophecy frightened him more than he had admitted. Someone
knocked at the door. "What!" Richard yelled.
Cara
opened the door and poked her head in. "General Kerson would like to see
you, Lord Rahl."
Richard
raked his fingers back through his hair. "Send him in, please, Cara."
Richard put a hand to Kahlan's shoulder as he stared off toward the window.
"I'm sorry," he whispered. "You're right. I need some sleep.
Maybe Nadine can give me some of her herbs to put me to sleep. My mind doesn't
seem to want to allow it when I try."
She
would sooner let Shota give him something. Kahlan answered with a tender touch,
fearing to test her voice at that moment.
General
Kerson, wearing a wide grin, marched into the room. He saluted with a fist over
his heart before coming to a halt.
"Lord
Rahl. Good morning. And a good morning it is. thanks to you." Richard took
a sip of his tea. "Why's that?"
The
general slapped Richard on the shoulder. "The men are all better. The
things you ordered-the garlic, blueberries, quench oak tea-it worked. They're
all well again. I've got a whole army of bright-eyed men who're ready and able
to do as ordered. I can't tell you how relieved I am. Lord Rahl."
"Your smile just did. general. I'm relieved, too."
"My
men are uplifted that their new Lord Rahl is a worker of great magic, able to
turn death from their door. Every one of those men would like to buy you an ale
and toast your health and long life."
"It
wasn't magic. It was simply things that . . . Thank them for the offer, but I .
. . What about the riots? Were there any more last night?"
General
Kerson grunted dismissively. "It's mostly finished. The worry went out of
people when the moon returned to normal." "Good. That's good news,
general. Thinks for the report." The general rubbed a finger along his
smooth jaw. "Ah, there was one other thing. Lord Rahl." He glanced at
Kahlan. 'If we could talk ..." The man let out a sigh. "A . . . woman
was murdered last night." "I'm sorry. Was it someone you knew?"
"No,
Lord Rahl. She was a . . . a woman who . . . she accepted money in return
for..."
"If
you're trying to say she was a whore, general," Kahlan said, "I've
heard the word before. I won't faint if I hear it again."
"Yes,
Mother Confessor." He turned his attention back to Richard. "She was
found dead this morning." "What happened to her? How was she
killed?"
The
general was looking more uncomfortable by the moment. "Lord Rahl, I've
been looking at dead people a lot of years. I can't remember the last time I
vomited when I saw one."
Richard
rested a hand on one of the leather pouches on his wide belt. "What was
done to her?"
The
general glanced to Kahlan as if to beg her indulgence as he put an arm around
Richard's shoulder and pulled him aside. Kahlan couldn't hear the whispered
words, but the look on Richard's face told her she didn't want to know. Richard
went to the hearth and stood staring into the flames. "I'm sorry. But you
must have men who can look into it. Why are you bringing this to me?"
The
general grimaced and cleared his throat. "Ah, well, you see. Lord Rahl, it
was, well, it was your brother who found her."
Richard
turned with a dark frown. "What was Drefan doing at a house of
prostitution?"
"Ah,
well, I asked him that myself. Lord Rahl. He doesn't seem to me a man who would
have any trouble"-the general wiped a hand across his face-"I asked
him, and he said that it was his business, not mine, if he wanted to go to
whorehouses."
Kahlan
could see the tightly controlled anger etched in Richard's expression. He abruptly
snatched his gold cloak from a chair.
"Let's
go. Take me there. Take me where Drefan goes. I want to talk to the people
there."
Kahlan
and General Kerson rushed after Richard as he swept out the door. She caught
his sleeve and glanced to the general. "General, could you give us a
moment, please?"
After
he moved down the hall, Kahlan pulled Richard in the other direction, away from
Cara, Raina, Ulic, and Egan. She didn't think that Richard was in any mood at
the moment to be looking into such a thing. Besides, she had come to him for a
reason.
''Richard,
there are representatives writing to meet with us. They've been waiting
days." "Drefan is my brother." "He's also a grown
man."
Richard
rubbed his eyes. "I need to see about this, and I have a lot of other
things on my mind. Would you mind talking to the representatives? Tell them
that I was called away on important matters, and that they can just as easily
give their land's surrender to you and then all the ;arrangements of command
can begin to be coordinated?''
"I
can. I know that some of them would be just as happy to talk to me and not have
to face you, even in surrender; they're terrified of you." "I
wouldn't hurt them," Richard objected.
"Richard,
you frightened the wits out of them, before, when you demanded their surrender.
You promised to annihilate them if they dared join with the Imperial Order.
"They
fear you might do it anyway, on a whim. The reputation of the Master of D'Hara
precedes you, and you fed their fears. You can't expect that they'll suddenly
be at ease around you just because they agree to your terms."
He
leaned down and whispered in her ear. "Well, just tell them how lovable I
am."
"I
can tell them that you look forward to working with them for our mutual peace
and prosperity," she said with a smile. "They trust me, and will
listen.
"But
Tristan Bashkar, the Jarian minister, is here, along with a pair from the royal
house in Grennidon. These three are the important ones, the ones with huge
standing armies. They're expecting to meet with you. It is they who may not be
satisfied to surrender to me. They will want to discuss terms." "Make
them satisfied."
"Tristan
Bashkar is not an affable man but a tough negotiator, as are Leonora and Walter
Cholbane, from Grennidon."
"That's
one reason I ended the Midlaids alliance: too many wish to argue and posture.
Arguing and posturing are over. The terms of surrender are unconditional."
Richard hooked a thumb behind his wide leather belt. His expression hardened.
"The terms are fair to all, the same for all, and are not subject to
discussion. They're either with us or against us."
Kahlan
dragged a finger down the black sleeve of his shirt, over the rise and fall of
his muscles. He'd been busy with the journal. It had been too long since she'd
been in those arms.
"Richard,
you depend on me for advice. I know these lands. Just having them agree is not
the only aim. There will be need for sacrifice. We need their full cooperation
in this war.
"You
are Lord Rahl. the Master of D'Hara. You made the demands. You said that
surrender, while unconditional, will be? handled with respect for their people.
I know these representatives. They will expect to see you, as a matter of your
respect for them."
"You
are the Mother Confessor. We are one, in this as in everything else. You led
these people long before I came along. You have no less standing than I. You
have had their respect a good long time. Remind them of that."
Richard
directed a brief gaze up the hall to the waiting general, and the others. He
looked back into her eyes.
"It
may not be any of General Kerson's business, as far as Drefan is concerned, but
it is mine; I'll not be deceived by another brother. From what you've said, and
others have told me, he already has women in the palace fawning over him. If he
catches something from those whores and then gives it to the young women here .
. . that's my business.
"I'll
not have it be my brother bringing diseases to innocent women here who trust
him because he's my brother."
Sarah, the
woman who had been bringing tea to Richard, was young and trusting. She was one
of the women captivated by Drefan.
Kahlan
rubbed his back. "I understand. If you promise you will get some sleep,
I'll go talk with the representatives. When you have time to talk to them, then
you will talk to them. They have no choice but to wait. You are the Lord
Rahl." Richard bent and kissed her cheek. "I love you."
"Then marry me." "Soon. We'll go wake the sliph soon."
"Richard,
you be careful. Marlin said that the Sister of the Dark-I don't remember her
name-left Aydindril and returned to Jagang, but he may be lying. She could
still be out there."
"Sister
Amelia. You know, I remember her. When I first went to the Palace of the
Prophets, she was one of Verna's friends who met us: Sisters Phoebe, Janet, and
Amelia. I remember Amelia's tears of joy at seeing Verna after all those
years." "Jagang has her now."
He
nodded. "Verna must be heartbroken that her friend is in Jagang's hands,
and worse, that she's a Sister of the Dark. If Verna even knows." ''You be
careful. Despite what Jagang says, she may still be lurking in Aydindril."
"I doubt it, but I'll be careful."
He
turned and signaled to Cara. She sprinted up the hall. "Cara, I'd like you
to go with Kahlan. Let Berdine get some rest. I'll take Raina, Ulic, and Egan
with me." "Yes, Lord Rahl. I will keep her safe."
Richard
smiled. "I know you will, Cara, but that's not going to get you out of
your punishment."
She
betrayed no emotion. "Yes, Lord Rail." "What punishment?"
Kahlan asked when they were out of earshot. "An unjust one. Mother
Confessor." "That bad. What is it?" "I am to feed seeds to
his chipmunks." Kahlan suppressed a smile. "That doesn't sound so
bad. Cara." Cara flipped her Agiel up into her fist. "That is why it
is unjust, Mother Confessor."
CHAPTER������������ 26
Kahlan
sat alone in the ornate chair of the Mother Confessor, the tallest one behind
the semicircular dais, under the ornate fresco of Magda Searus, the first
Mother Confessor, and her wizard, Merritt. They were painted onto the dome that
capped the enormous council chambers. Kahlan watched the representatives
approaching across the expanse of marble before her.
From
her place of honor overhead, Magda Searus had witnessed the long history that
was the Midlands alliance. She had witnessed, too, Richard ending it. Kahlan
prayed that Magda Searus's spirit would understand and approve of his reasons;
they were benevolent, despite what it must seem to some.
Cara
stood behind Kahlan's right shoulder. Kahlan had hastily gathered a number of
administrators to handle matters of state, such as the signing of documents of
surrender and trade instructions, and several D'Haran officers to oversee
matters of command. They all waited silently behind her left shoulder.
Kahlan
tried to focus her mind on the things she must say and do, but Richard's words
about the Temple of the Winds made it hard to think of anything else. He
thought the Temple of the Winds was sentient. The winds were hunting Richard.
The Temple of the Winds was hunting him. That threat lurked in every dark
corner of her mind.
Footsteps
of the representatives and boot strikes of the soldiers escorting them echoed
off vast expanses of marble, and brought her out of her breeding. The approaching
knot of people strode through glaring shafts of sunlight that streamed in
through round windows at the lower edge of the dome. Kahlan put on her
Confessor's face, as her mother had taught her, a face that showed nothing, and
masked what was inside.
Arched
openings around the room covered stairways up to colonnaded balconies edged
with polished mahogany railings, but this day no observers stood behind the
railing.
The
group, flanked by D'Haran soldiers, came to a halt before the resplendent,
carved desk. Tristan Bashkar of Jaraand Leonora and Walter Cholbane of
Grennidon stood at the fore. Behind them waited ambassadors Seldon from
Mardovia, Wexler from Pendisan Reach, and Brumford from Togressa.
Kahlan
knew that Jara and Grennidon, lands of vast wealth and large standing armies,
were likely lo be the most obstinate about retaining their prerogative of
status in return for their surrender. She knew she must shake their confidence
first. Having served in a position of authority and power most of her life,
first as a Confessor, then as the Mother Confessor, Kahlan knew the task well.
She knew these people, knew how they thought; surrender was acceptable, as long
as they could retain station above certain other lands, and as long as they
could be assured of unfettered authority in their own business.
That
kind of attitude was no longer acceptable. It couldn't be tolerated if all of
them were to have a chance against the Imperial Order. Kahlan had to uphold
Richard's word and conditions of surrender. The future of every land in the
Midlands depended on this.
In
order for this new union to prevail against the Imperial Order, there could no
longer be sovereign lands, each with its own agenda. They must now all be one.
under one authority of command, working together as one people, not a coalition
that could fragment at a critical moment, letting the Imperial Order snatch
freedom from all.
"Lord
Rahl is occupied with matters of our mutual safety in our struggle. I have come
in his place to hear your decisions. Your words will be passed on to him as you
speak them to me. As Mother Confessor, Queen of Galea, Queen of Kelton, and
betrothed of the Master of D'Hara. I have the authority to speak on behalf of
the D'Haran empire. My word is as final as would be Lord Rahl's."
The
words had come out unbidden, but that was what it was-the D'Haran empire.
Richard was its supreme leader, its supreme authority. The representatives
bowed and mumbled that they understood. Wanting these people of authority to
know that the order of things was no longer how it had been in these chambers
in the past, Kahlan reversed the order of how such matters were handled.
"Ambassador Brumford, please step forward."
Tristan
Bashkar and Leonora Cholbane immediately began objecting. It was unheard of to
have a lesser land speak first.
Kahlan's
glare brought them to silence. "When I ask you to speak for your people,
then you may speak. Not before. Until a land joins with us through surrender of
their sovereignty, they have no standing before me.
"Do
not expect that your presumption will be excused, as was customary in the past
in the alliance of the Midlands. The Midlands alliance is no more. You now
stand in the D'Haran empire." An icy silence settled over the chambers.
Kahlan
had been devastated when she had first heard that Richard had spoken much the
same words in this very chamber to representatives of the Midlands. She had
come to understand that there was no other way.
Tristan
Bashkar and the Cholbanes, to whom she had directed her words, stood red-faced
but silent. When she moved her gaze to Ambassador Brumford, he remembered her
orders and scurried forward.
The
amicable Ambassador Brumford gathered his voluminous violet robes in one hand
and put a knee to the marble floor as he sank into a deep bow.
"Mother
Confessor," he said as he straightened, "Togressa stands ready to
join with you and all free people in our alliance against tyranny."
"Thank
you. Ambassador. We welcome Togressa as a member of the D'Haran empire. The
people of Togressa will have standing equal to any among us. We know your
people will do their part."
"They
will. Thank you, Mother Confessor. Please relay my word to Lord Rahl that we
are joyful to be a part of D'Hara."
Kahlan
smiled sincerely. "Lord Rahl and I share your joy. Ambassador
Brumford."
He
moved to the side as Kahlan called forward the muscled, short, fiery-eyed
Ambassador Wexler from Pendisan Reach.
"Mother
Confessor," he said upon arising, tugging his leather surcoat straight,
"Pendisan Reach is a small land, with a small legion of men at arms, but
we are fierce fighters, as any who have come against our swords can attest.
"The
Mother Confessor has always fought for us with the same fierceness. We have
always held with the Midlands and with the Mother Confessor, and so we accord
your words great weight. With the greatest respect, we heed your counsel to
join with D'Hara.
"Our
swords are lowered to you and Lord Rahl. The people of Pendisan Reach, both
those of simple muscle and bone, and those with magic's talents, wish to be at
the van of battle against the horde from beyond the wilds, so that the enemy
may have a bitter taste of our ferocity. We will be known to all from this day
forward as the D'Harans from Pendisan Reach, if it so pleases you."
Touched
by his words, Kahlan bowed her head to him. The people of Pendisan Reach did
have a flair for the dramatic, but they were no less wholehearted for it. As
small as their land was, they were not to be taken lightly; the ambassador's
bold claim of their ferocity was no idle boast. If only their numbers were as
great as their fortitude.
"I
can't promise you the van. Ambassador Wexler, but we will be honored to have
your people with us in our struggle. We will value them regardless of how they
serve."
She
turned a dispassionate face to the ambassador from Mardovia. The Mardovian
people were proud, too, and no less fierce. They had to be for their survival
in tough country among the wilds, though they, also, were a small land.
"Ambassador Seldon, please come forward and deliver Mardovia's
decision." Ambassador Seldon glided forward, wearily eying the others. He
bowed from the waist, his white hair falling forward over the gold braiding on
the shoulders of his red coat as he did so.
"Mother
Confessor. The assembly of seven of Mardovia in our mother city of Renwold has
charged me with the duty of the long journey to Aydindril to relay their
decision. The assembly of seven has no desire or intention to relinquish rule
over our beloved people to outlanders, whether they be from D'Hara or from the
Imperial Order.
"Your
war with the Imperial Order is not our war. The assembly of seven has ruled
that Mardovia will remain sovereign and will remain neutral."
Behind
her, in the silence, a soldier coughed. The sound of it echoed around the stone
chamber.
"Ambassador
Seldon, the land of Mardovia lies among the eastern wilds, not far from the Old
World. You will be vulnerable to attack."
"Mother
Confessor, the walls surrounding our mother city of Renwold have stood the test
of time. As you say, we lie among the people of the wilds. Those people in the
past have tried to exterminate us. None ever succeeded in so much as breaching
the walls, much less overcoming our stalwart defenders. Instead, the various
peoples of the wilds now trade with us, and Renwold is a center of commerce in
the eastern wilds of the Midlands, respected by all who once sought to conquer
us."
Kahlan
leaned forward. "Ambassador, the Order is no tribe from the wilds. They
will crush you. Doesn't the assembly of seven have the sense to realize
that?"
Ambassador
Seldon smiled indulgently. "Mother Confessor, I understand your concern,
but as I have said, Renwold's walls have stood us in good stead. Be assured,
Renwold
will not fall to the Order." His expression hardened. "Nor will it
fall to this new alliance you form with D'Hara.
"Numbers
do not mean much against a knob of stone in the wilds. Would-be conquerors soon
tire of breaking their teeth on so small a morsel. Our small size, our
location, and our walls make us less than worth the trouble. Should we join
with you, then we would be vulnerable because we would represent resistance.
"Our
neutrality is not of hostile intent. We will be willing to trade with your
alliance, as we will be willing to trade with the Imperial Order. We wish harm
to no one, but we will defend ourselves."
"Ambassador
Seldon, your wife and children are in Renwold. Don't you understand the danger
to your family?"
"My
beloved wife and children are safe behind the walls of Renwold, Mother
Confessor. I fear not for them."
"And
will your walls stand against magic? The Order uses those with magic! Or are
you too drunk with the past to see the threat to your future?"
His
face had reddened. "The decision of the assembly of seven is final. We
don't fear for our safety. We have people of magic in turn to protect the walls
from magic. Neutrality is not a threat. Perhaps you should pray to the good
spirits for mercy, since it is you who sues for war. To live by violence is to
invite it."
Kahlan
drummed her fingernails against the desktop as everyone awaited her words. She
knew that even if she could convince this man, it would do no good: the
assembly of seven had made its decision, and he could not change it even if he
wanted.
"Ambassador
Seldon, you will leave Aydindril by the end of the day. You will return to the
assembly of seven in Renwold, and tell them that D'Hara does not recognize
neutrality. This is a struggle for our world-whether it is to thrive in the
Light, or wither under the shadow of tyranny. Lord Rahl has decreed that there
are no bystanders. I have decreed no mercy against the Order. We are of one
mind in this.
"You
are either with us, or you stand against us. The Imperial Order views it the
same.
"Tell
the assembly of seven that Mardovia now stands against us. One of us, either
D'Hara or the Order, will conquer Mardovia. Direct them to pray to the good
spirits, and ask that it is we who conquer you and take Renwold instead of the
Order. We will impose harsh sanctions for your resistance, but your people will
live. Should the Order set upon you first, they will annihilate your defenders
and enslave your people. Mardovia will be ground into the dust of the
past."
His
indulgent smile widened. "Fear not. Mother Confessor. Renwold will stand
against any land, even the Order."
Kahlan
regarded him with cold ire. "I have walked among the dead inside the walls
of Ebinissia. I have seen the slaughter at the hands of the Order. I have seen
what they did to the living, first. I will pray for those poor people who will
suffer because of the mad delusions of the assembly of seven."
Kahlan
angrily gestured to the guards to escort the man from the chambers. She knew
what would happen to the Mardovian people if the Order attacked first. She
knew, too, that Richard could not risk the lives of allies simply to take
Renwold in order to protect it. It was too distant a land. She would advise
against it, as would any of his generals.
Mardovia
was lost; their neutrality would draw the Order as the scent of blood drew
wolves.
She had
walked through the gates in the massive walls of Renwold. The walls were
impressive. They were not invincible. The Order had wizards, like Marlin. The
walls would not stand against wizard's fire, despite those of magic's talent
defending Renwold.
Kahlan
tried to put the fate of Mardovia from her mind as she called the pair from the
royal house in Grennidon forward. "How does Grennidon stand?" she
growled. Walter Cholbane cleared his throat. His sister spoke.
"Grennidon,
a land of great importance, a land of vast fields which produce-" Kahlan
cut her off. "I asked how Grennidon stands,"
Leonora
dry-washed her hands as she considered the resolve in Kahlan's eyes. "The
royal house offers its surrender. Mother Confessor." "Thank you,
Leonora. We are gladdened for you and for your people. Please see to it that my
officers here are granted any information they need so that your army can be
brought under coordination of our central command."
"Yes,
Mother Confessor," she stammered. "Mother Confessor, are our forces
to be bled against the walls of Renwold to bring them down?' '
Grennidon
was north of Mardovia, and in the best position to attack, but Kahlan knew that
Grennidon would not relish attacking a trading partner. Moreover, some of the
family of the assembly of seven had married into the royal house of Cholbane.
"No.
Renwold is a city of the walking dead. The vultures will pick it clean. In the
meantime, trade with Mardovia is forbidden. We trade only with those who join
us."
"Yes,
Mother Confessor."
"Mother
Confessor," Walter, her brother, interjected, "we wish to discuss
some of the terms with Lord Rahl. We have things of value to offer, and matters
of interest to us that we wish to bring to his attention,"
''Surrender
is unconditional. There is nothing to discuss. Lord Rahl has instructed me to
remind you that there will be no negotiations. Either you are with us, or you
are against us. Now, do you wish to withdraw your offer of surrender before you
sign the documents and instead cast your fate with Mardovia?" He pressed
his lips together as he took a deep breath. "No, Mother Confessor."
"Thank you. When Lord Rahl has the time, soon, I hope, he would very much
like to hear what you have to say, as a valued member of the D'Haran empire.
Just . remember that you are now part of D'Hara, and he is the Master of
D'Hara, the master of that empire."
She had
treated them with less respect than the two small lands who had offered their
surrender; not to do so would have resulted in emboldening them, and inviting
trouble. These two were among those who always requested red rooms.
Walter
and Leonora seemed to relax, now that Kahlan had their acquiescence. The
Cholbanes could be tenacious and stubborn to the end, but once an agreement was
reached and their word given, they never looked back, never second-guessed what
might have been. It was a quality that made dealings with them bearable.
"We understand, Mother Confessor," Walter said.
"Yes,"
his sister added. "And we look forward to the day that the Imperial Order
no longer threatens all our people."
"Thank
you. both of you. I know this must seem harsh to you. but know that we rejoice
to count you and your people among us."
As they
moved off to sign the papers and talk with the officers, Kahlan turned her
attention to Tristan Bashkar. of Jara. "Minister Bashkar, how stands
Jara?"
Tristan
Bashkar was a member of the royal family of Jara. In Jara, the position of
minister was one of high rank and trust. Of those gathered, he was the only one
with the authority to change his land's commitment without returning home for
consultation. If he thought there was reason enough, he could alter the royal
family's instructions, and thus. Jara's stand.
Hardly
out of his thirties, he wore his age well. He also used his looks to distract
people from his quick mind. After people had been disarmed by his likable
smile, bright brown eyes, and smooth-spoken flattery, he would extract
concessions before they realized they had parted with them.
He
brushed a thick lock of dark hair back from his forehead-a compulsive habit. Or
possibly a way to draw interest to his eyes. where people were often
distracted.
He
spread his hands apologetically. "Mother Confessor, I'm afraid it's not as
easy as a simple yes or no, although I wish to assure you that we are in
harmony with the great empire of D'Hara, and admire the wisdom of both Lord
Rahl. and of course, yourself. We have always put the advice of the Mother
Confessor above all others."
Kahlan
sighed. "Tristan, I'm in no mood for your usual games. You and I have
sparred in these chambers more times than I can remember. Don't test me today.
I'll not have it."
Being a
member of the royal family, he was well trained in all the arts of war, and had
fought with distinction in the past. Broad-shouldered and tall. he cut a
handsome figure. His easy smile always carried a playful twist that cloaked any
threat, were there one. and there sometimes was. Kahlan never turned her back,
so to speak, on Tristan Bashkar.
He
casually unbuttoned his dark blue coat and rested a hand on his hip. The ploy
revealed an ornate knife sheathed at his belt. Kahlan had heard it whispered
that, going into battle, Tristan Bashkar preferred to draw his knife rather than
his sword. It was whispered, too, that he got sadistic pleasure from slicing
the enemy.
"Mother
Confessor, I admit that in the past I've been reticent to reveal our exact
position in order to best protect our people from the avarice of other lands;
but it isn't like that this time. You see, the way we view the situation-"
"I'm
not interested. I want only to know if you stand with us or against us. If you
stand against us, Tristan, I give you my word that by morning we will have
troops riding for the royal palace in Sandilar, and they will return with
either unconditional surrender, or the heads of the royal family.
"General
Baldwin is here in Aydindril with a sizable Keltish force. I'll send
him-Keltans never let down their queen, nor rest until she is satisfied. I am
now the queen of Kelton. Do you wish a fight with General Baldwin?"
"Of
course not. Mother Confessor. We wish no fight, but if you will hear me
out-"
Kahlan
slapped a hand to the desk, silencing him. "When the Imperial Order held
Aydindril, before Richard liberated it, Jara sat on the council, allied with
the Order."
"As
was D'Hara, at the time," he gently reminded her.
Kahlan
glared at him. "I was brought before the council, and convicted of the
very crimes committed by the Order. Wizard Ranson, from the Order, called for a
death sentence. The councilor from Jara sat at this desk and voted to have me
beheaded." "Mother Confessor..."
Kahlan
turned a finger to her right. "He sat right there and called for me to be
put to death."
She looked
back to Tristan's brown eyes. "If you look closely, I think you will still
be able to pick out a stain down the front of the desk over there. When Richard
liberated Aydindril, he executed those traitorous councilors. The stain was
left by the Jarian councilor. I heard that Richard cleaved the man nearly in
two, he was so angered by the betrayal to me, and to the people of the
Midlands."
Tristan
stood politely, showing nothing of his emotions. "Mother Confessor, it was
not by the choice of the royal family that that councilor spoke for Jara. He
was a puppet of the Order." "Then join with us."
"We
want to, and we intended to. In fact, I was sent with authorization to make it
so."
"Whatever
it is you want, Tristan, you'll not get it. We make the same offer to all, and
no special terms for any."
"Mother
Confessor, would it be considered a special term to hear me out?" Kahlan
sighed. "Make it short, and keep in mind, Tristan, that your smile has no
effect on me."
He
smiled anyway. "As a member of the royal family, I have the authority, and
authorization, to surrender Jara and join with you. Given a choice, that is
what we wish." "Then do it."
"The
red moon interrupts those plans."
Kahlan
sat up straighter. "What does that have to do with it?" "Mother
Confessor, Javas Kedar, our star guide, holds great sway with the royal family.
He has read the stars in the matter of our surrender, and has given his opinion
that the stars hold this action with favor.
"Before
I left home, Javas Kedar told me that the stars would give sign if
circumstances changed, and to heed any sign. The red moon has given me pause in
our plans." "The moon is not the stars."
"The
moon is in the sky. Mother Confessor. Javas Kedar councils on the meaning of
moon symbols, also."
Kahlan pinched
the bridge of her nose between a thumb and finger as she sighed. "Tristan,
are you going to allow harm to visit your people on the basis of such
superstition?"
"No,
Mother Confessor. But I am bound by my honor to give heed to the beliefs of our
people. Lord Rahl said that surrender would not mean that we had to give up our
customs and beliefs."
"Tristan,
you have an annoying habit of leaving out things you wish to ignore. Richard
said that a land wouldn't have to give up its customs as long as they brought
harm to no one, and broke no laws common to all. You are stepping over a
dangerous line."
"Mother
Confessor, we in no way wish to circumvent his words or to step over any line.
I wish only some time." "Time. Time for what?"
"Time,
Mother Confessor, to assure myself that the red moon isn't a sign that we have
reason to fear joining with D'Hara. Now, I can either travel back to Jara and
consul', with Javas Kedar, or I can simply wait here for a while, if you would
prefer, to assure myself that the red moon is not a sign of danger."
Kahlan
knew that the Jarians. and the royal family in particular, were fervent
believers in guidance from the stars. As much effort as Tristan devoted to
chasing skirts, Kahlan knew that were a beautiful woman to offer him her
charms, he would flee from her if he believed the stars were against it.
It
would take him at least a month to return to Jara, consult the star guide, and
return to Aydindril.
"How
long would you have to wait in Aydindril before you felt comfortable and could
in good conscience surrender?"
He
frowned thoughtfully for a moment. "If Aydindril remained safe for a
couple of weeks after such a significant sign, then I would feel safe in
knowing that the sign was not a bad portent." Kahlan drummed her fingers.
"You have two weeks, Tristan. Not one day more."
"Thank
you. Mother Confessor. I pray that in two weeks we can consummate our union
with D'Hara." He bowed. "Good day. Mother Confessor, and I look
forward to the stars remaining fair for us."
He took
a step away, but turned back. "By the way, would you happen to know of a
place I can stay for such a length of time? Our palace was burned down in your
battle with the Blood of the Fold. What with all the damage to Aydindril, I'm
having difficulty in finding accommodations."
She
knew what he was angling for-to be close so he could see if the stars struck
out against D'Haran rule. The man thought too much of himself, thought himself
more clever than he was.
Kahlan
smiled. "Oh yes, I know a place. You will stay right here, where we can
keep an eye on you until the two weeks are up."
He
buttoned his blue coat. ' 'Why, thank you, Mother Confessor, for your
hospitality. It is most appreciated."
"And,
Tristan, while you are a guest under my roof, if you lay a finger, or anything
else, on any of the women living and working here, I will see to it that the
anything else is cut off."
He
laughed good-naturedly. "Mother Confessor, I never knew you believed the
gossip about me. I'm afraid that I often have to resort to the charms of coin
for company, but I'm flattered that you would think me so talented at wooing
young ladies. If I should break your rules, I would expect to be put on trial
and subjected to your choice of punishment." Trial.
Richard
said that the people who sent the Temple of the Winds away were put on trial.
In the Wizard's Keep there were records of all trials held there. She had never
read any of those books, but she had been told of them. Maybe they could find
out from the records of the trial what happened to the Temple of the Winds. As
Kahlan watched Tristan Bashkar departing behind a pair of guards, she thought
about
Richard, and wondered what he would find. She wondered if he was about to lose
another brother.
Kahlan
knew most of the women working at the Confessors' Palace. The women at the
palace respected Richard as a man of honor. She wouldn't like to think that
they would be prey to a man who would win them by trading on their trust of
Richard.
She
felt a pang of sadness for Richard. She knew he was hoping that Drefan would be
a brother he could be proud of. Kahlan hoped that Drefan didn't turn out to be
trouble. She remembered his hand on Cara.
Kahlan
turned to the Mord-Sith. "Three more with us, one lost, and one yet to
decide."
Cara
smiled conspiratorially. "A sister of the Agiel must be able to strike
fear into people's hearts. Mother Confessor, you wear the Agiel well. I thought
I could hear some of their knees knocking all the way up here."
CHAPTER������������ 27
Armor and
weapons clattered and clanged as the soldiers following behind marched up the
steep cobbled street. Narrow houses, mostly three and four stories, sat cheek
by jowl, with the upper floors overhanging the lower so that the topmost almost
closed off the sky. It was a gloomy part of the city.
Soldiers
throughout the city had cheered their thanks as Richard passed, wishing him
good health and long life. Some had wanted to buy him a drink. Some had run up
to bow before him and give the devotion: "Master Rahl guide us. Master
Rahl teach us. Master Rahl protect us. In your light we thrive. In your mercy
we are sheltered. In your wisdom we are humbled. We live only to serve. Our
lives are yours."
They
had hailed him as a great wizard for protecting them and healing their
sickness. Richard felt more than a little uncomfortable at their acclaim: he
had. after all, simply instructed them to take well-known cures for intestinal
distress. He hadn't worked any magic.
He had
tried to explain it wasn't magic; that the things they ate and drank had cured
them. They would hear none of it. They had expected magic from him. and. in
their eyes, they had gotten it. He had finally given up on explaining and took
to waving his thanks for their praises. Had they gone to an herb seller, they
would no doubt be just as healthy, and complaining about the price.
He had
to admit, though, that it did make him feel good to know that he had helped
people for a change instead of hurting them. He understood a little of what
Nadine must feel when she helped people with her herbs.
He had
been warned of a wizard's need for balance. There was balance in all things,
but especially in magic. He could no longer eat meat-it made him sick- and
suspected it was the gift seeking balance for the killing he sometimes had to
do. He liked to think that helping people was part of the balance in being a
war wizard.
Sullen
people, going about their business, moved to the side of the cramped street,
tramping through the dirty snow still in the sheltered places in order to
squeeze past the soldiers. Grim-looking groups of older boys and young men
watched warily and then vanished around corners as Richard and his escort
approached.
Richard
absently touched the gold-worked leather pouch on his belt. It contained white
sorcerer's sand that had been in the pouch when he found the belt in the Keep.
Sorcerer's sand was the crystallized bones of the wizards who had given their
lives into the Towers of Perdition separating the Old and New Worlds. It was a
sort of distilled magic. White sorcerer's sand gave power to spells drawn with
it- good and evil. The proper spell drawn in white sorcerer's sand could invoke
the Keeper. He touched the other gold-worked pouch on his belt. A little
leather purse tied
securely
inside contained black sorcerer's sand. He had gathered that sorcerer's sand
himself from one of the towers. No wizard since the towers were built had been
able to gather any black sorcerer's sand; it could only be taken from a tower
by one with Subtractive Magic.
Black
sorcerer's sand was the counter to the white. They nullified each other. Even
one grain of the black would contaminate a spell drawn with the white, even one
drawn to invoke the Keeper. He had used it to defeat Darken Rahl's spirit and
send him back to the underworld.
Prelate
Annalina had told him to guard the black sand with his life-that a spoonful of
it was worth kingdoms. He possessed several kingdoms' worth. He never let the
little leather purse containing the black sand out of his sight or his reach.
Children,
layered with ragged clothes for warmth against the cold spring day, played
catch-the-fox in the tightly hemmed street, running from doorway to doorway,
giggling with glee at the prospect of finding the fox, and more so at seeing
the impressive procession coming up their very own street. Even seeing happy
children didn't bring a smile to Richard's face. "This one. Lord
Rahl," General Kerson said.
The
general lifted a thumb to a door on the right, set back a few feet into the
clapboard face of a building. The faded red paint was flaking off the bottom of
the door where the weather worked on it the most. A small sign said:
"Latherton Rooming House. ''
A big,
stocky man inside didn't look up from a chair behind a rickety table set with
dry biscuits and a bottle. He stared at nothing with red-rimmed eyes. His hair
was disheveled and his clothes rumpled. He seemed in a daze. Beyond him was a
stairway, and beside that a narrow hall that ran back into darkness.
"Closed," he murmured.
"Are
you Silas Latherton?" Richard asked, his gaze sweeping the clutter of
dirty clothes and bed sheets awaiting washing. A half dozen empty ewers sat
against the wall, along with a stack of washrags.
The man
peered up from behind a puzzled frown. "Yeah. Who are you? You look
familiar."
"I'm
Richard Rahl. Perhaps you see a resemblance to my brother, Drefan."
"Drefan." The man's eyes widened. "Lord Rahl." His chair
rasped noisily against the floor as he shoved it back and stood to bow.
"Forgive me. I didn't recognize you. I've never seen you before. I didn't
know that the healer was your brother. I beg the Lord Rahl's forgiveness
..."
For the
first time, Silas noticed the dark-haired Mord-Sith at Richard's side, the
muscled general at the other side, Richard's two huge bodyguards towering
behind him, and the phalanx of soldiers spilling out the doorway and into the
street. He raked his greasy hair back and stood up straighter.
"Show
me the room where the . . . where the woman was murdered," Richard said.
Silas
Latherton bowed twice before hurrying to the stairs, tucking in his shirt as he
went. Checking over his shoulder to make sure Richard was following, he climbed
the stairs two at a time. They objected to his weight with creaks and groans.
He
finally came to a halt before a door partway down a narrow hall. With the walls
painted red, the candles at either end of the hall provided little
illumination. The place stank.
"In
here. Lord Rahl." Silas said.
When he
moved to open the door. Raina snatched his collar and pulled him back out of
the way. She planted him in place with a sinister look. A look like that from
Raina was enough to give an angry cloud pause.
She
opened the door and, Agiel in hand, stepped into the room before Richard.
Richard waited a moment while Raina checked the room for threat; it was easier
than objecting. Silas stared at the floor while Richard and General Kerson went
into the little room. Ulic and Egan took up posts beside the door and folded
their massive arms.
There
wasn't much to see: a bed, a small pine chest beside it, and a washstand. A
dark stain discolored the unfinished spruce floorboards. The bloodstain ran
under the bed and covered nearly the entire floor.
The
size of it didn't surprise him. The general had told him what had been done to
the woman.
The
water in the washbasin looked to be at least half blood. The rag hanging over
its side was red with it. The killer had washed the blood from himself before
he left. He must either be neat or, more likely, didn't want to walk out past
Silas Latherton dripping blood.
Richard
opened the pine chest. It contained orderly stacks of clothes, and nothing
else. He let the lid drop back down.
Richard
leaned a hand against the doorway. "No one heard anything?" Silas
shook his head. "A woman is mutilated like that, has her breasts cut off.
and is stabbed hundreds of times, and no one heard a thing?"
Richard
realized that his exhaustion was putting an edge to his voice. His mood wasn't
helping, either, he guessed.
Silas
swallowed. "She'd been gagged, Lord Rahl. Her hands were tied, too."
Richard scowled. "She must have kicked her feet. No one heard her kicking?
If someone was slicing me up, and I was gagged and my hands were tied. I'd have
kicked the washstand over at least. She must have kicked her feet trying to get
someone's attention."
"I
didn't hear it if she did. None of the other women heard it, either. Least,
they never mentioned it, and I'd think they would have come got me if they'd
heard anything like that. If there was trouble, they always came to me. They
always did. They know I'm not shy about protecting them."
Richard
rubbed his eyes. The prophecy wouldn't leave him be. He had a headache.
"Bring the other women here. I want to talk to them." "They left
me, after-" Silas gestured vaguely. "Except Bridget." He hurried
to the end of the hall and knocked on the last door. A woman with rumpled red
hair peered out after he spoke quietly to her. She withdrew back into her room
and in a moment emerged, pulling a cream-colored robe closed. She tossed a
quick knot in the tie as she followed Silas up the hall to Richard.
Standing
in the belly of a stinking whorehouse, Richard was getting more angry with
himself by the moment. Despite trying to be objective, he had begun to let
himself be happy about having a brother. He was beginning to like Drefan.
Drefan was a healer. What could be more noble?
Silas
and the woman bowed. They both looked the way Richard felt: dirty, tired, and
distraught.
"Did
you hear anything?" Bridget shook her head. Her eyes looked haunted.
"Did you know the woman who died?"
"Rose,"
Bridget said. "I only met her once, for a few minutes. She just came here
yesterday."
"Do
either of you have any idea who murdered her?" Silas and Bridget shared a
look.
"We
know who did it. Lord Rahl," Silas said, a smoldering tone welling in his
voice. "Fat Harry."
"Fat
Harry? Who's that? Where can we find him?"
For the
first time, Silas Latherton's features twisted in anger. "I shouldn't have
let him come here anymore. The women didn't like him."
"None
of us girls would take him anymore," Bridget said. "He drinks, and
when he drinks, he gets mean. There's no need to put up with that, not with the
army . . ." Her words died out as she glanced to the general. She resumed
with a different tack. "We have enough clients nowadays. We don't have to
put up with mean drunks like fat Harry."
"The
women all told me that they wouldn't see Harry no more," Silas said.
"When he came last night, I knew that they would all say no. Harry was real
insistent, and seemed sober enough, so I asked Rose if she'd see him, as she
was new and..."
"And
didn't know she was in danger," Richard finished. "It wasn't like
that," Silas said defensively. "Harry didn't seem to be drunk. I knew
the other women wouldn't take him, though, sober or not, so I asked Rose if she
was interested. She said she could use the money. Harry was the last one with
her. She was found a little while later." "Where can we find this
Harry?"
Silas's
eyes narrowed. "In the underworld, where he belongs." "You
killed him?"
"No
one saw who slit his fat throat. I wouldn't know who done it." Richard
glanced at the long knife tucked behind Silas's belt. He didn't blame the man.
If they had captured fat Harry, he would get the same for his crime as had
already been done. Although he would have had a trial first, and he could have
confessed, just to be sure it was he who had done it.
That
was why they used Confessors: to be sure they had convicted the guilty man.
Once touched by her magic, a criminal would confess all that he had done.
Richard wouldn't want Kahlan to hear what had been done to this woman. Rose.
Especially not from the beast who had done it.
It made
him sick to his stomach to think of Kahlan having to touch a man like that, a
man who had killed a woman in such a brutal fashion. He feared he would have
killed Harry himself to keep Kahlan from having to touch the flesh of a man
like that.
He knew
she had touched other men who were no better. He didn't want her to ever have
to do that again. He knew it had to hurt her to hear such perverted crimes
confessed in detail. He feared to think what terrible memories haunted her and
visited her dreams.
Richard
forced his mind off it and looked at Bridget. "Why did you stay when the
others ran off?"
She
shrugged. "Some of them had children, and feared for them. I don't fault
them their fears, but we were always safe here. Silas has always been fair to
me. I've been hurt other places, but never here. It wasn't Silas's fault that a
crazy killer
did
this. Silas always respected our wishes when we said we wouldn't see a man
again."
Richard
felt his stomach tighten. "And you saw Drefan?" "Sure. All the
girls saw Drefan."
"All
the girls," Richard repeated. He held a tight grip on his anger.
"Yeah. We all saw him. Except Rose. She never got a chance, 'cause she . .
." "So, Drefan didn't have a . . . favorite?" Richard had been
hoping that Drefan had confined himself to one woman he liked, and that maybe
she would be one who was healthy, at least.
Bridget's
brow wrinkled up. "How can a healer have a favorite?" "Well, I
mean, was there one he preferred, or did he just take who was available?"
The woman stuck a finger into her mat of red hair and scratched her scalp.
"I think you got the wrong idea about Drefan, Lord Rahl. He never touched
us . . . in that way. He only came here to do his healing." "He came
here to heal?"
"Yeah,"
Bridget said. Silas nodded his agreement. "Half the girls had something or
other. Rashes and sores and such. Most people who sell herbs and cures don't
want to help our kind, so we just live with our ailments.
"Drefan
told us how he wanted us to wash. He gave us herbs, and unguents to put on the
sores. He came twice before, real late, after we was done, so as not to interfere
with us earning a living. He checked on the girls' children, too. Drefan was
special kind with the children. One had a bad cough, and he got better after
Drefan gave him something to take.
"He
came checking on us early this morning. After he saw one of the girls, he went
to Rose's room, to check on her. That's when he found her. He came flying out
of her room after what he saw and was calling out"-she pointed at the
floor at Richard's feet-"between throwing up. We all rushed out in the
hall and saw him there, on his knees, heaved his guts out right there."
"So he didn't come here to... to... and he never-" Bridget guffawed.
"I offered-no charge, since he helped me and all with what he gave me. He
said that that wasn't why he had come. He said he only wanted to help, that he
was a healer.
"I
offered, mind you, and I can be very persuasive"-she winked-"but he
said no. He has a real handsome smile, he does. Just like yours. Lord
Rahl."
"Enter,"
came the response to Richard's knock.
Drefan
was kneeling before his array of candles set about on the table against the
wall. His head was bowed, and his hands were folded in supplication. "I
hope I'm not interrupting," Richard said.
Drefan
looked back over his shoulder and then stood. His eyes reminded Richard of
Darken Rahl. Drefan had the same blue eyes, with the same indefinably odd,
unsettling look in them. Richard couldn't help being disquieted by them. It
sometimes made him feel as if Darken Rahl himself were staring at him.
People
who had lived in fear of Darken Rahl were probably terrified when they looked
into Richard's eyes, too. "What are you doing?" Richard asked.
"Praying
to the good spirits to watch over the soul of someone." "Whose
soul?"
Drefan
sighed. He looked tired and doleful. "The soul of a woman no one cared
about." "A woman named Rose?"
Drefan
nodded. "How did you know about her?" He waved off his own question.
"Forgive me-I wasn't thinking. You're the Lord Rahl. I expect you get
reports of such things."
"Yes,
well, I do hear about things." Richard spotted something new in the room.
"I see you've taken to brightening up the decor."
Drefan
saw where Richard was looking, and went to the chair beside the bed. He
returned with a small pillow. He ran his fingers lovingly over the rose embroidered
on it.
"This
was hers. They didn't know where she came from, so Silas-he's the man who runs
the house-Silas insisted I take this for the small help I offer the women
there. I won't accept their money. If they had money to spare, they wouldn't be
doing what they do."
Richard
wasn't an expert, but the embroidered rose looked to be done with care.
"Do you think she made it?"
Drefan
shrugged. "Silas didn't know. Maybe she did. Maybe she saw it somewhere
and bought it because it had a rose on it, like her name." He gently
nibbled his thumb back and forth across the rose as he stared at it.
"Drefan, what are you doing going to . . . to places like that? There's no
shortage of people needing healing. We have soldiers here who were wounded down
by the pit. There's plenty for you lo do. Why were you going to
whorehouses?"
Drefan
dragged a finger down the stem of green thread. "I'm seeing to the
soldiers. I go on my own time, before people are up and need me."
"But why go there at all?"
Drefan's
eyes welled with tears as he stared at the rose on the pillow. "My mother
was a whore," he whispered. "I am the son of a whore. Some of those
women have children. I could have been any one of them.
"Just
like Rose, my mother took the wrong man to her bed. No one knew Rose. No one
knew who she was, or where she came from. I don't even know my own mother's
name-she wouldn't tell the healers she left me with. Only that she was a
whore."
"Drefan,
I'm sorry. That was a pretty stupid question." "No, it was a perfectly
logical question. No one cares about those women, I mean cares about them as
people. They get beaten bloody by the men who come to them. They catch terrible
diseases. They're scorned by other people.
"Herb
sellers don't want them coming into their shops-it gives them a reputation and
then decent people won't come around. Many of the things those women have, even
I don't know how to cure. They suffer sad, lingering deaths. Just for money.
Some of them are drunks, and the men prostitute them and pay them with liquor.
They're drunk all the time and don't know the difference.
"Some
of them think they'll find a rich man and be his mistress. They think they will
please him and gain his favor. Like my mother. Instead, they have bastard
children, like me."
Richard
was mentally wincing. He had been ready to believe that Drefan was an unfeeling
opportunist. "Well, if it makes you feel any better. I'm the son of that
bastard, too."
Drefan
looked lip and smiled. "I guess so. At least your mother loved you. Mine didn't.
She didn't even leave me her name."
"Don't
say that, Drefan. Your mother loved you. She took you to a place where you
would be safe, didn't she?"
He
nodded. "And left me there with people she didn't know." "But
she left you because she had to, so that you would be safe. Can you imagine how
that must have hurt her? Can you imagine how it must have broken her heart to
leave you with strangers? She must have loved you a great deal to do that for
you."
Drefan
smiled. "Wise words, my brother. With a mind like that. you might make
something of yourself, someday."
Richard
returned the smile. "Sometimes, we have to do desperate things to save the
ones we love. I have a grandfather who has great admiration for acts of
desperation. I think, with your mother. I'm beginning to understand what he
means." "Grandfather?"
"My
mother's father." Richard idly stroked a finger along the raised gold wire
spelling out the word TRUTH On the hilt of his sword. ' 'One of the greatest
men I've ever had the honor of knowing. My mother died when I was young, and my
father-the man I thought was my father-was often gone on his business as a
trader. Zedd practically raised me. I guess I'm more Zedd than anyone
else."
Zedd
had the gift. Richard had inherited the gift not only from Darken Rahl, but
also from Zedd, from his mother's side as well as his father's. From both
bloodlines. Richard found comfort in knowing that the gift of a good man flowed
in his veins, and not just that of Darken Rahl. "Is he still living?"
Richard
looked away from Drefan's blue. Darken Rahl eyes. "I believe he is. I
don't think anyone else does, but I do. Sometimes I feel like if I don't
believe, then he will be dead."
Drefan
laid a hand on Richard's shoulder. "Then keep believing; you may be right.
You're fortunate to have a family. I know, because I don't." "You do
now, Drefan. You have a brother, at least, and soon a sister-in-law."
"Thanks, Richard. That means a lot to me."
"How
about you? I hear you have half the women in the palace chasing after you. Any
of them special?"
Drefan
smiled distantly. "Girls, that's all. Girls who think they know what they
want and are impressed by foolish things that shouldn't matter. I see them all
batting their eyelashes at you, too. Some people are drawn to power. People
like my mother." "Me! You're seeing things."
Drefan
turned serious. "Kahlan is beautiful. You're a fortunate man to have a
woman of such substance and noble character. A woman like that only comes along
once in a lifetime, and then only if the good spirits smile on you."
"I
know. I'm the luckiest man alive." Richard stared off. thinking about the
prophecy, and the things he had read in Kolo's journal. "Life wouldn't be
worth living without her."
Drefan
laughed and slapped Richard on the back. "If you weren't my brother, and a
good one besides. I'd steal her from you and have her for myself. On second
thought, you'd better be careful, I may yet decide to have her." Richard
smiled with him. "I'll be careful."
Drefan
pointed an admonishing finger at Richard. "You treat her right."
"I'd not know how lo do otherwise." Richard swept a hand out,
indicating the small, simple room, and changed the subject. "What are you
still doing here? We can find you better quarters than this."
Drefan
gazed about at his room. "This is a king's room compared to my quarters at
home. We live simply. This room is almost more ostentation than I can
bear." His brow drew down. "It isn't what kind of house you have that
matters. This is not happiness. It's what kind of mind you have, and how you
care for your fellow man-what you can do to help others who can be helped by no
one else."
Richard
adjusted the bands at his wrists. They made him sweat under the leather pads.
"You're right, Drefan."
He
hadn't even realized it, but he had come to be used to his surroundings. Since
he had left Hartland, he had seen many splendid places. His own home, back in
Hartland, wasn't nearly as nice as this plain room, and he had been happy
there. He had been happy being a woods guide.
But, as
Drefan said, a person had to help others who could be helped in no other way.
He was stuck with being Lord Rahl. Kahlan was the balance. Now, all he had to
do was find the Temple of the Winds before he lost it all.
At
least he had a woman he loved more than he would ever have thought possible,
and now, too, he had a brother. "Drefan, do you know the meaning of
Raug'Moss?" "I was taught that it's old High D'Haran, meaning 'Divine
Wind.' " "Do you know High D'Haran?"
Drefan
brushed back his tumbled-down blond hair. "Just that word." "I
hear that you're their leader. You've done well for yourself to become the
leader of a community of healers."
"It's
the only life I've ever known. Being the High Priest, though, mostly means that
they have someone to blame when things go wrong. If someone we try to help
doesn't gel better, the healers point in my direction and say, 'He is our
leader. Talk to him.' Being High Priest means I have to read the reports and
records, and try to explain to distraught relatives that we are only healers,
and we can't revoke the Keeper's call. Sounds more impressive than it is,
really."
"I'm
sure you exaggerate. I'm proud that you've done well. What are the Raug'Moss?
Where do they come from?"
"Legend
has it that the Raug'Moss were founded thousands of years ago by wizards whose
gift was for healing. The gift began dying out in the race of man, and wizards,
especially ones gifted for healing, became more and more rare."
Drefan
told Richard the story of how the community of the Raug'Moss started to change
as wizards began dying out. Worried that their work would die out with them,
the healers, the wizard healers, decided to take in apprentices without the
gift. Over time, there were fewer and fewer wizards to oversee the work, until
long ago the last of the wizards died.
It
sounded to Richard much like reading in Kolo's journal how different the Keep
had been in that time long past when it was filled with wizards and their
families.
"Now,
there are no gifted among us," Drefan said. "The Raug'Moss were
taught many keys of health and healing, but we have nowhere near the talent of
the wizards of old; we have no magic to aid us. We do what we can, with the
teachings the
true
healers of old passed down, but we can only do so much. It's a simple life. a
hard life. but it has rewards that comforts of belongings can't provide."
"I understand. It must be the best feeling in the world to help
people." Drefan's face took on a curious set. "What of you? What is
your gift? Your talent?"
Richard
looked away from Drefan's eyes. His hand tightened on the hilt of his sword.
"I
was born a war wizard," he whispered. "I have been named fuer- grissa
ost drauka. High D'Haran for 'the bringer of death.' The room fell quiet.
Richard
cleared his throat. "I was pretty distraught by that. at first, but since
then I've come to understand that being a war wizard means that I have been
born to help others, by protecting them from those who would enslave them. From
those like our bastard father-Darken Rahl."
"I
understand." Drefan said into the uneasy silence. "Sometimes the best
use of our ability is to kill-such as to end a life that has no hope but pain.
or to end the life of one who would bring endless pain to others."
Richard
rubbed a thumb over the symbols on the silver bands at his wrist. "Yes. I
understand what you mean by that. now. I don't think I did. before. We both
must do things that we don't like, but which must be done."
Drefan
smiled a small smile. "Not many, other than my healers, ever understand
it. I'm glad you do. Sometimes killing is the greatest of charity. I am careful
to whom I speak those words. It is good to have my brother understand
them." "The same with me, Drefan."
Before
Richard could ask more, they were interrupted by a knock at the door. Raina
poked her head in. Her long, dark braid fell forward over her shoulder.
"Lord Rahl, do you have a moment?" "What is it. Raina?"
Raina
rolled her eyes, indicating someone behind her. "Nadine wishes to see you.
She seems upset about something, and will only speak to you."
When
Richard gestured, Raina opened the door a little wider and Nadine pushed her
way in, oblivious to Raina's scowl.
"Richard.
You have to come with me." She took up his hand in both of hers.
"Please? Please, Richard, come with me? There's someone here who
desperately needs to see you." "Who?"
She
looked to be genuinely troubled. She tugged on his hand. "Please,
Richard." Richard was still wary. "Mind if I bring Drefan
along?" "Of course not. I was going to ask that you did."
"Let's go, then, if it's really important." She held his hand tight
and dragged him behind her.
CHAPTER������������� 28
Richard
spotted Kahlan coming down the hall toward him. She frowned at seeing Nadine
pulling him along by the hand. Drefan, Raina, Ulic, and Egan trailed behind him
as they all wove their way past palace staff going about their chores, and
soldiers on patrol. Richard shrugged to Kahlan.
Nadine
glared at Kahlan before turning down the hall toward her room. He wondered what
that was all about. Annoyed, Richard yanked his hand away from Nadine's grip,
but kept following. Nadine skirted a walnut table against the wall beneath an
old tapestry with a herd of white-tailed deer grazing before white-peaked
mountains in the background. She checked over her shoulder to make sure Richard
was still with her.
Kahlan
and Cara caught up. Kahlan fell in beside him.
"Well,"
Cara said from behind, as she stroked her thick braid, "doesn't this look
interesting?"
Richard
shot her a scowl. Nadine turned and impatiently snatched his hand again.
"You promised. Come on."
"I
promised nothing. I said I'd go with you," Richard complained. "I
didn't say I would run."
"Big
strong Lord Rahl can't keep up with me?" Nadine taunted. "The woods
guide I remember could walk faster than this when he was half asleep."
"I am half asleep," he muttered.
"The
guards told me you were back, and had gone to Drefan's room," Kahlan
whispered to him. "I was on my way to meet you there. What's this business
with Nadine?"
Her whispered
question was laced with aggravation. He noticed her quick glance to Nadine's
hand gripping his. "Beats me. She wants me to see someone."
"And
must you hold her hand to do it?" she growled under her breath. He yanked
his hand away again.
Kahlan stole
a quick peek at Drefan, back behind Cara and Raina. She twined her arm through
Richard's. "How are you doing? What did you . . . find out?"
Richard
put his hand over hers and gave it a squeeze. "Everything is fine,"
he whispered to her. "It wasn't what I thought. I'll tell you about it
later." "What about the murderer? Has anyone found him yet?"
"Yes, someone found him, and murdered him for his crime," Richard
told her. "What about the representatives? Did you take care of it?"
Her
answer was a moment in coming. "Grennidon, Togressa, and Pendisan Reach
surrendered. Jara may yet, but they wish to wait for two weeks for a sign from
the sky," Richard frowned. "Mardovia refused to join with us. They
choose to remain neutral."
Richard
jerked to a halt. "What!" Everyone marching behind almost lurched
into him. "They refuse to surrender. They claim to be neutral."
"The
Order doesn't recognize neutrality. Neither do we. Didn't you tell them
that?"
Kahlan's
face showed nothing. "Of course I did." Richard hadn't meant to yell
at her. He was angry at Mardovia. not her. "General Reibisch is in the
south. Maybe we could have him take Mardovia before the Order grinds them into
carrion."
"Richard,
they were given a chance. They are now the walking dead. We can't waste the
lives of our soldiers to take Mardovia just so that we might protect them. It
would serve no purpose and it would weaken our effort."
Nadine
pushed between them and glared at Kahlan. "You talked to that evil Jagang.
You know what he's like. Those people will all die if you leave them to the
Order. You just don't care about the lives of innocent people. You're
heartless."
From
the corner of his eye, Richard saw a red flash as Cara's Agiel spun up into her
hand.
Richard
shoved Nadine on ahead of him. "Kahlan is right. It just took a moment for
it to sink in through my thick skull. Mardovia has chosen their own path: they
must walk it. Now, if you want to show me someone, then show me. I have
important things to do."
Nadine
huffed, flipped her thick brown hair back over her shoulder, and marched on.
Cara and Raina were scowling at the back of her head. A scowl from a Mord-Sith
was more often than not prelude to a serious consequence. Richard had probably
just spared Nadine that consequence. Someday, he was going to have to do
something about Shota. Before Kahlan tried.
Richard
leaned toward Kahlan. "I'm sorry. I'm dead tired and I just wasn't
thinking."
She
squeezed his arm. "You promised you would get some sleep, remember?"
"Soon as I see to this business with Nadine, whatever it is." At the
door to her room, Nadine snatched Richard's hand again and tugged him in.
Before he could object, he saw the boy sitting on a red chair. Richard thought
he recognized him as one of the Ja'La players he had watched.
The boy
was shuddering in tears. When he saw Richard coming into the room, he jumped
down off the chair and swiped the floppy wool hat from his head of blond hair.
He stood crushing his hat in his fists, trembling expectantly, tears coursing
down his face.
Richard
crouched down before the boy. "I'm Lord Rahl. I hear you need to see me.
What's your name?"
He
wiped his nose. The tears kept coming. "Yonick." "There now,
Yonick, what's the matter?"
He
could only get out the word "brother" before succumbing to gasping
sobs. Richard took the boy in his arms and comforted him. He wept in racking
sobs as he clung to Richard. His misery was heartbreaking. "Can you tell
me what's the matter, Yonick?" "Please, Father Rahl, my brother's
sick. Real sick."
Richard
stood the boy on his feet before him. "He is? What's he sick with?"
"I don't know," Yonick cried. "We bought him herbs. We tried
everything. He's so sick. He's just been getting worse since I came to see you
before."
"Since
you came to see me before?"
"Yes,"
Nadine snapped. "He came begging for your help a few days ago."
Nadine thrust a finger at Kahlan. "She sent him away." Kahlan's face
went crimson. Her jaw worked, but no words came out. "All she cares about
are her armies and fighting wars and hurting people. She doesn't care about a
miserable little boy who's sick. She would only care if he was some fancy,
important diplomat. She doesn't know what it is to be poor and sick." With
a glare, Richard froze Cara's advance. He turned and glared at Nadine.
"That's enough."
Drefan
laid a hand on Kahlan's shoulder. "I'm sure you had a good reason. You
couldn't have known how sick his brother was. No one is blaming you."
Richard
turned back to the boy. "Yonick, my brother here, Drefan, is a healer. Take
us to your brother, and we'll see if we can't help him."
"And
I have herbs," Nadine said. "I'll help your brother, too, Yonick.
We'll do everything we can. We promise." Yonick wiped his eyes.
"Please hurry. Kip is real sick." Kahlan looked on the verge of
tears. Richard put a hand tenderly to her back. He could feel her trembling. He
feared how sick the boy's brother might be, and wanted to spare her seeing it.
He feared she might blame herself. "Why don't you wait here while we see
to this."
Her wet
green eyes flashed up at him. "I'm going," she said through gritted
teeth.
Richard
gave up trying to remember the warren of narrow streets and twisting alleys
they went down, and simply noted where the sun was in the sky in order to keep
his bearings as Yonick led them through a maze of buildings and walled
courtyards hung with laundry.
Chickens
flapped and squawked as they scattered out of the way. Some of the tiny, walled
courtyards held a few goats, or sheep, or a pig or two. The animals seemed
incongruous amid the tightly packed buildings.
Overhead,
people carried on conversations from opposing windows. Some leaned out on
elbows to have a look at the procession led by a boy. It created quite a stir.
Richard knew that it was the sight of Lord Rahl, dressed in his black war
wizard's outfit with a gold cloak billowing out behind, and the Mother
Confessor in her pristine white dress, that was the object of wonder, rather
than the knot of soldiers or two Mord-Sith-soldiers were common, and the city
people probably didn't have a clue as to who the two women in brown leather
were.
People
in the streets and alleyways pushed their carts of vegetables, wood, or
household goods to the side to get out of the way. Others stood against the
walls and watched, as if it were a miniature, impromptu parade unexpectedly
coming through their neighborhood.
At
intersections, soldiers on patrol cheered their Lord Rahl, and called out their
thanks for his curing their ailment.
Richard
held a light grip on Kahlan's hand. She hadn't spoken a word since they left
the palace. He had made Nadine walk behind, between the two Mord-Sith. He hoped
Nadine knew enough to keep her mouth shut. Yonick pointed. "Just up
there." They followed him as he turned from the street down a narrow alley
between
stone
walls forming the bottom floors of houses, with wood above for the second
story. Water dripping from melting snow overhead splashed mud from the alley a
few feet up onto the stone. With one hand, Kahlan held Richard's, and with the
other she held the hem of her dress up as she followed him down the line of
boards laid in the mud.
Yonick
paused at a door under a small shed roof. People peered out windows to each
side. When Richard caught up, Yonick opened the door and ran up the stairs, calling
out for his mother.
A door
at the top of the stairs squeaked open. A woman in a brown dress and white
apron stared down at the boy running up the stairs. "Ma-it's Lord Rahl! I
brought Lord Rahl!" "The good spirits be praised," she said.
She
rested a weary hand on her son's back as he threw his arms around her waist.
She lifted her other hand toward a doorway at the rear of the small room used
as kitchen, dining room, and living area.
"Thank
you for coming," she mumbled to Richard, but she broke down in tears
before she could finish.
Yonick
ran for the back room. "This way. Lord Rahl." Richard squeezed the
woman's arm to reassure her as he swept past, following Yonick. Kahlan still
gripped his other hand. Nadine and Drefan followed on their heels, with Cara
and Raina close behind. Yonick balked at the bedroom door as the rest of them
entered.
A
single candle on a small table struggled to ward off the shroud of darkness. A
basin of water and soapy rags stood vigil beside the candle. The rest of the room,
mostly taken up with three pallets, seemed to be waiting for the candle's
diligence to flag, so night could seize the room.
A small
figure lay on the far pallet. Richard, Kahlan, Nadine, and Drefan crowded in
beside it. Yonick and his mother, silhouetted by the light from beyond the
door, stood at the brink of the darkness, watching. The room stank like rotting
meat.
Drefan
pushed back the hood of his flaxen cloak. "Open the shutters so I can
see."
Cara
drew both open and folded them against the wall, allowing the light to flood
into the tiny room and reveal a blond-headed boy covered to his neck with a
white sheet and blanket. The side of his neck, just above the sheet, was
grossly distended. His uneven breaths rattled. "What's his name?"
Drefan called back to the mother. "Kip," she said in a whining cry.
Drefan
patted the boy's shoulder. "We're here to help you. Kip." Nadine
leaned in. "Yes, Kip, we'll have you up and about in no time." She
put her hand back over her mouth and nose against the smell of rot that gagged
them all.
The boy
didn't respond. His eyes were closed. His sweaty hair was plastered against his
forehead.
Drefan
drew the bed covers down to Kip's waist, below his hands resting on his
stomach. The boy's fingertips were black. Drefan stiffened. "Dear
spirits," he breathed.
He
rocked back on his heels and touched the back of his hand to the legs of the
two Mord-Sith towering behind them.
"Get
Richard out of here," he whispered urgently. "Get him out, now."
Without questioning, Cara and Raina thrust hands under Richard's arms and
started to pull him up. Richard jerked away from their grip. "What's going
on?" he demanded. "What's the matter?" Drefan wiped a hand
across his mouth. He glanced over his shoulder at the mother and Yonick. His
gaze took in the rest of them before settling on Richard. He leaned closer.
"This boy has the plague." Richard stared at him. "What do we
have to do to cure him?"
Drefan
lifted an eyebrow. He turned back to the boy, elevating a little hand.
"Look at his fingers." The fingertips were black. He pulled the
bedcover aside. "Look at his toes." His toes were black. He opened
the boy's trousers. "Look at his penis." The tip of it was black,
too.
"That's
gangrene. It rots the extremities. This is why they call it the black
death."
Richard
cleared his throat. "What can we do for him?" Drefan's voice lowered
even more with incredulity. "Richard, did you hear what I said? Black
death. People sometimes recover from the plague, but not when it's this
advanced."
"If
we would have gotten to him sooner . . ." Nadine's imputation trailed off.
Kahlan's grip on Richard's forearm tightened painfully. He heard her stifle a
cry.
Richard
glared at Nadine. She looked away. "And do you know how to cure the
plague, herb woman?" Drefan sneered. "Well, I-" Nadine blushed
and fell silent. The boy's eyes fluttered open. His head rolled toward them.
"Lord . . . Rahl," he said with a shallow breath. Richard put a hand
on his shoulder. "Yes, Kip. I came to see you. I'm here." Kip nodded
the slightest bit. "I waited." His chest rested longer between each
breath.
"What
can you do lo help?" came a tearful question from the doorway. "How
soon will he be well again?"
Drefan
opened the collar of his white, ruffled shirt as he leaned close to Richard.
"Say something comforting to the boy-that's all we can do. He won't last
long. I'll go talk to the mother. It's part of the job of healer."
Drefan
stood, pulling Nadine away with him. Kahlan was leaning against Richard's
shoulder. He feared looking at her, lest she break down in tears. Lest he break
down in tears.
"Kip,
you'll be up and playing Ja'La soon. You'll be getting over this any day now.
I'd like to come watch another of your Ja'La games. I promise to come, just as
soon as you're better."
A faint
smile passed over the boy's face. His eyelids closed partway. His ribs sank as
breath abandoned his lungs.
Richard
crouched, feeling his heart pounding, as he waited for the boy's lungs to fill
again. They didn't.
Silence
settled into the room, patiently waiting for darkness to return. Richard could
hear the wheels of a handcart outside squeaking, and the distant, raucous cry
of ravens. The music of children's laughter drifted in the air.
This
child would never laugh again. Kahlan's head fell against his shoulder. Soft
sobs claimed her as she clutched
his
sleeve.
Richard
reached over to pull the sheet over the body. The boy's hand rose slowly off
his stomach. Richard froze. The hand floated purposefully to Richard's throat.
The black fingers curled,
gathering
Richard's shirt in a death grip, Kahlan had fallen silent. They both knew that
the boy had died. The boy's hand drew Richard closer. The long-silent lungs
filled once more with
a
breath.
Richard,
the hair at the base of his neck stiffening, put his ear close. "The
winds." the dead boy whispered, "hunt you."
CHAPTER������������ 29
Richard
stared in a daze as Drefan wrapped the dead boy in the sheet. Only Richard and
Kahlan had seen what had happened-had heard what the dead boy had said. Behind
him, in the outer room, the mother wailed in anguish. Drefan leaned close to
him. "Richard." Drefan touched his arm. "Richard." Richard
started. "What?" "What do you want to do?" "Do? What do
you mean?"
Drefan
glanced over his shoulder at the rest of them back by the door. "What do
you want to tell people about this? I mean, he died of the plague. Do you want
to try to keep it a secret?" Richard couldn't seem to make his mind work.
Kahlan
leaned past Richard. "A secret? Why would we want to do that?" Drefan
took a deep breath. "Well, word of a plague might cause a panic. If we let
people know, believe me, word of it will beat us back to the palace."
"Do you think others have it?" she asked.
Drefan
shrugged. "I doubt there would be only one isolated case. We have to bury
or burn the body at once. His bedcovers, bed, and anything else he touched
should be burned. The room should be treated with smoke."
"Won't
people want to know why that's being done?" Richard asked. "Won't
they guess the reason?" "Probably."
"Then
how could it be kept a secret?"
"You're
the Lord Rahl. Your word is law. You would have to suppress any information.
Arrest the family. Accuse them of a crime. Have them held until this is over.
Have the soldiers carry off all their possessions to be burned and shut up
their home."
Richard
closed his eyes and pressed his fingertips to them. He was the Seeker of Truth,
not the suppressor of it.
"We
can't do that to a family who just lost a boy. I won't do that. Besides, wouldn't
it be better if people knew? Don't people have a right to know of the danger
they're in?"
Drefan
nodded. "If it were my decision, I would want people to know. I've seen
the plague before, in small places. Some have tried to suppress the knowledge
of it to prevent panic, but when more people started dying, it couldn't be kept
a secret."
Richard
felt as though the sky had fallen on him. He struggled to make his mind work,
but the dead boy's words kept echoing around in his head. The winds hunt you.
"If
we try to lie to people, they won't believe anything we say. We have to tell
them the truth. They've a right to know."
"I
agree with Richard," Kahlan said. "We shouldn't try to deceive
people, especially about something that could endanger their lives."
Drefan
nodded his concurrence. "We're fortunate, at least, with the time of year.
Plague is worst in the heat of summer. It could run rampant if this were
summer. In the colder weather of the spring it shouldn't be able to get a good
foothold. With luck, the outbreak of plague will be weak and soon over."
"Luck,"
Richard muttered. "Luck is for dreamers. I only have nightmares. We have
to warn people."
Drefan's
blue eyes looked to each in turn. "I understand, and I agree with your
reasoning. The problem is. there's not much to be done, other than burying the
dead quickly and burning their things. There are remedies, but I fear they are
of limited value.
"I
just want to warn you: news of plague will spread like a firestorm."
Richard's flesh prickled with goose flesh. On the red moon will come the
firestorm.
"Dear
spirits spare us," Kahlan whispered. She was thinking the same as he.
Richard sprang up. "Yonick." He crossed the room, rather than make
the boy come to his dead brother.
"Yes,
Lord Rahl?" His brow creased as he struggled to hold back his tears.
Richard put one knee to the floor and held the boy's shoulders. "Yonick,
I'm so sorry. But your brother isn't suffering any longer. He's with the good
spirits now. He's at peace, and hoping we will remember the good times with
him, and not be too sad. The good spirits will watch over him." Yonick
brushed his blond hair aside. "But ...I..."
"I
don't want you to blame yourself. Nothing could have been done. Nothing.
Sometimes people get sick, and none of us has the power to make them well. No
one could have done anything. Even if you had brought me right at the first, we
couldn't have done anything." "But you have magic."
Richard
felt heartsick. "Not for this," he whispered.
Richard
hugged Yonick for a moment. In the room beyond, the mother wept onto Raina's
shoulder. Nadine was wrapping up some herbs for the woman, and giving her
instructions. The woman nodded against Raina's shoulder as she listened and
sobbed.
"Yonick,
I need your help. I need to go see the other boys on your Ja'La team. Can you
take us to their homes?" Yonick wiped his sleeve across his nose.
"Why?" "I'm afraid they might be sick, too. We have to
know." Yonick glanced back at his mother with unspoken concern. Richard
gestured for Cara.
"Yonick,
where's your father?"
"He's
a felt maker. He works down the street and three over to the right. He works
until late every day."
Richard
stood. "Cara. have some soldiers go and get Yonick's father. He should be
here with his wife right now. Have a couple of soldiers take his place for
today and tomorrow and help out as best they can, so that his family won't lose
the income. Tell Raina to stay here with her until Yonick's father comes home.
It shouldn't be long, then she can catch up with us." At the bottom of the
stairs, Kahlan clutched his arm, holding him back, and
asked
Drefan and Nadine to wait outside with Yonick while Cara went to find his
father. Kahlan closed the door to the alley, leaving Richard alone with her at
the bottom of the dim stairwell.
She
wiped the tears from her cheeks with trembling fingers. Her green eyes let slip
more.
"Richard."
She swallowed and gasped a breath. "Richard, I didn't know. There was
Marlin, and the Sister of the Dark . . . I never knew that Yonick's brother was
so sick, or I would never-"
Richard
held up a finger to silence her. He realized, though, by the dread in her eyes,
that his scowl was what had silenced her.
"Don't
you dare dignify Nadine's cruel lies with an explanation. Don't you dare. I know
you, and would never believe such things about you. Never."
She
closed her eyes with relief and fell against his chest. "That poor
child," she wept.
He
stroked a hand down her long, thick hair. "I know." "Richard, we
both heard what that boy said after he died." "Another warning that
the Temple of the Winds has been violated." She pushed herself back. Her
green eyes searched his.
"Richard,
we have to reconsider everything now. What you were telling me about the Temple
of the Winds was only one source and not an official one at that. It was just a
journal kept by one man to keep himself occupied while he guarded the sliph.
Besides that, you've only read parts of it, and it's in High D'Haran, which is
difficult to translate accurately. You may have been getting the wrong idea
about the Temple of the Winds from the journal." "Well, I don't know
that I would agree-"
"You're
dead tired. You're not thinking. We now know the truth. The Temple of the Winds
isn't trying to send a warning-it's trying to kill you."
Richard
took pause at the concern on her face. Besides the grief he saw in her eyes, he
saw disquiet. Disquiet for him.
"Kolo
didn't make it sound like that was what was happening. From what I've read, I
think the red moon is a warning that the Temple of the Winds has been violated.
When the red moon came before-"
"Kolo
said everyone was in an uproar. He didn't explain the uproar, did he? Maybe it
was because the temple was trying to kill them. Kolo said that the team who had
sent the Temple of the Winds away had betrayed them.
"Richard,
face the facts. That dead boy just delivered a threat from the Temple of the
Winds: 'The winds hunt you.' You hunt something when you want to kill it. The
Temple of the Winds is hunting you-trying to kill you." "Then why
didn't it kill me, instead of the boy?" She didn't have an answer.
Out in
the alley, Drefan's blue. Darken Rahl eyes watched Richard and Kahlan returning
over the boards in the mud. It seemed as if the process of deep reflection
could be glimpsed through those eyes. Richard guessed that healers had to be
keen observers of people, but those eyes made him feel somehow naked. At least
he saw no magic in them.
Nadine
and Yonick waited in mute anxiety. Richard whispered to Kahlan to wait with
Drefan and Yonick. He took Nadine's arm. "Nadine, would you come with me a
moment, please?" She beamed up at him. "Sure, Richard."
He
helped her step up into the stairwell. As Richard closed the door. she fussed
with her hair.
When
the door was shut, he turned to the smiling Nadine and slammed her back against
the wall so hard it drove the wind from her lungs. She pushed off the wall.
"Richard-"
He
seized her by the throat and smacked her against the wall again, holding her
there.
"You
and I were never going to be married." The sword's magic, its fury, was
bleeding into his voice. It was coursing through his veins. "We never are
going to be married. I love Kahlan. I am going to marry Kahlan. The only reason
you are still here is because you are somehow tangled in this. You are going to
remain here, for now, until we can figure it out.
"I
can, and I have, forgiven you for what you did to me. but if you ever again say
or do anything so cruel and deliberately hurtful to Kahlan, you will spend the
rest of your time in Aydindril down in the pit. Do you understand me!"
Nadine
put her fingers tenderly to his forearm. She smiled patiently, as if she
thought he didn't fully grasp the situation, and she would make him see her
reasoned side of it.
"Richard,
I know you're upset right now, everyone is, but I was only trying to warn you.
I didn't want you to be unaware of what had happened. I only wanted you to know
the truth about what she had-" He slammed her against the wall again.
"Do you understand me!" She watched his eyes a moment.
"Yes," she said, as if believing that there was no use in trying to
reason with him until he cooled off.
It only
made Richard more angry. He struggled to rein it in so that he could get across
to her that this was more than anger and that he meant what he was saying.
"I
know you have good in you, Nadine. I know that you care about people. We were
friends back in Hartland, so I'm going to let this go with a warning. You had
better mind my words. There is trouble about. A lot of people are going to need
help. You always wanted to help people. I'm giving you your chance to do that.
I can use your help.
"But
Kahlan is the woman I love and the woman I'm going to marry. I won't have you
trying to change that, or trying to hurt her. Don't you so much as think to
test this again, or I will find another herb woman to help. Are you clear on
that?"
"Yes,
Richard. Whatever you say. I promise. If she's what you really want, then I'll
not interfere, no matter how wrong-"
He held
up a finger. "Your toe is on the line, Nadine. If you step over it, I
swear there will be no coming back."
"Yes,
Richard." She smiled in an understanding, patient, long-suffering way.
"Whatever you say."
She
seemed to be satisfied that he had paid attention to her. It reminded him of a
child who misbehaved so that a beloved parent would notice her. He glared at
her until he was sure she would not say another word. and only then did he open
the door.
Drefan
was squatted down, whispering words of comfort to Yonick while he rested a hand
on the boy's shoulder. Kahlan's green eyes watched as Nadine reached back for
Richard's hand to help her balance as she stepped onto the narrow board in the
mud.
"Drefan,"
Richard said when he had joined them, "I need to talk to you about some of
the things you said in there."
Drefan
rubbed Yonick's back and then stood. "What things?" "About how
you wanted Cara and Raina to get me out of there, for one thing. I want to know
why."
Drefan
considered Richard a moment, and then Yonick. He drew open his cloak, hooking
it behind one of the leather pouches on his belt. He opened the pouch at the
front of his belt and poured some dried powder from a leather purse onto a
piece of paper. He twisted the paper closed and handed it to the boy.
"Yonick,
before we go to see the other boys, would you please take this up to your
mother and tell her to steep it in hot water for a couple of hours to make a
tea, and then strain it and see that everyone in your family drinks it tonight?
It will help build up your family's strength to keep them well."
Yonick
looked at the paper in his hand. "Sure. I'll be back as soon as I tell my
mother."
"No
rush," Drefan said. "We'll be waiting when you're through."
Richard watched Yonick close the door. "All right, I know you wanted me
out of there because of the danger of catching the plague from the sick boy.
But we're all in danger, aren't we?"
"Yes,
but I don't know how much. You are the Lord Rahl. I wanted you as far away as
possible." "How do you catch the plague?"
Drefan
glanced to Kahlan and Nadine, and then to Ulic and Egan back with the soldiers
guarding either end of the alley. He took a deep breath.
"No
one knows how the plague is passed from one person to the next, or even if that
is the way it spreads. There are some who believe that it's the wrath of the
spirits brought down on us, and the spirits decide who they will smite. There
are others who argue that the effluvia infest the very air of a place, of a
city, endangering everyone. Others insist that it can only be caught by
inhaling the infectious steams of the body of a sick person.
"I
can only assume, for the sake of caution, that, like fire, the closer you are,
the more dangerous it is. I didn't want you close to that danger, that's
all."
Richard
was so tired that he felt sick. Only his terror kept him on his feet. Kahlan
had been near the boy, too.
"So,
you're saying that it's possible we could all get it just from being in the
same house as someone who has it." "It's possible."
''But
the sick boy's family doesn't have it, and they lived with him. His mother
tended to him. Wouldn't she have it, at least, if that were true?"
Drefan
considered his words carefully. "Several times I have seen isolated
outbreaks of the plague. One time, when I was young and in training, I went
with an older healer to a town, Castaglen Crossing, that had been visited with
the plague. From this place, I learned much of what I know about the sickness.
"It
started when a merchant came with his wagon of goods to sell. It was reported
that when he arrived, he was coughing, vomiting, and complaining of agonizing
headaches. In other words, the plague was already upon him before he arrived in
Castaglen Crossing. We never knew where he came to have it, but it could have
been that he drank envenomed water, stayed with a sick farmer, or that the
spirits chose to strike him with it.
"The
townspeople, wishing to do a trusted merchant a kindness, put him up in a room,
where he died the next morning. Everyone remained well for a time, and they thought
the danger had passed them by. They soon Forgot about the man who had died
among them.
"Because
of the confusion brought on by the sickness and death by the time we arrived,
the accounts were varied, but we were able to determine that the first townsperson
became sick with the plague at least fourteen days, by some accounts, or as
many as twenty days, by others, after the merchant arrived."
Richard
pinched his lower lip as he thought. "Kip was well at the Ja'La game a few
days back, so that would mean that he really became ill with it sometime
before."
Despite
being mournful over the boy's death. Richard felt great relief that what he had
been thinking didn't seem to be plausible. If Kip got the plague long before
the Ja'La game. then Jagang didn't have anything to do with it. The prophecy
wasn't involved.
But
then, why the warning of the winds hunting him?
"That
would also mean," Drefan said, "that the dead boy's family may yet
become sick. They look well at the moment, but they may already be fatally
infected with plague. Just as were the people of Castaglen Crossing."
"Then."
Nadine said, "we may all have caught it just from being in the room with
the boy. That awful smell was his sickness. We may all have the plague from
breathing it in. but won't know it for a couple of weeks yet."
Drefan
shot her a condescending look. "I can't deny that it's possible. Do you
wish to run away, herb woman, and spend the next two or three weeks preparing
for death by living out the things you always wanted to do?" Nadine lifted
her chin. "No. I'm a healer. I intend to help." Drefan smiled in that
private, knowing way he had. "Good. then. A true healer is above the
phantom evils he chases."
"But
she may be right," Richard said. "We may all already be infected with
the plague."
Drefan
lifted a hand, warding off the concern. "We mustn't let fear rule us. When
I was in Castaglen Crossing, I cared for many people who were in death's grip,
people just like that boy. So did the man who took me there. We never became
sick.
"I
was never able to determine any pattern to the plague. We touched the sick
every day and never became sick. Possibly because we were with the sick so much
that our bodies knew it well, and were able to strengthen us against its
corruption.
"Sometimes,
a member of a family would come down sick and thereafter every member of the
family, even those who stayed away from the sick room, succumbed to the plague
and all died. In other homes, I witnessed, one. or even several, children come
down sick with the plague and die, yet their mothers who tended them nearly
every moment never became ill, nor did any other member of the household."
Richard
sighed in frustration. "Drefan, all this isn't very helpful. Maybe this.
maybe that, sometimes yes, sometimes no."
Drefan
wiped a hand wearily across his face. "I'm just telling you what I've
seen, Richard. There are people who will tell you for sure that it is this or
it is that. Shortly, there will be people in the streets who will be selling
indisputable cures, unquestionable preservatives against the plague. Hucksters
all. "What I am telling you is that I don't know the answers. Sometimes
knowledge is beyond our limited understanding. It's one of our tenets, as
healers, that it is a wise man who admits the limits of his knowledge and
skill, and that pretending either causes harm."
' 'Of
course." Richard felt foolish to have pressed for answers that weren't
there. "You're right, of course. It's better to know the truth than hang
hope on lies."
Richard
looked to see where the sun was in the sky, but clouds were moving in,
obscuring it. A cold wind was coming up. At least it wasn't hot. Drefan had
said that the plague spread worst in heat.
He
looked back at Drefan. "Are there any herbs-or anything-that you do know will
help prevent it, or cure it?"
"A
standard precaution is to treat the home of sick people with smoke. It is said
the smoke may purge the air of the effluvia. There are herbs that are
recommended for smoking sick rooms. I would think it a wise precaution, at
least, but I wouldn't count on it.
"There
are other herbs that can help with the complaints of the plague-the headaches,
sickness of the stomach, things like that-but none that I know of that will
cure the plague itself. Even with these treatments, the person will likely die
just the same, but they may have some comfort from the herbs before they
pass."
Kahlan
touched Drefan's arm. "Do all the people who come down with the plague
die? Are all who catch it doomed?"
Drefan
smiled in reassurance to her. "No, some recover. In the beginning not as
many, and in the end of the outbreak more. Sometimes, if the infection can be
urged to a head and the poison drained away, then the person will recover, but
will complain for the rest of their life about the torture of the
treatment."
Richard
saw Yonick come out the door. He put his arm around Kahlan's waist and pulled
her close. "So we all may already be infected."
Drefan
watched his eyes a moment. "It's possible, but I don't believe it
so." Richard's head was pounding, but it wasn't from any plague; it was
from lack of sleep, and dread.
"Well,
then, let's go to the other boys' homes and see what we can find out. We need
to know as much as we can."
CHAPTER������������ 30
The
first boy they went to see, Mark, was fine. Mark was happy to see Yonick, and
wondered why he hadn't seen him and his brother. Kip. for the last few days.
The young mother was frightened by the important strangers who had appeared at
her door inquiring after the health of her son. Richard was relieved that Mark,
who had been in the Ja'La game with Yonick and his brother, wasn't sick.
So far,
only one boy who had been at the Ja'La game had become sick. It was looking
more and more as if his fears about Jagang were just panicked inferences.
Richard was beginning to feel the warmth of hope.
Yonick
told a stunned Mark of Kip's death. Richard told the mother to send for Drefan
if any of the family fell ill. Richard left the home feeling much better. The
second boy, Sidney, had been dead since morning.
By the
time they found the third boy lying in blankets at the rear of a one-room
house, Richard's hopes had faded.
Bert
was gravely ill, but at least his extremities weren't black, as Kip's had been.
His mother told them that he had a headache, and had been throwing up. While
Drefan saw to the boy, Nadine gave the woman herbs.
"Sprinkle
these on the fire," Nadine told Bert's mother. "It's mugwort, fennel,
and hussuck. They'll smoke and help drive away the sickness. Bring hot coals to
your boy, put a pinch of the herbs on the coals, and fan the smoke at your son
to insure that he breathes enough of it. It will help drive the sickness from
him."
"Do
you think that will really help?" Richard whispered when Nadine returned
to his side, near the boy. "Drefan said he doesn't know if it will."
"I
was taught that it was said to help serious sickness, like the plague,"
she said in a low voice, "but I've never seen anyone with the plague
before, so I can't say for sure. Richard, it's all I know to do. I have to
try."
Even
though he was dead tired, and had a headache, Richard had no trouble sensing
the helplessness in her voice. She wanted to help. As Drefan had said, maybe it
would do some good.
Richard
watched as Drefan pulled a knife from his belt. He gestured for Cara and Raina,
who had both caught up with them after taking care of Richard's instructions,
to hold down the sick boy. Raina gripped Bert's chin with one hand, and held
his forehead with the other. Cara pressed his shoulders into the blankets.
With a
steady hand, Drefan lanced the swelling at the side of the boy's throat. Bert's
screams seared Richard's nerves. He could almost feel the knife slicing his own
throat. The mother wrung her hands as she stood off a ways, watching with
unblinking eyes.
Richard
remembered Drefan saying that if the person lived, they would complain the rest
of their life about the torture of the treatment. Bert would have cause.
"What did you give Kip's mother?" Kahlan asked Nadine.
"I
gave her some herbs to smoke the house, the same as I gave this woman,"
Nadine said. "And I made her a pouch of hop cone, lavender, yarrow, and
lemon balm leaves to put in her pillow so that she might sleep. Even so, I
don't know that she will be able to sleep, after .. ." Her eyes turned
away. "I know that I wouldn't be able to," she whispered, almost to
herself.
"Do
you have any herbs that you think might prevent the plague?" Richard
asked. "Things that would keep people from catching it?"
Nadine
watched Drefan mopping blood and pus from the boy's throat. "I'm sorry,
Richard, but I don't know enough about it. Drefan might be right; he seems to
know a lot. There may be no cure, or preventative."
Richard
went to the boy and squatted down beside Drefan, watching his brother work.
"Why are you doing that?"
Drefan
glanced over as he folded the rag to a clean place. "As I said before,
sometimes, if the sickness can be brought to a head and drained, they will
recover. I have to try."
Drefan
gestured to the two Mord-Sith. They gripped the boy again. Richard winced as he
watched Drefan slide the sharp knife deeper into the swelling, bringing forth
more blood and yellowish-white fluid. Mercifully, Bert passed out.
Richard
wiped sweat from his own brow. He felt helpless. He had his sword to defend
against attack, but it could do no good against this. He wished it was
something he could fight.
Behind
him, Nadine spoke to Kahlan in a soft voice, but loud enough for Richard to
hear.
"Kahlan,
I sorry about what I said before. I've devoted my life to helping sick people.
It makes me so upset to see people suffer. That's what I was angry about. Not
you. I was frustrated at Yonick's grief, and I lashed out at you. It wasn't
your fault. Nothing could have been done. I'm sorry."
Richard
didn't turn. Kahlan said nothing, but she might have offered Nadine a smile to
accept the apology. Somehow, Richard doubted it.
He knew
Kahlan, and he knew that she expected as much from others as she expected from
herself. Forgiveness was not forthcoming simply because someone asked for it.
The transgression was weighed into the equation, and there were transgressions
that outweighed absolution.
The
apology hadn't been for Kahlan, anyway; it had been for Richard's benefit. Like
a child who had been upbraided, Nadine was on her best behavior, trying to
impress him with how good she could be.
Sometimes,
even though she had once brought him pain, a part of him was comforted to have
Nadine around; she reminded him of home, and his happy childhood. She was a
familiar face from a carefree time. Another part of him was troubled over what
her real purpose was in coming. Despite what she might believe, she hadn't
decided it on her own. Someone, or something, had precipitated her actions.
Another part of him wanted to skin her alive.
After
they left Bert's home, Yonick led them down a cobbled alley to a yard behind
where Darby Andersen's family lived. The srnall yard of mud churned with wood
shavings was cluttered with cutoffs and scraps, several stickered stacks of
lumber protected by tarps, some old, rusty two-man rip saws, two carving
benches, and warped, split, or twisted boards leaning up against the buildings
to the side. Darby recognized Richard and Kahlan from the Ja'La game. He was
astonished
233
that
they had come to his home. To have them come to see a Ja'La game was a cause of
great pride, but to have them come to his home was beyond belief. He
frantically brushed sawdust from his short brown hair and dirty work clothes.
Yonick
had told Richard that the whole Anderson family-Darby, his two sisters, his
parents, father's parents, and an aunt-lived over their small workshop. Clive
Anderson, Darby's father, and Erling, his grandfather, made chairs. Both men,
having heard the commotion, had come to the wide, double doors and were bowing.
"Forgive
us, Mother Confessor, Lord Rahl," Clive said after Darby had introduced
his father, "but we didn't know you were coming, or we would have made
preparations-I'd have had my wife make tea, or something. I'm afraid that we're
just simple folk."
"Please
don't be concerned about any of that, master Anderson," Richard said.
"We came because we were concerned about your son." Erling, the
grandfather, took a stem step toward Darby. "What's the boy done?"
"It's nothing like that," Richard said. "You have a fine
grandson. We watched him play Ja'La the other day. One of the other boys is
sick. Worse, two others of them have died." Darby's eyes widened.
"Died? Who?" "Kip," Yonick said, his voice choking off.
"And Sidney," Richard added. "Bert is very ill, too."
Darby
stood in shock. His grandfather put a comforting hand to the boy's shoulder.
"My brother, Drefan"- Richard lifted a hand to the side-"is a
healer. We're checking on all the boys on the Ja'La team. We don't know if Drefan
can help, but he would like to try." "I'm fine," Darby said in a
shaky voice.
Erling,
an unshaven, scrawny man, had teeth so crooked Richard wondered how he managed
to chew his food. He noticed Kahlan's white dress and Richard's gold cloak
billowing in the cold wind, and gestured toward the shop.
"Please,
won't you all step inside? The wind is biting today. It's warmer inside, out of
the weather. I think we'll have snow tonight, the way it looks."
Ulic
and Egan took up posts near the back gate. Soldiers milled about in the alley.
Richard, Kahlan, Nadine, and Drefan went into the shop. Cara and Raina shadowed
them inside, but remained on guard near the doors.
Old
chairs and templates hung from pegs on the dusty walls. Cobwebs in all the
corners, that in a forest would have netted dew, here netted loads of sawdust.
The workbench held chair pieces being glued up, a fine-toothed saw, a variety
of smaller finishing and heading planes, and a number of chisels. Several jack
and long joiner planes hung on the wall behind the bench along with hammers and
other tools.
Partially
finished chairs, cinched tightly together in twisted ropes as they were being
finished, or drying in peg-and-wedge clamps, sat about the floor. A carving
horse where the grandfather had been when they came into the yard held a split
billet of ash he had been working with a drawknife.
Clive,
a broad-shouldered young man, seemed content to let his father do the talking.
"What's ailing these children?" Erling asked Drefan. Drefan cleared
his throat but let Richard answer. Richard was so tired he could hardly stand
anymore. He almost felt as if he were asleep, and this was just a bad dream.
"The plague. I'm relieved to see that Darby, here, is well." Erling's
scruffy jaw dropped. "Dear spirits spare us!" Clive turned white.
"My daughters are sick."
He
turned suddenly and ran for the stairs, but stopped abruptly. "Please,
master Drefan, will you see them?" "Of course. Show the way."
Upstairs,
Darby's mother, grandmother, and aunt had been making meat pies. Turnips were
boiling in a pot hung in the hearth, and the boiling water had steamed the
windows over.
The
three women, alarmed by Clive's calls, were waiting wide-eyed in the center of
the upstairs common room. They were shocked by the sight of the strangers, but
bowed the instant they saw Kahlan's white dress. Kahlan, in the dress of the
Mother Confessor, needed no introduction to anyone in Aydindril, or most of the
Midlands, for that matter.
"Hattie,
this man here, master Drefan, is a healer, and has come to see the girls."
Hattie, her short, sandy-colored hair tied back with a head wrap, wiped her
hands on her apron. Her gaze darted among all the people standing in her home.
"Thank you. This way, please."
"How
do they fare?" Drefan asked Hattie on their way back to the bedroom.
"Beth has complained since yesterday of her head hurting," Hattie
said. "She was sick at her stomach, earlier. Common children ailments,
that's all." It sounded to Richard more like a plea than a statement of
fact. "I gave her some black horehound tea to settle her."
"That's
good," Nadine assured her. "An infusion made of pennyroyal might
help, too. I have some with me I'll leave in case she needs it."
"Thank
you for the kindness," Hattie said, her concern growing with each step she
took.
"What
of the other girl?" Drefan asked.
Hattie
had almost reached the doorway. "Lily's not so sick, but just feeling out
of sorts. I suspect she's just looking for sympathy because her older sister is
getting attention and honey tea. That's the way of children. She has some
little, round sores on her legs." Drefan missed a step.
Beth
was fevered, but not gravely so. She had a wet cough, and complained that her
head hurt. Drefan all but ignored her. He watched Lily, in that analytical way
of his, as she sat in her blankets, carrying on an earnest conversation with
her rag doll.
The
grandmother fussed with her collar and watched from the doorway as Hattie
fussed with Beth's covers. The aunt mopped Beth's brow with a wet cloth while
Nadine spoke words of comfort to the girl. Nadine really did have a soothing,
kind way about her. She selected herbs from leather pouches in her bag and
wrapped them up in several cloth packets, giving the intent, nodding mother
instructions.
Richard
and Kahlan moved with Drefan over to the younger girl. Kahlan squatted down and
talked to her, telling her what a lovely doll she had, so as to keep her from
being frightened by Richard and Drefan. Lily cast worried looks in their
direction as she chattered with Kahlan. Kahlan hugged an arm around Richard's
waist to show Lily that he wasn't anyone to be afraid of. Richard made himself
smile. ' 'Lily,' ' Drefan said with forced cheerfulness, ' 'could you show me
your doll's sores?' ' Lily held the doll upside down and pointed out spots on
the inside of the doll's thighs. "She has ouches here, and here, and
here." Her big, round eyes turned up to Drefan. "And do they hurt
her?" Lily nodded. "She goes 'ouch' when I touch them."
235
"Really?
Well, that's too bad. I'll bet she's better, soon, though." He squatted
down so that he wasn't towering over her, circling an arm around Kahlan's waist
and pulling her back down with him. "Lily, this is my friend, Kahlan. Her
eyes aren't so good. She can't see the sores on your doll's legs. Could you
show Kahlan here the ones on your legs?"
Nadine
was still talking to the mother about the other girl. Lily glanced in their
direction.
Kahlan
brushed Lily's hair back and told her what a pretty doll she had. Lily grinned.
She was fascinated by Kahlan's long hair. Kahlan let her feel it. "Can you
show me the ouches on your legs?" Kahlan asked. Lily hiked up her white
nightdress. "Here they are, just like my doll's ouches." She had
several dark spots, the size of pennies, on the inside of each thigh. Richard
could tell when Drefan gently touched them that they were hard as calluses.
Kahlan straightened Lily's nightdress back down and drew the blanket back over
her lap as Drefan patted her cheek, telling her what a good girl she was, and
that her doll's ouches would be better by morning. "I'm glad." Lily
said. "She doesn't like them."
Erling
was absently planing a chair seat at the workbench. Richard could see that he
wasn't paying any attention to what he was doing, and was ruining it. He didn't
look up when they came down the stairs. At Richard's urging. Clive had stayed
upstairs with his wife and daughters. "Do they have it?" Erling asked
in a hoarse voice.
Drefan
laid a comforting hand on the old man's shoulders. "I'm afraid so."
Erling took a shaky, crooked stroke with his plane.
"When
I was young, I lived in the town of Sparlville. The plague came one summer. It
took a good many people. I hoped never to see such a thing again." "I
understand," Drefan said in a soft voice. "I, too, have seen it visit
places." "They're my only granddaughters. What can we do to help
them?" "You can try to smoke the house," Drefan offered.
Erling
grunted. "We did that in Sparlville. Bought cures and preventatives, too,
but people died just the same."
"I
know," Drefan said. "I wish there was something I could do, but I've
never heard of a sure cure. If you know of anything that you think helped when
you were young, then try it. I don't know of all the treatments, by any means.
At worst, it could do no harm, and at best may help."
Erling
set the plane aside. "Some folk burned fires hot that summer, trying to
drive the sickness from their blood. Some said it was because their blood was
too hot already with the high summer heat and with the fever on top of that,
and tried to fan their loved ones to cool their blood. Which would you
advise?"
Drefan
shook his head. "I'm sorry, but I just don't know. I've heard of people
recovering when each was tried, and I've heard of people dying just the same
with each. Some things are out of our hands. No one can stay the Keeper's hand
when he comes."
Erling
rubbed his scruffy chin. "I'll pray that the good spirits spare the
girls." His voice caught. "They're too good, too innocent, for the
Keeper to touch them just yet. They've brought untold joy to this house and
family."
Drefan
returned his hand to Erling's shoulder. "I'm sorry, master Anderson, but
Lily has the tokens upon her." Erling gasped and gripped the bench. Drefan
had been ready and caught him
236
under
his arms to keep him from falling when his knees gave out. Drefan helped him to
sit on the carving horse.
Kahlan
turned her face away and put it to Richard's shoulder when Erling covered his
tears with both hands. Richard felt numb. "Grandpa," Darby called
from the steps, "what's wrong?" Erling straightened. "Nothing,
boy. I'm just worried about your sisters, that's all. Old men get foolish,
that's all."
Darby
eased the rest of the way down the stairs. "Yonick, I'm real sorry about
Kip. If your pa needs anything. I'm sure my pa would let me leave my work and
go help."
Yonick
nodded. He looked in a daze, too.
Richard
squatted down before the boys. "Did either of you see anything strange at
the Ja'La game?"
"Strange?"
Darby asked. "Strange like what?"
Richard
combed his fingers back through his hair. "I don't know. Did you talk to
any strangers?"
"Sure,"
Darby said. "There were lots of people there we didn't know. Soldiers were
there watching the game. Lots of people I didn't know came to congratulate us
after we won."
' 'Do
any of them stand out in your mind? Anything odd about any of them?' ' "I
saw Kip talking to a man and a woman after the game," Yonick said.
"More than like they were just congratulating him. They were leaning down
talking to him, showing him something." "Showing him something?
What?"
"I'm
sorry," Yonick said, "but I didn't see. I was too busy getting
slapped on the back by soldiers."
Richard
was trying not to frighten the boy with his questions, but he had to press for
answers. "What did this man and woman look like?"
"I
don't know," Yonick said. His eyes were filling with tears at remembering
his brother alive. "The man was skinny, and young. The woman was young,
too, but not as young as he. She was kind of pretty, I guess. She had brown
hair." He pointed at Nadine. "Like hers, but not as thick, or as
long."
Richard
glanced up at Kahlan. By the stricken look on her face, he knew she was fearing
the same thing as he.
"I
remember them," Darby said. "My sisters talked to that man and woman,
too."
"But
neither of you talked to them?"
"No,"
Darby said. Yonick shook his head. "We were jumping around, excited that
we'd won the game in front of Lord Rahl. A lot of the soldiers were
congratulating us, and so were a lot of other people; I never talked to those
two."
Richard
took Kahlan's hand. "Kahlan and I have to go ask Beth and Lily a
question," he said to Drefan. "We'll be right back."
Pressed
close together, seeking support in each other's touch, they climbed the stairs.
Richard was dreading what he might hear from the girls.
"You
ask them," Richard whispered to her. "They're afraid of me. They'll
talk easier to you."
"Do
you think it could have been them?" Richard didn't need to ask who she was
talking about. "I don't know. But you
237
told me
that Jagang said he had watched the Ja'La game-through Marlin's eyes. Sister
Amelia was with Marlin. They were doing something here in Aydindril."
Richard
reassured the women that they just had a small question to ask the girls. The women
busied themselves with their work while he went with Kahlan back into the
bedroom. Richard doubted they were paying any more attention to their meat pies
than Erling had been with the chair seat he had been planing.
"Lily,"
Kahlan asked the younger girl first in a soft voice as she smiled, "do you
remember when you went to watch your brother play Ja'La?"
Lily
nodded. "He won. We were real happy that he won. Pa said Darby scored a
point."
"Yes,
we saw him play, and we were happy for him, too. Do you remember the two people
you talked to? A man and a woman?"
She
frowned. "When Ma and Pa were cheering? That man and woman?"
"Yes. Do you remember what they said to you?"
"Beth
was holding my hand. They asked if it was my brother we was cheering for."
"That's
right." Beth said from the other bed. She had to stop talking as she was
taken with a bout of coughing. When she recovered and caught her breath, she
went on. "They said Darby played really good. They showed us the pretty
thing they had."
Richard
stared at her. "Pretty thing?" "The shiny thing in the
box," Lily said. "That's right," Beth said. "They let me
and Lily see it." "What was it?"
Beth
frowned through her headache. "It was . . . it was . . . I don't know
exactly. It was in a box that was so black you couldn't see its sides. The
shiny thing inside was pretty."
Lily
nodded her agreement. "My doll saw it, too. She thought it was real
pretty, too."
"Do
you have any idea what it was?" They both shook their heads.
"It
was in a box that was as black as midnight. To look at it is like looking down
a dark hole." Richard said. They both nodded.
"Sounds
like the night stone," Kahlan whispered to him. Richard knew well that
blackness. Not only the night stone had been like that, but also the outer covering
of the boxes of Orden. It was a color so sinister that it seemed to suck the
very light from a room.
In
Richard's experience, that void of light was only associated with immensely
dangerous things. The night stone could bring beings forth from the underworld,
and the boxes of Orden held magic that, if used for evil, could destroy the
world of life. The boxes could open a gateway to the underworld.
"And
inside was something shiny," Richard said. "Was it like looking at a
candle, or the flame of a lamp? That kind of shiny?" "Colors,"
Lily said. "It was pretty colors." "Like colored light,"
Beth said. "It was sitting on white sand." Sitting on white sand. The
hairs on the back of Richard's neck stood on end. "How big was the
box?" Beth held her hands not quite a foot apart. "About this big on
a side. But it
238
wasn't
very thick. Kind of like a book. It was almost like they opened a book. That's
what the box reminded me of-a book."
"And
inside, the sand that was inside, did it have lines drawn in it? Kind of like
if you were to draw lines in dry dirt with a stick?"
Beth
nodded as she succumbed to a bout of rattling coughs. She panted, catching her
breath, when they finally ceased.
"That's
right. Neat lines, in patterns. That's just what it was like. It was a box, or
maybe a big book, and when they opened it to show us the pretty colors, it had
white sand in it with careful lines drawn in it. Then we saw the pretty
colors."
"You
mean, there was something sitting in the sand? This thing that made the colored
light was sitting in the sand?"
Beth
blinked in confusion, trying to remember. "No ... it was more like the
light came out of the sand." She flopped back on her bed and rolled on her
side, in obvious distress from her sickness. From the plague. From black death.
From a black box.
Richard
stroked a hand tenderly down her arm and pulled the blanket back up over her as
she moaned in pain. "Thank you, Beth. You rest now, and get yourself
better."
Richard
couldn't thank Lily. He dared not trust his voice. Lily lay back. Her tiny
little brow puckered. "I'm tired." She pouted, near tears. "I
don't feel good."
She
curled up and put her thumb in her mouth.
Kahlan
tucked Lily in, and promised her a treat as soon as she was well. Kahlan's
tender smile brought a small smile to Lily's mouth. It almost made Richard
smile. Almost.
In the
alley, after they had left the Anderson house, Richard pulled Drefan aside.
Kahlan told the others to wait, and then she joined them.
"What
are tokens?" Richard asked. "You told the grandfather that the
youngest had tokens on her."
"Those
spots on her legs are called tokens."
"And
why was the old man nearly struck down with dread when he heard you say the
girl had them?"
Drefan's
blue eyes turned away. "People die of the plague in different ways. I
don't know the reason, except to imagine it has something to do with their
constitution. The strength and vulnerability of everyone's aura is different.
"I've
not seen with my own eyes all manner of death the plague causes, as,
thankfully, it is a rare occurrence. Some of what I know I learned from the
records that the Raug'Moss keep. The plagues I've seen have been in small,
remote places. In the past, many centuries ago, there have been a few great
plagues in large cities, and I've read the records of those.
"With
some people it comes on of a sudden-very high fevers, intolerable headaches,
vomiting, searing pains in their backs. They are out of their minds with the
agony of it for many days, even weeks, before they die. A few of these recover.
Beth is like that. She will get much worse, yet. I have seen people like her
recover. She has a small chance.
"Sometimes,
they look like the first boy, with the black death overwhelming them and
rotting their bodies. Others are tortured with horribly painful swellings in
their neck, armpits, or groin, they suffer miserably until they finally die.
Bert is
like
that. If the distemper can be brought to a head, and encouraged to break and
run, then they occasionally recover."
"What
about Lily?" Kahlan asked. "What about these tokens, as you called
them?"
"I've
never seen them before, with my own eyes, but I've read about them in our
records. The tokens will appear on the legs and sometimes on the chest. People
who have the tokens rarely know they are sick, until the end. They will one day
discover to their horror that they have the tokens upon them, and be dead
shortly thereafter.
' 'They
die with little or no pain. But they all die. No one with tokens on them ever
lives. The old man must have seen them before, because he knew this.
"The
plagues I've seen, as violent as the outbreaks were, never displayed the
tokens. The records say that the worst of the great plagues, the ones that
brought the most widespread death, were marked with the tokens. Some people
thought they were visible signs of the Keeper's fatal touch."
"But
Lily is just a little girl," Kahlan protested, as if arguing could change
it, "she doesn't seem so sick. It isn't possible for her to ..."
"Lily
is feeling out of sorts. The tokens on her legs are fully developed. She will
be dead before midnight." "Tonight?" Richard asked in
astonishment.
"Yes.
At the very latest. More likely within hours. I think perhaps even . . ."
A woman's long, shrill scream came from the house. The horror in it sent a
shiver through Richard's bones. The soldiers who had been talking in low voices
off at the end of the alley fell silent. The only sound was a dog barking down
the next street.
A man's
anguished cry came from the house. Drefan closed his eyes. "As I was about
to say, even sooner." Kahlan buried her face against Richard's shoulder.
She clutched his shirt. Richard's head spun.
"They're
children," she wept. "That bastard is killing children!"
Drefan's brow bunched. "What's she talking about?"
"Drefan"-
Richard tightened his arms around Kahlan as she shook-"I think these
children are dying because a wizard and a sorceress went to a Ja'La game a few
days back and used magic to start this plague." "That's not possible.
It takes longer than that for people to fall sick." ' 'The wizard was the
one who hurt Cara when you first arrived. He left a prophecy on the wall in the
pit. It begins: 'On the red moon will come the firestorm.' " Drefan
regarded him with a dubious frown. "How can magic start a plague?"
"I don't know," Richard whispered.
He
couldn't bear to speak aloud the next part of the prophecy. The one bonded to
the blade will watch as his people die. If he does nothing, then he, and all
those he loves, will die in its heat, for no blade, forged of steel or conjured
of sorcery, can touch this foe.
Kahlan
trembled in his arms, and he knew she was agonizing over the final part of the
prophecy.
To
quench the inferno, he must seek the remedy in the wind. Lightning will find
him on that path, for the one in white, his true beloved, will betray him in
her blood.
CHAPTER������������� 31
At the
edge of the expansive palace grounds, a patrol of D'Haran soldiers spotted them
and snapped to attention. Just beyond the soldiers, in the streets of the city,
Kahlan could see people everywhere going about their business pause to bow to
the Mother Confessor and the Lord Rahl.
Although
the activities of commerce, on the surface, seemed like any other day, Kahlan
thought she could detect subtle differences: men loading barrels into a wagon
scrutinized people who passed close by; shopkeepers appraised customers
carefully; people walking on the street skirted those stopped in conversation.
The knots of people gossiping seemed more numerous. Laughter was conspicuously
absent from the streets.
After
they had solemnly saluted with fists to the leather armor and chain mail over
their hearts, the patrol of soldiers not far off broke into good-natured grins.
"Huzzah, Lord Rahl!" they cheered as one. "Huzzah, Lord
Rahl!" "Thank you, Lord Rahl," one of the soldiers shouted
toward them. "You cured us! Restored our health! We're well because of
you. Long live the great wizard, Lord Rahl!"
Richard
froze in midstride, not looking at the soldiers, but staring at the ground
before him. His cloak, snared in a gust of wind, embraced him, shrouding him in
its golden sparkles.
The
others joined in. "Long live Lord Rahl! Long live Lord Rahl!" Hands
balled in fists, Richard started out once more without looking their way. Kahlan,
her arm around his, slid her hand down and urged his fist open to twine her
fingers in his. She gave his hand a squeeze of silent understanding and
support.
From
the corner of her eye, Kahlan could see Cara, back behind Drefan and Nadine,
gesturing angrily at the patrol to silence them and move them along.
In the
distance before them, on a gentle rise, the expanse of the Confessors' Palace
rose up in all its splendor of stone columns, vast walls, and elegant spires,
standing out a pristine white against the darkening sky. Not only was the sun
going down but murky clouds scudded by, messengers, delivering a vow of a
storm. A few errant snowflakes flitted past on the wind, scouting for the horde
to come. Spring had not yet prevailed.
Kahlan
gripped Richard's hand as if clutching at life itself. In her mind's eye, she
saw nothing but sickness and death. They had seen near to a dozen sick
children, stricken with plague. Richard's pallid face looked hardly better that
the six dead faces she had seen.
Her
insides ached. Holding back her tears, her cries, her screams, had cramped her
stomach muscles. She had told herself that she couldn't lose control and cry in
front of mothers who were terrified that their sick children might be sicker
than they had imagined, or as sick as they knew, but refused to believe.
Many of
those mothers were hardly older than Kahlan. They were just young women, faced
with a crushing plight, who fell to piteous prayer for the good spirits to
spare their precious children. Kahlan couldn't say that she wouldn't have been
reduced to the same state in their place.
Some of
the parents, like the Andersons, had older members of their families to rely on
for advice and support, but some of the mothers were young and alone, with only
husbands hardly more than boys themselves, and no one to turn to.
Kahlan
put her free hand over the painful spasm in her abdomen. She knew how
devastated Richard felt. He had more than enough to carry on his shoulders. She
had to be strong for him.
Majestic
maple trees stood to each side, the bare thicket of branches laced together
over their heads. It wouldn't be long before they budded. They passed out from
the tunnel of trees, onto the winding promenade that led up to the palace.
Behind
them. Drefan and Nadine carried on a whispered discussion of herbs and cures to
be tried. Nadine would propose something, and Drefan would give his opinion as
to whether it would be useless or might be worth trying. He would gently
lecture her on the paths of infirmity, and the causes of breaks in the body's
defenses that allowed an affliction to gain hold.
Kahlan
got the vague impression that he almost seemed to view those who fell sick with
contempt, as if because they took so little care with their auras and flows of energy
that he talked about all the time, it was only to be expected that they would
succumb to a pestilence unworthy of those like himself who minded their bodies
better. She guessed that one with his knowledge of healing people must get
frustrated with those who brought disease upon themselves, like the prostitutes
and the men who went to them. She was relieved, at least, that he wasn't one of
those.
Kahlan
wasn't sure if she felt Drefan was justified in some of the things he was
saying, or if it was simple arrogance. She herself had felt frustration at
people who flouted dangers to their health. When she was younger, there was a
diplomat who became ill every time he ate rich sauces with certain spices. They
always left him with difficulty breathing. He loved the sauces. Then one time,
at a formal dinner, he gorged himself on the sauces he loved, and fell dead at
the table.
Kahlan
could never understand why the man would bring such sickness on himself, and
had trouble feeling sorry for him. In fact, she always viewed him with contempt
when he came to a formal dinner. She wondered if Drefan didn't feel much the
same way about some people, except that he knew much more of what made people
sick. She had seen Drefan do remarkable things with Cara's aura, and she knew,
too, that sickness could sometimes be influenced by the mind.
Kahlan
had on a number of occasions stopped in a small place called Langden where
lived a very superstitious and backward people. It was decided by their
powerful local healer that the headaches that so bothered the people of Langden
must be caused by evil spirits possessing them. He ordered white'hot irons put
to the bottoms of the feet of those with headaches to drive out the evil
spirits. It was a remarkable cure. No one in Langden was ever possessed again.
The headaches vanished.
If only
the plague could vanish so easily.
If only
Nadine could vanish so easily. They couldn't send her away, now, when there
would be so much need among the people. Like it or not, Nadine was going to be
around until this was over. Shota seemed to be tightening her clutches around
Richard.
Kahlan
didn't know what Richard had said to Nadine, but she could imagine. Nadine had
suddenly been stricken with overt politeness. Kahlan knew Nadine's apology hadn't
been sincere. Richard had probably told her that if she didn't apologize, he
would boil her alive. With the way Cara's gaze so often passed over Nadine,
Kahlan suspected that Nadine had more to worry about than Richard.
Kahlan
and Richard led the rest of their group between the towering white columns set
to each side of the entrance, through the open doors carved with geometric
designs, and into the palace. The cavernous grand hall inside was lit by
windows of pale blue glass set between polished white marble columns topped
with gold capitals, and by dozens of lamps spaced along the walls.
A
leather-clad figure in the distance wandered toward them across the
black-and-white marble squares. Someone else approached from the right side,
from the guest rooms. Richard slowed to a stop and turned.
"Ulic,
would you please go find General Kerson. He might be at the D'Haran
headquarters. Does anyone know where General Baldwin is?"
"He's
probably at Kelton's palace, on Kings Row," Kahlan said. "He's been
staying there since he arrived and helped us defeat the Blood of the
Fold."
Richard
nodded wearily. Kahlan didn't think she had ever seen him looking worse. His
spiritless eyes stared out from an ashen face. He swayed on his feet as he
squinted, looking for Egan not ten feet away.
"Egan,
there you are. Go get General Baldwin, please. I don't know where he is, but
you can ask around."
Egan
cast a quick, uneasy glance toward Kahlan. "Would you like us to bring
anyone else. Lord Rahl?"
"Anyone
else? Yes. Tell them to bring their officers. I'll be in my office. Bring them
there."
Ulic
and Egan both clapped fists to hearts before turning to their duties. As they
departed, they conveyed a message through quick hand signals to the two
Mord-Sith. In response, Cara and Raina maneuvered closer to Richard, screening
him as Tristan Bashkar came to a wary halt.
Berdine
meandered up on the other side, her rapt attention on the open journal in her
hands. She seemed completely absorbed in what she was studying, and oblivious to
anything around her. Kahlan put out a hand to stop her before she bumped into
Richard. She rocked to a halt like a rowboat that had drifted in and grounded
on the shore.
Tristan
bowed. "Mother Confessor. Lord Rahl." "Who are you?"
Richard asked.
"Tristan
Bashkar, of Jara, Lord Rahl. I'm afraid we haven't been formally
introduced."
Life
sparked into Richard's gray eyes. "And have you decided to surrender,
minister Bashkar?"
Tristan
had been about to bow again at an expected formal introduction. He hadn't
expected Richard's questions to come first. He cleared his throat and
straightened. His easy smile welled onto his face.
"Lord
Rahl, I do appreciate your indulgence. The Mother Confessor has graciously
granted me two weeks to observe the signs from the stars."
Power
came to Richard's voice. "You risk your people seeing swords, instead of
stars, minister." Tristan unbuttoned his coat. From the corner of her eye,
Kahlan saw Cara's Agiel
twitch
up into her hand. Tristan didn't notice. His gaze stayed on Richard while he
drew his coat back, holding it open casually by resting his fist on his hip. It
exposed the knife at his belt. Raina flicked her Agiel up into her hand.
"Lord
Rahl, as I explained to the Mother Confessor, our people looked forward with
great joy to joining with the D'Haran empire." "D'Haran empire?"
"Tristan,"
Kahlan said, "we're rather busy at the moment. We have discussed this
already, and you have been given two weeks. Now, if you will excuse us?"
Tristan
brushed back a lock of his hair, his bright brown eyes taking her in.
"I'll get to the point, then. I've heard rumors that plague is loose in
Aydindril."
Richard's
raptor glower was suddenly in full form. "It's not just a rumor. It's
true."
"How
much danger is there?"
Richard's
hand found the hilt of his sword. "If you join with the Order, minister,
you will wish it was the plague on you, instead of me."
Kahlan
had rarely seen two men so instantly and intently dislike each other. She knew
Richard was exhausted, and in no mood, after having just seen so many seriously
ill or dead children, to be challenged by a noble such as Tristan inquiring
after his own hide. Jara had also been on the council that had condemned Kahlan
to death. Although it wasn't Tristan who had voted to behead her, it had been a
councilor from his land. Richard had killed that Jarian councilor.
Kahlan
didn't know why Tristan took such an instant dislike to Richard, except for the
fact that this was the man who had demanded Jara's surrender. She guessed that
was reason enough; if she were in his place, she might feel the same.
Kahlan
was expecting the two men to draw steel any second. Drefan stepped between
them.
"I'm
Drefan Rahl, High Priest of the Raug'Moss community of healers. I've had some
experience with the plague. I suggest that you confine yourself to your room
and avoid contact with strangers. Especially prostitutes. Beyond that, you
should get enough sleep and proper, healthful food.
"Those
things will help to keep your body strong against the distemper. Also, I will
be speaking to the staff, here at the palace, on strengthening oneself against
illness. You're welcome to come and hear my guidance, as is anyone else of a
mind."
Tristan
had listened earnestly to Drefan. He bowed, thanking him for his advice.
"Well, I appreciate the truth, Lord Rahl. A lesser man might have tried to
deceive me about such a serious problem. I can see why you're so busy. I'll
take my leave so that you may see to your people."
Berdine
nudged up beside Richard as he glared after Tristan's departing back. As
intently as she had been studying the journal, muttering to herself, testing
the pronunciation of High D'Haran words, Kahlan doubted she had heard anything
that had been said.
"Lord
Rahl, I need to talk to you," Berdine mumbled.
Richard
put a hand on her shoulder in a signal for her to wait. "Drefan, Nadine,
do either of you have anything for a headache? A really bad headache?"
"I have some herbs that will help, Richard," Nadine offered. "I
have something better." Drefan leaned closer to Richard. "It's called
sleep. Perhaps you recall having experienced it in the past?"
"Drefan, I know that I've been awake for a while, but-" "Many
days and nights." Drefan held up a finger. "If you try to mask the
outcome
of lack of sleep with so-called remedies, you do yourself no service. The
headache will return, worse than before. You will ruin your strength. You will
be no good to yourself, or anyone else." "Drefan is right,"
Kahlan said.
Without
looking up, Berdine turned the page she was reading in the journal. "I
agree. I feel much better since I got some sleep." Berdine seemed to have
finally noticed that there were other people around. "Now that I'm alert,
I can think better."
Richard
warded their insistence with a lifted hand. "I know. Soon, I promise. Now,
what was it you wanted to tell me, Berdine?"
"What?"
She was reading again. "Oh. I found out where the Temple of the Winds
is."
Richard's
brow went up. "What?"
"After
I got some sleep, I could think more clearly. I realized that we were limiting
our search by looking for a limited number of key words, so I tried to think of
what the old wizards would do in their situation. I reasoned that-"
"Where is it!" Richard bellowed.
Berdine
finally looked up and blinked. "The Temple of the Winds is located atop
the Mountain of the Four Winds."
Berdine
noticed Raina for the first time. The two women smiled in greeting, their eyes
sharing a private warmth.
Kahlan
shrugged to Richard's questioning look. "Berdine, that's not much help
unless you can tell us where it is."
Berdine
frowned a moment, and then waved in apology. "Oh. Sorry. That's the
translation"-she frowned again-"I think." Richard swiped a hand
across his face. "What does Kolo call it?" Berdine flipped the page
back and turned the book, tapping a finger at a place in the writing.
Richard
squinted. "Berglendursch ost Kymermossf," he read from the journal.
"Mountain of the Four Winds."
"Actually,"
Berdine said, "Berglendursch means more than just mountain. Berglen is 'mountain,'
and dursch can sometimes mean 'rock,' though it can also mean other things,
like 'strong-willed,' but in this case I think it means something more along
the lines of rock mountain, or great mountain made of rock. You know, rocky
mountain of the four winds . . . something like that." Kahlan shifted her
weight on her tired feet. "Mount Kymermosst?" Berdine scratched her
nose. "Yes. That sounds like it could be the same place." "That
has to be the same place," Richard said, looking hopeful for the first
time in hours. "Do you know where it is?"
"Yes.
I've been on Mount Kymermosst," Kahlan said. "There's no doubt about
its being windy up there-and rocky. There are some old ruins atop the mountain,
but nothing like a temple."
"Maybe
the ruins are the temple," Berdine offered. "We don't know how big it
is. A temple can be small." "No, I don't think so, in this
case."
"Why?"
Richard asked. "What's up there? How far is it?" "It's not far
to the northeast. Maybe a day's ride, depending. Two at the most. It's a pretty
inhospitable place. As treacherous as the old trail going up and over
245
the
mountain is, going over Mount Kymermosst prevents you from having to go through
some very difficult country and saves days of travel.
"At
the top is the site of some old ruins. Just some kind of outbuildings, from the
look of them. I've seen a lot of grand places: I recognize, architecturally,
that what's up there isn't the main structure. They're something like the
outbuildings here, at the Confessors' Palace. There's a road through the
buildings, a bit like the grand promenade here going through the
outbuildings."
Richard
hooked a thumb behind his wide leather belt. ' 'Well, where does it go, this
grand road?"
Kahlan
stared into his gray eyes. "Right to the edge of a cliff. The buildings
are at the edge of a cliff. That sheer stone wall drops off for maybe three or
four thousand feet."
"Is
there any kind of stairway carved in the cliff? Something leading down to the
temple itself?"
"Richard,
you don't understand. The buildings are hard on the edge of the cliff. It's
obvious that the buildings, walls, and the road itself went on, because they're
sheared off abruptly right at the edge. There used to be more of the mountain
there. It's gone now. It's all fallen away. A rockslide, or something. What was
beyond the ruins, the main structure and the mountain, is gone."
"That's
what Kolo said. The team returned, and the Temple of the Winds was gone."
Richard looked devastated. "They must have used magic to tear away the
side of the mountain, to bury the Temple of the Winds so no one could ever go
there again."
"Well,"
Berdine sighed, "I'll keep looking in the journal to see if he says
anything about the Temple of the Winds falling in a rockslide, or
avalanche." Richard nodded. "Maybe there's more about it in the
journal." "Lord Rahl, will you have time to help me before you go off
to be married?" A chill silence filled the grand hall.
"Berdine-"
Richard's mouth worked, but no more words were forthcoming. "I heard the
soldiers are well," Berdine said, looking briefly at Kahlan and then back
at Richard. "You told me that you and the Mother Confessor would be
leaving to be wedded just as soon as the soldiers were well. The soldiers are
well." She grinned. "I know that I'm your favorite, but you haven't
changed your mind, have you? Gotten cold feet?"
She
waited expectantly, seeming not to notice that no one was smiling at her joke.
Richard looked numb. He couldn't say it. Kahlan knew that he feared speaking
the words, feared he would break her heart.
"Berdine,"
Kahlan said into the heavy hush, "Richard and I won't be going away to be
married. The wedding is called off. For now, anyway."
Even
though she had whispered the words, they seemed to echo off the marble walls as
if she had shouted them.
Nadine's
intently blank face spoke more than if she had grinned. It was somehow worse
that she didn't, because it made it all the more obvious that she was schooling
her expression, yet no one could have cause to reproach her. "Called
off?" Berdine blinked in astonishment. "Why?" Richard stared
down at Berdine, not daring to look at Kahlan. "Berdine, Jagang started a
plague in Aydindril. That's what the prophecy down in the pit was about. Our
duty is to the people here, not to our own . . . How would it look if . . . ?''
He fell silent. The journal in her hands lowered. "I'm sorry."
CHAPTER������������� 32
Kahlan
stared out the window at the falling night, at the falling snow. Behind her,
Richard sat at his desk, his gold cloak laid over the arm of his chair. He was
working on the journal with Berdine while he waited for the officers to arrive.
Berdine did most of the talking. He grunted occasionally when she told him what
she thought a word meant, and why. Kahlan didn't think that as tired as he was
he was much use to Berdine.
Kahlan
glanced back over her shoulder. Drefan and Nadine were huddled together beside
the hearth. Richard had asked them to come along to answer any questions the
generals might have. Nadine confined her attention to Drefan, scrupulously
avoiding looking at Richard, and especially at Kahlan. Probably because she
knew that Kahlan would detect the glint of triumph in her eyes.
No.
This wasn't a triumph for Nadine-for Shota. This was only a postponement. Just
until . . . until what? Until they could halt a plague? Until most of the
people of Aydindril died? Until they themselves got the plague and died, as the
prophecy foretold?
Kahlan
went to Richard and laid a hand on his shoulder, desperately needing his touch.
Thankfully, she felt him put a hand over hers.
"Just
a postponement," she whispered as she leaned close to his ear. "This
doesn't change it, Richard. This only delays it for a little while, that's all.
I promise." He patted her hand as he smiled up at her. "I know."
Cara opened the door and leaned in. "Lord Rahl, they're coming now."
"Thanks, Cara. Leave the door open and tell them to come in." Raina
lit a long splinter in the hearth. She put a hand to Berdine's shoulder to
balance herself as she leaned past to light another lamp at the far end of the
table. Her long, dark braid slipped over her shoulder, tickling Berdine's face.
Berdine scratched her cheek and gave Raina a brief smile.
To see
those two touch or even acknowledge one another in front of others was rare in
the extreme. Kahlan knew that it was because of the things Raina had seen that
day. She, too, was feeling lonely, and in need of comfort. As deadening as
their training had been, as numb as they were to agony, their human feelings were
beginning to be rekindled. Kahlan could see in Raina's dark eyes that
witnessing children suffer and die had affected her.
Kahlan
heard Cara, out in the hall, telling men to go in. Muscular, graying General
Kerson, looking as imposing as ever in his burnished leather uniform, marched
through the doorway. Muscles bulged under the chain mail covering his arms.
Behind
him came the commander of the Keltish forces, the robust General Baldwin. He
was an older man with a white-flecked dark mustache, the ends of which grew
down to the bottom of his jaw. As always, he looked distinguished in
his
green silk-lined serge cape. fastened on one shoulder with two buttons. A
heraldic emblem slashed through with a diagonal black line dividing a yellow
and blue shield was emblazoned on the front of his tan surcoat. Lamplight
flashed off his ornate belt buckle and silver scabbard. He looked as fierce as
he was dashing.
Before
the phalanx of officers accompanying them had all entered the room, both
generals were bowing. In the lamplight. General Baldwin's pate shone through
his thinning gray hair as he bent low. "My queen." General Baldwin
said. "Lord Rahl."
Kahlan
bowed her head to the man as Richard stood, pushing his chair back. Berdine
scooted her chair over. to be out of his way. She didn't bother to look up. She
was Mord-Sith, and busy besides.
"Lord
Rahl," General Kerson said with a salute of his fist to his heart after he
had straightened. "Mother Confessor."
Behind
them, the officers were all bowing. Richard waited patiently until it was all
finished. Kahlan imagined that he couldn't be eager to start.
He did
so simply. "Gentlemen, I regret to inform you that there is a plague upon
Aydindril."
"A
plague?" General Kerson asked. "A plague of what?" "A
distemper. A plague that makes people sicken and die. That kind of
plague." "The black death," Drefan put in with a somber voice
from behind Kahlan and Richard.
The men
all seemed to take a collective breath. They waited in silence. "It
started not long ago," Richard said, "so, fortunately, we will be
able to take a few precautions. As of this moment, we know of less than a
couple of dozen cases. Of course, there is no telling how many have it and have
yet to fall ill. Of the ones we know were stricken, almost half are already
dead. By morning, the number will grow."
General
Kerson cleared his throat. "Precautions, Lord Rahl? What precautions are
there to be taken? Do you have another cure for the men? For the people of the
city?"
Richard
rubbed his fingertips on his forehead as his eyes turned to the desk before
him.
"No,
general, I have no cures," he whispered. Everyone heard his words, though;
it was that silent in the room. "Then what . . . ?"
Richard
straightened himself. "What we need to do is to separate the men. Disperse
them. My brother has seen the plague before, and has read of great plagues in
the past. We believe that it's possible that it spreads from person to person,
much as when one person in a family has a sore throat, chest congestion, and
stuffed nose, then the others in the family, from their proximity to the sick
person, come down with the same illness."
"I've
heard that the plague is caused by bad air in a place," one of the
officers in the back put in.
"I
am told that this, too, is possible," Richard said. "I have also been
told that it could be caused by any number of other things: bad water, bad
meat, heated blood." "Magic?" someone asked.
Richard
shifted his weight. "That, too, is a possibility. It is said by some that
it could be a judgment by the spirits on our world, and a punishment for what
they
find.
I, myself, don't believe such a thing. I've been out this afternoon, seeing
innocent children suffering and dying. I can't believe that the spirits would
do such a thing, no matter how displeased."
General
Baldwin rubbed his chin. "Then what do you think it is that spreads it,
Lord Rahl?"
"I'm
no expert, but I lean toward my brother's explanation that it's like any other
sickness, that it can be passed from person to person through odors in the air
or close contact. This makes the most sense to me, although this sickness is
much more serious. The plague, I am told, is almost always fatal.
"If
it is, in fact, passed from person to person, then we must not delay. We must
do what we can to keep the plague from our forces. I want the men split up into
smaller units."
General
Kerson spread his hands in frustration. "Lord Rahl, why can't you simply
use your magic and rid the city of this plague?"
Kahlan
touched Richard's back, reminding him to hold his temper. He seemed, though, to
have no anger in him.
"I'm
sorry, but right now, I don't know what magic can cure this plague. I don't
know that any wizard has ever before cured a plague through the use of magic.
"You
have to understand, general, that just because a person can command magic, that
doesn't mean that they can stay the Keeper himself, when the time for his touch
has come. If wizards could do that, I assure you, graveyards would vanish for
want of clients. Wizards have not the power of the Creator.
"Our
world has balance to it. Just as we all, especially soldiers, can aid the
Keeper in bringing death, we all can also be a part of the Creator's work of
creating life. We know, better than most, perhaps, that soldiers are charged with
protecting peace and life itself. The balance to that is that we sometimes must
take life to stay an enemy who would do greater harm. For this, we are
remembered, not for the lives we try to preserve.
"A
wizard, too, must be in balance, in harmony, with the world he lives in. The
Creator and the Keeper both have a part to play in our world. It is not within
the power of a mere wizard to dictate to them what shall be. He can work for
events to combine toward a result-a marriage, for example, but he cannot direct
the Creator Himself to bring forth a life as a result of that marriage.
"A
wizard must remember always that he works within our world, and must do his
best to help people, just as a farmer would help a neighbor who has a harvest
to bring in, or a fire to douse.
"There
are things a wizard can do that those without magic cannot, much the same as
you men are strong and can wield a heavy battle-axe, whereas an old man could
not. Even though you have the muscle to do this, that doesn't mean that your muscles
can do what they aren't meant to do, such as exercise wisdom the old man has
from his experience. He may defeat you in battle through his knowledge, rather
than his muscle.
"No
matter how great a wizard may be, he could not bear a new life into this world.
A young woman, without magic, experience, or wisdom, could do such a thing, but
he could not. Perhaps she has more to do with magic than he, in the end.
"What I'm trying to tell you men is that just because I have been born
with the gift, that doesn't mean that the gift can stop this plague. We can't
depend on magic to solve all our problems. Knowing the limitations of his power
is just as important for a wizard as knowing the limitations of his men is for
an army officer.
"Many
of you have seen what my sword can do against the enemy. Yet as awesome a
weapon as it is, it cannot touch this invisible enemy. Other magic may prove as
impotent."
"
In your wisdom we are humbled.' " General Kerson quoted softly from the
devotion.
Men
voiced their agreement and nodded at the logic of Richard's explanation. Kahlan
was proud of him, that at least he had convinced them. She wondered if he had
convinced himself.
"It's
not so much wisdom," Richard murmured, "as it is simple common sense.
"Please be assured, all of you," he went on, "that that doesn't
mean I have no intention of trying to find a way to end this plague. I am
looking into every possible means of stopping it." He laid a hand on
Berdine's shoulder. She glanced up. ' 'Berdine is helping me with the old books
from wizards past, to see if they left us any wisdom.
' If
there is a way for magic to stop it, then I will find that way. For now,
though, we must use other means at our disposal to protect people. We need to
have the men split up."
"Split
up, and then what?" General Kerson asked. "Split up and get out of
Aydindril."
General
Kerson stiffened. The links of his chain mail reflected the lamplight, so that
he seemed to sparkle like a vision of a spirit. "Leave Aydindril
undefended?"
"No,"
Richard insisted. "Not undefended. What I propose is to have our forces
divide up, so there is less chance of the plague spreading among them, and move
to separate positions around Aydindril. We can put detachments of our forces at
all the passes, all the roads and access valleys. That way, no force can
advance against us."
"What
if one does?" General Baldwin asked. "Then those smaller, separate
forces may be insufficient to drive off an attack."
"We
will have sentries and scouts. We'll have to increase them so that we don't
have any surprises. I don't think there are any forces of the Order this far
north yet, but if any attack does come, then we will have warning and can
gather our forces quickly. We don't want them too far apart to be able to
defend the city if they must, but they must be far enough apart to keep from
passing the plague throughout the whole of the army.
"Any
ideas you men have would be valued. That's one reason I asked you here. If you
have ideas about any of this, then please feel free to speak up."
Drefan
stepped forward. "It needs to be done quickly. The sooner the men are
away, the better the chance that none of them will have come in contact with
the sickness."
The
officers all nodded as they pondered.
"The
officers who went with us today should remain here," Drefan said.
"They may have come in contact with someone who has the plague. Make a
list of any they work closely with, and have them isolated here in Aydindril,
too." "We'll see to it at once," General Kerson said.
"Tonight." Richard nodded. "Each group of our forces must
communicate with the others, of course, but messages must be spoken only. No
written messages passing from hand to hand. The papers could carry the plague.
These men who pass commands and messages should talk at a distance. At least
the way we are here, in this room, with me at this end and you at the
other."
"Isn't
that a rather extraordinary precaution?" one of the officers asked.
"I have heard," Drefan said, "that people who have the plague,
but have not yet fallen sick and therefore don't know of their affliction, can
be detected by the distinctive odor of the plague on their breath." Men
nodded with interest. "But to smell that fatal odor would infect you with
the plague, and you, too, would be stricken and die." Mumbling spread back
through the men.
"That's
why we don't want the messengers to get too close to one another," Richard
said. "If one were to already have the plague, we don't want him spreading
it to another group of our forces. There is no use in going to all of this
trouble if we aren't scrupulous in our attention to everything.
"This
is a deadly poison. If we act quickly, and act as wisely as we know how, we may
spare a great many people from death. If we don't take these precautions
seriously, nearly every one of the people in this city, and every one of our
men, could be dead within weeks." Serious, worried talk swept back through
the room.
"We
are giving you the worst look at it," Drefan said, bringing their
attentive gazes back. "We don't want to pretend the danger is less than it
is. But there are things in our favor. The most important is the weather. The
plagues I have seen, and read about, spread worst in the high heat of summer. I
don't think it will be able to get a foothold in the cool weather of this time
of year. We have that much." Men sighed with renewed hope. Kahlan didn't.
''One
other thing,'' Richard said as he looked from eye to eye. ' 'We are D'Harans.
We are people of honor. Our men will act accordingly. I don't want any of us
lying to people about the danger, telling people that there is no risk, and on
the other hand, I don't want anyone deliberately panicking people. Everyone
will be frightened enough as it is.
"You
are also soldiers. This is no less a battle than if any other enemy attacked
our people. This is part of our job.
"Some
of the men will have to stay in the city to help. There may need to be men at
arms to hold down any uprising that may be stirred up. If there are any riots,
like there were with the red moon, I want them put down at once. Use whatever
force is necessary, but no more. Remember, the people of this city are our
people- we are their protectors, not their wardens.
"We
will need men to help with digging graves. I don't think we can be burning that
many dead, if the plague gets hot among the population." "How many do
you think could die. Lord Rahl?" one of the officers asked.
"Thousands," Drefan answered. "Tens of thousands." His
blue-eyed gaze took them all in. "If it gets bad enough, more. I read of a
plague that in three months took the life of nearly three of every four people
in a city of close to half a million." A low whistle came from an officer
in back.
"One
other thing," Richard said. "Some people will panic. They will want
to run from Aydindril to remove themselves from the danger. Most will want to
stay, not only because this is the only home they know, but because their
livelihood is here.
"We
can't allow people to flee Aydindril and spread the plague to other places in
the Midlands, or even beyond, to D'Hara. It must be confined here. If people
want to rush away from the city and go to the surrounding hills, separating
themselves
from
their neighbors who they fear have the plague upon them. we must be
understanding of their fears.
"They
are to be allowed to run to the countryside if they wish. but they must remain
in the area. I want our soldiers who will be in these separate units to ring
the city and surrounding country, protecting all routes to and from Aydindril.
The people must stay within these limits.
"Any
person fleeing could be infected with the plague and not know it, thus
endangering people in other places. As a last resort, force must be used to
prevent them from taking the plague abroad. Please keep in mind that these are
not malevolent people, but simply people frightened for the lives of their
families.
"The
ones who flee the city to wait out the plague will soon be short of food and
succumb to starvation. Remind people to take food. as they are not likely to
find it in the countryside. They will be no less dead if they die of hunger
rather than plague. Remind them of this, and that looting of farms will not be
tolerated. We will not allow anarchy.
"Well,
I guess that's about all I have to say. What are your questions?"
"Will you be leaving tonight, my queen. Lord Rahl, or in the
morning?" General Baldwin asked. "And where will you be
staying?" "Richard and I won't be leaving Aydindril," Kahlan
said. "What? But you must get away," General Baldwin insisted.
"Please, both of you must escape this. We need you to lead us."
"We
didn't know what we were dealing with until it was too late," Kahlan said.
"We may have already been exposed to the plague."
"We
don't think that likely," Richard said, wanting to assuage their fears.
"But I must stay to see if there is any magic that will stop this plague.
I will need to be going up to the Keep. If we're up in the hills we can't be of
any use. and I might miss a chance of finding a solution. We will remain here
and oversee the command of the city.
"Drefan
is the High Priest of the Raug'Moss healers, from D'Hara. The Mother Confessor
and I could be in no better hands. He and Nadine will be staying, too, to see
what relief can be brought to people."
As the
men asked questions and discussed matters of food and supplies, Kahlan moved to
the window, watching the snow and wind build in the spring storm. Richard was
speaking to his men the way a commander spoke on the eve of a battle, to
instill in them a sense of purpose, to harden them to the battle ahead. As in
any battle, death would run rampant.
Despite
what Drefan believed about the plague not being able to build to full strength
in the cold weather, Kahlan knew that it wasn't true in this case.
This
was no ordinary plague. This was a plague started by magic, by a man who wanted
to kill them all.
Down in
the pit, Jagang had called it Ja'La dh Jin-The Game of Life. Jagang was
incensed that Richard had changed the ball to a lighter one so that all the
children could enjoy playing, instead of just the strongest, the most brutal.
Jagang started the killing with those children. It was no accident; it was a
message. It was the game of life. This would be Jagang's world, ruled by such
savagery, if he won.
CHAPTER������������� 33
For the
next hour, the men asked questions, mostly of Drefan. The two generals
offered
suggestions to Richard regarding command and logistics. Options were briefly
discussed, plans were made, and officers were assigned duties. The army was to
begin moving that very night. There were a great many Blood of the Fold who had
surrendered, and although they had since sworn loyalty to Richard, it was still
thought wise to divide them, too, sending some with each unit, rather than
letting them remain together. Richard concurred with the suggestion.
When at
last they had all departed to begin the work, Richard dropped heavily into his
chair. He had come a long way from being a woods guide. Kahlan was proud of
him.
She
opened her mouth to say so, but Nadine spoke the words in her stead. Richard
mumbled a flat "Thanks."
Nadine
tentatively touched her fingertips to the back of his shoulder. "Richard,
you were always . . . I don't know . . . Richard, to me. A boy from home. A
woods guide.
'
'Today, and especially tonight, with all those important men, I think I saw you
differently for the first time. You really are this Lord Rahl."
Richard
put his elbows on the table before him and his face in his hands. "I think
I'd rather be at the bottom of the cliff, buried with the Temple of the
Winds." "Don't be silly," she whispered.
Bristling,
Kahlan moved to his side. Nadine glided away. "Richard," Kahlan said,
"you have to get some sleep. Now. You promised. We need you strong. If you
don't get some sleep-"
"I
know." He pushed away from the table and stood. He turned to Drefan and
Nadine. "Do either of you have anything to make a person go to sleep? I've
tried. . . . Lately, I just lie there. My mind won't be quiet."
"A
Feng San disharmony," Drefan announced at once. "You bring it on
yourself with the way you push past the limits of your body. There are bounds
to what we can do, and if-"
"Drefan,"
Richard said, cutting him off with a gentle voice, "I know what you mean,
but I do what I must. You just have to understand that. Jagang is trying to
kill us all. It will do me no good to be as high-spirited as a squirrel in
spring if it means we all end up dead."
Drefan
grunted. "I understand, but that doesn't get you strong." "So,
I'll try to be good later. What about going to sleep tonight?"
"Meditation," Drefan said. "That will calm your energy flows,
and begin bringing them into harmony." Richard rubbed his brow.
"Drefan, hundreds of thousands of people are in danger
of
dying because Jagang wants to put the whole of the world under his boot. He's
shown us that he has no bounds to his determination.
"He's
starting the killing with children." Richard's knuckles turned white as
his hands fisted. "Just to send me a message! Children!
"He
has no conscience. He's showing me what he's willing to do to win. To make me
surrender! He thinks it will break me!"
In
contrast to his knuckles. Richard's face had gone scarlet. "He's wrong.
I'd never give our people over to that kind of tyrant. Never! I'll do whatever
I must to stop this plague! I swear it!"
The
room rang with the sudden silence. Kahlan had never seen Richard angry in quite
this way. When he had the deadly fury of the Sword of Truth's magic in his
eyes, the object of his rage was usually at hand: the rage was invoked by and
directed at a palpable threat.
This
was frustrated anger at an invisible enemy. There was no threat he could get
his hands on, now. He had no direct way to fight it. Kahlan could see in his
eyes that this anger wasn't the magic of the sword. This was purely Richard's
rage.
His
face finally cooled. He took a calming breath as he wiped a hand across his
face. He regained control of his voice.
"If
I try to meditate. I will only see those sick and dead children again in my
mind. Please, I can't bear to see that in my sleep. I need to go to sleep and
not have dreams."
"Go
to sleep and not have dreams? You are bothered by dreams?"
"Nightmares. I have them all day, too, when I'm awake, but they're real.
The dream walker can't enter my dreams, but he has found a way to give me
nightmares, nonetheless. Please, dear spirits, at least when I'm asleep, grant
me some peace."
"A
sure sign of a Feng San meridian disharmony," Drefan confirmed to himself.
"I can see that you are going to be a difficult patient, but not without a
cause."
He
slipped the bone pin from the loop of leather and opened the flap on one of the
pouches at his belt. He pulled out a few leather purses. He put one back.
"No, that will kill pain, but not be much aid to sleep." He sniffed
another. "No, that will make you vomit." He searched his other things
and finally closed the flaps on the pouches. "I'm afraid I didn't bring
anything so simple with me. I only brought rare items."
Richard
sighed. "Thanks for trying, anyway."
Drefan
turned to Nadine. She was bottled zeal, pressing her lips together with
restrained delight as the others talked.
"The
things you gave Yonick's mother wouldn't be strong enough for Richard,"
Drefan said to her. "Do you have any hops?"
"Sure,"
she said calmly, but obviously pleased that someone had at last asked her.
"In tincture, of course."
"Perfect,"
Drefan said. He slapped Richard on the back. "You can meditate another
time. Tonight, you will be asleep in no time. Nadine will fix you a
preparation. I'll go start checking with the staff and giving them my
recommendations." "Don't forget to meditate," Richard muttered
as Drefan departed. Berdine remained behind, studying the journal, as Nadine.
Cara, Raina, Ulic, Egan, and Kahlan all followed Richard to his room, not far
away. Ulic and Egan took up posts outside in the hall. The rest of them went
into the room with Richard.
Inside,
Richard tossed his gold cloak over a chair. He pulled the baldric over his head
and laid the Sword of Truth atop it. He wearily drew his gold-trimmed
tunic
over his head, and removed his shirt, leaving him with a black, armless
undershirt.
Nadine
watched from the corner of her eye while she softly counted each drop aloud as
it dripped into a glass of water.
Richard
flopped down on the edge of the bed. "Cara, would you pull my boots off
for me, please?"
Cara
rolled her eyes. "Do I look like a valet?" She squatted to the task
when Richard smiled.
He
leaned back on his elbows. "Tell Berdine that I want her to look for any
reference to this Mountain of the Four Winds place. See what else she can find
out about it."
Cara
looked up from his feet. "What a brilliant idea," she said with mock
enthusiasm. "I bet she would never have thought of that on her own,
all-wise and knowing master."
"All
right, all right. I guess I'm not needed. How's my magic potion coming over
there?' '
"Just
finished," Nadine said in a cheery voice.
Cara
grunted as she yanked off his other boot. "Undo your pants, and I'll pull
them off, too."
Richard
scowled down at her. "I'll manage, thank you." Cara smirked to
herself as he rolled off the bed and went to Nadine. She handed him the glass
of water with the tincture of hops. She had put something else in the glass of
water, too.
"Don't
drink it all. I put in fifty drops. That's way more than you should need, but I
wanted to leave you with extra. Drink about a third, and then if you wake in
the night, you can always drink another swallow or two. I put in some valerian
and skullcap, too, to help insure you go into a deep and dreamless sleep."
Richard
downed half of it. His face contorted. "As bad as this tastes, it will put
me to sleep or else kill me." Nadine smiled at him. "You'll sleep
like a baby." "Babies don't sleep all that well, from what I've
heard." Nadine laughed in a soft lilt. "You'll sleep, Richard. I
promise. If you wake too early, just take a little more."
"Thanks."
He sat down on the edge of the bed, looking from one woman to the next.
"I'll manage with my pants. I swear."
Cara
rolled her eyes and headed for the door, urging Nadine along before her. Kahlan
kissed his cheek.
"Get
in bed. I'll come back in and tuck you in and kiss you good night as soon as I
see to the guards."
Raina
followed Kahlan out and closed the door. Nadine was waiting, rocking back and
forth on her heels. "How's the arm? Do you need a poultice?"
"My
arm is much better," Kahlan said. "I think it's fine, now. But thank
you for asking."
Kahlan
clasped her hands and stood watching Nadine. Cara watched Nadine. Raina watched
Nadine.
Nadine's
gaze moved from one woman to the next. She glanced to Ulic and Egan, who were
watching her. too. "All right, then. Good night." "Good
night," Kahlan, Cara, and Raina said as one.
They
watched as Nadine strolled off.
"I
still say you should have let me kill her," Cara said under her breath.
"I may yet let you," Kahlan said. She knocked on the door.
"Richard? You in bed?" "Yes."
Cara
started to follow as Kahlan opened the door.
Kahlan
turned. "I'll only be a minute. I don't think he can spoil my honor in a
minute."
Cara
frowned. "With Lord Rahl, anything is possible." Raina laughed and
slapped Cara's arm, making her leave Kahlan be. "I wouldn't worry. With
what we've seen today, neither of us would be in the mood," Kahlan said.
She shut the door.
A single
candle was lit. Richard was covered to his stomach. Kahlan sat on the edge of
the bed and took his hand. She held it to her heart. "Are you terribly
disappointed?" he asked.
"Richard,
we will be married. I've waited my whole life for you. We're together; that's
all that really matters."
Richard
smiled. His tired eyes sparkled. "Well, not all." Kahlan couldn't
help smiling herself. She kissed his knuckles. "Just as long as you know
that I understand," she said. "I didn't want you to go to sleep
thinking I was heartbroken that we can't be married just now. We'll be married
when we can."
He put
his other hand to the back of her neck and pulled her into a gentle kiss. She
laid a hand on his bare chest, feeling his warm flesh, his breathing, his
heartbeat. If she hadn't been so devastated by the suffering children she had
seen that day, the feel of him would have ignited longing in her own breast.
"I love you." she whispered. "I love you, now, and always,"
he whispered back. She blew out the candle. "Sleep well, my love."
Cara
eyed Kahlan suspiciously as she closed the door. "That was two
minutes." Kahlan ignored Cara's little jab. "Raina, would you guard
Richard's room until you go to bed, and then have a guard posted?"
"Yes, Mother Confessor."
"Ulic,
Egan, with that sleep potion, Richard may not be able to awake if he were in
danger. I'd like one of you to be here when Raina goes to bed."
Ulic
folded his massive arms. "Mother Confessor, neither of us has any
intention of leaving this spot as long as Lord Rahl is asleep."
Egan
pointed at the floor against the opposite wall. "One of us can take a nap
if need be. We'll both be here. Don't be concerned for Lord Rahl's safety while
he is sleeping."
"Thank
you, all of you. One other thing: Nadine isn't to be allowed into his room-for
any reason. None whatsoever."
They
all nodded in satisfaction. Kahlan turned to the blond-headed Mord-Sith.
"Cara, go get Berdine. I'm going to get a cloak. Both of you should bring
your cloaks, too. It's a foul night." "And where are we going?"
"I'll meet you both out in the stables." "The stables? Why do
you want to go out there? It's time for dinner."
Cara
would never really balk at a duty over a matter so petty as dinner. She was
suspicious.
"Grab
something from the kitchens that we can take with us, then." Cara clasped
her hands behind her back. "Where are we going?" "For a
ride."
"A
ride. Mother Confessor, where are we going?" "The Wizard's
Keep." Both Cara and Raina lifted an eyebrow.
Cara's
surprise turned to a frown of disapproval. "Does Lord Rahl know that you
want to go up to the Keep?"
"Of
course not. If I had told him why I'm going, he would have insisted on going,
too. He needs sleep, so I didn't tell him." "And why are we
going?"
"Because
the Temple of the Winds is gone. The wizards who did it were put on trial.
There are records in the Keep of all the trials held there. I want to find that
record. Tomorrow, Richard can read it over, after he's gotten some sleep. It
could help him."
"Makes
sense, going to the Wizard's Keep after dark. I will go get Berdine and some
food and meet you in the stables. We'll make a picnic of it," Cara said
with blithe sarcasm.
CHAPTER������������ 34
Kahlan
batted the big, wet snowflakes from her lashes and pulled the hood of her cloak
forward as she considered the foolishness of not thinking to change out of her
white Confessor's dress. She stood in the stirrups, reached between her legs,
and pulled more of the back of the dress under her bare legs to protect them
from the cold saddle. Fortunately, her boots were high enough that hiking up
the dress to sit in the saddle didn't expose her calves to the wind. She was
glad, though, to be back on Nick, the big warhorse her Galean soldiers had
given her. Nick was an old friend.
Cara and
Berdine looked just as uncomfortable as she, but Kahlan knew that it was
because they feared going to a place of magic. They had been in the Wizard's
Keep before. They didn't want to return. Back at the stables they had tried to
talk her out of it. Kahlan had reminded them of the plague.
Nick's
ears twitched even before the dark shapes of soldiers appeared out of the
swirling snow to challenge them. Kahlan knew they had reached the stone bridge;
the soldiers were posted just to the city side of it.
The men
sheathed their swords when Cara growled at them, pleased to have someone handy
upon whom to vent her foul mood.
"Terrible
night to be out. Mother Confessor," one of the soldiers said, happy to
address someone other than the Mord-Sith. "Terrible night to be stationed
out here," she said.
The man
looked back over his shoulder. "Any night you're stationed on watch up
here at the Keep is a terrible night."
Kahlan
smiled. "The Keep looks sinister, soldier, but it's not so bad as it
looks." "If you say so. Mother Confessor. Myself, I think I'd just as
soon stand guard over the underworld itself." "No one has tried to
get in the Keep, have they?"
"If
they had, you'd have heard about it, or found our bodies. Mother
Confessor." Kahlan urged her big stallion on. Nick snorted and surged
ahead on the slick snow. She trusted him in such conditions and let him lead
the way. Cara and Berdine both swayed easily in their saddles as they followed
behind. Back in the stables, Cara had snatched her horse's bit, looked the
animal in the eye, and ordered it not to give her any trouble. Kahlan had the
odd feeling that the bay mare understood the warning.
Kahlan
could just see the stone walls at the sides of the bridge. Just as well that
the horses couldn't see the chasm beyond. She knew Nick wouldn't spook, but she
wasn't sure about the other two. The sheer rock walls of the yawning abyss
dropped for thousands of feet. Unless you had wings, there was only this one
way into the Wizard's Keep. In the snowy darkness, the vast Keep, its soaring
walls of dark stone, its ramparts,
bastions,
towers, connecting passageways, and bridges all blended into the inky darkness
of the side of the mountain into which it was built. To those without magic or
those who didn't understand magic, the Keep presented an unmistakable spectacle
of sinister menace.
Kahlan
had grown up in Aydindril and had been up to the Keep uncountable times, more
often than not, alone. Even as a child, she had been allowed to go alone to the
Keep, as were the other young Confessors. When she was little, wizards had
tickled her and chased her through the halls, laughing with her. The Keep was a
second home to her: comfortably safe, welcoming, and protective.
She
knew, though, that there were dangers in the Keep, just as in any home. A home
could be a safe, welcoming place, as long as one wasn't foolish enough to walk
into the hearth. There were places in the Keep you didn't walk into, either.
It was
only when she was older that she no longer went to the Keep alone. When a
Confessor became older, it was dangerous to go anywhere alone. After a
Confessor had begun taking confessions, it wasn't safe for her to be without
the protection of her wizard.
When
she was older, a Confessor earned enemies. Family of the condemned rarely
believed that a loved one had committed violent crimes, or they blamed
Confessors for the man's death sentence, even though she was only the means of
confirming its justice.
There
were always attempts on the lives of Confessors. There was no shortage of
people, from commoners to kings, wanting a Confessor dead.
"How
are we going to go through the shields without Lord Rahl?" Berdine asked.
"His magic enabled us to pass through, before. We won't be able to get
through the shields."
Kahlan
smiled assurance to the two Mord-Sith. "Richard didn't know where he was
going. He just blundered through the Keep, going where he needed to go on
instinct. I know the ways to go that don't require magic to pass. There may be
a few mild shields that will keep people out, but I can pass those. If I can
pass, then I can get you through them by touching you when you pass through,
the same way Richard took you through the more powerful shields."
Cara
grunted disagreeably. She had been hoping that the shields would stop them.
"Cara,
I've been in the Keep thousands of times. It's perfectly safe. We're just going
to the libraries. Just as you are my protector out in the world, in the Keep I
will be yours. We are sisters of the Agiel. I won't let you get anywhere near dangerous
magic. Trust me?"
"Well
. . . I guess you are a sister of the Agiel. I can trust a sister of the
Agiel." They passed under the huge portcullis and onto the Keep grounds.
Once inside the massive outer walls, the snow melted as it touched the ground.
Kahlan pushed back her hood. Inside the walls, it was warm and comfortable.
She
shook the snow from her cloak and took a deep breath of the spring-fresh air,
filling her lungs with the familiar, soothing scent. Nick whinnied agreeably.
Kahlan
led the two Mord-Sith across the stretch of gravel and stone chips to the
arched opening in the wall that tunneled under part of the Keep. As they passed
through the long passageway, the lamps hanging from Cara and Berdine's saddles
lit the arched stone around them in an orange glow.
"Why
are we going through here?" Cara asked. "Lord Rahl took us in that
big door back there."
"I
know. That's one reason you're afraid of the Keep. That was a very dangerous
way to go in. I'm taking us to the way I usually enter. It's much better.
You'll see.
"It's
not the way visitors entered, either, but the way used by those who lived and
worked here. The public came in at a different door. a place where they were
greeted by a guide who saw to their wants."
Beyond
the tunnel, all three horses eyed the expansive paddock lush with grass. The
gravel road ran beside the wall that held the main entrance to the Keep, with a
fence on the other side of the road enclosing the paddock. To the left. part of
the paddock was bounded by the walls of the Keep rather than a fence. At the
rear were stables.
Kahlan
dismounted and opened the gate. After removing saddles and tack, all three of
them turned their horses loose in the paddock, where they could crop grass and
frisk in the mild air if they wished.
A dozen
wide granite steps, worn smooth and swayback over the millennia, led up into a
recessed entryway, to the simple but heavy double doors into the Keep proper.
Cara and Berdine followed behind with the lamps. The anteroom swallowed the lamplight
into its vast space, only allowing the weak flames to hint at the columns and
arches.
"What's
that?" Berdine asked in a low whisper. "It sounds like a storm
drain." "There aren't . . . rats in here, are there?"
"Actually,
it's a fountain," Kahlan said, her voice echoing into the distance.
"And yes, Cara. there are rats in the Keep, but not where I'm taking you.
Promise. Here, give me your lamp. Let me show you the bones of this menacing
dungeon."
Kahlan
took the lamp and strode to one of the key lamps on the wall to the right. She
could walk there without the aid of the lamp, she had done it so often, but she
needed the lamp's flame. She found the key lamp, tilled back the tall chimney,
and lit it with the flame from Cara's lamp.
The key
lamp took to flame. With a succession of whooshing sounds, the rest of the
lamps in the room lit-hundreds of them-two at a time. in pairs, one to each
side. Each whoosh was followed almost simultaneously by another, as the lamps
around the huge room took to flame from the key lamp. The light in the room
grew: the effect was like turning up the wick on a lamp.
In a
span of seconds, the anteroom was nearly as bright as day, bathed in the mellow
yellow-orange glow of all the flames. Cara and Berdine stood slackjawed at the
sight.
A
hundred feet overhead the glassed roof was dark, but in the day, it flooded the
room with warmth and light. At night, if the sky was clear, you could turn down
the lamps and gaze at the stars, or let the moonlight wash the room.
In the
center of the tiled floor stood a clover leaf-shaped fountain. Water shot
fifteen feet into the air above the top bowl, to cascade down each successive
tier into ever wider, scalloped bowls, finally running from evenly spaced
points in the bottom one in perfectly matched arcs into the lower pool. An
outer wall of variegated white marble was wide enough to act as a bench.
Berdine
stepped down one step of the five that ringed the room. "It's
beautiful," she whispered in astonishment.
Cara
gazed about at the red marble columns holding the arches below the balcony that
ran all the way around the oval-shaped room. She had a smile on her lips.
"This is nothing like the place Lord Rahl took us." Cara frowned.
"The lamps.
That
was magic. There is magic in here. You said you would keep us away from
magic."
"I
said I would keep you away from dangerous magic. The lamps are kind of like a
shield, except in reverse. Instead of keeping people out, they're an enabling
shield, to welcome and help them enter. It's a friendly kind of magic,
Cara." "Friendly. Sure."
"Come
on, we came here for a purpose. We have work to do." Kahlan took them to
the libraries via the elegant, warm halls, rather than the frightening way they
had gone before. They encountered only three shields. Kahlan's magic allowed
her to pass these, and by holding Cara and Berdine's hands, it was possible to
get them through, too, though both complained about a tingling sensation.
These
shields didn't guard dangerous areas, and so were weaker than others in the
Keep. There were shields that Kahlan couldn't pass, like the ones Richard had
taken her through to go down to the sliph, though Kahlan thought there might be
other ways to get down there. There were shields which Richard had gone through
that in her experience no wizard had ever crossed before.
They
came to an intersection with a hall of light pink stone running down both
sides. At places, the hall opened into commodious rooms ringed with padded
benches for conversing or reading. Beyond double doors in each of these large
outer rooms was a library.
"I've
been here," Berdine said. "I remember this." "Yes. Richard
brought you here, but by a different route." Kahlan continued on to the
eighth sitting room, and went through the double doors into the library there.
She used her lamp to light the key lamp, and as before, all the rest lit,
lifting the room out of its pitch blackness, bringing it to life. The floors
were polished wood, with walls paneled in the same honey-colored oak. During
the day, glassed windows on the far wall bathed the room with light and
provided a beautiful view of Aydindril. Now, through the snow, Kahlan could
only occasionally see the lights of the city below.
She
strode down the aisle between the reading tables and the rows upon rows of
bookshelves, looking for the one she remembered. In this room alone, there were
one hundred and forty-five rows of books. There were comfortable chairs to use
while reading, but tonight they would need the tables to lay out the books.
"So
this is the library," Cara said. "In D'Hara, at the People's Palace,
there are libraries much larger than this."
"This
is only one of twenty-six rooms like this. I can only imagine how many
thousands of books are here in the Keep," Kahlan said.
"Then
how are we ever going to find the ones we're looking for?" Berdine asked.
"It
shouldn't be as hard as it sounds. The libraries can be a bewildering maze when
you wish to find something. I used to know a wizard who searched on and off his
whole life for a bit of information he knew was in the libraries. He never
found it." "Then how can we?"
"Because
there are a few things that are specialized enough that they are kept together.
Books of language, for example. I can take you to all the books on any specific
language, because they're not about magic and so they're in one place. I don't
know how books on magic and prophecy are organized, if they even are.
"Anyway,
this library is where certain records are kept. such as the records of trials
held here. I've not read them, but I was taught about them."
Kahlan
turned and led them between two rows of shelves. Nearly midway down the
fifty-foot-long aisle, she came to a halt.
"Here
they are. I can see by the writing on the spines that they're in different
languages. Since I know all the languages but High D'Haran, I'll search all the
ones in other languages. Cara, you look at the ones in ours, and Berdine, you
take the ones in High D'Haran."
The
three of them started picking books from the shelves and carrying them to the
tables, separating them into three stacks. There weren't as many as Kahlan had
feared. Berdine had only seven books, Cara had fifteen, and Kahlan eleven, in a
variety of languages. For Berdine, it would be slow going translating the
D'Haran, but Kahlan was fluent in the other languages, and she would be able to
help with Cara's stack as soon as she finished her own.
As
Kahlan started in, she quickly found that it was going to be easier than she'd
first thought. Each trial began with a statement of the type of crime, making
it simple to eliminate those that had nothing to do with the Temple of the
Winds.
There
were charges against the accused ranging from the taking of a cherished object
of little worth to murder. A sorceress was accused of casting a glamour, but
was found innocent. A boy of twelve was accused of starting a fight in which
another boy's arm was broken; because the aggressor had used magic to cause the
injury, the sentence was the suspension of his training for a period of one
year. A wizard was accused of being a drunkard, a third offense, the prior
punishments having failed to halt his belligerent behavior. He was found guilty
and sentenced to death. The sentence was carried out two days later, when he
had sobered.
Habitually,
drunken wizards were viewed not with tolerance but as the true dangers they
were, capable, in their inebriated state, of causing mass injury and death.
Kahlan herself had seen wizards drink to excess only one time.
The
accounts of the trials were fascinating, but the seriousness of their purpose
kept Kahlan skimming through the books, looking for a reference to the Temple
of the Winds, or to a team charged with a crime. The other two were making
quick progress, too. In an hour, Kahlan had finished all eleven books in the other
languages, Berdine had only three left, and Cara six. "Anything?"
Kahlan asked.
Cara
lifted an eyebrow. "I just found an account of a wizard who fancied hiking
up his robes in front of women in the market on Stentor Street and commanding
them to 'kiss the serpent.' I never knew wizards could get themselves in such a
variety of trouble."
"They're
people, just like any other people." "No, they're not. They have
magic," Cara said. "So do I. Have you found anything, Berdine?"
"No, not what we're looking for. Just common crimes." Kahlan reached
for one of the books Cara hadn't been through, but paused. "Berdine, you
were down in the room with the sliph." Berdine made a show of shivering
and producing a sound of revulsion from deep in her throat. "Don't remind
me."
Kahlan
shut her eyes, trying to remember the room. She remembered Kolo's bones, and
she remembered the sliph, but she only vaguely recalled what else was in the
room.
"Berdine,
do you remember if there were any other books down there?" Berdine bit
down on the end of a fingernail as she squinted in concentration. "I
remember finding Kolo's journal open on the table. An inkwell and pen. I
remember Kolo's bones, lying on the floor next to the chair, with most of his
clothes long ago rotted away. His leather belt was still around him."
Kahlan
remembered much the same thing. "But do you remember if there were any
books on the shelves?" Berdine turned her eyes up as she thought.
"No." "No there weren't, or no you don't remember?"
"No,
I don't remember. Lord Rahl was really excited about finding Kolo's journal. He
said it was something different from the books in the library, and he felt it
was what he had been searching for: something different. We left right after
that."
Kahlan
stood. "You two keep looking through these books. I'm going down there and
have a look, just to be sure."
Cara's
chair clattered against the floor as she stood. "I will go with you."
"There are rats down there."
Her
expression vexed, Cara put a hand on her hip. "I've seen rats before. I
will go with you."
Kahlan
remembered well Cara's story about the rats. "Cara, there's no need. I
don't need your protection in the Keep. Outside, yes, but in here I know the
dangers better than you.
"I
told you I wouldn't take you near dangerous magic. Down there is dangerous
magic."
"Then
there is danger to you."
"No,
because I know about it. You don't. The danger would be to you, not me. I grew
up here. My own mother let me have the run of the Keep when I was a little girl
because I was taught about the dangers and how to avoid them. I know what I'm
doing.
"Please
stay here with Berdine and finish going through the books. It will save us
time, and it's important. The sooner we find the one we're looking for, the
sooner we can get home to watch over Richard. That's where our real concern
is."
Cara's
leather creaked as she shifted her weight. "I guess you would know the
dangers of the magic here better than 1. I think you're right about getting
home. Nadine is back there."
CHAPTER���� ��������35
Kahlan
tried to overlay her mental map of the Keep on the passageways, stairwells. and
rooms she traversed as she wound her way lower. Rats squeaked and skittered
away from her lamp.
Although
she had often seen the tower outside Kolo's room from the ramparts and walkways
up on top of the Keep, she had never been down inside it until Richard had
taken her there. Unfortunately, Richard had taken her there by way of dangerous
passages, through shields she would never be able to get through on her own.
She was
confident that there were other routes down to Kolo's room. There were vast
areas of the Keep that weren't protected by any shields at all. She had only to
find a way without shields, or with shields that her magic would be able to
pass. The areas that Richard had taken her, protected by dangerous shields, she
didn't know at all, since she had never been beyond those before, but she was
familiar with a myriad of ways to get around them.
Oftentimes
the "hard shields," as the wizards used to call them, were meant to
protect something just beyond, rather than specifically to prevent passage to
another area. Many of the rooms Richard had taken her through were like that:
places of menacing magic she had never seen before. They oftentimes provided a
more direct route, but required special magic.
If she
was correct, that Richard had traversed a maze through dangerous places, rather
than going through hard shields specifically protecting the tower, then there
would be a way around the dangerous areas and into the tower room. In her
experience, that was the way the Keep worked: if the tower room was meant to be
off-limits, then it would be protected by its own hard shields. If it wasn't
forbidden, then there would be at least one way she could enter. She had but to
find it.
Even
though she had spent a great deal of time in the Keep. much of that time was
spent in the libraries studying. She had explored, of course, but the Keep was
almost inconceivably vast. Not only was the part that could be seen from the
outside immense, but much more of the Keep was burrowed into the mountain. The
outer walls were only the tip of the Keep, the visible part of the tooth, with
much more of the root hidden beneath.
Kahlan
went through an empty room, chiseled from bedrock, to one of the passages on
the other side. There were numerous empty rooms in the Wizards' Keep. Some of
them, like the one she had just passed through, seemed nothing more than
junctions where various passages connected, possibly enlarged to provide reference
points.
The
square-sided passage through the rock ahead appeared carefully cut and
smoothed. Her lamp illuminated bands of symbols incised in the granite, with
round areas in the field of swirling carvings polished to a high luster. Each
encircling
band
marked the location of a mild shield that tingled against her flesh as she
passed through.
Ahead,
she saw the hall split into three passageways. Before she reached the junction,
the air about her suddenly hummed. It took two steps before she could halt her
onward rush. Each of those two steps caused the hum to raise in pitch to an
uncomfortable buzzing. Her long hair lifted from her shoulders and back to
stand straight out in all directions. The band carved in the stone ahead
immediately began to glow red.
Kahlan
retreated several paces. The humming lowered in pitch. Her hair settled down.
She
cursed under her breath. A humming shield was an urgent warning to stay away.
The red glow displayed the region of the shield itself. The hum warned that you
were entering the field of a dangerous shield.
Some of
these hard shields would actually prevent a person without the required magic
from getting too close, by making the very air get as thick as mud, and then
stone. Some of the humming shields didn't prevent entry, but walking into one
would sear the flesh and muscle right off a person's bones. The lesser shields
were meant to keep people without magic, and thus knowledge, from getting close
to the danger.
Kahlan
turned and held up the lamp as she quickly retraced her steps to the room. She
took a different passageway that ran in the general direction she wanted to go.
It was a much more congenial-looking hall, with whitewashed walls and ceiling,
making the lamp better able to brighten her way.
She encountered
no shields at all in the white hall. A stairway took her lower into the Keep.
Another stone hall at the bottom provided quick travel devoid of shields. In
her mind, she was retracing the halls, rooms, stairs, and cramped tunnels, and
was pretty sure that, by eliminating the false routes she had taken, there was
a way to get to and from the tower without encountering any shields.
Kahlan
threw open the door at the end of the stone hall and stepped out onto a walkway
with an iron railing. She held the lamp up in front of her. She stood at the
bottom level of the tower.
The
walkway ringed the hall. Stairs wound their way up around the inside of the
immense stone tower, with landings at other doors along the way. In the center,
at the bottom of the tower, lurked a pool of black water. Rocks broke the
surface of the water here and there. Bugs skittered across the inky surface of
the pool. Salamanders rested on the rocks, their eyes rolling to watch her.
This
was the place where she and Richard had fought the mriswith queen. Her
stinking, broken eggs still littered the rock. Small bits of the door blasted
from Kolo's room still floated in the pool, providing islands for fat bugs that
hissed at the intrusion.
Across
the water, on the opposite side of the round tower room, was the opening to
Kolo's room.
Kahlan
quickly made her way around the walkway to the wide platform outside Kolo's
room. The doorway had been blown open, leaving blackened, jagged edges. In some
places the stone itself was melted like candle wax. The tower wall outside the
doorway was streaked with blackened lines of soot from the unleashed power that
had opened Kolo's room for the first time in millennia.
When
Richard had destroyed the Towers of Perdition, it had destroyed the magic seal
on this room, too. The towers had sealed the Old World away from the New
in the
great war three thousand years before. They had also sealed the room with the
sliph, and sealed in the man who had been unfortunate enough to be the one
guarding her at the time.
Stone
fragments crunched under her feet as Kahlan stepped into the room where Kolo
had died, the room where dwelled the sliph. The silence was oppressive. It
droned in her ears. making her welcome the relief of her footsteps.
Richard
had awakened the sliph after thousands of years. The sliph had taken Richard to
the Old World, and had brought him and Kahlan safely back to Aydindril. When
they returned, Richard had put the sliph back to sleep. All the years Kahlan
had spent in the Keep, and she had never known the sliph was there.
Kahlan
couldn't even imagine the magic the wizards of old could use to conjure a being
such as the sliph, or how they could have put her to sleep for all that time.
so that she could wake again. Only at the fringes of her imagination could she
conceive of the power Richard wielded, but didn't comprehend.
What
would the war wizards of old, who knew their gift well, have been able to do
with such unfathomable magic? What terrors would a war among those with that
kind of power have been like? The very thought gave her shivers.
It
would have been things like the plague that had been set upon them, now. They
could do those kinds of things.
The
lamplight fell across Kolo's bones beside the chair. The pen and inkwell still
sat on the dusty table. The round room, nearly sixty feet across, was capped
with a high-domed ceiling, itself nearly as tall as the room was wide.
In the
center was a round stone wall, like a well, twenty-five or thirty feet across.
There dwelled the sliph. Kahlan held the light over the wall of the well, and
glanced briefly down the smooth stone walls of the dark shaft that fell away
seemingly forever.
The
walls of the room were scorched in ragged lines as if lightning had gone wild
in the place-another result of the same magic Richard had invoked when he
destroyed the towers and when the doorway had been blasted open. Kahlan strode
quickly around the room, checking to see if there was anything that might be
useful. There was nothing in the room, other than the table, chair, and Kolo,
except for a dusty set of shelves.
Kahlan
was disappointed to find that there were no books on the shelves. There were
three faded blue, glazed, lidded containers, probably once holding water or
soup for the wizard on duty guarding the sliph. A white, glazed bowl held a
silver spoon. A neatly folded cloth, or embroidery of some sort, sat on one of
the shelves. When she touched it, it disintegrated into dust and little flakes
where her fingers contacted it.
Kahlan
bent lower, seeing that the bottom shelf held only a few spare candles and a
lamp.
An
abrupt sensation of icy alarm inundated her. She was being watched.
She
froze, holding her breath, telling herself that it was just her imagination.
The fine hairs at the back of her neck stiffened. She felt a cold wave of
gooseflesh run up her arms.
She
strained to hear a telling sound. Her toes cringed inside her boots. She feared
to move. Carefully, quietly, she let her lungs draw a needed breath.
Slowly,
ever so slowly, so as not to make a sound, she straightened a little. She dared
not move her feet lest the stone chips crunch.
Courage,
as thin as eggshells, urged her to hide behind the wall of the sliph's well.
From there, she could determine if it was only her imagination spooking her.
Perhaps it was just a rat.
She
twisted to check the distance to the stone wall. Kahlan sucked a cry as she
flinched back.
CHAPTER������������ 36
The
quicksilver face of the sliph had risen above the edge of the stone wall and
was watching her.
The
glossy metallic female features of the sliph reflected the lamplight and the
room in a living mirror. It was obvious why Kolo called the sliph
"she." The sliph was a silver statue. Except it moved with liquid
grace.
Kahlan
pressed a hand to her hammering heart as she panted, getting her breath. The
sliph watched her, as if curious about what Kahlan might do next. Kolo often
said in his journal that "she" was watching him. "Sliph . .
." Kahlan stammered. "What are you doing-awake?" The face distorted
into a puzzled frown. "Do you wish to travel?" The eerie voice echoed
around the room. Her lips hadn't moved as she spoke, but she smiled pleasantly.
"Travel?
No." Kahlan took a step toward the well. "Sliph, Richard put you to
sleep. I was here." "Master. He woke me."
"Yes,
Richard woke you. He traveled in you. He rescued me, and I traveled back with
him . . . in you."
Kahlan
recalled that strange experience with a certain fondness. To travel in the
sliph, you had to breathe her in. It was frightening at first, but with Richard
there holding her hand, Kahlan had been able to do it, and had discovered the
enthralling sensation of "traveling." To breathe the sliph was
rapture.
"I
remember," the sliph said. "Once you are in me, I remember."
"But don't you remember Richard putting you to sleep again?" "He
woke me from the sleep of ages, but he did not put me back into the long sleep.
He put me at rest, until I was needed."
"But
we thought-we thought you had gone back to sleep. Why are you not at . . .
rest, now?" "I felt you near. I came to look."
Kahlan
stepped to the stone wall. "Sliph, has someone traveled in you since
Richard and I last did?" "Yes. I was used."
Suddenly
realization broke through her surprise. "A man and a woman. They traveled
in you, didn't they?" The sliph's smile turned sly, but she didn't answer.
Kahlan
touched her fingers to the stone wall. "Who was it, sliph, who traveled in
you?"
"You
should know that I never betray those I hold within me." "I should
know? How would I know?"
"You
have traveled in me. I would not reveal you. I never betray my clients. You
traveled, so you must understand."
Kahlan
licked her lips patiently. "Sliph, I'm afraid that I don't know anything
about you, really. You are from a time before my time-from another age. I only
know that you can travel, and that you helped me before. You were a valuable
aid in defeating some very bad people."
"I
am glad that you were pleased with me. Perhaps you would like to be pleased
again? Would like to travel again?"
A
shiver ran up Kahlan's spine. This had to be why Marlin was trying to get to
the Keep. He and Sister Amelia must have come to Aydindril from the Old World
in the sliph. Jagang had said he had waited to reveal himself until she
returned. How else could she have returned to him so fast, except in the sliph?
Kahlan swept out an imploring arm. "Sliph, some very evil people . .
." She halted, sucking a breath through her open mouth. Her eyes widened.
"Sliph," she whispered, "you took me to the Old World before."
"Ah. I know the place. Come, we will travel." "No, no, not
there. Sliph, can you travel other places?" "Of course."
"Where?"
"Many
places. You must know. You have traveled. Name the place that would pleasure
you, and we will travel." Kahlan leaned toward the alluring, smiling
silver face. 'The witch woman. Can you take me to the witch woman?"
"I do not know this place."
"It's
not a place. It's a person. She lives in the Rang'Shada mountains. In a place
called Agaden Reach. Can you go there, to Agaden Reach?" "Ah. I have
been there." Kahlan touched her trembling fingers to her lips.
"Come,
and we will travel," the sliph said, her haunting voice echoing around the
ancient stone walls. The sound died out slowly, letting silence settle once
more, covering everything, like the veil of dust in the room.
Kahlan
cleared her throat. "I have to go do something, first. Will you still be
here when I get back? Will you wait for me?"
"If
I am at rest, you can let me know of your need, and we will travel. You will be
pleased."
"You
mean, if you're not right here, I should call down to you, and you will come to
me, and we will travel?" "Yes. We will travel."
Kahlan
rubbed her hands together as she backed away. "I'll be back. I'll be back
soon, and we will travel."
"Yes,"
the sliph said, watching Kahlan retreat, "we will travel." Kahlan
snatched the lamp from where she had set it on the floor near the shelves. She
paused at the door, looking back at the quicksilver face floating in the gloom.
"I'll be back. Soon. We will travel."
"Yes.
We will travel," the sliph said as Kahlan started running. Kahlan had to
struggle to think where she was going as she ran. Her mind spun with arguments.
While she grappled with her alternatives, she also tried to pay attention as she
turned down halls, raced through rooms, and dashed upstairs. She seemed to
reach Library Hall before she was ready. Huffing, she realized
that
she couldn't run in on Cara and Berdine in such a state. They would know
something was wrong.
Not far
from the library where the two Mord-Sith waited, Kahlan collapsed onto a padded
bench, letting the lamp slip to the floor. She leaned back against the wall and
stretched out her aching legs. She fanned her face with one hand. She gulped
air, and tried to convince her heart to slow down. She knew her face must be
red as an apple.
She
couldn't walk in on the other two like this. Kahlan made plans as she rested,
waiting for her heart to slow, her lungs to recover, her face to cool.
Shota
knew something about the plague. Kahlan was sure of it. Shota had said about
Richard, "May the spirits have mercy on his soul."
Shota
had sent Nadine to marry Richard. Kahlan vividly recollected Nadine's tight
dress, her flirtatious smiles, her accusations, telling Richard that Kahlan was
heartless. The look in Nadine's eyes when she talked to him.
Kahlan
thought about what she must do. Shota was a witch woman. Everyone feared the
witch woman. Even wizards feared Shota. Kahlan had never done anything against
her, but that had never stopped Shota from hurting her. Shota might kill her.
Not if Kahlan killed her first.
The
distraction of making plans had allowed her to regain her composure. She stood,
smoothed down her dress, and took a deep, settling breath.
Kahlan
put on her Confessor's face and strode through the doors to the library where
the other two waited.
Cara
and Berdine popped out from behind a row of bookshelves. The books were gone
from the table.
Cara
eyed Kahlan suspiciously. "You've been gone long enough." "It took
me a while to find a way with shields I could pass." Berdine came out from
behind the shelves. "Well? Did you find anything?" "Find
anything? Like what?"
Berdine
spread her hands. "Books. You went to look for books." "No.
Nothing."
Cara
was frowning. "Did you have any problems?"
"No.
I'm just upset about all this . . . about everything. The plague and all. I'm
upset that I couldn't find anything to help. What about you two?"
Berdine
swiped a stray strand of hair back from her face. "Nothing. Nothing about
the Temple of the Winds or the team who sent it away."
"I
don't understand," Kahlan said, mostly to herself. "If there was a
trial, as Kolo said, then there should be a record of it."
"Well,"
Berdine said, "we were looking through the other books to see if we missed
any of the records of the trials. We didn't find any. Where else can we
look?"
Kahlan
sagged in disappointment. She had been sure they would find a record of the
trial for Richard.
"Nowhere.
If it isn't here, then there must be no record of the trial, or else it was
destroyed. From what Kolo said, the Keep was in an uproar at the time; they may
have been too busy to keep a record."
Berdine
cocked her head. "But we're going to keep looking for part of the night,
at least." Kahlan looked about the library. "No. It would be a waste
of time. The time
would
be better spent if you kept working on Kolo's journal. If we don't have the
record of the trial, translating the journal would be the best help to Richard.
Maybe you can find something important in the journal."
In the
brightness of the library, Kahlan's resolve was beginning to falter. She began
to reconsider her plan.
"Well,"
Cara said, "I guess we better get back, then. No telling what Nadine will
be up to. If she gets into Lord Rahl's room, she'll get blisters kissing him
while he's asleep and helpless."
Berdine
pressed her lips tight and smacked Cara's shoulder. "What's the matter
with you? The Mother Confessor is a sister of the Agiel."
Cara
blinked in surprise. "Forgive me. I was only making a joke." She
touched Kahlan's arm. "You know that I will kill Nadine if you wish-you
have but to ask. Don't worry, Raina would not let Nadine into his room."
Kahlan
wiped a tear from her cheek. "I know. It's just that with all that's going
on-1 know."
Her
mind was made up. It might help Richard find an answer. It might help Richard
discover something that would stop the plague. Kahlan knew she was only making
excuses to herself. She knew why she was going.
"Did
you find what you were looking for?" Raina asked as Kahlan, Cara, and
Berdine approached.
"No,"
Kahlan said. "There was no record of the trial." "I'm
sorry," Raina said.
Kahlan
gestured to the door. "Has anyone tried to bother him?" Raina
smirked. "She came by. She wanted to check on Lord Rahl. To make sure he
was sleeping, she said."
Kahlan
didn't have to ask who came by. Her blood heated. "And you let her
in?"
Raina
smiled that dark smile of hers. "I put my head in, saw that Lord Rahl was
asleep, and told her so. I didn't let her have so much as a peek at him."
"Good. But she'll probably be back."
Raina's
smile widened. "I don't think so. I told her that if I caught her in this
hall again tonight, she would feel my Agiel against her bare bottom. When she
left, there was no doubt in her mind that I meant it." Cara laughed.
Kahlan couldn't.
"Raina,
it's late. Why don't you and Berdine go get some sleep." Kahlan caught the
quick glance to Berdine. "Berdine, just like Lord Rahl, needs to get some
rest so that she can work on the journal tomorrow. We all need some rest. Ulic
and Egan here will watch over Richard."
Raina
slapped the back of her hand against Ulic's stomach. "You boys up to it?
Can you handle it without me?"
Ulic
scowled down at the Mord-Sith. "We are the Lord Rahl's bodyguards. If
anyone tried to get into his room, there wouldn't be enough left for you to
pick your teeth with."
Raina
shrugged. "I guess the boys can handle it. Let's go, Berdine. It's about
time you got a good night's sleep for a change."
Cara
stood beside Kahlan as she watched Berdine and Raina stride off down the hall,
passing a critical eye over soldiers on patrol.
"You
are right about rest. You need to get some sleep, too. Mother Confessor,"
Cara said. "You don't look well."
"I
. . . I want to check on Richard first. I'll be able to sleep better if I know
he's all right. I'll be back out in a minute." She gave Cara a firm look
to discourage any ideas she might have about going in with her. "Why don't
you go get some sleep, too?"
Cara
clasped her hands behind her back. "I will wait."
Richard's
room was dark, but the light coming from the window proved enough to find the
bed. Kahlan stood beside him and listened to his even breathing.
She
knew how distressed Richard was by recent events. She felt the same pain. How
many families were suffering in grief this night? How many more would be
suffering the next, and the night after?
Kahlan
sat lightly on the edge of the bed. She slipped an arm under his shoulders and
strained to gently lift him. He murmured her name under his breath in his
sleep, but didn't wake as she sat him up a bit and leaned the heavy weight of
him against her.
Kahlan
reached behind and picked up the glass with the sleeping potion Nadine had
made. It was still half full. She held it to his mouth and tipped it, letting
the potion slide to his lips. He stirred slightly, and swallowed as she tipped
the glass higher.
"Drink,
Richard." she urged in a whisper. She kissed his forehead. "Drink, my
love. It will help you sleep."
She
tipped the glass a little more each time he swallowed, forcing him to drink
more. When he had taken most of it, she set it behind once more. He murmured
her name again.
Kahlan
hugged his head, holding his cheek to her breast. She pressed her cheek to the
top of his head as a tear rolled over the bridge of her nose and fell into his
hair.
"I
love you so much, Richard," she whispered. "No matter what, don't
ever doubt how much I love you."
He
mumbled something she couldn't understand, except for the word "love."
Kahlan eased him back onto the pillow and slipped her arm out from underneath
him. She pulled up his covers.
She
kissed her finger, and gently pressed the kiss to his lips, before she left the
room.
On the
way to her own room, she again told Cara that she should go get some sleep.
"I
will not leave you unguarded," Cara insisted. "Cara, you need sleep,
too."
Cara
glanced over out of the comer of her eye. "I have no intention of letting
Lord Rahl down again." When Kahlan started to protest, Cara spoke over her
words. "I will be posting soldiers outside your room. too. I can nap
there, and if anything happens I will be at hand. I'll get enough sleep."
Kahlan had things to do. She needed Cara out of her hair. "You saw how
Richard was when he didn't get enough sleep." Cara let out a dismissive
chuckle. "Mord-Sith are stronger than men. Besides, he was like that
because he hadn't slept for days. I slept last night."
Kahlan
didn't want to argue. She was frantically trying to think of how to overcome
this obstacle in skintight leather. She couldn't let Cara know what she
272
was
doing. Sister of the Agiel or not, Cara would tell Richard; there was no doubt
of that.
That
was the last thing Kahlan wanted. Under no circumstances did she want Richard
knowing what she was going to do. She would have to think of a new plan.
"I don't know if I'm ready for bed. I'm kind of hungry." "You
look tired. Mother Confessor. You need sleep, not food. You won't sleep as well
if you eat right before bed. I want you to get a good sleep, like Lord Rahl.
You can sleep well knowing that Nadine will not be going near him. I have a
good idea of what Raina said to Nadine, and I can assure you that as brazen as
that strumpet is, she has enough sense to heed a warning from Raina. You have
no cause for fear tonight, so you can sleep well." "Cara, what are
you afraid of? Besides magic, and rats." Cara scowled. "I don't like
rats. I am not afraid of them." Kahlan didn't believe a word of it. She
waited until they were out of earshot of a patrol passing in the opposite
direction. "What scares you? What do you fear?" "Nothing."
"Cara,"
Kahlan admonished, "it's me, Kahlan, a sister of the Agiel. Everyone is
afraid of something."
"I
wish to die in battle, not weak and sick in a bed, at the hands of some unseen
foe. I fear Lord Rahl getting the plague, and leaving us without a Master of
D'Hara."
"I'm
afraid of that. too," Kahlan whispered. "I'm afraid of Richard
getting the plague, and everyone else I love. You, Berdine, Raina, Ulic, Egan,
and everyone I know here at the palace." "Lord Rahl will find a way
to stop it."
Kahlan
hooked some hair behind her ear. "Are you afraid of not finding a man who
will love you?"
Cara
flashed Kahlan an incredulous look. "Why would I be afraid of that? I have
but to give any man permission to love me, and he would."
Kahlan
let her gaze drift from Cara to the columns at the sides of the room they were
passing through. Their boot strikes echoed off the marble floor.
"I
love Richard. A Confessor's magic will destroy a man if she loves him- you
know, when they're . . . together. Only because Richard is special, has special
magic, can he love me in return. I'm terrified of losing him. I want no one but
Richard-ever-but even if I wanted, I couldn't. No other man could express his
love for me except Richard. I could never have anyone else."
Cara's
voice softened in sympathy. "Lord Rahl will find a way to stop the
plague."
They
passed from the marble floor onto the quiet of carpets running up the stairs
toward Kahlan's room.
"Cara,
I'm terrified of losing Richard to Nadine."
"Lord
Rahl does not care for Nadine. I can see it in his eyes that he has no interest
in her. Lord Rahl only has eyes for you."
Kahlan
ran her fingers along the smooth marble railing as she ascended the stairs.
"Cara, a witch woman sent Nadine." Cara had no answer for that; magic
was involved.
When
they came at last to the door to her rooms, Kahlan paused. She looked into
Cara's blue eyes. "Cara, will you make me a promise? As a sister of the
Agiel?"
"If
I can."
"With
all that's going on-so much has gone wrong already. Will you promise me that
if. . . if something happens, if I somehow make a mistake, the worst mistake
I've ever made, and I somehow get things wrong . . . will you promise me that
you won't let it be her, instead of me. who has Richard?" "What could
happen? Lord Rahl loves you, not that woman." "Anything could happen.
The plague-Shota-anything. Please, Cara. I couldn't bear to think that if
anything happened, Nadine would have my place with Richard." Kahlan
clutched Cara's arm. "Please, I'm begging you. Promise me?"
Cara's
intent blue eyes stared back. Mord-Sith didn't take oaths lightly. Kahlan knew
that she was asking for something of solemn importance: she was asking Cara to
swear her life on this, for that was what it meant for a Mord-Sith to give her
word.
Cara
brought her Agiel up in her fist. She kissed it. "Nadine will not have
your place with Lord Rahl. I swear it." Kahlan nodded, words failing her
for a moment.
"Get
some sleep. Mother Confessor. I will be here, watching your rooms. No one will
bother you. You can sleep well, knowing that Nadine will never take your place.
You have my oath."
"Thank
you, Cara," Kahlan whispered in gratitude. "You truly are a sister of
the Agiel. If you ever want a favor in return, you have but to name it."
274
CHAPTER������������� 37
Kahlan
was finally able to send away Nancy and her helper, telling them that she was
exhausted and wanted only to go to bed. She had to decline an offer of a bath,
having her hair brushed, a massage, and food; but she let Nancy help her with
her dress so as not to raise the woman's suspicion.
Kahlan
rubbed her bare arms in the chill after she was alone at last. She tested her
wound, under the bandage. It was healing well, and hardly hurt her anymore.
Drefan had helped it, and she supposed that Nadine's poultices had been a
benefit, too.
Kahlan
slipped on a dressing gown and went to the writing desk beside one of the
hearths. The heat felt good, but it only warmed one side of her. She pulled
paper and pen from a drawer. As she took the silver lid from the ink bottle,
she tried to organize her thoughts, and what she would write. At last, she
dipped the pen.
My
dearest Richard,
I have
something important to do, and I have to do it alone. I am serious about this.
Not only because I respect you, but because you are the Seeker, I bow to what
you sometimes do that I wish would be otherwise. I understand that I must
sometimes allow you to do what you know you must. I am the Mother Confessor;
you must understand that I must sometimes do what I must. This is one of those
times. Please, if you love me, then you will respect my wishes, not interfere,
and leave me to do what I must.
I have
had to trick Cara, which I greatly regret. She does not know anything of what I
plan. She did not know I was leaving. If you hold her liable for this, I will
view it with the greatest displeasure.
I don't
know when I will return, but I expect that I will be gone for a few days. I am
doing this to help our situation. I beg you to understand and not be angry with
me-1 must do this.
Signed,
the Mother Confessor, your queen, your love for all time, in this world and
those beyond-Kahlan.
Kahlan
folded the letter and wrote Richard's name on the outside. She opened it and
read it again, just to be sure she hadn't revealed anything she didn't want to
him to know. She was satisfied with "to help our situation." It was
vague enough to mean anything. She hoped she wasn't being too harsh with the
way she insisted he not interfere.
Kahlan
brought a candle close and heated the end of a stick of colored sealing wax
from the drawer. She watched the wax drip onto the letter, making a red pool,
and
then pressed the Mother Confessor's seal-twin lightning bolts-into the warm
wax. She kissed the letter, blew out the candle, and propped the letter against
it so it couldn't be missed.
She
never used to know why the Mother Confessor's seal was twin lightning bolts,
but she did now; it was the symbol of the Con Dar-the Blood Rage-an ancient
component to a Confessor's magic. It was magic so rarely invoked that she had
never known of it; her mother had died before she could teach Kahlan to call it
forth if needed.
After
she had met Richard and fallen in love with him, she had invoked it by
instinct. In the grip of that magic, she had painted a lightning bolt on each
cheek as a warning to others not to get in her way. A Confessor in the Con Dar
couldn't be reasoned with.
The
Blood Rage was the Subtractive side of a Confessor's magic, invoked for
retribution. Kahlan had brought it to life within herself when she thought
Darken Rahl had killed Richard. It was called forth on behalf of someone, and
could only be used to defend that person. It couldn't be used to defend
herself.
Like
her Confessor's power, which she had always felt in the core of her being, the
Con Dar was always there, now, just below the surface, a menacing storm cloud
on the horizon. She had felt it instantly rip through her when she needed it to
protect Richard: blue lightning that destroyed all before it.
Without
the Subtractive as well as the common Additive Magic, a person couldn't travel
in the sliph. The Sisters of the Dark, and the wizards who had become the
Keeper's minions, could call on Subtractive Magic, too.
Kahlan
went into her bedroom. She stripped off the dressing robe and tossed it on the
bed. She pulled open the bottom drawer of the ornately carved chest and pawed
through her things, looking for what she needed.
Inside were
clothes she had worn before, when she had been on her journeys, better suited
to what she was going to do than was her white Mother Confessor's dress. She
stepped into dark green pants. She pulled out a heavy shirt and threw it on,
buttoning it up with shaking fingers. She tucked in the shirt and buckled the
wide belt. She left the waist pouch.
From
the back of the drawer, Kahlan retrieved an object carefully wrapped in a
square of white cloth. She set it on the floor and, crouching over it, laid
back the corners of the cloth.
Even
though she knew what it was, and what it looked like, she couldn't help feeling
a shiver when she actually saw it again.
Atop
the cloth sat the spirit knife Chandalen had given her. It was a weapon made
from the arm bone of his grandfather.
This
knife had saved her life before. She had used it to kill Prindin, a man who had
been her friend, but who had turned to the Keeper.
At
least, she thought she had killed him; she didn't remember exactly what had
happened that day. She had, at the time, been under the influence of the poison
Prindin had been giving her. She wasn't entirely sure that it wasn't the spirit
of Chandalen's grandfather who had saved her. Prindin had lunged atop her, and
the knife seemed just to be there, in her hand. She remembered his blood
running down the knife and over her fist.
Inky
black raven feathers spread in a fan from the round knob of bone at the top.
Raven was powerful spirit magic to the Mud People; it was associated with
death.
Chandalen's
grandfather had sought the aid of the spirits to protect his people from
slaughter by another people of the wilds who had gone mad with the blood lust
of war. No one knew the reason, but the result was a bloodbath.
Chandalen's
grandfather had called a gathering to ask the spirits for their help. His
people were peaceful, and didn't know how to defend themselves. The spirits had
taught Chandalen's grandfather how to kill the Jocopo, and in so doing, they
became the Mud People. The Mud People defended themselves, and eliminated the
threat. There were no more Jocopo.
Chandalen's
grandfather had taught his son to be a protector of his people, and Chandalen's
father had in turn taught Chandalen. Kahlan knew few men who were as good
protectors of their people as Chandalen. In a battle with the army of the
Imperial Order, Chandalen had been death itself. So had she.
Chandalen
wore this spirit knife made from his grandfather's bones, and one made from his
father's. Chandalen had given Kahlan the one made from his grandfather, so that
it might protect her. Indeed, it once had. Maybe it would again. Kahlan
reverently lifted the bone knife in her hands.
"Grandfather
of Chandalen, you helped me before. Please protect me now." She kissed the
sharpened bone.
If she
was to face Shota, Kahlan didn't want to do it unarmed. She could think of no
better weapon to carry.
She
tied the band made of woven prairie cotton around her arm and slipped the knife
through it. It lay against her upper arm, with the black feathers draped down
over it. It was a surprisingly quick weapon to draw, held to her arm as it was.
Even though she was going to see a woman she feared, Kahlan felt decidedly
better with grandfather's spirit knife.
Kahlan
pulled a light tan cloak from another drawer. She would have liked to have
taken one that was heavier, considering the spring snowstorm, but she wasn't
liable to be out in it all that long. Agaden Reach wouldn't be cold, as it was
in Aydindril.
She was
hoping that the light color would help her slip unnoticed past the guards up at
the Keep, and besides, with the light cloak, she could draw the knife faster.
She
wondered if it was folly to think she could draw her bone knife faster than
Shota could cast a spell, or if such a weapon would even be of any use against
a witch woman. She threw the cloak around her shoulders. The knife was all she
had.
Other
than her Confessor's power. Shota was wary of a Confessor's power: no one was
immune to the touch of a Confessor. If Kahlan could touch Shota, that would be
the end of her. Shota had magic that in the past had prevented Kahlan from
getting close enough to use her power, though.
But
Kahlan wouldn't have to be touching Shota for the blue lightning of the Con Dar
to work. She gave a mental sigh; she couldn't invoke the Con Dar to defend
herself. Kahlan had defended Richard with the lightning before when the
screeling had attacked him, and when the Sisters of the Light had come to take
him.
Kahlan
felt a wave of realization course through her mind. Richard loved her and
wanted to marry her; to be with her always. Shota had defied his wishes and
sent Nadine to marry him. He didn't want that.
Even
disregarding the fact that Richard loved Kahlan, Nadine had caused him anguish,
hurt him. He didn't want to be with her, and only tolerated her presence
because
Shota was up to something and he feared to let that threat out of his sight.
But he desperately didn't want to be forced to marry her. Shota was banning
Richard.
Richard
was in danger because of Shota. Kahlan could call the Con Dar to defend him.
She had done it before at the threat of the Sisters taking Richard against his
wishes. Kahlan could use the blue lightning to stop Shota. Shota had no defense
against that kind of magic.
Kahlan
knew how magic worked. This was magic from within her. Like the magic of
Richard's sword, it worked through perception. If Kahlan felt justified in its
use to defend Richard, the Con Dar would do her bidding. She knew Richard
didn't want Shota using him, controlling him, dictating what his life would be.
Kahlan
had justification: Shota was harming Richard. The Con Dar would work against
her.
Kahlan
paused, sitting back on her heels, and prayed to the good spirits that they
would guide her. She wouldn't want to think she was doing this for vengeance,
or that she was setting out to murder someone. She didn't want to think that
she intended to kill Shota. She wondered if she was trying to put justification
to something that couldn't be justified.
No. she
wasn't going with the intention of killing Shota. She was just going to get to
the bottom of this business with Nadine, and to find out what Shota knew about
the Temple of the Winds.
But if
she had to, Kahlan intended to defend herself. Moreover, she intended to defend
Richard against Shota-against her plans to ruin his future. Kahlan had had
enough of being at the unfavorable end of Shota's capricious ire. If Shota
tried to kill her, or tried to force this suffering on Richard, then Kahlan
would end the threat.
Kahlan
already missed Richard. For so long they had struggled to be together, and here
she was leaving him. If the situation were reversed, would she be as
understanding as she was expecting him to be?
At the
thought of Richard, she slowly pulled open the top drawer to her most prized of
possessions. Reverently, she lifted her blue wedding dress from its place as
the only item in the drawer. Her thumbs stroked the fine fabric. Kahlan
clutched the dress to her breast as tears took her.
She
carefully set the dress back in its place in the drawer before she got tears on
it. For a long moment, she stood there with one hand on the dress.
She
pushed the drawer closed. She had a job to do. She was the Mother Confessor,
whether she liked it or not; Shota lived in the Midlands, and was therefore one
of her subjects.
Kahlan
didn't want to die and never see Richard again, but she could no longer
tolerate Shota's meddling in their lives-her tampering with their future. Shota
had sent another woman to marry Richard. Kahlan wouldn't allow that kind of
interference to go unchecked.
Her
resolve hardened. She reached into the back of a wardrobe and pulled a knotted
rope from a peg. It was there in case of fire, so that the Mother Confessor
could escape from the balcony.
Opening
the glass doors gave her a shock of snarling wind and snow. Kahlan squinted
against the storm and pulled the doors shut behind her. She drew up the hood
and stuffed her hair inside it. It would do no good to have people recognizing
the
Mother Confessor-if anyone was even out on a night like this. But she knew that
the guards up at the Wizards' Keep would be.
She
quickly secured the rope around one of the vase-shaped stone balusters and
tossed the rest of the heavy coil out over the railing. In the darkness, she
couldn't see if it reached to the ground. She would have to trust that whoever
had put the rope in the wardrobe had checked to make sure that it was long
enough.
Kahlan
swung a leg over the stone railing, gripped the rope in both hands, and started
down.
Kahlan
had decided to walk. It wasn't that far, and besides, if she took a horse, she
would have to leave it at the Keep and it might be found, giving her away, or
else she'd have to turn it loose before she got there, only raising fears as to
what had happened to her. A horse would also make it more difficult to get past
the guards up at the Keep. The good spirits had provided her with a spring
snowstorm; the least she could do was take advantage of it.
Tramping
through the heavy, wet snow, she was beginning to wonder if going on foot was
the wise thing to do. She stiffened her resolve. If she was already beginning
to second-guess her decisions, she had no business going through with the rest
of it.
Most of
the buildings were shuttered. The few people she encountered were too worried
about making their own way to be concerned with a huddled figure struggling
into the wind. In the darkness, no one would even be able to tell if she was a
man or a woman. Before long, she was out of the city and on the deserted road
up to the Keep.
All the
way up the road, she pondered the best way past the guards. These were D'Haran
soldiers. It was always a mistake to underestimate D'Haran soldiers. It
wouldn't do to have them recognize her. They would report it.
Killing
sentries was the easiest way to get past them, but she couldn't do that; they
were her men, now, fighting for their cause against the Imperial Order. Killing
them was out of the question.
Whacking
them across the skull to knock them unconscious was no good, either. That was
never a dependable way to silence someone. In her experience, hitting a man
across the head rarely had the desired result. Sometimes they would not be
knocked unconscious and would scream at the top of their lungs before anything
else could be done, raising an alarm and bringing other guards ready to kill
the intruder.
Besides,
she had seen men suffer and die from a blow on the head. She didn't want that.
You only hit someone on the head if you intended to kill them, because you most
likely would.
The
Sister and Marlin had probably used magic to get by the guards unseen. She
didn't have any magic that could do that. Her magic would destroy their minds.
That
left either a trick, or stealth. D'Haran sentries were trained in every kind of
trick, and probably knew more of them than she could even imagine. She was down
to stealth.
She
wasn't sure exactly where she was, but she knew she was getting close. The wind
was coming from the left, so she stayed to the right of the road, downwind of
them, crouching lower us she went on. When she got close enough, she would have
to crawl.
If she
laid down on the snow. spread her cloak out over her, and waited for a short
time. the snow would cover her back and hide her. Then she would have to proceed
slowly, and if she saw a soldier, simply lie still until he passed. She wished
she had remembered to bring gloves.
Deciding
that she was as close as she dared get. she moved off the right side of the
road. She knew that the bridge would be the hardest part: it would funnel her
into a relatively narrow space, with no option of moving away from the
soldiers. But the soldiers feared the magic of the Keep. and would probably not
be close to the bridge. They had been twenty or thirty feet from it when she had
seen them before, and in the darkness and snow. visibility wasn't great.
She was
beginning to feel better about her chances of getting by unseen. The snow would
provide enough cover.
Kahlan
froze in her tracks as a sword blade appeared in front of her face. A darting
glance revealed a sword to each side. Another man rested a lance on her back,
at the base of her neck. So much for stealth.
"Who
goes there?" came a gruff voice from the man in front of her. Kahlan had
to think of a new plan, and fast. She quickly settled on a bit of truth, mixed
in with their fear of magic.
"Captain,
you nearly scared me to death. It's me. the Mother Confessor." "Show
yourself."
Kahlan
pushed back her hood. "I thought I'd be able to get past you unnoticed. I
guess D'Haran sentries are even better than I thought."
The men
lowered their weapons. Kahlan was the most relieved to feel the lance lift from
the back of her neck. That was the killing weapon in a challenge.
"Mother
Confessor! You gave us a fright, you did. What are you doing up here again
tonight? And on foot, no less?' '
Kahlan
sighed in resignation. "Get all your men together and I'll explain."
The captain tilted his head. "Over here. We have a shelter to get you out
of the wind."
Kahlan
let them lead her to the other side of the road. where stood a simple
three-sided structure meant to give some relief from wind and wet weather. It
wasn't big enough for her and all six men. They insisted she take the driest
spot. farthest inside.
She was
torn between satisfaction that even in a snowstorm no one got past D'Haran
guards, and wishing she had. It would have made it much easier. Now, she was
going to have to talk her way out of it.
"All
of you, listen carefully," she began. "I don't have a lot of time.
I'm on an important mission. I need your confidence. All of you. You all know
about the plague?"
The men
grunted and nodded that they did, shifting their weight uncomfortably.
"Richard. Lord Rahl, is trying to find a way to stop it. We don't know if
there is a way, but he won't give up, you know that. He would do anything it
takes to save his people."
The men
were nodding again. "What's that got to do with-" "I'm in a
hurry. Lord Rahl is sleeping right now. He's exhausted from trying to find a
cure for the plague. A cure that involves magic."
The men
straightened a bit. The captain rubbed his chin. "We know that Lord Rahl
won't let us down. He cured me a few days back."
Kahlan
looked to all the eyes watching her. "Well, what if Lord Rahl comes down
with the plague himself? Before he can find an answer? Then what? We're all
dead, that's what."
The
anxiety on their faces was clear. For D'Harans to lose a Lord Rahl was a
calamitous event. It cast all their futures into doubt. "What can be done
to protect him?" the captain asked. "What can be done is up to you
men, here, tonight." "What can we do?"
"Lord
Rahl loves me. You men all know how he protects me. He has those Mord-Sith
shadowing me all the time. He sends guards with me wherever I go. He won't let
danger come within miles of me. He won't let harm even get a view of me.
"Well,
I don't want him harmed, either. What if he gets the plague? Then we all lose
him.
"I
may have a way to help him stop the plague before it can touch us all- before
he can get it, as surely he will." They gasped. "What can we do to
help?" the captain asked. "What I'm doing involves magic-very
dangerous magic. If I'm successful, I may be able to protect Richard from the
plague. Protect all of us from the plague. But, like I said, it's dangerous.
"I
need to go away for a few days, with the aid of magic, to see if I might be
able to help Lord Rahl stop the plague. You men know how he guards me. He would
never let me go. He would rather die than let me be exposed to danger. He can't
be reasoned with when it comes to my being in danger.
"That's
why I tricked the Mord-Sith and my other guards. No one knows where I'm going.
If anyone finds out, then Richard will come after me, and be in the same danger
as me. What good will that do? If I'm killed, then he would be killed, too. If
I'm successful, there's no reason to expose him to the danger.
"I
intended for no one to find out where I went tonight, but you men are better
than I gave you credit for. Now, it's up to you. I'm risking my life to protect
Lord Rahl. If you want to protect him, too, then you must swear to secrecy.
Even if he looks you in the eye, you must tell him that you haven't seen me,
that no one came up here."
The men
shuffled their feet, cleared their throats, and looked at one another. The
captain's fingers fretted with his sword hilt. "Mother Confessor, if Lord
Rahl looks us in the eye and asks us, we can't lie to him."
Kahlan
leaned closer to the man. "Then you may as well slay him on the spot.
That's what you'll be doing. Do you want to endanger your Lord Rahl's life? Do
you want to be responsible for his dying?" "Of course not! We'd all
lay down our lives for him!"
"I'm
offering to lay down my life, too. If he finds out what I'm doing, where I went
this night, then he will come after me. He can be of no help and he may die
because of it."
Kahlan
pulled her arm out from under her cloak and passed a finger before each man's
face. "You will be responsible for endangering Lord Rahl's life. You will
be exposing him to harm's view to no purpose. You may be killing him."
The
captain looked into the eyes of each of his men. He straightened and rubbed his
face as he considered. At last he spoke. "What is it you wish us to do?
Swear on our lives?" "No," Kahlan said. "I want you to swear
on Lord Rahl's life."
At the
captain's lead, the men all went to one knee.
"We
give our oath on Lord Rahl's life to tell no one that we saw you again tonight,
and further to swear that no one went up to the Keep, except you and your two
Mord-Sith earlier." He looked about at his men. "Swear it."
When
they had all sworn, the men stood. The captain placed a fatherly hand on
Kahlan's shoulder.
"Mother
Confessor, I don't know anything about magic, that's Lord Rahl's business, and
I don't know what you're up to tonight, but we don't want to lose you, either.
You're good for Lord Rahl. Whatever you're about to do, please be
careful."
"Thank
you, captain. I think you men are the most danger I'll see tonight. Tomorrow is
another matter."
"If
you are killed, it ends our oath. If you die, we will have to tell Lord Rahl
what we know. If that happens, we will be executed."
"No,
captain. Lord Rahl wouldn't do something like that. That's why we have to do
what we must to protect him. We all need him, lest we be ruled by the Imperial
Order. They have no respect for life-it is they who started this plague. They
started it among children."
Kahlan
swallowed as she stared into the silver face of the sliph. "Yes, I'm
ready. What do you want me to do?"
A
lustrous metallic hand rose up from the pool and touched the top of the wall.
"Come to me," the voice said, echoing around the room. "You do
not do. I do."
Kahlan
climbed up onto the wall. "And you're sure you can take me to Agaden
Reach?"
"Yes.
I have been there. You will be pleased." Kahlan didn't know about being
pleased. "How long will it take?" The sliph seemed to frown. Kahlan
could see herself reflected in the shiny surface of the sliph's face.
"From
here to there. That long. I am long enough. I have been there." Kahlan
sighed. The sliph didn't seem to understand that she had been asleep for three
thousand years, either. What was a day, more or less. to her?
"You
won't tell Richard where you took me, will you? I don't want him to know."
The
silver face distorted into a sly smile. "None who know me wish others to
know. I never betray them. Be at ease: no one will know what we do together. No
one will know of your pleasure."
Kahlan's
face assumed a perplexed expression. The liquid silver arm came up and slipped
around her. The warm, undulating grip held her tight.
"Do
not forget: you must breathe me," the sliph said. "Do not be afraid.
I will keep you alive when you breathe me. When we reach the other place, you
must then breathe me out and breathe in the air. You will be just as afraid to
do that as you will be to breathe me, but you must do it or you will die."
Kahlan
nodded as she panted. She rocked from one foot to the other. "I
remember." She couldn't help fearing to be without air. "All right.
I'm ready."
Without
further word. the sliph's arm lifted her gently from the wall and plunged with
her down into the quicksilver froth. Kahlan's lungs burned. Her eyes were
squeezed shut. She had done it before,
and
knew she must, but she was still terrified to breathe in this liquid silver.
Richard had been with her the last time. Alone this time, panic snatched at
her. She thought about Shota sending Nadine to marry Richard. Kahlan let the
air go from her lungs. She pulled a deep breath, inhaling the sliph's silken
essence.
There
was no heat, no cold. She opened her eyes and saw light and dark in a single,
spectral vision. She felt movement in the weightless void, at once fast and
slow, rushing and drifting. Her lungs swelled with the sweet presence of the sliph.
It felt as if she were taking the sliph into her soul. Time meant nothing. It
was rapture.
CHAPTER������������ 38
Through
the warm swirl of color, Zedd could hear Ann calling his name. It was a distant
plea, even though she stood only a short distance away. In the flux of power
atop his wizard's rock, it might as well have come from another world. In many
ways, it did.
Her
voice came again, irritating, insistent, urgent. Zedd all but ignored her as he
lifted his arms into the rotating smoke of light. Shapes before him hinted at
their spirit presence. He was almost through.
Abruptly,
the wall of power began to collapse. The sleeves of his robes slipped down his
arms as Zedd threw his contorted hands higher, trying to coerce more puissance
into the field of magic, trying to stabilize it. He was madly hauling a bucket
from the well, and finding it empty.
Sparkles
of color fizzled. The twisting eddy of light degenerated into a muddy gloom of
color. With gathering speed, it slumped, foundering impotently. Zedd was
dumbfounded.
With a
thump that shook the ground, the whole elaborately forged warp in the world of
existence extinguished.
Zedd's
arms windmilled as Ann snatched the back of his collar and yanked him from atop
his wizard's rock. He tumbled back, knocking them both to the ground.
Deprived
of enlivening magic, the rock, too, collapsed. Zedd hadn't done it; his
wizard's rock had reverted to its inert state of its own accord. Now he truly
was baffled.
"Bags,
woman! What's the meaning of this!"
"Don't
you curse at me, you contrary old man. I don't know why I bother trying to save
your skinny hide." "Why did you interfere? I was almost
through!" "I didn't interfere," she growled.
"But
if it wasn't you"-Zedd shot a glance at the dark hills. "You mean . .
. ?" "I suddenly lost the link with my Han. I was trying to warn you,
not stop you." "Oh," Zedd said in a thin voice. "That's
very different." He stretched out and snatched up his wizard's rock.
"Why didn't you say so?" He slipped the rock into an inner pocket.
Ann
scanned the darkness. "Did you find out anything before you lost
contact?" "I never made contact."
Her
gaze shot back at him. "You never . . . what do you mean, you never made
contact? What were you doing all that time?"
"Trying,"
he said as he reached for a blanket. "Something was wrong. I couldn't
reach through. Get your things. We'd better get out of here."
Ann
scooped up a saddlebag and began stuffing their gear into it. "Zedd,"
she said in a worried tone, "we were counting on this. Now that you have
failed-"
"I
didn't fail," he snapped. "At least, it wasn't my fault that it
wasn't working." She slapped his hands away when he pushed her toward her
horse. ' 'Why wouldn't it work?" "The red moons."
She
twisted and stared at him. "You think . . ."
"It's
not something I do often, or lightly. I've only made contact with the spirit
world a handful of times in the whole of my life. My father warned me, when he
gave me the rock, that it must only be used in the most dire of circumstances.
Such contact risks letting the wrong spirits through, and worse, tearing the
veil. When I had trouble making contact in the past, it was because of a
disharmony. The red moons were a warning of disharmony, of a sort."
"We're
running out of things to try." She yanked her arm from his grip.
"What's gotten into you?"
Zedd
grunted. "What's this you said about not being able to touch your
Han?" Ann stroked a hand along the flanks of her horse, letting it know
she was close to its hindquarters. The horse pawed a front hoof as it
whickered.
"When
you were up on your rock, I was casting sensing webs to make sure no one was
near. This is the wilds, after all, and you were making quite a show with all
the light. All of a sudden, when I reached to touch my Han again, it was like
falling on my face."
Zedd
flicked his hand, casting a simple web to flip over a fist-sized rock lying at
his feet. Nothing happened. It felt rather like trying to lean against
something, and finding out too late that it wasn't there. Like falling on his
face.
Zedd
reached into an inner pocket and pulled out a pinch of concealing dust. He cast
it in the direction they had come. The breeze carried it away. It didn't
sparkle. "We're in trouble," he whispered.
She
huddled close to him. "You wouldn't mind being more specific, would you?'
'
"Leave
the horses." He took her arm again. "Come on." This time she
didn't object as he took her arm and led her at a trot. "Zedd, what is
it?" she whispered.
"This
is the wilds." He stopped, lifted his nose, and sniffed the air. "My
guess would be Nangtong." He pointed in the dim moonlight. "Down
here, in this ravine. We must do our best to stay out of sight. We may have to
split up and try to escape in separate directions."
Zedd
held her arm, helping her as her feet slipped on the dewy grass and wet clay of
the steep sides. "Who are the Nangtong?"
Zedd
reached the bottom first. He put his hands on her wide waist and helped her
down. Her legs were short, and she didn't have the reach with them that he had
with his. Without the aid of magic, her weight almost toppled him. With a hand,
she caught a tangled mat of bur bush roots to steady herself.
"The
Nangtong," Zedd whispered, "are a people of the wilds. They have
magic of their own. They can't exactly use their magic for anything, the way we
use it, but it leaches the strength right out of other magic. Like rain on a
campfire.
"That's
the trouble with the wilds. There are any number of people in the wilds who
cause odd things to go wrong with your attempts to use magic. There are
creatures and places here, too, that are trouble in ways you don't expect. It's
best to stay clear of the wilds.
"That's
why I was so perturbed when after Nathan said we had to go to the Jocopo
Treasure, Verna told us that the Jocopo used to live somewhere in the wilds.
Nathan might as well have told us to reach into a roaring fire and pull out a
hot coal. There are hazards everywhere in the wilds; the Nangtong are only one
of them."
"So
what makes you think it's these Nangtong people who are causing the trouble
with our magic?"
"With
most peoples of the wilds who have this effect, it steals the strength out of
our magic, but my concealing dust would still have worked. It doesn't. The
Nangtong are the only ones I know of who can do that."
Ann
held her arms out to the sides to help balance herself and keep her footing as
she crossed behind him on a fallen log. The moon slipped behind the clouds. The
return of darkness pleased Zedd, because it helped hide them. but it made it nearly
impossible to see where to step. They would be no less dead if they fell and
broke their necks than if they were run through with a poison arrow or spear
point.
"Maybe
we could show them that we're friendly," Ann whispered from behind him.
She nabbed his robes so she could follow in the dark as he hurried along the
flat beside the stream. "You're always boasting and telling me to let you
do the talking, as if you have a magic, honeyed tongue, to hear you tell it.
Why don't you simply tell these Nangtong that we're looking for the Jocopo, and
we would appreciate their help? Many people who would seem to be trouble turn
out to be reasonable if you only talk with them."
He
turned his head back so he could keep his voice low and she would still be able
to hear him. "I agree, but I don't speak their language, so I can't win
them over."
"If
these people are so dangerous, and you know it. then why would you be so
foolish as to take us right into them?" "I didn't. I skirted their
lands by a wide margin." "So you say. It would appear you've gotten
us lost."
"No,
the Nangtong are seminomadic. They have no exact, permanent home, but they stay
within their own homelands. I stayed out of their homelands. It's probably a
spirit raiding party." "A what?"
Zedd
halted and crouched low, studying the lay of the land. He couldn't see anyone
in the faint light, and he could only vaguely detect the foreign smell of
sweat. It could be that it had been carried on the breeze for miles.
"A
spirit raiding party," he said as he put his mouth close to her ear.
"It's a long story, but the ending is that they offer sacrifices to the
spirit world.
"It
is their belief that the newly departed spirit will carry the Nangtongs'
respects and requests to their departed ancestors, and in return the spirits
will look kindly upon them. The hunting parties hunt things to sacrifice."
"People?"
"Sometimes.
If they can get away with it. They aren't very brave when they encounter strong
opposition-they would rather run than have a fight-but they will gladly pick
off the weak or defenseless."
"In
the name of Creation, what kind of place is this Midlands, letting people get
away with such things? I thought you people were more civilized than that. I
thought you had this alliance through which everyone in the Midlands cooperated
and saw to the common good."
"The
Confessors come here, to try to insure the Nangtong don't murder people, but
it's a remote place. The Nangtong are always servile when a Confessor comes;
her magic is one of the few not altered by the Nangtongs' power. It could be
that because a Confessor's power has an element of the Subtractive to it, it
isn't altered."
"Why
would you fools leave these people to their own devices, if you know what they
are capable of?"
Zedd
scowled at her in the darkness. "Part of the reason for the Midlands
alliance was to protect those with magic who would be slaughtered by stronger
lands." "They don't have magic. You said they couldn't do anything
with magic." "Since they can nullify magic, make it impotent, then
that means that they have magic. Those without magic could not do such a thing.
It's part of the way these people defend themselves. It's their teeth, so to
speak, used to defend themselves against those with powerful magic who would
subjugate or destroy them.
"We
leave alone people and creatures with magic. They have as much right to exist
as we, but we try to insure that they don't murder innocent people. We may not
like all forms of magic, but we don't believe in exterminating the Creator's
beings to make a world in the image of those with the most power."
She
remained silent, so he went on. "There are creatures that can be
dangerous, such as a gar, but we don't go out and kill all the gars. Instead,
we leave them be, let them have their own lives, the way the Creator intended.
It is not up to us to judge the wisdom of Creation.
"The
Nangtong are diffident when challenged by strength, but deadly when they think
they have the upper hand. They're a kind of scavenger-like vultures, or wolves,
or bears. It wouldn't be right to eliminate those creatures. They have a part
to play in the world."
She put
her face close so she could express her displeasure without yelling. "And
what part do the Nangtong play?"
"Ann,
I am not the Creator, nor do I have conversations with Him to discuss His
choices in creating life and magic. But I am respectful enough to allow that He
may have a reason, and it isn't my place to say He is wrong. That would be
naked arrogance.
"In
the Midlands, we allow all forms of Creation to exist, and if it's dangerous,
we simply keep away from it. You, of all people, with your dogmatic teachings
of your version of the Creator, should be able to sympathize with this
view."
Ann's
words, whispered though they were, became heated. "Our duty is to teach
heathens such as this to respect the Creator's other beings." "Tell
that to the wolf, or the bear." Her growl could have been either.
"Sorceresses
and wizards are meant to be custodians of magic, to protect it, just as a
parent protects a child," Zedd said. "It is not up to us to decide
which are good enough to have a right to exist, which is worthy of life.
"Down
that path lies Jagang's view of all magic. He thinks we are dangerous, and that
we should be eliminated for the good of all. You seem to be siding with the
emperor."
"If
a bee stings you, do you not swat it?" "I didn't say we shouldn't
defend ourselves."
"Then
why haven't you defended yourselves and eliminated such threats? In the war
with Darken Rahl's father, Panis, your own people called you the wind of death.
You knew how to eliminate a threat then."
"I
did what I had to do to protect innocent people who would have been
slaughtered-who were being slaughtered. I will do the same against Jagang if I
must. The Nangtong haven't warranted annihilation: they don't try to rule
others through murder, torture, and enslavement. Their beliefs result in harm
only if we are careless enough to intrude."
"They're
dangerous. You should never have let the threat continue." He shook a finger
at her. "And why haven't you killed Nathan, to eliminate the threat he
represents?"
"Would
you equate Nathan with those who sacrifice people for heathen beliefs? And I
can tell you that when I get my hands on Nathan again, I will set him on the
right path!"
"Good.
But in the meanwhile, this is a poor time to debate theology." Zedd
smoothed back his wavy hair. "Unless you wish to begin teaching the
Nangtong your beliefs, I would suggest we follow mine, and remove ourselves
from their hunting grounds."
Ann
sighed. "Perhaps you have a point or two. Your intentions, at least, were
benevolent."
With a
shooing motion, she signaled for him to get going. Zedd followed the twisting
gorge, trying to stay out of the sluggish ribbon of water running through it.
The
ravine led southwest. He knew that would take them away from the Nangtong
homeland. He hoped it would also conceal them while they fled. The Nangtong had
spears and arrows.
When
the moon came out between a break in the clouds, Zedd put out a hand to stop
Ann, and squatted down to take a quick appraisal of the landscape while there
was light enough for a moment. He saw little but the eight- to ten-foot-high
walls of the banks and, beyond, the nearly barren hills. There were scattered
copses on distant hills.
In the
low valley ahead, the stream ran into a thicket of woods. Zedd turned back to
tell Ann that their best bet might be to hide in the brush and woods. The
Nangtong might be leery of a trap, and stay out of such a place.
The
moon was still out. He saw behind them their perfect pair of tracks through the
mud. He had forgotten that he couldn't hide their trail. He pointed, so she
would see them, too. She gestured with a thumb, indicating that they should get
out of the muddy gully.
Twin,
reed-thin screams in the distance cut through the stillness. "The
horses," he whispered.
The
screams silenced abruptly. Their throats had been cut. "Bags! Those were
good horses. Do you have anything with which to defend yourself?"
Ann
flicked her wrist and brought forth a dacra. "I have this. Its magic won't
work, but I can still stab them. What do you have?" Zedd smiled
fatalistically. "My honeyed tongue." "Maybe we should split up,
before your weapon gets me killed." Zedd shrugged. "I wouldn't hold
it against you if you wish to strike out alone. We have important business.
Maybe it would be better if we split up to give a better chance of at least one
of us making it."
She
smiled. "You just want me to miss out on all the fun. We'll get away.
We're a goodly distance from the horses. Let's stay together." Zedd
squeezed her shoulder. "Maybe they only sacrifice virgins."
"But
I don't want to die alone."
Zedd
chuckled softly as he moved on, searching for a place ahead where he could take
them up and out of the ravine. He finally found a cut through the bank. Roots
of gnarled bushes hung down like hair, providing handholds. The moon slid
behind a thick cloud. In the inky darkness, they climbed slowly, blindly,
feeling their way with their hands.
Zedd
could hear a few bugs buzzing about and, in the distance, the mournful call of
a coyote. Other than that, the night was still and silent. Hopefully, the
Nangtong would be busy picking through Zedd and Ann's things back with the
horses.
Zedd
reached the top and turned to help pull Ann up. "Stay on your hands and
knees. We'll crawl or at least crouch as we go."
Ann
whispered her agreement. She made her way atop the bank with him. They struck
out, away from the gully. The bright moon came out from behind the cloud. In a
semicircle right in front of them, blocking their way, stood the Nangtong.
There were perhaps twenty of them. Zedd reasoned that there were more about
nearby; Nangtong hunting parties were larger.
They
were not tall, and were nearly naked, wearing only a thong and a pouch of sorts
that held their manhood. Necklaces made of human finger bones hung around their
necks. Heads were shaved bald. They all had sinewy arms and legs and pronounced
bellies.
The
Nangtong had all smeared white ash over their entire body. The area around
their eyes was painted black, giving them the appearance of living skulls.
Zedd
and Ann peered up at spears, their barbed, steel points glinting in the
moonlight. One of the men chattered an order. Zedd didn't understand the words,
but he had a good idea of what it meant.
"Don't
use the dacra," he whispered over to Ann. "There's too many. They'll
kill us on the spot. Our only chance is if we can stay alive and think of
something." He saw her slip the weapon back up her sleeve.
Zedd
grinned up at the wall of grim faces. "Would any of you men happen to know
where we could find the Jocopo?"
A spear
jabbed at him, then signaled them to stand. He and Ann reluctantly complied.
The men, not up to Zedd's shoulders, but about as tall as Ann, crowded in
around them, suddenly jabbering all at once. Men pushed and poked at them.
Their arms were pulled back and their wrists tightly bound. "Remind me
again," Ann said to him, "about the wisdom of leaving these heathens
to their unenlightened practices."
"Well,
I heard from a Confessor, once, that they are quite good cooks. Perhaps we will
sample something new and delightful."
Ann
stumbled but caught herself as she was pushed on ahead. "I'm too
old," she muttered to the sky, "to be mucking about with a crazy
man."
An hour
of brisk marching brought them to the Nangtong village. Broad, round tents,
perhaps thirty of them, made up the mobile community. The low tents hunkered
close to the ground, presenting the least possible purchase to the wind. Enclosures
made of tall stick fences held a variety of livestock.
Chattering
people, wrapped head to toe in unadorned cloth to hide their identities from
the sacrificial offerings about to take their prayers to the spirit world,
turned out to watch Zedd and Ann being prodded at spearpoint through the
village. Their captors, covered in the white ash and with their eyes painted
black, were hunters
in the
guise of the dead. so there would be no danger of their being recognized as one
of the still living.
Zedd
was jerked to a halt before a pen while men undid the rope tie at the gate. The
gate swung open in the moonlight. It seemed that the whole Nangtong village had
followed behind. They hooted and hollered as the two prisoners were hustled
through the gate, apparently wanting to give messages to the two spirits about
to go speak on the Nangtongs' behalf to their ancestors.
Zedd
and Ann. their wrists still bound behind their backs, both fell when they were
forcefully shoved into the pen. It was a muddy landing. Snorting shapes loped
away. The pen was occupied by pigs. The way they had churned the ground into a
quagmire, the village must have occupied this place for at least the past few
months. It smelled like what it was.
The
spirit hunting party, nearly fifty, as Zedd had guessed, split up. Some went
back to tents, surrounded by gleeful children and stoic women. Others of the
hunters encircled the pen to stand guard. Most of the people who stood around
watching were calling out to the prisoners, giving their messages for the
spirit world.
"Why
are you doing this?" Zedd called to their guards. He nodded his head and
inclined it toward Ann. "Why?" He shrugged.
One of
the guards seemed to understand. He made a cutting gesture across his throat,
and then indicated the imaginary blood running from the pretend wound. With his
spear, he pointed at the moon. "Blood moon?" Ann asked under her
breath.
"Red
moon," Zedd whispered in realization. "The last I'd heard, the
Confessors had secured a pledge from the Nangtong that they would no longer
sacrifice people. I was never sure if they held to their promise. Just the
same, people stayed away.
"The
red moon must have frightened them, made them think the spirit world was angry.
That's probably why we're to be sacrificed: to placate the angry spirits."
Ann
squirmed uncomfortably in the mud beside him. She gave Zedd a murderous look.
"I
only pray that Nathan's situation is worse than ours." "What was it
you said," Zedd asked absently, "about mucking about with a crazy man?"
CHAPTER������������� 39
What do
you think?" Clarissa asked.
She
turned a little one way and then the other, trying to mimic a natural stance
while feeling anything but natural. She wasn't sure what to do with her hands,
so she clasped them behind her back.
Nathan
was lounging in a chair as splendid as any she had ever seen, its padded seat
and back covered with striped tan and gold fabric. His left leg was draped
casually over one of the chair's ornately carved arms as he slouched with his
elbow propped on the chair's other arm. His chin rested thoughtfully in the
heel of his hand. His sword's finely crafted silver scabbard hung down, so that
its point touched the floor in front of the chair.
Nathan
smiled that smile he had that said he was sincerely pleased. "My dear, I
think you look lovely."
"Really?
You're not just saying that? You really like it? I don't look . . .
silly?" He chuckled. "No, most definitely not silly. Ravishing,
perhaps." "But I feel ...I don't know . . . presumptuous. I've never
even seen clothes so fine, much less tried them on." He shrugged.
"Then it's about time you did."
The
dressmaker, a thin, neat man with only a wisp of long gray hair covering the
bald expanse atop his head, returned through the curtained doorway. He gripped
each end of the tape measure draped around his neck, seesawing it nervously
back and forth.
"Madam
finds the dress acceptable?"
Clarissa
remembered how Nathan had instructed her to conduct herself. She smoothed the
rich blue satin at her hips. "It's not the best fit-"
The
dressmaker's tongue darted out to wet his lips. "Well, madam, had I known
you were to grace my shop, or if you had sent the measurements on ahead, I
would certainly have made the appropriate alterations." He glanced to
Nathan. His tongue darted out again. "Be assured, madam, I can make any
necessary minor adjustments."
The man
bowed to Nathan. ' 'My lord, what think you? I mean, if it were altered to suit
you."
Nathan
folded his arms as he studied Clarissa the way a sculptor studied a work in
progress. He squinted as he considered, rolled his tongue around inside his
cheek, and made little sounds in his throat as if unable to decide. The
dressmaker twiddled with the end of his tape measure
"Like
madam says, it fits a little sloppily at the waist."
"Sir,
have no fear." The dressmaker whisked around behind her, tugging sharply
at the material. "See here? I have but to take a dart or two. Madam is
graced with
an
exquisite figure. I rarely have ladies so fine of form. but I can have the
dress altered in a matter of hours. I would be most honored to do the work this
very night and have it delivered to you at-at-where would you be staying, my
lord?"
Nathan
flicked a hand. "I've yet to seek accommodations. Any place you could
recommend with confidence?"
The
dressmaker bowed again. "The Briar House would be the finest inn in
Tanimura, my lord. If you wish. I'd gladly have my assistant run over there and
make arrangements for you and . . . madam."
Nathan
straightened himself in the chair and fingered a gold coin from his pocket. He
flipped the coin to the man, followed by a second, and then a third.
"Yes,
thank you, that would be very kind of you." Nathan frowned in thought, and
then tossed the man another gold coin. "It's late, but I'm sure you could
convince them to keep their dining room open until we arrive. We've been on the
road all day and could use a decent meal." He shook a finger at the man.
"Their best rooms, mind you. I'll not have them sticking me in some cramped
little sty."
"I
assure you, my lord, the Briar House has no room that could remotely be
considered a sty, even by one such as yourself. And how long shall I have my
assistant tell them you will be staying at their establishment?"
Nathan
stroked the ruffles on the front of his shirt. "Until Emperor Jagang
requires me, of course."
"Of
course, sir. And would you like the dress, my lord?" Nathan hooked a thumb
in the little pocket in the front of his green vest. letting his hand hang.
"It will have to do for common wear. What do you have that would be more
elegant?"
The
dressmaker smiled and bowed. ''Let me bring some others for your approval, and
madam can try on the ones you fancy."
"Yes,"
Nathan said. "Yes, that would be best. I'm a man of wide experience and refined
taste. I'm used to better. Bring something to dazzle me." "Of course,
my lord." He bowed twice and rushed off. Clarissa grinned in wonder after
the man had gone. "Nathan! This is the finest dress I've ever seen, and
you wish him to show us something better?"
Nathan
lifted an eyebrow. ' 'Nothing is too good for a concubine to the emperor, the
woman carrying the emperor's child."
Her
heart fluttered to hear the prophet say that again. Sometimes, when she looked
into his azure eyes, she almost saw something there, almost had the vaguest
impression, if only for an instant, that Nathan was quite beyond mad. But when
that serene smile of his came to his face, she melted in his confidence.
He was
more daring than any man she had ever met. His daring had saved her from the
brutes back in Renwold. Since then, his daring had saved them in circumstances
that to her seemed worse than hopeless. There had to be a grain of madness in
daring that far beyond bold. "Nathan, I trust in you, and will do whatever
you ask of me. but please, would you tell me if this is just a story to pass us
here, or do you really see such a horrid thing for my future?"
Nathan
brought his leg down and rose to his full, towering height. He lifted one of
her hands, bringing it to his heart as if it were the most fragile of blossoms.
His long silver hair slipped over the front of his shoulder as he stood ever so
close to her and looked into her eyes. "Clarissa, it is just a tale to
accomplish my goals. It in no way reflects anything
I see
about the future. I won't lie to you and tell you that there are not dangers
ahead, but be at ease for now, and enjoy this much of it. We must wait for a
while, and I wanted you to have an enjoyable time of it.
"You
are pledged to do what you must. I trust in your word. In the meantime, I
wanted nothing more than to do you a simple kindness."
"But
shouldn't we hide where people won't know of us? Somewhere alone and out of
sight?"
"That
is the way criminals or unskilled runaways would hide. That's why they get
caught. It makes people suspicious. If anyone is hunting them, they look in all
the dark holes, never thinking to look in the light. As long as we must hide,
the best place to hide is in the open.
"The
story is too preposterous for people not to believe in its truth. No one would
ever consider that anybody would have the audacity to invent such a tale, and
so no one will question it.
"Besides,
we aren't really hiding; no one is hunting us. We simply don't want to make
people suspicious. Hiding would make them so." She shook her head.
"Nathan, you are a marvel."
Clarissa
eyed the bodice of the beautiful dress, what she could see of it, anyway,
beyond the exposed flesh of her breasts, which were pushed up so high that they
nearly tumbled out. She tugged at the bone stays lying against her ribs under
her bosom. She had never worn such strange and uncomfortable undergarments. She
couldn't imagine why they were all required. She smoothed the silken skirt of
the dress.
"Does
it look good on me? I mean, honestly. Tell me the truth, Nathan. I'm just a
plain woman. Doesn't it look silly on a plain woman?" Nathan's eyebrow
arched. "Plain? Is that what you think?" "Of course. I'm no
fool. I know I'm not-"
Nathan
waved her to silence. "Maybe you should have a look for yourself." He
pulled the sheet off the standing mirror. This was a showing room for
gentlemen. When he had instructed her on matters of decorum and propriety, he
had told her that the mirrors in such a place were rarely used, and she wasn't
to look in one unless asked. It was the look in the gentleman's eyes that
mattered in such an exclusive shop, not the look in the mirror.
Nathan
gently took her elbow and walked her before the mirror. "Forget what you
see in your mind, and look at what others see when they look at you."
Clarissa's
fingers fidgeted over the bunched frills at her waist. She nodded at Nathan,
but feared to look in the mirror and be disappointed by what she always saw
when she looked at herself. He gestured again. Wincing just a little out of
embarrassment, she turned to gaze at her reflection. Her jaw dropped at what
she saw.
Clarissa
didn't recognize herself. She was not this young-looking. A woman- not a young,
fickle woman, but a woman in the full glory of her maturity, a woman of
elegance and bearing-stared back.
"Nathan,"
she whispered, "my hair . . . my hair wasn't this long. How did the woman
who worked on it this afternoon make it longer?"
"Ah,
well, she didn't. I used some magic to do it. I thought it would look better if
it was just a bit longer. You don't object, I pray?" "No," she
whispered. "It's lovely." Her soft brown hair was done in ringlets,
with delicate violet ribbons tied into
them.
She moved her head. The ringlets sprang up and down. and swayed side to side.
Clarissa had once seen a woman of standing come to Renwold, and she had hair
like this. It was the most beautiful hair Clarissa had ever seen. Now,
Clarissa's hair looked just like that.
She
stared at herself in the mirror. Her shape was so . . . shapely. All those
hard, tight things under her dress had somehow rearranged her figure.
Clarissa's face blushed to see her bosom straining up the way it did. half
exposed for all to see.
She had
always known, of course, that women like Manda Perlin weren't really shaped as
they appeared. She knew that when they had their clothes off. their shapes were
not a great deal different from any other woman's, but Clarissa had never known
just how much of it was due to the dresses those attractive women wore.
In the
mirror, in this dress, with her hair done in such a fashion and with the paint
on her face, she looked the equal of any of them. Perhaps older, but that age
seemed only to add bearing to what she saw; not a spent, unattractive quality,
as she had always thought. And then she saw the ring in her lip. It was gold,
not silver.
"Nathan,"
she whispered. "What happened to the ring?" "Oh, that. Well, it
wouldn't do to have you supposedly a concubine to the emperor himself and
carrying his little emperor heir, and have a silver ring through your lip.
Everyone knows that the emperor only brings those with gold rings to his bed.
"Besides,
you were wrongly marked with a silver ring. It should have been gold from the
beginning. Those men were just plain blind." He gestured in a grand
fashion. "I, of course, am a man of vision." He held his hand out
toward the mirror. "Look for yourself. That woman is too beautiful to wear
anything but a gold ring."
In the
mirror, the woman staring back was getting tears in her eyes. Clarissa wiped a
finger across her lower lids. She feared to ruin the paint the woman had put on
her face when her hair was being curled.
"Nathan,
I don't know what to say. You have done magic. You have made a plain woman into
something ..." "Beautiful," he finished. "But why?"
His
face screwed up with an odd expression. "Are you daft? I couldn't very
well have you looking plain," He swept a hand down, indicating himself.
"No one would believe a man as dashing as myself would be seen with a
woman any less stunning."
Clarissa
grinned. He didn't look so old to her as he had seemed when she had first met
him. He really did look dashing. Dashing, and distinguished. "Thank you,
Nathan, for having faith in me, in more ways than one." "It's not
faith: it's vision for what others are too blind to see. Now they do." She
glanced to the curtain where the dressmaker had disappeared. "But this is
all so very expensive. This dress alone would cost me near to a year's wages.
And all the other things: the lodging; the coaches; the hats; the shoes; the
women who did my hair and face. It all costs so much. You are spending money
like a prince on holiday. How can you possibly afford it?"
The sly
smile oozed back onto his face. "I'm good at . . . making money. I could
never spend all I can make. Don't be concerned about it: it means little to
me." "Oh." She glanced back at the mirror. "Of
course."
He
cleared his throat. "What I mean is that you are more important than petty
matters of gold. People are more important than such considerations. If it was
my last copper, I would have spent it with no less enthusiasm, or greater
worry."
When
the dressmaker finally returned with a selection of stunning dresses, Nathan
chose a number for her to try on. Clarissa went into the dressing room with
each, and with the aid of the dressmaker's woman, tried on each. Clarissa
didn't think she would have been able to lace, tie, and button any of them by
herself.
Nathan
smiled at each dress she came out in, and told the dressmaker he would buy it.
By the end of the next hour, Nathan had selected a half dozen dresses, and had
passed a handful of gold to the dressmaker. In all her life, she had never
imagined a place of such wealth that dresses were already made. It was another
measure of how much her life had changed with Nathan; only the very rich, or
royalty, would buy dresses this way.
"I
will make the necessary alterations, my lord, and have the dresses delivered to
the Briar House." He darted a look at Clarissa. "Perhaps my lord
would wish me to leave several of them loose-fitting, to accommodate madam,
when she grows with our emperor's child?"
Nathan
waved a hand dismissively. "No, no. I enjoy having her look her best. I
will have a seamstress let them out when necessary, or simply purchase others
to fit her then."
It
suddenly embarrassed Clarissa to realize that this dressmaker thought that she
was concubine not only to the emperor but to Nathan. The ring through her lip,
gold though it was, still meant she was nothing more than a slave. A slave
would mean little to the emperor, with child or not, gold ring or not.
Nathan
boldly told people that he was Emperor Jagang's plenipotentiary, which kept
them furiously bowing and scraping. Clarissa was merely property, shared with
the emperor's trusted agent.
The
dressmaker's sidelong glance finally struck home. She was a whore in his eyes.
Maybe a whore in a fine dress, and maybe not a whore by choice, but a whore
nonetheless. A whore who was enjoying herself, being dressed in fine clothes
and kept by an important man at the finest inn in the city.
The
fact that Nathan didn't think the same thing was all that kept her from running
from the dress shop in humiliation.
Clarissa
reproached herself. This was the pretense Nathan had crafted for them, to keep
them safe. It kept the soldiers they encountered at every turn from hauling her
away to a tent. Deprecating glances were a small thing indeed for her to bear
in return for all that Nathan had done for her, and for the respect he always
showed her. It was what Nathan thought that mattered.
Besides,
she was used to disapproving looks-looks of sympathy at best, scorn at worst.
People had never looked upon her with favor. Let these people think what they
would. She knew she was doing something worthwhile, for a man of worth.
Clarissa lifted her chin as she strutted to the door.
The
dressmaker bowed again as they stepped out into the dark street to the waiting
carriage. ' Thank you. Lord Rahl. Thank you for allowing me to serve the
emperor in my small way. The dresses will be delivered before morning, you have
my word."
Nathan
waved an offhanded dismissal to the man.
In the
dim dining room of the elegant Briar House, Clarissa sat across a small table
from Nathan. She now noticed the surreptitious glances she got from the staff.
She sat
up straighter and put her shoulders back, defying them to have a good look at
her bosom. She reasoned that in the murky candlelight, and under all the face
paint, they wouldn't be able to see her face reddening.
The wine
warmed her, and the roasted duck finally sated her gnawing hunger. People kept
bringing food-fowl and pork and beef. along with gravies and sauces and a
variety of side dishes. She nibbled at a few, not wanting to appear a glutton,
and afterward she was satisfied.
Nathan
ate with zeal, but didn't overeat. He enjoyed the different dishes, wanting to
try them all. The staff hovered around him, slicing meat. pouring sauces, and
moving plates and platters around as if he were helpless. He encouraged them, asking
for things, sending others away, and in general made himself appear an
important man in their midst.
She
guessed that he was. He was the emperor's plenipotentiary: a man not to be
crossed. No one wanted Lord Rahl to be anything but most pleased. If his
pleasure required seeing to Clarissa's desires, they did that, too.
Clarissa
was relieved when they were finally shown to their rooms, and Nathan had at
last closed the door. She sagged, at last unburdened of the responsibility of
acting a fine lady, or a fine whore; she wasn't exactly sure how to play the
part. She did know that she was glad to be away from the eyes that played over
her.
Nathan
strode around the two rooms, inspecting the painted walls with gold molding
applied to form huge, sweeping panels with reverse-curved corners. Rich carpets
in deep colors covered nearly every inch of floor. Everywhere there were
couches and chairs. One room had several tables, one for taking meals there,
another, with a slant top, for writing. The writing table held neatly arranged
sheets of paper, silver pens, and gold-topped ink bottles with various colors
of ink.
In the
other room was the bed. Clarissa had never seen a bed like it. Four elaborately
turned posts held up a canopy of lace and rich red fabric with gold designs
splashed boldly over it. The bed cover matched. It was a huge bed. She had
trouble imagining why such an expanse of bed was needed.
"Well,"
Nathan said as he strolled back into the room with the bed, "I guess it
will have to do."
Clarissa
giggled. "Nathan, a king would be delighted to sleep in such a room."
Nathan's expression contorted in a casual manner. "Perhaps, but I am more
than a king. I am a prophet."
Her
smile faded as her mood turned earnest. "Yes, you really are more than a
king."
Nathan
went around the room blowing out most of the dozen lamps. He left the one
beside the bed, and the one on the dressing stand.
He
half-turned, and gestured to the other room. "I'll sleep on a couch in
there. You may have the bed."
"I'll
take the couch. I wouldn't be comfortable in such a bed. I'm a simple woman,
not accustomed to such grand things. You are. You should have the bed."
Nathan
cupped her cheek. "Get used to them. Take the bed. It would be
uncomfortable for me, knowing such a lovely lady was sleeping on a couch. I'm a
man of the world, and such things don't faze me." He bowed grandly from
the doorway. "Sleep well, my dear." He paused with the door half
closed. "Clarissa. I apologize for the looks you had to endure, and for
what people might have thought of you, because of my story." He truly was
a gentleman.
"No
apology is necessary. It was rather fun pretending, as if I were in a play on a
stage."
He
laughed with that sparkle in his blue eyes as he flung his cape around himself.
"It was fun, wasn't it, having those people think we were other than we
were?" "Thank you for everything, Nathan. You made me feel pretty,
today." "You are pretty." She smiled. "That was just the
clothes."
"Beauty
comes from within." He winked. "Sleep well, Clarissa. I've left a
protective shield on the door so no one can enter. Be at ease here; you will be
safe." He closed the door gently.
Feeling
a warm glow from the wine, Clarissa ambled about the room, inspecting all the
fine things. She ran her fingers over the inlaid silver on the small tables
beside the bed. She touched the cut glass on the lamps. She ran her hand over
the finely woven bed covers when she turned them down.
Standing
in front of the dressing table, she looked at herself in the mirror as she
unlaced the bodice of her dress. She almost hated to take off the dress and be
just herself again, although she wouldn't be unhappy about being free of the
bone stays that confined her.
With
the laces loose, she was at last able to take a full breath. She slipped the
top of the dress off her shoulders. The things still pressing from underneath
held the dress up over her bosom. She sat on the edge of the bed as she tried
to reach the buttons up the back. Some of them were too high. Sagging in frustration,
she settled on removing her new shoes, made of supple, napped leather. She
rolled off her stockings and wiggled her toes, glad to have them free.
Clarissa
thought about home. She remembered her cozy bed, little as it was. She missed
home, not because she was so happy there, but simply because it was home, and
all she knew. As fancy as this place was, it felt cold to her. Cold and
frightening. She was someplace she didn't know, and she could never go home
again.
Suddenly
Clarissa was very lonely. With Nathan, she felt the comfort of his confidence.
He always knew where he was going, what to do, and what to say. He never seemed
to have any doubts. Clarissa was full of them, now that she was alone in the
bedroom.
It was
odd, but she missed Nathan more than home, and he was right in the next room.
Nathan was almost her home, now.
The
carpet felt good under her bare feet as she went to the door. Gently, she
rapped against the white panel in the center of the gold molding. She waited a
moment, and then knocked again. "Nathan?" she called softly.
She
knocked and called his name once more. When still no answer came, she cracked
the door open and peeked in. Only a single candle cut the still gloom.
Nathan
was in one of his trances again. He was sitting in a chair, staring blankly at
nothing. Clarissa stood at the door for a time, watching his steady breathing.
She had
been frightened the first time she found him stiff and unblinking, but he had
assured her that it was something he had done nearly his whole life. He hadn't
gotten angry, that first time, when she shook him, thinking there was something
wrong.
Nathan
never got angry with her. He always treated her with respect and kindness-two
things she had always longed for, but had never gotten from her own people, and
here was a stranger who gave them without effort.
Clarissa
called his name again. Nathan blinked and looked up at her. "Is everything
all right?" he asked. "Yes. I hope I'm not disturbing you in your
reflection?" Nathan waved away her concern. "No. no."
"Well,
I was wondering, could you help me . . . undo my dress? I can't reach the
buttons in the back and I seem to be stuck in it. I didn't want to lie down in
it and ruin it."
Nathan
followed her back into the bedroom. She had blown out the lamp on the dressing
table so that she wouldn't be embarrassed. Only the one beside the bed allowed
him to see what he was doing.
With
both hands, Clarissa held her hair up out of the way as his strong fingers
worked their way down the buttons. It felt good to have him near.
"Nathan?" she whispered when he had reached the last of them at her
waist. He made a questioning sound in response. She feared he would ask what
the thumping sound was. and she would have to tell him that it was her heart.
Clarissa turned, having to hold the dress over her breasts, now that it was
undone. "Nathan," she said, as she gathered her courage and looked up
into his beautiful eyes, "Nathan, I'm lonely."
His
brow drew together as he gently laid one of his big hands on her bare shoulder.
"No need, my dear. I'm right in the next room."
"I
know. But I mean that I'm lonely in a bigger way than that. I mean. I'm lonely
for the way you . . . I don't know how to say it. When I'm alone, I start
thinking about what I will have to do to help those people you talked about,
and all kinds of fearful things come into my head, and before I know it, I'm
sweating in a terror."
"It's
often more worrisome to ponder something than it is to actually do it. Just
don't think about it. Try to enjoy the big bed, and the fine room. if you can.
Who knows, one day we may have to sleep in a ditch."
She
nodded. She had to look away from his eyes. lest she lose her courage.
"Nathan, I know I'm a plain woman, but you make me feel special. No man
ever made me feel pretty, feel . . . desirable." "Well, as I said
before-"
She
reached up and put her fingers to his lips to silence him. "Nathan. I
really . . ." She looked up into his wonderful eyes. She swallowed and
changed what she was going to say. "Nathan, I'm afraid you are just too
dashing a man for me to resist. Will you come spend the night in this big bed
with me?" He smiled with one side of his mouth as she took her fingers
away. "Dashing?" She nodded. "Very." She could feel the
curls springing. He rested his arms around her waist. It made her heart beat
even faster. ' 'Clarissa, you owe me nothing. I saved you from what was
happening in Renwold, but you in return have promised to help me. You owe me
nothing beyond that." "I know. It's not-" She wasn't making
herself clear, she knew.
She
stretched up on her tiptoes, her arms circling his neck, and pressed her lips
to his. His arms drew her tight. She abandoned herself in those arms. and to
those lips.
He
pulled back. "Clarissa, I'm old. You're a young woman. You don't want
someone who's as old as 1." How long had she hurt because she thought she
was too old to have someone?
298
How
often had she felt forlorn because she was too old? And now this man, this
wonderful, vibrant, handsome man, was telling her she was too young.
"Nathan,
what I want is to be thrown on the bed, to have this fancy, expensive dress
pulled off me, and for you to have your way with me until I hear the spirits
sing."
In the
silence, Nathan stared at her. At last he reached down, put an arm behind her
legs, and swept her off her feet. He carried her to the bed, but instead of
throwing her onto it, as she had suggested, he set her down gently.
His
weight sank into the bed as he reclined beside her. His fingers stroked her
forehead. They looked into each other's eyes. Tenderly, he kissed her.
Since
her dress was all untied and unbuttoned, it easily slipped down to her waist.
She ran her fingers through his long silver hair as she watched him lovingly
kiss her breasts. His lips were warm against her. For some reason, she found
that surprising, and marvelous. A soft moan escaped her throat at the feeling
of her nipples being kissed in such a manly, passionate fashion.
Nathan
may have lived longer than she, but he was not an old man in her eyes. He was
dashing, daring, and thoughtful, and he made her feel beautiful. She found
herself panting at the sight of him without his clothes.
No man
had ever touched her with such tender purpose, and the sureness of that touch
further heated her passion.
His
kisses trailed down the front of her, each making her gasp to catch her breath
in sweet, startled desire.
When he
at last took his place atop her, she totally and unashamedly succumbed to her
need. She felt cradled not only in the canopy bed but in his ardent embrace. At
long last, as her whole body stiffened with her cry of release, she could hear
the spirits sing.
CHAPTER������������ 40
Like a
hawk in a dive, Kahlan silently shot ahead, and at the same time, like an eagle
in an updraft, she serenely hovered in place. Light and dark, heat and cold,
time and distance, had no meaning, yet they meant everything. It was a
marvelous confusion of sensations, heightened by the sweet presence of the
sliph each time Kahlan drew the living quicksilver into her lungs, into her
soul. It was rapture.
With an
abrupt explosion of perception, it ended.
Light
erupted in Kahlan's vision. Sounds of birds, breezes, and bugs hurt her ears.
Trees draped with streamers of moss, rocks incrusted with lichen and snarled in
roots and vines, and patches of damp, dark mist crowded in all around. The
overpowering presence of it all terrified her. Breathe, the sliph told her. The
thought horrified her. No.
The
sliph's voice seemed to sear through Kahlan's mind. Breathe. Kahlan didn't want
to be thrust from the serene womb of the sliph into this garish, loud world.
She
remembered Richard, and with Richard, the threat to him: Shota. Kahlan expelled
the sliph from her lungs. The liquid silver sloughed from her, yet she was not
wet. She gasped a deep breath of the strange, sharp air. She covered her ears
and shut her eyes as the sliph set her on the edge of the well. "We are
where you wished to travel," the sliph said.
Kahlan
reluctantly opened her eyes and lowered her hands. The living world seemed to
slow and settle into harmony with what she expected it to be. The comforting
hand of the sliph slipped from Kahlan's waist. "Thank you, sliph. It was .
. . a pleasure."
The
sliph's fluid face smiled. "I am pleased that you found it
pleasurable." "I hope not to be long, and then we must travel
back."
"I
will be ready when you wish to travel again," the sliph said. her voice
echoing out into the gloom. "I am always ready to travel, if I am
awake."
Kahlan
swung her legs down off the stone wall of the sliph's well. Parts of an ancient
structure were visible, but it seemed mostly to have crumbled into the damp,
tangled forest. She could see a bit of a wall here, half of a column there,
some paving stones on the ground, all covered with vines and roots and leaves.
Kahlan
didn't know exactly where she was, but she knew she was in the somber woods
around the witch woman's home. Kahlan remembered going through this dangerous,
mysterious forest when Shota had captured her and taken her to Agaden Reach in
order to draw Richard there.
Jagged
peaks, like a wreath of thorns, sheltered the murky forest high up in the vast
spine of the Rang'Shada mountains. The dark and dangerous woods, in turn,
surrounded
and protected Shota's remote home. These woods kept people away from Agaden
Reach, away from the witch woman.
Whoops,
clicks, and calls echoed through the stagnant stink. Kahlan rubbed her arms,
even though the air was damp and warm. Her chill came from within.
Through
small, rare gaps in the forest canopy, Kahlan could detect the pink glow of the
sky. It must be just dawn. She knew that the brightening day would bring no
relief to the gloom of these woods. On the sunniest day, this morose place was
never anything more than dismally dark.
Kahlan
stepped carefully, watching the forest floor, the hanging vines, and the
drifting fog that seemed to conceal creatures issuing strings of hissing clicks
and hooting calls. In the expanses of stagnant water lurking under the thick
vegetation, she could see eyes just breaking the surface.
Kahlan
took another careful step and then paused. She realized that in the
directionless forest, she didn't know where she was going. There was no telling
north from south, east from west. This wood looked the same in all directions.
She
realized, too, that she didn't even know if Shota was home. The last time
Richard and Kahlan had seen Shota was at the Mud People's village. Shota had
been driven from her home by a wizard aligned with the Keeper. Shota might not
be here.
No,
Nadine had visited her. Shota was here. Kahlan took another step. Something
snatched her ankle and yanked her feet from under her. She landed on her back
with a hard thud.
A
heavy, dark shape sprang onto her chest, driving the wind from her lungs. A
hiss, carried on fetid breath, came from between sharp teeth packed with gray,
spongy filth. "Pretty lady." Kahlan gasped to catch her breath.
"Samuel! Get off me!"'
Powerful
fingers squeezed her left breast. Bloodless lips drew back with a wicked grin.
"Maybe Samuel eat pretty lady."
Kahlan
pressed the point of the bone knife up into the folds of skin at Samuel's neck.
She seized one of his long fingers and bent it back until he squealed and
released her breast.
She
jabbed the knife against his throat. "Maybe I'll feed you to the things in
the water over there. What do you think? Shall I slit your throat? Or do you
want to get off me?"
The
hairless, splotchy gray head drew back. Yellow eyes, like twin lanterns in the
dim light, glared hatefully down at her. He carefully rolled to the side to let
her up. Kahlan kept the bone knife trained on him.
Dead
leaves and forest debris stuck to his waxy skin. A long arm lifted to point off
into the dark mist. "Mistress wants you." "How does she know I'm
here?"
The
grotesque face split with a hissing grin. "Mistress knows everything.
Follow Samuel." He skittered a few steps and then stopped to look back
over his shoulder. "When mistress is finished with you, Samuel will eat
you."
"I
may just have something for Shota she isn't expecting. She's made a mistake
this time. When I'm finished with her, you may not have a mistress."
The
squat figure stared, appraising her. His bloodless lips pulled back and he
hissed.
"Your
mistress is waiting. Get going."
The
stocky, hairless, long-armed figure finally moved on through the undergrowth.
He skirted dangers Kahlan didn't see, and grudgingly pointed at things for her
to avoid. Vines he circumvented reached for her as she passed, but she was too
far away for them to catch her. Roots Samuel bypassed snarled up, trying to
snare her.
The
short figure, dressed only in pants held up with straps, glanced over his
shoulder occasionally to make sure she followed. A couple of times, he gurgled
his odd laugh as he bounded along.
After a
time, they picked up a trail of sorts, and not long after that the light coming
through the tangled mass of branches overhead became brighter. As Kahlan
followed the repulsive little creature, they came at last to the edge of the
dark wood, and the edge of a cliff.
Far
below lay the verdant valley where lived the witch woman. That it was as
beautiful a place as any in the Midlands didn't ease the anxious knot in
Kahlan's stomach. All around the valley the massive rocky peaks of the surrounding
mountains soared nearly straight up. The budding trees in the placid valley
below swayed gently in the early morning breeze.
Descending
the sheer walls of rock looked to be impossible, but Kahlan knew from being
here before that there were steps carved in the rock. Samuel led her through a
morass of brush, tight trees, and fern-covered boulders, to a place that would
be nearly impossible to find without him to guide her. A trail hidden behind
rocks, trees, ferns, and vines ran to the edge of the precipice and the steps
leading down the cliff walls.
Samuel
pointed off. down into the valley. "Mistress." "I know. Get
moving."
Kahlan
followed Samuel down the cliff's edge. Part of it was a narrow trail, but most
of the way down was comprised of thousands of steps cut into the rugged rock
wall. They twisted and turned downward, sometimes spiraling back under ones
above.
Below,
far off in the center of the valley, among the streams, grand trees, and
rolling fields, sat Shota's graceful palace. Colorful flags flew atop towers
and turrets as if to announce a festival. Kahlan could hear the distant flags
snapping in the wind. She had trouble seeing it for the splendid place it was.
She saw it as the center of the spiderweb. A place where threat lurked. Threat
for Richard.
Samuel
sprang down the steps ahead, happy to be going back to the protection of his
mistress, no doubt thinking about cooking Kahlan in a stew when his mistress
was finished with her.
Kahlan
hardly noticed the hateful glances from the big yellow eyes. She, too, was lost
in a world of loathing.
Shota
wanted to harm Richard. Kahlan kept that thought foremost in her mind: it was
key. Shota wanted to deny Richard happiness. Shota wanted Richard to suffer.
Kahlan
could feel angry power welling up inside her, ready to do her bidding and
eliminate the threat against Richard. Kahlan had at last found the way to
defeat Shota. Shota had no shield against Subtractive power. It would slice
through any magic she threw out.
Kahlan
had found the path, the gateway, through the labyrinth of protection layered
over her magic, to the core of its power. This side of her magic was protected
by
precepts that governed its use. Like the Wizards' Keep, protected by shields of
all kinds, there was a way to get through. She had found a way to get through
the Keep, and she had used her reason to find the justification that traced its
way through the maze of rationale forbidding this magic's use. She had tapped
its ancient strength, its destructive power. Kahlan felt the power coursing up
through her and down her arms. Blue light snarled and snapped around her fists.
She was nearly lost in a trance of purpose.
For the
first time, Kahlan wasn't afraid of the witch woman. If Shota didn't swear to
leave Richard alone, to let him have his own life, Shota was going to be dust
before this day was out.
At the
bottom of the cliff, Kahlan followed behind Samuel as he bounded along the road
among tree-dotted hills and green fields. Snow-capped peaks all around soared
up past a scattering of clouds. Blue deepened in the sky as the sun rose over
those peaks.
Kahlan
felt as if she had enough power blazing within her to level those peaks. Shota
had only to say or do the wrong thing-to prove herself a threat to Richard- and
she would be no more.
The
road led up a gentle rise from which Kahlan could see the spires of the palace
through the trees ahead. Samuel glanced back to make sure she was still
following, but Kahlan didn't need his direction; she knew that Shota waited in
the grove of trees below.
The
witch woman was the last person Kahlan ever wanted to see again, but if it was
to be, then, this time, she intended it to be on her terms.
Samuel
halted and pointed with a long finger. "Mistress." Yellow eyes
glowered back at Kahlan. "Mistress wants you."
Kahlan
lifted a warning finger to his face. Threads of blue light crackled around the
finger.
"If
you get in my way, or interfere, you will die."
He
glanced from her finger back into her eyes. His bloodless lips drew back as he
hissed, and then he skittered off into the trees.
In a
cocoon of seething magic, Kahlan advanced down the slope toward the waiting
witch woman. The breeze was spring-warm, the day bright and cheerful. Kahlan
felt no cheer.
Sheltered
among the towering maples, ash, and oak, sat a table covered with a white cloth
and set with food and drink. Beyond the table, atop three square white marble
platforms, stood a massive throne carved with gold-leaf vines, snakes, and
other beasts.
Shota
sat regally, one leg crossed casually over the other, her ageless almond eyes
watching Kahlan's approach. Shota's arms rested on the chair's high, widely
spaced arms, with her hands draped arrogantly over gold gargoyles. The
gargoyles nuzzled her hands, as if hoping to be stroked. A rich canopy draped
with heavy red brocade and trimmed with gold tassels shaded the throne's
occupant from the morning sun, yet her luxuriant auburn hair shimmered as if
touched by streamers of sunlight.
Kahlan
halted, not far away, under the witch woman's rock-hard, penetrating gaze. The
blue lightning screamed for release.
Shota
clicked her lacquered fingernails together. A self-satisfied smile spread
across her full red lips.
"Well,
well, well," Shota said in her velvety voice. "The child assassin
arrives at last."
"I
am not an assassin," Kahlan said. "Nor am I a child. But I have had
enough of your games."
Shota's
smile slipped away. She put her hands to the chair's arms and stood. Points of
her wispy, low-cut, variegated gray dress lifted in the gentle breeze. Her gaze
never left Kahlan as she gracefully descended the three white marble platforms.
"You're late." Shota held a hand out to the table. "The tea is
getting cold." Kahlan flinched when a bolt of lightning struck from the
blue sky, hitting the teapot. Amazingly, it didn't shatter.
Shota
glanced down at Kahlan's hands, and then back to her eyes. "There. I
believe it's hot, now. Please, won't you have a seat? We will have tea and ...
conversation."
Knowing
Shota had seen the ominous blue light, Kahlan returned the self-assured smile
in kind. Shota drew out a chair and sat. She again held out a hand in
invitation. "Please, have a seat. I imagine you have things you wish to
discuss." Kahlan slid into a chair as Shota poured tea, holding on the
white top with her other hand as she did so. Steam rose from the cups. The tea
was indeed hot. Shota lifted a gold-trimmed platter, offering Kahlan toast.
Kahlan warily pulled a golden-crisp slab from the platter. Shota slid a bowl of
honeyed butter across the table. "Well," Shota said. "Isn't this
unpleasant." Against her will, Kahlan smiled. "Very."
Shota
picked up her silver knife and spread honeyed butter across her slice of toast.
She took a sip of tea.
"Eat,
child. Murder is always best accomplished on a full stomach." "I have
not come to murder you."
Shota's
sly smile returned. "No, I suppose you have managed to justify it to
yourself. Retribution, is it? Or perhaps self-defense. Punishment? Recompense?
Justice?" The smooth smile widened. An eyebrow arched. "Bad
manners?" "You sent Nadine to marry Richard."
"Ahh.
Jealousy, then." Shota leaned back as she sipped her tea. "A noble
motive, were it justified. I hope you realize that jealousy can be a cruel
taskmaster."
Kahlan
nibbled her crunchy toast. "Richard loves me, and I love him. We're
engaged to be married."
"Yes,
I know. For one who professes to love him, I would think you would be more
understanding." "Understanding?"
"Of
course. If you love someone, you want them to be happy. You want what's best
for them."
"I
make Richard happy. He wants me. I'm best for him." "Yes, well, we
can't always have what we want, now can we?" Kahlan sucked honeyed butter
from her finger. "Just tell me why you wish to hurt us."
Shota
looked genuinely surprised. "Hurt you? Is that what you think? You think I
am being spiteful?"
"Why
else would you always try to keep us apart, to hurt us?" Shota took a
dainty bite of toast. She chewed for a moment. "Has the plague come,
yet?" The cup paused partway to Kahlan's lips. "How do you know about
that?"
"I'm
a witch woman. I see the current of events. Let me ask you a question. If you
visited a young child sick with the plague, and the child's mother asked you if
her child was going to recover, and you told her the truth, would you be guilty
of causing the child's death because you foretold it?" "Of course
not."
"Ah.
It is only I, then, who am to be judged by different standards." "I'm
not judging you. I simply want you to stop interfering with Richard's and my life
together."
"A
messenger is often blamed for the message."
"Shota,
the last time we saw you, you said that if we stopped the Keeper, you would owe
us a debt. You asked me to help Richard. We stopped the Keeper. It cost us
dearly, but we did it. You owe us." "Yes, I know," Shota
whispered. "That is why I sent Nadine." Kahlan could feel the rage of
power surge within her. "Seems a strange way to show your
appreciation-sending someone to try to ruin our lives." "No,
child," Shota said gently. "You see things through blind eyes."
Kahlan had to help Richard by finding out all she could, but she would defend
herself and Richard if she had to. Until that became necessary, she could
endure this wandering conversation, if it would help get the answers they needed.
And they did need answers. "What do you mean?"
Shota
sipped her tea. "Have you lain with Richard?"
Kahlan
was taken off guard by the question, but she recovered quickly. She shrugged
one shoulder in an offhanded manner. "Yes, as a matter of fact, I have."
Shota's gaze rose from her tea. "You're lying."
Pleased
by the smoldering tone in Shota's voice, Kahlan lifted an eyebrow. "It's
the truth. You don't like the message, and so now you hold malice toward the
messenger?' '
Shota's
eyes narrowed. Her gaze locked on Kahlan as if drawing a bow and aiming an
arrow.
"Where,
Mother Confessor? Where did you lie with him?" Kahlan felt triumphant at
Shota's obvious displeasure.
"Where?
What difference does that make? Have you turned from witch woman to gossip,
now? I was with him . . . in that way, and that's the truth, whether you like
it or not. I'm no longer a virgin. I was with Richard; that's all that
matters." Shota's gaze turned dangerous. "Where?" she repeated.
Shota's tone was so threatening that Kahlan forgot she needn't be afraid of the
witch woman.
"In
a place between worlds," Kahlan said, suddenly embarrassed to reveal the
details. "The good spirits . . . took us there," she stammered.
"The good spirits . . . they wanted us to be together."
"I
see." Shota's gaze cooled. Her small smile returned. "I'm afraid that
doesn't count."
"Doesn't
count! What in the name of all that's good does that mean? I was with him.
That's all that matters. You're just vexed because it's true."
"True?
You were not with him in this world, child. This is the world we live in. You
were not with him here, where it counts. In this world, you are still a
virgin." "That's absurd."
Shota
shrugged. "Think what you will. I am satisfied that you have not been with
him."
Kahlan
folded her arms. "This world, or another, it doesn't matter. I was with
him."
Shota's
smooth brow puckered with mirth restrained. "And if you have been with him
in the place between worlds, where the good spirits took you, then why have you
not been with him in this world, since you are no longer a virgin, here, as you
say?"
Kahlan
blinked. "Well, I . . . we . . . thought it best to wait until we were
wedded, that's all."
Shota's
soft, exultant laugh drifted out through the morning air. "You see? You know
the truth of what I say." She held the teacup between the tips of the
fingers of both hands as she sipped, more balmy laughter escaping between each
sip.
Kahlan
fumed, somehow feeling she had lost the argument. She tried to look confident
as she leaned back and took a drink of her own tea.
"If
it pleases you to delude yourself with punctilios, then be my guest. I know
what we did," Kahlan said. "I don't know why it's any concern of
yours, anyway."
Shota
looked up. "You know why it's my concern. Mother Confessor. Every
Confessor bears a Confessor. If you have his child, it will be a boy. I told
you both to remember that before you lay together. Lust dims thoughts of the
consequences.
"From
you, the boy would be a Confessor. From Richard, he would have the gift. Such a
dangerous melding has never taken place before."
With a
patient, reasoned tone, meant almost as much for herself as for the witch
woman, Kahlan hid her inner terror at Shota's prediction.
"Shota,
you are a witch woman of great talent, and you may know it would be a boy, I
grant you that, but you could not know he would be like most of the male
Confessors born in the past. Not all were like that. You have as much as
admitted that you don't know if it would be so. You are not the Creator; you
can't know what He will choose to do-if He even chooses to give us a
child."
"I
don't need to see the future in this. Almost every male Confessor was like
that. They were beasts without conscience. My mother lived in the dark times
caused by a male Confessor. You would visit upon the world not only a male
Confessor, but one with the gift. You cannot even envision such a cataclysm.
"It
is for this very reason that Confessors are not supposed to love their mates.
If she bears a male child, she must ask the husband to kill the baby. You love
Richard. You would not ask that of him. I have warned you that I have the
strength to do what you will not. I also told you that it will not be
personal."
"You
talk about the distant future as if it has come to pass. It has not,"
Kahlan said. "Events do not always unfold as you say. Yet, other things
have already come to pass. Because of Richard, you still live. You told us that
if Richard and I were able to close the veil, saving you and everyone else from
the Keeper, you would be forever grateful to us both." "And so I
am."
Kahlan
leaned forward. "You show your gratitude not only by threatening to murder
my child should I have one, but also by trying to kill me when I come to ask
your help?"
Shota's
brow twitched. "I have made no attempt on your life." "You sent
Samuel up there to attack me, and then you have the effrontery to rebuke me for
coming prepared to defend myself. The little monster threw me on
the
ground and attacked me. If I hadn't had a weapon, who knows what he would have
done. This is your gratitude? He said that when you were through with me, you
would let him eat me. And then you expect me to believe in your benevolence?
You dare to profess gratitude?"
Shota's
gaze shifted toward the trees. "Samuel!" She set down her teacup.
"Samuel! Come here at once!"
The
squat figure loped out of the trees, using his knuckles to help himself bound
across the grass. He ran to Shota and nuzzled against her legs.
"Mistress," he purred.
"Samuel,
what did I tell you about the Mother Confessor?" "Mistress told
Samuel to go get her." Shota looked into Kahlan's eyes. "What else
did I tell you?" "To bring her to you." "Samuel," she
said with rising inflection. "Mistress said not to harm her."
"You
attacked me!" Kahlan put in. "You threw me on the ground and jumped
on me! You said you were going to eat me when your mistress was through with
me." "Is that true, Samuel?"
"Samuel
not hurt pretty lady," Samuel grumbled. "Is what she says true? Did
you attack her?"
Samuel
hissed at Kahlan. Shota thunked him on the head with a finger. He shrank back
against her leg.
"Samuel,
what did I tell you? What were my instructions?" "Samuel must guide
Mother Confessor back. Samuel must not touch Mother Confessor. Samuel must not
hurt Mother Confessor. Samuel must not threaten Mother Confessor."
Shota
drummed her fingers on the table. "And did you disobey me, Samuel?"
Samuel hid his head under the hem of her dress. ''Samuel, answer my question at
once. Is what the Mother Confessor says true?" "Yes, mistress,"
Samuel whined. "I'm very disappointed in you, Samuel." "Samuel
sorry."
"We
will discuss this later. Leave us."
The
witch woman's servant skittered away into the trees. Shota turned back to face
Kahlan's eyes.
"I
told him not to harm or threaten you. I can understand why you would be upset
and think I meant you harm. Please accept my apology." She poured Kahlan
more tea. "You see? I have no intention of hurting you."
Kahlan
took a sip from her full cup. "Samuel is the least of it. I know you want
to hurt me and Richard, but I'm not afraid of you anymore. You can no longer
harm me."
Shota's
smug smile returned. "Really?" "I'd suggest you not try to use
your power against me." "My power? All things I do, all things
everyone does, is using their power. To breathe is to use my power."
"I'm
talking about hurting me. If you dare try it, you'll not survive the
attempt." "Child, I have no wish to harm you, despite what you
think." "A brave thing to say, now that you know you can't."
"Really?
Did you ever think that the tea might be poisoned?" Her smile widened when
Kahlan stiffened. "You . . . ?" "Of course not. I told you. I
have no wish to harm you. If I wished to harm you, I could do any number of
things. I could have simply put a viper behind your heels. Vipers dislike
sudden movement."
If
there was one thing Kahlan hated, it was snakes, and Shota knew it.
"Relax, child. There is no viper under your chair." Shota took a bite
of her toast.
Kahlan
eased her breath out. "But you wished to make me think there might
be."
"What
I wished is for you to realize that confidence can be overrated. If it will
please you, I will tell you that I have always regarded you as singularly
dangerous for any number of reasons. That you have found a way to tap the other
side of your magic means little to me.
"It
is the other things you do that frighten me. Your womb frightens me. Your
arrogant certitude frightens me."
Kahlan
nearly leaped to her feet in anger, but then she suddenly thought of the children
dying back in Aydindril. How many of them hung near death, shivering in fear
for their lives, while Kahlan stubbornly debated fault and imputation with
Shota. Shota knew something about the plague, and about the winds hunting
Richard. What significance was Kahlan's pride in the face of that?
She
remembered, too, part of the prophecy: . . . no blade, forged of steel or
conjured of sorcery', can touch this foe.
In much
the same way, crossing swords with Shota wasn't going to work. This was serving
no purpose, and worse, solving nothing.
Kahlan
admitted to herself that she had come for vengeance. Her true duty should be to
help people who were suffering and dying. How would anything but pride be
satisfied by striking out at Shota? She was stubbornly putting herself and her
insecurity above innocent lives. She was being selfish.
"Shota,
I came with hurt in my heart because of Nadine. I wanted you to leave Richard
and me be. You say you have no wish to harm us, and that your intent is to
help. I also wish to help people who are desperate and dying. Why don't we, for
the moment at least, agree to take each other's word as true?" Shota
watched over her teacup. "What an outrageous concept." Kahlan
reasoned with her inner fear, her inner rage. Her anguish at the things Nadine
did made Kahlan want to strike out at Shota. What if it wasn't Shota's fault?
What if Nadine was acting on her own, much the same way as Samuel had? What if
Shota was telling the truth, if she had not meant to cause harm?
If that
were true, then Kahlan was guilty of a grievous wrong in wanting to strike out
at Shota.
Kahlan
admitted to herself that Shota had been right, that she had been justifying
vengeance simply to be able to tap her deadly power. She hadn't been willing to
listen.
Kahlan
placed her hands on the table. Shota sipped her tea as she watched the blue
glow around Kahlan's hands fade and finally extinguish. Kahlan didn't know if
she would be able to call it forth should Shota strike, but she realized it
didn't matter.
Failure
in her true task was too great a price to pay for pride. Kahlan felt that this
was the only thing that could truly have a chance of saving
her
future, of saving Richard, and of saving those innocent people back in
Aydindril. Richard always said to think of the solution, not the problem. She
would trust in Shota's word.
"Shota,"
Kahlan whispered, "I always thought the worst of you. Fear has been only
part of it. As you warned, jealousy has been my taskmaster. I beg you forgive
my obstinacy and insolence.
' I
know that you have tried to help people before. Please, help me, now. I need
answers. Lives depend on this. Please, talk with me. I'll try to hear with an
open mind the things you say, knowing that you are the messenger, and not the
cause."
Shota set
down her teacup. "Congratulations, Mother Confessor. You have earned the
right to ask me questions. Have the courage to hear the answers, and they will
be of aid to you." "I swear to do my best," Kahlan said.
CHAPTER������������ 41
Shota
poured them more tea. "What do you wish to know?"
Kahlan
reached for her cup. "Do you know anything about the Temple of the
Winds?" "No."
Kahlan
paused, cup in hand. ''Well, you told Nadine that the winds hunt Richard."
"I did."
"Could
you explain that? What you meant?"
Shota
lifted a hand in a vague gesture. "I don't know how to explain to a woman
who is not a witch how I see the flow of time, the passing of future events. I
guess you could say that it's something like memories. When you think about a
past event, or a person, say, the memory comes to you. Sometimes you more
vividly remember past events. Some things you can't recall.
"My
talent is like that, except I am also able to do the same with the future. To
me, there is little difference between past, present, and future. I ride a
current of time, seeing both upstream and down. To me, seeing the future is as
simple as it is for you to remember the flow of past events." "But
sometimes I can't remember things." Kahlan said. "It is the same with
me. I can't recall whatever happened to a bird my mother would call when I was
very young. I remember it sitting on her finger as she spoke soft, tender words
to it. I don't remember if it died, or if it flew away.
"Other
events, such as the death of a loved one, I remember vividly. I remember the
texture of the dress my mother wore on the day she died. Even today, I could
measure out for you the length of the loose thread on the sleeve."
"I
understand." Kahlan stared down into her tea. "I, too, remember well
the day my mother died. I remember every horrid detail, even though I wish I
could forget."
Shota
placed her elbows on the table and twined her fingers together. "The
future is that way with me. I can't always see pleasant future events that I
wish to see, and I sometimes can't avoid seeing those things I abhor. Some
events I can see with clarity, and others, despite how much I wish to see them,
are only shadows in the fog."
"What
about the winds hunting Richard?"
With a
distant look, Shota shook her head. "That was disturbing. It was as if
someone else's memory was being forced on me. As if someone else was using me
to pass on a message."
"Do
you think it was a message, or a warning?"
A
thoughtful frown creased Shota's brow. "I wondered that, myself. I don't
know the answer. I passed it on through Nadine because I thought Richard should
know. in either case."
Kahlan
rubbed her forehead. "Shota, when the plague started, it started among
children who had been playing or watching a game." "Ja'La."
"Yes,
that's right. Emperor Jagang-" "The dream walker." Kahlan looked
up. "You know of him?"
"He
visits my future memories occasionally. He plays tricks, trying to get into my
dreams. I won't allow it."
' 'Do
you think it possible that it was the dream walker who gave you this message
about the winds hunting Richard?"
"No.
I know his tricks. Take my word; it was not a message from Jagang. What of the
plague and the Ja'La game?"
"Well,
Jagang used his ability as a dream walker to slip into the mind of a wizard he
sent to assassinate Richard. He was at the Ja'La game. The wizard, I mean.
Jagang saw the game through this wizard's eyes.
'
'Jagang was incensed that Richard had changed the rules so that all the
children could play. The plague started among those children. That's one reason
we think Jagang was responsible.
"The
first child we went to see was near death." Kahlan closed her eyes and
covered them with her fingertips at the memory. She took a settling breath.
"While Richard and I knelt at his side, he died. He was just a boy. An
innocent boy. His whole body was rotting from the plague. I can't imagine the
suffering he endured. He died before our eyes." "I'm sorry,"
Shota whispered.
Kahlan
composed herself before looking up. ''After he had died, his hand reached up
and grabbed a hold of Richard's shirt. His lungs filled with air, he pulled
Richard close, and he said, 'The winds hunt you.' "
A
troubled sigh came from across the table. "Then I was right; it was not
something I saw, but a message sent through me."
"Shota,
Richard thinks it means that the Temple of the Winds is hunting him. He has a
journal from a man who lived during the great war of three thousand years ago.
The journal tells of how the wizards of that time placed things of great value,
and great danger, in the temple, and then they sent the temple away."
Frowning, Shota leaned forward. "Away? Away where?" "We don't
know. The Temple of the Winds was atop Mount Kymermosst." "I know the
place. There is no temple there, only a few bits of old ruins." Kahlan
nodded. "It's possible the wizards used their power to blast the side of
the mountain away and bury the temple in a rockslide. Whatever they did, it's
gone. From information in the journal, Richard believes that the red moons were
a warning from the temple. He further believes that the Temple of the Winds is
also known more simply as 'the winds.' "
Shota
tapped a finger against the side of her teacup. "So the message could have
come directly from the Temple of the Winds." "Do you think that
possible? How could a place send a message?" ' 'The wizards of that time
could do things with magic we can only wonder at. The sliph, for example. From
what I know, and what you have told me, my best guess would be that Jagang has
somehow stolen something deadly from the Temple of the Winds, and used it to
start the plague."
Kahlan
felt a cold wave of fright flood through her. "How could he do such a
thing?"
"He
is a dream walker. He has access to untold knowledge. Despite his crude
objectives, he is anything but stupid. I have been touched by his mind in my
sleep, when he hunts in the night. He is not to be underestimated."
"Shota, he wishes to extinguish all magic."
Shota
lifted an eyebrow. "I have already told you I will answer your questions.
There is no need to convince me of my own interest in this matter. Just as the
danger from the Keeper, Jagang is no less a threat to me. He promises to
eliminate magic, but to accomplish those ends he uses magic."
"But
how could he have stolen this plague from the Temple of the Winds? Do you think
it even possible? Really?"
"I
can tell you that the plague did not start of its own account. Your guess is
correct. It was ignited through magic." "How can we stop it?"
"I
know of no cure for plague." Shota took a sip of her tea. She glanced up
at Kahlan. "On the other hand, how could a plague be started?"
"Magic."
Kahlan frowned. "You mean . . . you mean that if magic could start it,
even though we don't know how to cure the plague, magic may be able to stop it?
Is that what you're suggesting?"
Shota
shrugged. "I know no more how to start a plague than to cure it. I know
magic started this one. If magic started it, then it would stand to reason that
magic could halt it."
Kahlan
straightened. "Then there is hope we can stop it, and save all those
people from dying."
"Possibly.
If we were to put the pieces together, it would at least suggest that Jagang
stole from the Temple of the Winds magic to start the plague, and that the
temple is trying to warn Richard of the violation." "Why
Richard?"
"Why
do you think? What makes Richard different from anyone else?" Kahlan felt
transfixed by Shota's small, sly smile.
"He's
a war wizard. He has Subtractive Magic. It's how he defeated the spirit of
Darken Rahl and stopped the Keeper. Richard is the only one with the power to
do whatever it is that can help." "Keep that in mind," Shota
whispered into her teacup.
Kahlan
was suddenly getting the feeling that she was being led down a path. She
dismissed the feeling. Shota was trying to help. Kahlan gathered her courage.
"Shota, why did you send Nadine?" "To marry Richard."
"Why Nadine?"
Shota's
lips spread in a sad smile. It was the question for which she had been waiting.
"Because
I care about him. I wanted it to be someone in whom he could find at least some
small comfort." Kahlan swallowed. "But he finds comfort in me."
"I know. But he is to marry another."
"The
flow of the future tells you this? Your future . . . memory?" Shota gave
her a single nod. "It wasn't your idea? You didn't simply want to send
someone to marry him so I wouldn't?"
312
"No."
Shota leaned back in her chair and stared off into the trees. "I saw that
he will marry another. I see great pain for him in this. I exerted all my
influence so that it would be someone he knew, someone in whom he would find at
least some solace. I wanted to spare him as much pain in it as I could."
Kahlan
didn't know what to say. She felt as she had when she was struggling against
the flow of water down in the drainage tunnel when she was fighting Marlin. She
remembered the weight of the water, the way it pinned her in place. "But I
love him," was all she could think to say.
"I
know," Shota whispered back. "It was not my choice to have him marry
another. I was only able to influence who it would be."
Kahlan
struggled to pull a shaky breath as she looked away from the witch woman's
ageless eyes.
"I
had no say," Shota added, "in who would be your husband."
Kahlan's gaze returned to Shota. "What? What do you mean?" "You
are to be wedded. It is not Richard. I could not influence that part of it.
That is not a good sign." Kahlan felt stunned. "What do you
mean?"
"The
spirits are somehow involved in this. They would only accept limited influence.
They have their reasons for the rest of it. Those reasons are veiled from
me."
Kahlan
felt a tear run down her check. "Shota, what am I to do? I'll lose my only
love. I could never love anyone but Richard, even if I wished it. I'm a
Confessor."
Shota
sat still as stone as she watched Kahlan. "The good spirits have granted
us all they could in allowing me to have a say in who will be Richard's bride.
I searched, and could find no other woman for whom he feels even this limited
empathy. She was the best I could do.
"If
you truly love Richard, then you should try to find comfort in the fact that he
will have Nadine, a woman he knows and for whom he at least has some feeling,
however small. Perhaps, with a woman such as this, he will someday find
happiness and come to love her."
Kahlan
put her trembling hands in her lap. She felt sick to her stomach. It would do
no good to argue with Shota. This wasn't her doing. The spirits were involved.
"To
what purpose? What good will it do for him to marry Nadine? For me to be mated
to one I don't love?"
Shota's
voice came soft and compassionate. "I don't know, child. Just as some
parents, for a variety of reasons, choose their children's spouses, so have the
spirits chosen for you and Richard."
"If
the spirits were involved, why would they desire our misery? They took us to
that place so we could be together." Kahlan struggled against the weight
of the floodwaters. "Why would they want to do this to us?"
"Perhaps,"
Shota whispered as she watched Kahlan, "it is because you will betray
him."
Kahlan's
throat clenched shut, locking her breath in her lungs. The prophecy screamed
through her head.
. . .
for the one in white, his true beloved, will betray him in her blood. Kahlan
shot to her feet. "No!" Her hands balled into fists. "I would
never hurt him! I would never betray him!" Shota calmly sipped her tea.
"Sit
down. Mother Confessor."
Kahlan
fought to keep the tears back as she sank into her chair. "I don't control
the future memories any more than I control the past. I told you, you must have
the courage to hear the answers." She tapped a finger to her temple.
"Not only here"-she tapped the finger over her heart-"but here.
too."
Kahlan
made herself take a deep breath. "Forgive me. It's not your fault. I know
that."
Shota
lifted an eyebrow. "Very good. Mother Confessor. Learning to accept the
truth is the first step to gaining control of your destiny."
"Shota,
I don't mean this to sound disrespectful, but seeing the future does not
provide all the answers. Before, you told me that I would touch Richard with my
power. I thought that would destroy him. I tried to kill myself to prevent your
words from coming to pass, to prevent myself from hurting him.
"Richard
wouldn't allow me the chance at suicide. As it turned out, your seeing of the
future was true, but there was more to it, and it turned out differently than
we thought.
"I
touched Richard, but his magic protected him, and my touch didn't harm
him."
"I
didn't see the result of the touch. Only that you would touch him. This is
different. I see you both being wedded." Kahlan felt numb. "Who is it
to be that I will marry?" "I see only a misty form. I cannot see the
person. I do not know his identity." "Shota, I was told that a witch
woman's seeing of future events is a form of prophecy." "Who told you
this?" "A wizard. Zedd."
"Wizards,"
Shota muttered. "They don't know what is in a witch woman's mind. They
think they know everything."
Kahlan
pushed her long hair back over her shoulder. "Shota, we were going to be
honest with each other, remember?"
Shota
let out a dainty grumble. "Well, I guess that in this case, they may be
mostly right."
"Prophecy
does not always turn out how it seems. The dire dangers can be avoided, or
changed. Do you think there is any way I can change the prophecy?" Shota
frowned. "The prophecy?" "The one you mentioned. Betraying
Richard."
Shota's
frowned deepened into suspicion. "Are you saying that this was also
foretold in a prophecy?"
Kahlan's
eyes turned away from the witch woman's intense gaze. "When the wizard
came, with Jagang possessing his mind, Jagang said that he had invoked a
prophecy to trap Richard. It, too, says I will betray him." "Do you
remember this prophecy?"
Kahlan
rubbed her finger around the rim of her teacup. "It's one of those
memories that we spoke of, the memories we wish we could forget, but we can't.
"
'On the red moon will come the firestorm. The one bonded to the blade will
watch as his people die. If he does nothing, then he, and all those he loves,
will die in its heat, for no blade, forged of steel or conjured of sorcery, can
touch this foe. " To quench the inferno, he must seek the remedy in the
wind. Lightning will
find
him on that path, for the one in white, his true beloved, will betray him in
her blood.' "
Shota
leaned back, taking her teacup with her. "It is true, as you say, that the
events in prophecy can be altered, or avoided, but not in a double bind
prophecy. This one is such a prophecy, a trap that ensnares its victim. The red
moon proves that the trap has sprung."
"But
there must be a way-" Kahlan pushed her hands back into her hair.
"Shota, what am I to do?"
"You
are to be wedded to another," she whispered, "as is Richard. What is
beyond, I don't see, but this much of it is the future."
"Shota,
I know you're speaking the truth, but how can it be that I would betray
Richard? I'm telling you the truth; I would die before I would betray him. My
heart won't allow me to betray him. I couldn't."
Shota
smoothed a loose wisp of her dress. "Think. Mother Confessor, and you will
see that you are wrong, just as I showed you that you were wrong that I could
no longer harm you."
"How?
How could I do such a thing, when I know it isn't in me-for any reason-to
betray him?"
Shota
took a patient breath. "It is not nearly so difficult as you wish to
think. What if you knew, for example, that you had only one way to save his
life, and that way was to betray him, but in so doing, you would lose his love?
Would you make the sacrifice of his love to preserve his life? The truth,
now."
Kahlan
swallowed past the lump in her throat. "Yes. I would betray him if it was
to save his life."
"So,
you see, it is not as impossible an event as you imagined." "I guess
not," Kahlan said in a small voice. She pushed at a few crumbs on the
table. "Shota, what is the purpose of all this? Why would the future hold
that Richard will marry Nadine, and that I will marry another man? There must
be a reason. It goes against everything we both want, so there must be some
force pushing events down that path."
Shota
said after a moment's deliberation, "The Temple of the Winds hunts
Richard. The spirits have a hand in this." Kahlan's face sank wearily into
her hands.
"You
said to Nadine, 'May the spirits have mercy on him.' What did you mean by
that?"
"The
underworld contains more than just the good spirits. The spirits-good, and the
evil-are all involved in this."
Kahlan
didn't want to talk anymore. It was too painful, talking about the ruination of
her dreams and hopes as if they were pieces on a game board. "To what purpose?"
she mumbled. "The plague." Kahlan looked up. "What?"
"It
has something to do with the plague, and the thing of magic the dream walker
stole from the Temple of the Winds."
"You
mean that it could be that this could somehow be part of our attempt to find
the magic to stop the plague?"
"I
believe it is so," the witch woman said at last. "You and Richard are
desperately seeking a way to stop the plague and save the lives of countless
people. I see in the future that you each wed other people.
"For
what other reason would both of you make such a sacrifice?" "But why
would it be necessary-"
"You
seek something I cannot answer. I cannot alter what will be, nor do I know the
reason for it. We are forced to consider the possibilities. Think.
"If
the only way to save all those people from dying in a firestorm of plague were
for Richard and you to sacrifice your life together, perhaps, say, to prove
your true devotion to protecting innocent lives, would you both do such a
thing?' '
Kahlan
put her trembling hands in her lap, under the table. She had seen the pain in
Richard's eyes when he had watched that boy die. She knew her own pain. They
had both seen innocent, sick children, who were going to die. How many more
would die?
She
would never be able to live with herself if the only way to save those children
was to sacrifice her love, and she refused.
"How
could we not? Even if it would kill us, how could we not? But how could the
good spirits demand such a price?"
Kahlan
suddenly remembered Denna's spirit taking the Keeper's mark from Richard, and
freely choosing to go in Richard's place to eternal torment at the Keeper's
hands. That it turned out that Denna didn't have to face that fate didn't
matter; she thought that she would, and had sacrificed her soul in the place of
one she loved.
The
branches of a nearby maple tree clacked together in the gentle breeze. Kahlan
could hear the flags atop Shota's palace snapping in the wind. The air tasted
of spring. The grasses were a bright, new green. Life was beginning to bud all
around. Kahlan's heart felt like dead ashes.
"Then
I will tell you one other thing," Shota said, as if from a great distance.
Kahlan listened from the bottom of a well of despair. "You have not heard
the last message from the winds. You will receive one more, involving the moon.
This will be the consequential communion.
"Do
not ignore it, nor dismiss it. Your future, Richard's future, and the future of
all those innocent people will hinge on this event. Both of you must use all
you have learned in order to comprehend the chance you will be offered."
"Chance? Chance for what?"
Shota's
gaze riveted Kahlan. "The chance to carry out your most solemn duty. The
chance to save all the innocent lives of those who depend upon you to do what
they cannot." "How soon?" "I only know it will not be
long."
Kahlan
nodded. She wondered why she wasn't crying. It seemed as if this was the most
devastating personal tragedy she could imagine-losing Richard-and yet, she
wasn't crying. She guessed she would, but not now, not here.
Kahlan
stared at the table. ' 'Shota, you would try to stop us from having a child,
wouldn't you? A boy child?" "Yes."
"You
would try to kill our son, if we had one, wouldn't you?" "Yes."
"Then
how do I know that this isn't just some plot on your part to prevent us from
having a child?" "You will have to judge the truth of my words with
your own mind and heart."
316
Kahlan
remembered the dying boy's words, and the prophecy. Somehow, she had known all
along that she would never marry Richard. It was all just an impossible dream.
When
she was young, Kahlan had asked her mother about growing up and having a love.
a husband, a home. Her mother had stood before her, beautiful, radiant.
statuesque, but wearing her Confessors face. Confessors don't have love,
Kahlan. They have duty. Richard was born a war wizard. He had been born for a
purpose. Duty. She watched the breeze roll a few of the crumbs from the table.
"I believe you," Kahlan whispered. "I wish I didn't, but I do.
You're telling me the truth."
There
was nothing else to say. Kahlan stood. She had to lock her knees to stay
upright on her trembling legs. She tried to remember where the sliph's well
was, but she couldn't seem to make her mind work. "Thank you for the
tea," she heard herself say. "It was lovely." If Shota answered,
Kahlan didn't hear it.
"Shota?"
Kahlan grasped the back of the chair to steady herself. "Could you point
me in the right direction? I can't seem to remember . . ."
Shota
was there, taking her arm. "I will walk partway with you, child,"
Shota said in a soft, compassionate voice, "so you may find your
way."
They
walked the road in silence. Kahlan tried to find cheer in the warm spring
morning. It was still so cold in Aydindril. It had been snowing when she left.
Still, she couldn't find any cheer in the fine day.
As they
climbed the stone steps cut into the cliff, Kahlan fought to regain a sense of
purpose. If she and Richard could somehow save all those people from the
plague, it would be a wonderful thing. Most wouldn't care about the sacrifice
they made, but that wouldn't lessen the relief she would feel in the sound of a
child's laughter, or the sight of a mother's joy in her child's safety.
There
would still be things to live for. She could fill the void with the happiness
to be seen in the eyes of her people. She would have done something no other
could do. She and Richard would have stopped Jagang from harming all those
people.
Near
the top of the cliff, Kahlan paused at a turn in the steps and looked out at
Agaden Reach. It truly was a beautiful place, this valley nestled among the
peaks of jagged mountains.
She
remembered that the Keeper had sent a wizard and a screeling to kill Shota.
Shota had barely escaped with her life. She had vowed to regain her home.
"I'm
glad you got your home back. I'm glad for you, Shota. I really am. Agaden Reach
belongs to you." "Thank you. Mother Confessor."
Kahlan
looked to the witch woman's almond eyes. "What did you do to the wizard
who chased you out?"
"What
I said I would do. I tied him up by his thumbs, and I skinned him alive. I sat
back and watched as his magic bled from his skinless carcass." She turned
and gestured back down into the green valley. "I covered the seat of my
throne with his hide."
Kahlan
remembered that that was precisely what Shota had promised to do. It was small
wonder that even wizards rarely dared to enter Agaden Reach; Shota was
more
than a match for a wizard. One wizard, at least, had learned that lesson too
late.
"I
can't say I blame you-the Keeper sending him to kill you and all. If the Keeper
had gotten you, well, I know how much you feared that."
"I
owe you and Richard a debt. Richard prevented the Keeper from having us
all."
'I'm
glad the wizard didn't send you to the Keeper, Shota." Kahlan really meant
it. She still knew Shota was dangerous, but the witch woman seemed also to have
a compassion that Kahlan hadn't expected.
"Do
you know what he said to me, this wizard?" Shota asked. "He said he
forgave me. Can you believe it? He granted me forgiveness. And then he begged
mine."
The
wind carried some of Kahlan's hair across her face. She pulled it back.
"Seems a strange thing for him to say, considering."
"The
Wizard's Fourth Rule, he called it. He said that there was magic in
forgiveness, in the Fourth Rule. Magic to heal. In forgiveness you grant, and
more so in the forgiveness you receive."
"I
guess the Keeper's minion would say anything to try to get away with what he
had done, and to get away from you. I can understand you not being in the mood
to forgive him."
Light
seemed to vanish into the ageless depths of Shota's eyes. "He forgot to
place the word 'sincere' before 'forgiveness.' "
CHAPTER������������� 42
Kahlan
watched the witch woman disappear back into the gloomy forest. Vines hanging
down from craggy branches reached out to touch their mistress as she passed,
while tendrils and roots stretched up to brush her leg. She vanished into a
shroud of mist. Unseen creatures called in low whistles and clicks from the
direction she had gone.
Kahlan
turned back to the moss-covered boulder Shota had shown her and, just beyond,
found the sliph's well. The silver face of the sliph rose from beyond the
round, stone wall, to watch as Kahlan approached. Kahlan almost wished the
sliph hadn't come, as if somehow, if Kahlan couldn't get back, none of the
things she had learned would come to pass.
How was
she going to look into Richard's eyes and not scream in anguish? How was she
ever going to be able to go on? How would she find the will to live? "Do
you wish to travel?" the sliph asked. "No, but I must."
The
sliph frowned, as if well puzzled. "If you wish to travel, I will be
ready." Kahlan sank to the ground, put her back to the sliph's well, and
folded her legs under herself. Was she to give up this easily? Was she to
submit meekly to the fates? She didn't have a choice. Think of the solution,
not the problem.
Somehow,
things didn't seem as desperate as they had back in the reach. There had to be
a way to solve this. Richard would not so easily give in. He would fight for
her. She would fight for him. They loved each other, and that was more
important than anything else.
Kahlan's
mind felt as if it were in a fog. She tried to focus with more resolve. She
couldn't just give up. She had to face this with her old determination.
She
knew that witch women bewitched people. They didn't necessarily do it out of
malice; it was just the way they were. It was like a person not being able to
help the fact that they were tall, or short, or the color of their hair. Witch
women bewitched people because that was the way their magic worked.
Shota
had bewitched Richard, to an extent. Only the magic of the Sword of Truth saved
him the first time. The Sword of Truth.
Richard
was the Seeker. This was the kind of thing a Seeker did: solved problems. She
was in love with the Seeker. He would not so easily give up.
Kahlan
plucked a leaf and tore little strips from it as she began to reconsider
everything she had been told by Shota. How much of it dare she believe? It was
all beginning to seem like a dream, from which she was just coming awake.
Matters could not possibly be as desperate as she had thought. Her father had
told her never to give up. to fight with every breath, with the last
breath
if need be. Nor would Richard give in easily. This wasn't ended yet. The future
was still the future, and despite what Shota said, the matter was not yet
decided.
Something
at her shoulder was bothering her. As she thought, she flicked her hand at it,
and then went back to tearing strips off the big leaf. There had to be a way to
solve this.
When
she swatted at her shoulder again, her fingers hit the bone knife. It felt
warm.
Kahlan
drew the knife and held it in her lap. The knife was warm. It seemed to pulse
and vibrate. It grew so hot that it became uncomfortable to hold.
Kahlan
watched, wide-eyed, as the black feathers stood up. They danced and waved and
twisted in a breeze. Her hair hung limp. The air was dead still. There was no
breeze. Kahlan shot to her feet. "Sliph!"
The
sliph's silver face was right there, close. Kahlan backed away a bit.
"Sliph, I need to travel."
"Come,
we will travel. Where do you wish to go?" "The Mud People. I need to
go to the Mud People." The liquid features contorted in thought. "I
do not know this place." "It's not a place. They're people.
People-" Kahlan tapped her chest-"they're people, like me."
"I
know different peoples, but not these Mud People." Kahlan pushed back her
hair, trying to think. "They live in the wilds." "I know places
in the wilds. Which one do you wish to travel to? Name it, and we will travel.
You will be pleased."
"Well.
it's a place that's flat. It's a grassland. Flat grassland. No mountains, like
here." Kahlan gestured around, but realized that the sliph could see only
trees. "I know several places like that." "Which places? Maybe
I'll recognize them." "I can travel to a place overlooking the
Callisidrin River-" "To the west of the Callisidrin. The Mud People
are farther west." "I can travel to Tondelen Vale, the Harja Rift,
Kea Plains, Sealan, Herkon Split. Anderith, Pickton, the Jocopo Treasure-"
''The
what? What was the last one?' ' She knew most of the rest of the places the
sliph named, but they weren't close to the Mud People. "The Jocopo
Treasure. Do you wish to travel there?"
Kahlan
held out the warm bone knife-grandfather's knife. Chandalen had told her how
the Jocopo had made war on the Mud People, and the ancestor spirits had guided
Chandalen's grandfather in how to defend his people against the Jocopo.
Chandalen had said they used to trade with the Jocopo, before their war. The
Jocopo had to be close to the Mud People. "Say the last place again,"
Kahlan said. "The Jocopo Treasure."
At the
echoing words, the black feathers danced and twisted. Kahlan shoved the bone
knife back in the band around her upper arm. She sprang up onto the stone wall.
"That's
where I wish to go: the Jocopo Treasure. I wish to travel to the Jocopo
Treasure. Can you take me there, sliph?"
A
silver arm swept her off the stone wall. "Come. We will travel to the
Jocopo Treasure. You will be pleased."
Kahlan
gasped one quick breath before she was plunged into the quicksilver froth. She
let the breath go, and inhaled the sliph, but this time, numbed by troubling
thoughts of losing Richard, of his marrying Nadine, she felt no rapture.
Zedd
cackled like a madman. Ann was upside down in his vision. He stuck out his
tongue at her and blew, making a long, crude sound.
"You
needn't attempt to pretend," she growled. "It seems to be your
natural state."
Zedd
moved his legs as if trying to walk upside down through the air. The blood was
rushing to his head.
"Do
you wish to die with your dignity?" he asked her. "Or would you
rather live." ' I'll not play a fool."
"That's
the word-play! Don't just sit there in the mud. Play in it!" She leaned
over, putting her head close to his. He was standing on it in the mud.
"Zedd, you can't possibly think such a thing would work."
"You
said it yourself. You are mucking about with a crazy man. It was your
suggestion." "I suggested no such thing!"
"Perhaps
you didn't suggest it, but you were the one who gave me the inspiration. I'll
be happy to give you full credit, when we tell people the story."
"Tell
people! In the first place, it won't work. In the second place, I realize full
well that you would be only too delighted to tell people. That's just one more
reason why I won't do it."
Zedd
howled like a coyote. He stiffened his legs and his spine, letting himself
topple like a felled tree. Mud splashed on Ann. Fuming, she wiped a small splat
from her nose.
At the
tall stick fence, grim-faced Nangtong guards watched the two prisoners, the two
sacrifices. Zedd and Ann had sat in the mud with their backs to one another and
untied the ropes binding their wrists. The guards, armed with spears and bows,
didn't seem to care; the prisoners couldn't get away. Zedd knew they were
right.
Happy
people had begun to stop by the pigpen at dawn. As the morning wore on, the
crowd grew as more people stopped by to chatter with the guards and take a look
at the fine offerings. Apparently, everyone was in a good mood because they now
had a sacrifice for the spirits. Their lives would be safe after the unhappy
spirits were appeased.
The
guards and the people of the Nangtong village, watching from the other side of
the fence, were now looking less pleased. They fidgeted with the cloth covering
their faces, making sure it hid enough, and that it was secure. The guards
began wiping more ash on their faces and bodies. Apparently, one couldn't be
too careful, lest the spirits recognize them.
Zedd
tucked his head down between his knees and rolled himself through the wet,
sticky slop. He laughed maniacally as he rolled in a circle around Ann's squat
figure sitting on the cold ground. "Would you stop that!"
Zedd
spread supine in the mud before her. He swept his rigid arms and legs through
the mud.
"Ann,"
he said in a low tone, "we have important business. I think we might have
better success if we attempt to carry out those tasks in this world, rather
than in the underworld, after we are dead." "I know we can't help if
we're dead."
"It
would stand to reason, then, that we need to get away, now, wouldn't it?"
"Of course it would," she grumbled. "But I don't think-"
Zedd plopped himself down in her lap. She winced in disgust. Her nose wrinkled
when he rested his muddy arms around her neck.
"Ann,
if we do nothing, we die. If we try to fight these people, we will die. Without
the use of our magic, we can't escape them. Our only option is to convince them
to let us go. We can't speak their language, and even if we could, I doubt we
would be able to persuade them." "Yes, but-"
"We
have only one chance, as I see it. We must convince them that we are quite
loony. This sacrifice is a sacred service to their spirit ancestors. Look at
the guards behind my back. Do they look happy?" "Well, no."
' If
they believe that we're crazy, then they just might think twice before
sacrificing us to their spirits. Wouldn't the spirits be insulted to receive a
lunatic as a sacrifice? Wouldn't that be disrespectful? We have to make them
fear insulting their spirits with two loony people." "But that's . .
. crazy."
"Look
at it this way. A sacrifice is something like a treaty wedding between two
peoples. The bride is the sacrifice of one people to another, in the flesh of
the new husband, all in the hope for a peaceful and productive future. The
bride's new people treat her with respect. The bride's people treat the husband
and his people with respect. It's all an arrangement symbolizing unity,
continuity, and hope for the future.
"We
are like the bride, being offered to the spirits. How would it look if the
Nangtong offered an unworthy, demented bride? If you were one of the spirits, wouldn't
you be offended?" "If I got you in the bargain, I would be."
Zedd howled at the sky. Ann winced and pulled away from him. "It's our
only chance, Ann." He leaned close, whispering in her ear. "I swear
an oath as First Wizard that I will never tell anyone how you behaved."
He drew
back and grinned at her. "Besides, it's fun. Remember how much fun it was
as a child to play outside? To play in the mud? Why, it was the grandest of
things." "But it might not work."
"Even
if it doesn't, wouldn't you rather die having fun on the last day of your life,
instead of sitting here, afraid and cold and dirty? Wouldn't you rather have
some childlike fun one last time? Let yourself go, Prelate, and recall what it
was to be a child. Let yourself do anything that comes into your head. Have
fun. Be a child."
With a
serious expression, Ann considered his words. "You won't tell
anyone?"
"You
have my word. You can act with childish glee. and no one but I will ever
know-and the Nangtong, of course."
"Another
of your acts of desperation. Zedd?"
"The
time for desperation is upon us. Let's play."
Ann
smiled a sly smile. She stiff-armed him in the chest, knocking him back into
the mud. With a riot of laughter, she leaped on top of him.
They
wrestled like children, rolling through the slop. After a half dozen turns, Ann
was a mud monster with arms, legs, and two eyes. The mud split, revealing a
pink mouth as she howled with him at the sky.
They
made mudballs and used the pigs as targets. They chased the pigs. They flopped
onto the hard, round backs of the squealing creatures, riding them around until
they were tossed off into the mud. Zedd doubted that Ann had ever been this
dirty in her nine centuries of life.
He
realized, while they were having a one-legged game of tag that involved more
falling in the mud than hopping progress, that her laughter had changed.
Ann was
having fun.
They
stomped through puddles. They chased the pigs. They ran around the enclosure
rattling sticks against the fence.
And
then they hit upon the idea of making faces at the guards. They drew whimsical
expressions on each other's faces in mud. They made every rude noise they could
think of. They jumped and laughed and pointed at the solemn guards.
Ann and
Zedd got to laughing so hard that they couldn't stand, and like two drunks,
they rolled on the ground, holding their sides.
The
crowd grew. Worried whispers swept through the onlookers.
Ann
stuck her thumbs in her ears and wiggled her fingers as she made faces at them.
Zedd stood on his head and sang a few lewd ballads he knew. Ann laughed
hysterically as he mispronounced key words.
Zedd
fell to laughing, and then fell in the mud, and then Ann fell on him. She sat
on his stomach, pinning him to the ground as she tickled him under his arms, while
he gasped for breath between laughter and tickled her ribs. The two of them had
never had so much fun. The pigs cowered in the corner.
Suddenly,
buckets of water were dumped over the both of them as they were furiously
engaged in trying to find each other's most ticklish spots. They looked up.
More water rained down on them.
As fast
as the mud was washed off them, they dived back into it. Ash-covered guards
seized them by the arms and held them at spearpoint while they were once again
washed off. Zedd peered over at Ann. She peered back. She looked ridiculous,
her face emerging from streamers of slop. He giggled and made a face at her.
She giggled and made a face back. The men yelled.
Zedd's
cheeks puffed with attempts to halt his laughing. The guards shoved them
forward, spears poking in their backs. It reminded him of being tickled, and
they both laughed.
It was
as if once uncorked, the laughter had a life of its own. If they were to be
sacrificed, what difference did it make? They might as well have the last
laugh.
The
crowd of shrouded figures parted as the two prisoners were led out of the pigs'
pen.
Giggling,
Zedd held his arm high and waved. "Wave at the people, Annie."
She
made faces instead. Zedd liked the idea and imitated her. People shrank back,
as if seeing a horrifying sight. Some of the women wept and wailed. Zedd
and Ann
laughed and pointed at them as the women ran from the crowd, seeking refuge
from the lunatics.
The
tents and onlookers were soon left behind as their captors prodded them on with
spears. Before long, the two dirty, smelly, happy sacrifices were out in the
hills. Thirty-five or forty Nangtong spirit hunters, all holding ready spears
or bows, followed behind. Zedd noticed that some of them had brought packs and
provisions.
First
Wizard Zeddicus Zu'l Zorander and Prelate Annalina Aldurren skipped along ahead
of the spears, laughing and making outrageous, ever-increasing claims as to how
many onions they could eat without producing tears.
Zedd
hadn't a clue where they were going, but it was a fine morning to be going
there, wherever it was.
"It's
kind of funny, Lord Rahl," Lieutenant Crawford said. Richard gazed out
over the boulder field. "What's funny about it?" The lieutenant bent
his head back to peer up the cliff. "Well, I meant it's odd. I grew up in
rugged mountains, so I've seen places like these mountains my whole life, but
this place is odd." He turned and pointed. "See that mountain over
there? You can see where the rockslide came from."
Richard
put a hand over his brow to shield his eyes from the low afternoon sun. The
mountain the lieutenant was pointing to was rugged and covered with trees,
except for the uppermost reaches. On the steep side facing them, a part of it
had given way, leaving naked rock to scar the mountain where the rock had
broken off. At the bottom of the barren scar lay a boulder field. "What
about it?"
"Well,
look at all the rock at the bottom. That's the portion that broke off the face
of the mountain." He gestured to the boulder field they stood atop.
"This isn't the same."
Another
soldier approached and saluted with a fist to his heart. He cast a wary glance
at Ulic and Egan, who were standing with their arms folded, while he waited
silently.
"Nothing,
Lord Rahl," he said when Richard acknowledged him. "Not so much as a
flake of rock that's been worked with tools."
"Keep
looking. Try the outer fringes of the boulder field. Look for places where you
can crawl down under some of the larger boulders and check under there,
too."
The soldier
saluted and hurried off. There wasn't much of the day left. Richard had told
them that he didn't want to stay the next day. He wanted to get back to
Aydindril. Kahlan would probably be back that night, or possibly tomorrow. He
wanted to be there. If she came back. If she was still alive.
He
broke out in a sweat at the very thought. His knees felt weak. He banished the
thought. She would be back. That was all there was to it. She would be back. He
made himself quit thinking about it, and put his mind to the problem at hand.
"So what do you think, lieutenant?"
Lieutenant
Crawford pitched a stone, watching it bounce first off one boulder, and then
another. The sharp sound echoed off the cliff behind them.
"It
could be that the face of this mountain broke off much longer ago. Then, over
all that time, things started growing in, dying, making soil for larger things
to
grow,
and then they died, making yet more soil. It could be that it's been covered
over."
Richard
knew what Lieutenant Crawford was talking about. He knew how a forest, in time,
could cover over rockslides. If you dug in the forest at the bottom of a cliff,
you often encountered the bones of the fallen mountain. "I don't think so,
in this case."
The
lieutenant looked over at him. "May I ask why you think not. Lord
Rahl?" Richard stared across the rift to the next mountain. "Well,
look at that cliff. The face of it is rough and uneven, yet the rock of the
mountain left behind after the face fell away is weathered now, so much of it
isn't sharp. It's been worn by time.
"Some
of it is sharp, though. Water gets in the cracks, freezes, and breaks off more
of the rock with time. You can see some of those sharp places; but most of it
has a softer look.
"It
has the look to me that it happened long before this slide here, yet you can
still see most of the rock lying at the bottom of the cliff. Here, there's much
less scree."
Egan
unfolded his arms and brushed back his blond hair. "Could just be the lay
of the land. This cliff faces south, letting the sun in to help things grow,
whereas that one faces north, so it's in shade most of the time. The forest
wouldn't grow in as well over there, and that would leave the scree
exposed." Egan had a point.
"There's
more to it." Richard tilted his head back and looked up the thousands of
feet of sheer cliff face towering above them. "Half this mountain is gone.
That one over there is just a small slide, in comparison.
"Look
up at this mountain, and try to imagine what it would have looked like before
this happened. It's cleaved from the very top all the way down, like a log
round split in half. All the rest of the mountains around here are more or less
cone-shaped. This one is only half a cone.
"Even
if I'm wrong, and half the mountain isn't gone, and it used to be shaped much
as we see it now, there would still be an immense amount of rock down here. I
mean, even if it used to be much this shape, and only a shell of rock ten or
twenty feet thick collapsed, by the towering height alone there would have to be
a huge pile of rubble.
"This
rock is sharp, so it might be pieces broken off by the working of water
freezing, but probably, since I can't see any time-worn places, it happened
more recently. Yet I just don't see any evidence of the mass of rock that would
have had to come off this mountain. Even if it had been covered over in time.
I'd think that where we're standing would be a huge mound."
The
lieutenant glanced about. "You have a point. This is pretty much level
with the bottom of the rift. If all that rock broke off, there's no mound under
the forest down here."
Richard
watched the soldiers all about searching through the rock and woods for any
sign of the Temple of the Winds. None looked to be finding anything.
"I
can't see that it's down here. I just don't see any reason to believe that the
mountain fell down here."
Ulic
and Egan folded their arms again, the matter settled as far as they were
concerned.
Lieutenant
Crawford cleared his throat. "Lord Rahl, if the half of Mount Kymer-mosst
that used to be there isn't down here, then where is it?"
Richard
shared a long look with the man. "That's what I'd like to know. If it
isn't down here, then it must be someplace else."
The
blond-headed lieutenant shifted his weight to his other foot. "Well, it
didn't just get up and walk away. Lord Rahl."
Richard
turned his scabbard out of the way as he started climbing down off the rocks.
He realized he was frightening the man; Richard seemed to be suggesting
something that hinted at magic.
"It
must be as you say, lieutenant. It must have fallen and grown over. Perhaps the
cleft between the mountains was deeper back then, and the fall simply filled it
in, rather than making a mound."
The
lieutenant liked the idea. It gave him a rock solid reality. Richard didn't
believe it. The cliff face looked peculiar to him. It was too smooth, as if
cleaved with a huge sword. Yes, there were jagged places, but that would
explain the rock that was at the bottom. It looked to him as though the
mountain had been cut off and taken away, and over time water and ice had
worked at the smooth face of the cliff, breaking off pieces and making it more
craggy; but it was nowhere near as rough as the other cliffs round about.
"That
might explain it. Lord Rahl," the lieutenant said. "If that's true,
though, that would mean that the temple you're looking for must be buried deep
underground."
With
his two huge guards right at his heels, Richard made for the horses. "I
want to have a look up on top. I want to see the ruins up there."
Their
guide, a middle-aged man named Andy Millett, was waiting with the horses. He
wore simple wool clothes of browns and greens, much like Richard used to wear.
His shaggy brown hair hung past his ears. Andy was immensely proud that Lord
Rahl had asked him to guide them to Mount Kymermosst. Richard felt a bit
sheepish about that; Andy was simply the first person Richard found who knew
where it was.
"Andy,
I'd like to go up to the ruins on top."
Andy
handed Richard the reins to the big roan. "Sure enough. Lord Rahl. There's
not much up there, but I'd be glad to show you, just the same."
Big as
his two guards were, they mounted lightly, their horses hardly moving under the
sudden weight. Richard swung up into the saddle and wiggled his right boot into
the stirrup.
"Can
we get up there before dark? Most of that spring snowstorm is melted. The trail
should be open."
Andy
glanced at the sun, which was just about touching a mountain. "With the
way you ride. Lord Rahl, I'd say long before. Usually, important people slow me
down. I think I'm the one slowing you down."
Richard
smiled. He remembered the same thing himself. The more important the person he
guided, the slower they went, it seemed.
The sky
was streaked with golds and reds by the time they reached the ruins. The
surrounding mountains were cast in deep shadow. The ruins seemed to glow in the
honeyed light.
There
were some once elegant structures, now crumbling, that looked to have been a
part of a larger place, just as Kahlan had said. Here and there on the barren
mountaintop, parts of walls still stood, their stones not covered by vine and
wood, as they would have been down below, but covered with a rust of lichens
instead. Richard dismounted and handed his reins to Lieutenant Crawford. The
building
to the
left of the broad road was large by any standards Richard had grown up with,
but compared to castles and palaces he had seen since, it was an insignificant
structure.
The
doorway stood empty. Crumbling evidence of a doorfrarne remained, still partly
covered with gold leaf. Inside, the walls echoed with his footsteps. A stone
bench sat in one room of the roofless building. In another room a stone
fountain held snowmelt.
A
twisting hall with most of its barrel ceiling still in place led Richard past a
warren of rooms. The hall split, leading, he surmised, to rooms at either
corner of the building. He followed the left branch to the room at the end.
Like
all the rooms on this side, it faced the cliff. Hollow rectangles gaped where
windows once shielded the room from wind and rain. Beyond, through the
openings, was a view past the edge of the cliff to the blue haze of the
mountains beyond.
This
was the place where visitors and supplicants to the temple would have awaited
admittance. During their wait, they would have had a glorious view of the
Temple of the Winds. If they were turned away, they left with at least that
much. He could almost see what those who had stood in this very spot had seen.
It was
his gift. he knew, that was telling him this, much the way the spirits of those
who once held the Sword of Truth guided him when he used that magic.
As he
stood staring, he could almost imagine it there, just beyond the edge, a place
of grandeur and might. This was where the wizards had taken things of powerful
magic for safekeeping. The wizards of old, some of them Richard's ancestors,
had probably stood where he stood, looking out at the Temple of the Winds.
Richard
strolled around outside in the fading light, past the stately columns, peering
into guard huts and once magnificent garden structures, touching the
deteriorating walls. Even though it all was now crumbling, it was easy for him
to imagine the majestic scene it must once have been.
He
stood in the center of the broad road that ran through the crumbling ruins,
feeling his gold cloak billowing out behind in the wind, trying to visualize
the place as it had been, trying to get the feel of it. The road, more than the
buildings, gave him the eerie feeling of the presence of the temple beyond. This
road had once led right into the Temple of the Winds.
He
strode the wide roadway, imagining striding toward the Temple of the Winds, the
winds that had said they were hunting him. He passed along part of a wall, and
between the hollow stone buildings, feeling the timeless quality of the place,
feeling the life that once was here.
But
where had it gone? How was he to find it? Where else could he look? It had been
here, and even now, Richard could almost see it, feel it, sense it, as if his
gift were pulling him onward, pulling him home. Abruptly, he was jerked to a
halt.
Ulic on
one side of him, and Egan on the other, had seized him under his arms and
pulled him back. He looked down, and saw that another step would have taken him
out into thin air. Vultures soared in the updraft not twenty feet straight in
front of him.
He felt
as if he was standing at the edge of the world. The view was dizzying. The hair
on the back of his neck stiffened.
More
should lie beyond the edge at his feet; he knew it should. But there was
nothing there. The Temple of the Winds was gone.
CHAPTER������������� 43
Breathe.
Kahlan
did as she was told, expelling the sliph, and pulling in the sharp, cold air.
The
sound of a hissing torch roared in her ears. Her own breath echoed painfully.
But she knew what to expect by now, and calmly waited for the world around her
to twist back to normal.
Except
this was not normal. At least it was not the normal she expected. "Sliph,
where are we?" Her voice reverberated around her. "Where you wished
to travel: the Jocopo Treasure. You should be pleased, but if you are not, I
will try again."
"No,
no, it isn't that I'm not pleased, it's just that this wasn't what I
expected." She was in a cave. The torch wasn't the familiar kind she was
accustomed to, a length of wood with pitch at the head, but instead was made of
bundled reeds. The ceiling nearly brushed her head as she swung her legs down
from the sliph's well and stood.
Kahlan
pulled the bundled-reed torch from where it was wedged in a split in the rough
stone wall.
"I'll
be back," she told the sliph. "I'll have a look around, and if I
don't find a way out, I'll come back and we'll go somewhere else." She
realized that there must be a way out, or the torch wouldn't have been there.
"Or else, when I'm through finding what I'm looking for, I'll be
back."
"I
will be ready when you wish to travel. We will travel again. You will be
pleased."
Kahlan
nodded to the silver face reflecting the dancing torchlight, then stepped into
the cave. There was only one way out of the room she was in, a wide, low
passageway, so she went through it, following it as it twisted and turned
through the dark brown rock. There were no other corridors, or rooms, so she
kept going.
The
passageway led to a broad room, perhaps fifty or sixty feet across, and she
found out why this place was called the Jocopo Treasure. Torchlight reflected
back in thousands of golden sparkles. The room was filled with gold.
Some
was stacked in crude ingots, or spheres, as if the molten metal had been poured
into pots, the pots then broken away. Simple boxes were piled high with
nuggets. Other boxes, with handles at both ends so they could be carried by two
men, held a rubble of golden objects.
There
were several tables, still holding gold disks, and shelves along one wall. The
shelves held several gold statues, but were filled mostly with rolled vellum
scrolls. Kahlan wasn't interested in the Jocopo Treasure; she didn't take time
to inspect the objects all around and, instead, made for the corridor on the
other side of the room.
She
didn't want to linger in the room because she was worried and wanted to get to
the Mud People, but even if she had been interested in looking around, she
wouldn't have stayed long; the air smelled awful, and made her gag and cough.
The foul stench made her head spin and start to hurt.
The air
in the passageway was better, though not what she would call good. She reached
over and felt the bone knife, and found it still warm. At least it wasn't hot,
as it had been.
The
tunnel began slanting upward as it twisted along. As she went higher, the dark
rock became dirt, in places held back with beams. She didn't see any other
passages branching off until she began to smell fresh air. One tunnel branched
left, and in a few paces, another right. She felt cool air drifting down from
the one straight ahead, and so went that way.
The
flame of the torch whipped and fluttered as she stepped out into the night. The
sky glittered with stars. A figure not far away sprang up. Kahlan backed a few
paces into the cave, glancing both ways to see if there was anyone else waiting
outside.
"Mother
Confessor?" came a voice she knew. Kahlan took a step forward and held out
the torch into the night air. "Chandalen? Chandalen, is it you?"
The
muscular figure rushed into the torchlight. He had no shirt, and was smeared
with mud. Grass bundles were tied to his arms and head. His straight black hair
was slicked down with the sticky mud the hunters used. Even though his face was
also smeared with the mud, she recognized the familiar, wide grin.
"Chandalen,"
she said with a sigh of relief. "Oh, Chandalen, I'm so happy to see
you."
"And
I you. Mother Confessor."
He
advanced toward her, to slap her face in the traditional Mud People greeting to
show respect for another's strength. Kahlan held her hands out, warding him.
"No! Stay away!" He straightened to a halt. "Why?"
"Because
there was sickness where I came from-in Aydindril. I don't want to get too
close to any of you, for fear I might pass the fever on to you and our
people."
The Mud
People were, indeed, her people. She and Richard had been named Mud People by
the Bird Man and the other elders, and were now members of the village, even
though they lived apart.
Chandalen's
pleasure at seeing her faded. "There is sickness here, too, Mother
Confessor. ''
Kahlan's
torch lowered. "What?" she whispered.
"Much
has happened. Our people are afraid, and I cannot protect them. We called a
gathering. Grandfather's spirit came to us. He said that there was much
trouble.
"He
said he must speak with you and that he would send you a message to come to
us."
"The
knife," she said. "I felt his call through the knife. I came right
away." "Yes. Just before dawn, he told us this. One of the elders
came out of the spirit house and said I was to come to this place to wait for
you. How did you come to us from the hole in the ground?" "It's a
long story. It was magic. . . . Chandalen, I don't have the time to wait
until
we can call another gathering to speak with the ancestor spirits. There's
trouble. I can't afford to wait three days."
He
lifted the torch from her hand. His face was grim under the mud mask.
"There is no need to wait three days. Grandfather waits for you in the
spirit house."
Kahlan's
eyes widened. She knew that a gathering lasted only through the one night it
was called. "How can that be?"
"The
elders still sit in the circle. Grandfather told them to wait for you. He, too,
waits." "How many are sick?"
Chandalen
held all his fingers up once, and then only one hand a second time. "They
have great pain in their heads. They empty their stomachs even though they have
nothing in them. They burn with fever. Some begin to turn black on their
fingers and toes."
"Dear
spirits," she whispered to herself. "Have any died?" "One
child died this day, just before grandfather sent me here. He was the first to
become sick."
Kahlan
herself felt sick. Her head spun as she tried to come to grips with what she
was hearing. The Mud People didn't usually tolerate other people coming to
their village, and they rarely ventured from their lands. How could this have
happened?
"Chandalen,
have any outsiders come?"
He
shook his head.� 'We would not allow it.
Outsiders bring trouble." He seemed to reconsider. "One may have
tried to come. But we would not allow her to come to the village."
"Her?"
"Yes.
Some of the children were playing at hunting out in the grassland. A woman came
to them, asking if she could come to the village. The children ran back to tell
us. When I took my hunters to the place, we could not find her. We told the
children that their spirit ancestors would be angry if they played such tricks
again."
Kahlan
feared to ask, because she feared the answer. "The child who died today,
he was one of those children who said they saw the woman, wasn't he?"
Chandalen cocked his head. "You are a wise woman, Mother Confessor."
"No, I'm a frightened woman, Chandalen. A woman came to Aydindril, and
talked to children. They have begun to die, too. Did the boy who died say that
she showed him a book?"
"When
I went on my journey with you, you showed me these things called books that you
use to pass on knowledge, but the children here do not know of such things. We
teach our children with living words, as our ancestors taught us.
"The
boy did say that this woman showed him pretty colored lights. That does not
sound like the books I remember."
Kahlan
put a hand to Chandalen's arm, a touch that once would have frightened him with
the implied threat of a Confessor's power, but now worried him for other
reasons.
"You
said we should not be close."
"It
doesn't matter, now," she reassured him. "I can cause no further
harm; the same sickness is here that is in Aydindril."
"I
am sorry. Mother Confessor, that this sickness and death should visit your
home, too."
They
embraced in friendship, and shared fear. "Chandalen, what is this place?
This cave?"
"I
told you of it once. The place with the bad air and the worthless metal."
"Then we're north of your home?" "North, and some west."
"How
long will it lake us to get back to the village?"
He gave
his own chest a thump with a fist. "Chandalen is strong and runs fast. I
left our village as the sun was going down. It takes Chandalen only a couple
hours. Even in the dark."
She
surveyed the moonlit grassland beyond the low, rocky hill on which they stood.
"There is enough moon to see our way." Kahlan managed a small smile.
"And you ought to know that I'm as strong as you, Chandalen."
Chandalen
returned the smile. It was a wonderful sight to see, even under the
circumstances. "Yes, I remember well your strength, Mother Confessor. We
will run, then."
The
moonlight conveyed intimately the ghostly, boxy shapes of the Mud People's
village lying hidden on the dark, grass-covered plain. Few lights burned in the
small windows. At this late hour not many people were out, and Kahlan was glad
for that; she didn't want to see the faces of these people, see the fear and
sorrow in their eyes, and know that many of them would die.
Chandalen
took her directly to the spirit house, among the communal buildings at the
north side of the village. Most of these buildings were bunched close together,
but the spirit house sat apart. Moonlight reflected off the tile roof Richard
had helped to make. Guards, Chandalen's hunters, ringed the windowless
building.
Outside
the door, on a low bench, sat the fatherly figure of the Bird Man. His silver
hair hanging down around his shoulders shone in the moonlight. He was naked.
Black and white mud covered his body and face in a tangle of whorls and lines:
a mask all in the gathering wore so the spirits could see them.
Two
pots, one with white mud and the other holding black, sat on the ground at the
Bird Man's feet. She could tell by the glazed look in his eyes that he was in a
trance, and speaking would do her no good. She knew what was required.
Kahlan
unbuckled her belt. "Chandalen, would you mind turning your back, please?
And ask your men to do the same." It was the greatest concession to her
modesty that circumstances would allow. Chandalen called out the order to his
men in his own language. "My men and I will guard the spirit house while
you and the elders are inside," Chandalen said to her over his shoulder.
When
she had slipped off all her clothes and at last stood naked in the cool night
air, the silent Bird Man began applying the gooey mud so that the spirits might
see her, too. Sleepy chickens sat watching from the nearby low wall. The wall
still bore a slash from Richard's sword.
She
knew she had to do this, to go in and speak with the spirits, but she wasn't
eager; speaking with the spirit ancestors was only done in times of dire need,
and while the results sometimes brought the answers needed, they never brought
joy. When the Bird Man had finished covering Kahlan with the black and white
mud,
he
silently led her inside. The six elders sat in a circle around the skulls of
ancestors arranged in the center. The Bird Man took his place, sitting
cross-legged on the floor. Kahlan sat in the circle, opposite him. to the right
of her friend Savidlin. She didn't speak to him; he. too. was in a trance,
seeing the spirit in the center of the circle that she could not yet see.
A woven
basket sat behind her. Knowing why it was there, she picked it up and reached
inside. Hesitantly. she seized a squirming red spirit frog and pressed its back
between her breasts-the one place she wasn't painted.
The
slime from the frog tingled against her skin. She released the spirit frog and
took up hands with the elders to either side. It wasn't long before she felt
herself spiraling into a daze.
,� The room began its dizzying spin. She was
lifted away from the world she knew. and carried into a revolving vortex of
light, shadow, aroma, and sound. The skulls spun with her.
Time
twisted, much as it did in the sliph. but not in the same comforting way. This
was a disorienting experience that brought sweat to her brow. It also brought
the spirit.
His
glowing form was before her. yet she couldn't recall when it had appeared to
her. It was simply there.
"Grandfather,
" she whispered in the tongue of the Mud People. Chandalen had said that
it was his grandfather who had come in the gathering. but she recognized him on
a more visceral level; he had become her protector. She felt the connection to
the bone that had been his in life.
"Child.'
'The unearthly sound of his voice coming through the Bird Man tingled against
her flesh. ''Thank you for heeding my call. '' "What does our ancestor's
spirit wish of me?"
The
Bird Man's mouth moved with the spirit's voice. "That which has been
partly entrusted to us has been violated. '' "Entrusted to you? What was
entrusted to you?" ''The Temple of the Winds. '' Kahlan's naked flesh
prickled with goose bumps.
Entrusted
to the spirits? The implications made her head swim. The spirit world was the
underworld, the world of the dead. How could something like a temple, built
mostly of inert materials like stone, be sent to the underworld? "The
Temple of the Winds is in the spirit world?"
"The
Temple of the Winds exists partly in the world of the dead, and partly in the
world of life. It exists in both places, both worlds, at once. '' "Both
places, both worlds, at once? How could such a thing he possible?" The
glowing form, like a shadow made of light, lifted a hand. "Is a tree a
creature of the soil, like the worms, or is it a creature of the air, like the
birds?"
Kahlan
would have preferred a simple answer, but she knew better than to argue with
the dead.
"Honored
grandfather, I guess the tree is of neither world, yet exists in both."
The spirit seemed to smile. ''So if does. child. '' the spirit said through the
Bird Man. "As does the Temple of the Winds."
Kahlan
leaned forward. "You mean, the Temple of the Winds is like the tree, with
its roots in this world, and its branches in your world? '' ' It exists in both
our worlds. '' "In this world, in the world of life, where is it?"
''
Where it always was, on the Mountain of the Four Winds. You know it as Mount
Kyntermosst. ''
"Mount
Kymennosst," Kahlan repeated in a flat tone. "Honored grandfather, I
have been to that place. The Temple of the Winds is no longer I here. It's
gone. " "You must find it."
"Find
it? It looks to have been there at one time, but the rock of the mountain where
the temple used to be has collapsed. The temple is gone, except for a few of
its outbuildings. There is nothing to find. I'm sorry, honored grandfather, but
in our world, the roots have died and crumbled. " The spirit stood
silently. Kahlan feared it might become angry. "Child," the spirit
said, but not through the Bird Man. The voice came from the spirit itself. The
sound was so painful it was almost more than she could bear. She felt as if the
flesh would burn from her bones. ' 'Something was stolen from the winds and
taken to your world. You must help Richard, or all my blood in your world, all
our people, will die. ''
Kahlan
swallowed. How could something be stolen from the spirit world, the world of
the dead, and be brought back to the world of the living?
"Can
you help me? Can you tell me anything that might help me to know how to find
the Temple of the Winds ? ''
"I
have not called you here to tell you how to find the winds. The way of the
winds will come with the moon. I have called you here to see the extent of what
has been released, and what will become of your world should this be allowed to
stand. ''
Grandfather's
spirit spread his arms. Soft light cascaded from them, like water coming over a
ledge. The light spread in her vision until she saw only white light.
The
light cleared, and she saw death. Corpses, like leaves littering the ground in
the autumn, lay everywhere. They were strewn in the street where they fell.
They sat on steps, slumped against railings. They lay in doorways and on
dead-carts.
Kahlan's
vision was carried through windows, as if on the wings of a bird. Bodies lay
rotting in homes. She saw them in beds, in chairs, in halls, stretched out on
floors, and slumped over one another. The stench gagged her.
With
her floating vision, Kahlan swept to towns and cities she knew, and everywhere
it was the same. Death had taken nearly everyone, their bodies black and
rotting even before they had died. The few still living, wherever she viewed,
wept in unrelieved anguish.
Her
floating vision returned to the Mud People's village. She saw the corpses of
people she knew. Beside dead cook fires lay dead mothers holding dead children
in their arms. Dead husbands held dead wives. Here and there, orphaned children
with tear-stained faces wailed hysterically beside the corpses of parents.
Everywhere, the stench was so thick it made her eyes water.
Kahlan
gasped back a sob as she closed her eyes. It did no good. The sight of the dead
burned through to the vision in her mind.
"This,
" the spirit said. "is what will come to pass if that stolen from the
winds isn't flailed. ''
"What
can I do?" Kahlan whispered through the tears.
"The
winds have been violated. That which was entrusted was taken. The winds have
decided that you are the path of the price. I have come to show you the results
of this
violation and to beg you. on behalf of my living descendants, to fulfill your
part, when you are asked. '' "And what is the price?"
"I
have not been shown the price, but I forewarn you that I do know that there is
no way for you to circumvent or avoid it. It must he as it will lie revealed to
you. or all will be lost. I ask that when the winds show you the path, you fake
it. lest what I have shown you comes to be. "
Kahlan,
tears streaming down her cheeks, didn't have to consider. "I will.
grandfather."
'
'Thank you. child. There is one other thing I would fell you. In our world,
where the souls of those departed from your world now reside, there are those
existing in the Light with the Creator, and those who are forever shadowed from
His glory by the Keeper. "
"You
mean that there are both good and evil spirits in this?" "That is an
oversimplification that nearly obscures the truth, but it is as near as you, in
your world, would be able to come to comprehending this world. In this, our
world, ail make it what if is. The winds must allow all to mark out the path. '
' "Can you tell me how the magic was stolen from the winds?"
"The path was betrayal. " "Betrayal? Who did they betray?"
''The Keeper. ''
Kahlan's
jaw dropped. She immediately thought of the Sister of the Dark who had been in
Aydindril: Sister Amelia. It had to be her. "The Sister of the Dark has
betrayed her master?"
"This
soul's path was to enter the Temple of the Winds through the Hall of the Betrayer.
That is the only way to achieve the initial breach. It was created as a
precaution.
'' To
tread the Hall of the Betrayer, a person must betray completely and
irrecoverably that in which they believe. Since they have irreparably betrayed
their cause. they would no longer have reason to enter.
"The
dream walker found a prophecy that could be used to defeat his foe, but to
ignite if, he needed magic from the winds.
"The
dream walker found a way to force this soul to betray her master, the Keeper,
yet still carry out the dream walker's wishes. He did this by at first allowing
her to maintain her oath to the Keeper and by relegating himself to the role of
her secondary master, her master in your world alone. Then. with the use of a
double bind, he forced her to betray her primary master. She was able to tread
Betrayer's Hall, with her charge from the dream walker, and her obligation to
if. intact. In this way. the dream walker violated the winds and obtained what
he wanted.
"Those
who sent the temple into the winds did, however, make contingency' plans,
should such a thing happen. The red moon was the ignition of these plans.
"
The
very word "betray" had made Kahlan's heart pound. "Is this the
way we must gain entrance to the winds?"
The
spirit considered her. as if weighing her soul. "Once the Temple of the
Winds has been violated, that path is closed, and another must be used. But
this is not your concern: the winds will issue their requirements in
conjunction with the precepts of balance. The five spirits guarding the winds
will dictate the path accordingly. ''
"Honored
grandfather, how can a place issue instructions? You make it seem as if the
winds are alive. "
"I
no longer exist in the world of life, yet, when called, I can pass information
through the veil. ''
Kahlan's
head hurt from trying to understand. She wished Richard were here to ask
questions. She feared to miss the important one.
' 'But,
honored grandfather, you can do this because you are a spirit. You lived once.
You have a soul. " The spirit began fading.
"The
boundary, the veil, was damaged by this event in the winds. I can remain no
longer. The skrin, the guardians of the boundary between worlds, pull me hack.
Because the violation in the winds altered the balance, we cannot return again
in a gathering unless the balance is restored. '' The spirit faded until she
could hardly see it.
"Grandfather,
I must know more. Is the plague itself magic?" The voice came from a great
distance. "The magic sent into the winds is of vast power. To use it fully
requires vast knowledge. It was used without understanding what was released,
or how to control it. The plague was begun by this magic, much as a bolt of
lightning from a wizard is magic, but if the lightning strikes a tinder
grassland, the resulting firestorm is not magic. The plague is like this. It
was begun with magic, but it is now simply a plague, as others before-random
and unpredictable-yet heated by magic. ''
"The
plague is in Aydindril, and here. Will it stay confined?" "No."
Jagang
didn't realize what he had done. This could end up killing him, too, if allowed
to burn out of control.
"Is
it. as you showed me, already in other places? Has it already been started in
these oilier places, too?"
The
light of the spirit extinguished like the weak flame of a lamp gone out.
"Yes, " came the distant, echoing whisper.
They
had hoped that they could confine the plague to Aydindril. That was hope lost.
The whole of the Midlands, the whole of the New World, was about to be consumed
in the firestorm started by that spark of magic from the Temple of the Winds.
In the
center of the circle, where the spirit had been, the air swirled as the spirit
vanished back into the underworld.
In the
distance, in the underworld, Kahlan heard the soft echo of laughter from a
different spirit. The malevolent chuckle made her skin crawl.
As
Kahlan came out of the trance of the gathering, the elders were there, standing
around her. They were more used to this altered state than she; her head still
spun sickeningly. Elder Breginderin reached down, offering her his hand to help
her up.
As she
took his hand. under the covering of black and white mud, she saw the tokens on
his legs. She gazed up into his face, at his kindly smile of assurance. He
would be dead within the day.
Her
friend, Savidlin, was there, holding out her clothes. Kahlan, despite the mud,
suddenly felt very naked. She started pulling on her clothes, trying not to
betray her embarrassment, and at the same time chiding herself for such mundane
concerns
in the
face of the impending catastrophe. The gathering was about calling the spirits
of the dead, not about being man or woman. Still, she was the only one of the
latter, and they were all the former.
"Thank
you for coming, Mother Confessor, " the Bird Man said. "We know this
homecoming is not the one of joy we all wished. ''
"No,
" she whispered, "it's not. My heart sings lo see my people again,
but the song is tempered by sadness. You know, honored elders, that Richard and
I will do what we must. We will not rest until this is stopped. '' "Do you
think you can stop such a thing as a fever?" Sunn asked. Savidlin placed a
hand on her shoulder as she buttoned her shirt. "The Mother Confessor and
Richard with the Temper have helped us before. We know their hearts. Our
ancestor said that this is a fever caused by magic. The Mother Confessor and
the Seeker have great magic. They will do what they must. " "Savidlin
is right. We will do what we must."
Savidlin
smiled at her. "And then, when you have finished, you will come home to
your people and be wedded, as you planned? My wife, Weselan. wishes to see her
friend, the Mother Confessor, wedded in the dress she made for you. "
Kahlan
swallowed back a cry. "There is nothing I could wish that would bring me
greater joy, except to see all our people well. ''
"You
are a great friend to all our people, child, " the Bird Man said. "We
look forward to the wedding, when you have finished with these matters of the
spirits and magic. ''
Kahlan
glanced at all the eyes watching her. She didn't think these men had witnessed
the visions of death she had been shown, or the true nature or dimensions of
the epidemic they faced. They had all seen fevers come before, but never one
like the plague.
"Honored
elders, if we fail . . . if we . . ." Her voice faltered. The Bird Man
came to her rescue.
' If
you should fail, child, we know it will not be because you didn't do everything
you could. If there is a path, we know you will do all you can to find if. We
trust in you. '' "Thank you," she murmured.
Tears
were watering her vision. She forced herself to hold her chin up. She would
only frighten these people if she showed her fear.
"Kahlan,
you must wed Richard with the Temper." The Bird Man chuckled softly as if
trying to cheer her. "He escaped wedding a Mud Woman before, as I had
planned for him. He will not escape wedding you, if I have any say. He must
marry a Mud Woman." She felt too numb to return the smile.
"Will
you stay the rest of the night?" Savidlin asked. "Weselan would find
joy in seeing you. "
"Forgive
me, honored elders, but if I am to save our people. I must return at once. I
must go to Richard and tell him what I have learned with your help. ''
CHAPTER� 44
A woman
stepped out of a doorway into the narrow, deserted alleyway. He had to stop, or
collide with her. Under her shawl she wore a thin dress, and he could tell by
the way her nipples stood out with the cold that she wore nothing underneath
the dress.
She
thought his smile was for her; it wasn't. It was amusement at the way
opportunity sometimes stepped into his path when he least expected it. He
guessed it was his extraordinary nature that drew such events to him. Expecting
it or not, he was never unprepared to bend events to his advantage. She returned
the smile as she ran her hand up his chest and with a single finger stroked the
bottom of his chin. "There, there, love. Care for a bit of pleasure?"
She
wasn't attractive; nonetheless, the nature of the chance opportunity instantly
ignited his need. He knew what this was about. By the way she stood close,
commanding his attention, he knew. He had had this kind of encounter before. In
fact, he sometimes sought it out. It was more of a challenge. With challenge
came a rare form of fulfillment.
It wasn't
an ideal situation-there were distinct disadvantages, such as not being able to
allow her screams to bring attention, yet there were still pleasures to be had,
even like this. His senses opened to it. Already, he was taking in the details,
like dry earth took in a soaking rain. He let the lust take him.
"Well,"
he said, drawing the word out, "do you have a room?" He knew she
wouldn't have one. He knew what this was about. She rested a wrist over his
shoulder. "Don't need no room, love. Just a half silver."
Discreetly
as possible, he swept his gaze over the close buildings. The windows were all
dark. Only a few lights in the distance reflected off the wet stone. This was a
warehouse district; no one lived in these buildings. There weren't likely to be
many people about, except passersby, like himself. Still, he knew he had to
temper his lust with prudence.
"A
little cold to be undressing out here on the cobblestones, isn't it?" She
put one hand on the side of his face to keep his attention focused on her. Her
other hand touched him between his legs. She purred with satisfaction at what
she found.
"Not
to worry, love. For a half silver I'll have someplace warm for you to put
it."
He was
enjoying the game. It had been too long. He put on his most innocent,
inexperienced expression for her.
"Well,
I don't know. This seems somewhat crude to me. I usually like it best when
there's time for the young lady to enjoy it, too."
"Oh,
I do enjoy it, love. You don't think I do this just for the half silver, do
you? 'Course not. I enjoy it. It's my pleasure."
She was
backing toward the doorway she had come from. He let her fingers, curled behind
his neck. guide him with her.
"I
don't carry any money that small." He could almost see her eyes light with
her luck. She had yet to learn that her luck this night was going to be bad.
"You
don't?" she said, as if preparing to withdraw her offer now that she
thought she had snared him with tempting thoughts of what she was offering.
"Well. a lady has to earn a living. I guess I'll have to move along and
see if I can find ..."
"The
smallest I have is a silver. But I'd be willing to give you the whole silver if
it would mean you took your time and enjoyed it, too. I like lovely young
ladies like you to enjoy it. That's what pleases me."
"What
a love," she said with clumsy, exaggerated delight as she took the silver
coin when he held it out.
She
stank. Her smile brought no beauty to her face, yet he reveled in the details:
coarse hair. the smell of her body. the humped nose, and small eyes. She was
common, less than a man of his stature was used to, but this had its own
delights to offer.
He
listened carefully as he watched her. Other details were even more important,
if he was to have his full pleasure from this.
She backed
into the shallow doorway and sat on a stool waiting there. The doorway was just
deep enough to hold them both, with his back to the alleyway as he stood before
her.
It
aggravated him that she thought him so ignorant, so foolish, so impetuous. She
would learn just how wrong she was.
She
planted a kiss on the front of his trousers as she fumbled with his belt. It
wouldn't be long. She wouldn't want it to take too long. before she moved on to
another place, reaping all the coin she could in the cloak of night.
Before
she undid his trousers, he gently took her wrists in one hand. It wouldn't do
to have his trousers down around his knees when it started. No, that wouldn't
do at all.
She
smiled up at him, clearly puzzled, but just as clearly sure she was bewitching
him with her smile. He wouldn't have to suffer it for long. It wouldn't be
long.
It was
dark enough. Too dark to see for sure what he was doing. People saw what they
expected.
While
she still smiled at him, before she had time to question, he reached down with
his other hand and gripped her neck. She thought he simply wished to hold her
while she performed her service. The way her head was tilted back was perfect.
With a thumb, and a small grunt of effort, he crushed her windpipe. The smile transferred
to his face. The choking sound wouldn't immediately raise suspicions. People
heard what they expected to hear, just as they saw what they expected to see.
He hunched over her, to make it look as expected, while he crushed the life out
of her.
"Surprise."
he whispered to her bulging eyes. He luxuriated in her startled, strangled
expression. When her arms went limp,
he let
them drop, and held her up by a fistful of her hair. He bent her head back over
his thigh to help hold her up as he waited.
He had
to wait only seconds before he heard the careful footsteps approaching from
behind. More than one man, as he had expected. He knew what this was about:
robbery.
Mere
seconds more, and they had closed the distance. To him, time stretched with the
anticipation, with the details of sights, sounds, and smells. He was the most
rare of men. He owned time. He owned life. He owned death. And now it was time
for the rest of his pleasure.
He
pushed his knee up against her spine and, with a quick yank, snapped her neck
over his leg. He spun, bringing his knife up into the man right behind, slicing
him open from his groin to his sternum. He spun past the man as guts slopped
out into the alley.
He
expected another man. There were two. A woman like this usually had two men to
rob the man. He had never before seen three. The unexpected danger of this
development made him reel with lust.
The
second man on the right swung an arm. He saw the knife in the fist, and with a
step back, escaped the sweep of the blade. As the third man advanced, he drove
him back with a boot to the point at the base of the breastbone. The man
smacked the wall behind and stumbled to his knees with a grunt of pain, unable
to regain his breath.
The man
on the right froze. In that instant, it was one on one. The face was that of a
boy, really. Hardly a man, yet. With a boy's courage, he broke and ran.
He
smiled. There was no more perfect target as they ran than a person's head. The
head remained nearly still while the arms and legs flailed furiously. That
target was a core of stability in his vision.
He
loosed his knife. The boy ran as fast as his rapidly pumping legs would carry
him. The knife was faster, hitting home with a solid thunk. The young thief
went down instantly.
The
third man was coming up from his knees. He was older, muscled, heavy, and
violently angry. Good.
A side
kick broke the man's nose. Howling in pain and rage, the man sprang forward. He
saw a flash of steel and dodged to the side as he swept a leg beneath the man.
taking his feet from under him. It all happened in a blink. It was a glorious
event, this dangerous, raging bull charging madly.
He
pulled in the details: the man's clothes, the small rip in the back of his
coat, his bald spot reflecting the distant light, his curly, greasy hair, the
nick missing out of his right ear, the way he flopped when the boot landed
between his shoulders. .
It was
when he was twisting the man's arm behind his back that he saw the blood. Blood
was something he kept careful track of. This blood surprised him. He hadn't cut
the man-yet. Nor was this blood from the man's crushed nose. He rarely had a
thrill of surprise such as this unexpected blood brought. He realized the man
was screaming in pain. He screamed louder when the shoulder joint popped. He
dropped onto the man's back and smacked his head with the heel of a hand,
breaking the loan's teeth against the cobbles and quieting him, somewhat.
He
gripped the greasy hair in a fist and pulled the man's head back, listening to
the sound of the grunts.
"Robbery
is a dangerous business. Time you paid the price." "We wouldn't have
hurt you." the man burbled. "Just robbed you. you bastard"
"Bastard,
is it?"
Carefully,
slowly, enjoying the detail of every inch. he slit open the man's throat as he
thrashed.
What
unexpected pleasure this night had brought. He lifted his hands, curling his
fingers, slowly sweeping the quintessence of death from the air. capturing the
silken substance of it as it lifted in the darkness, and pulled it back to
himself.
He was
the fulfillment of their lives. He was the balance. He was death. He savored
seeing that awareness in their eyes. He liked it best when he could bask in
that look. that knowledge . . . that terror. It brought him fulfillment. It
made him complete.
He
stood, swaying in ecstasy at the cloying scent of blood. He regretted it hadn't
lasted longer. He regretted not being able to enjoy prolonged screams. Screams
were rapture. He craved them, needed them. lusted after them. Screams fulfilled
him, made him whole. He needed the screams, not the actual sound of them-he
often gagged his partners-but the attempt at them, and what they represented:
terror.
Being
denied the chance to leisurely enjoy the screaming terror left him unfulfilled,
his lust unsated.
He
glided up the alley and found that his skill was as sharp as ever. as was his
knife; it had found its target. The boy lay crumpled on his side. He looked
delicious with the knife buried to the cross guard at the back of his head. and
the point of the heavy blade jutting from his forehead, just slightly off
center. Immersed in a pool of sensation, he realized he felt a new one: pain.
Surprised, he inspected his arm. and discovered the source of the unexpected
blood. He had a gash a good six inches long on the outside of his right
forearm. It was deep. It would need to be stitched.
The
pleasure of such an unexpected occurrence made him gasp. Danger, death, and
damage-all in one night, in one chance encounter. This was nearly too much.
The
voices had been right about coming to Aydindril.
Still,
he hadn't had what he needed-the prolonged terror, the careful cutting, the
slicing, the binge of blood, the giving of endless, exquisite pain, the orgy of
frenzied stabbing at the end.
But the
voices from the ethers promised him he would have those things, promised him he
would have the ultimate conquest, the ultimate balance, the ultimate pairing.
They promised him he would have the ultimate consummation of debauchery. They
promised him he would have the Mother Confessor. His time was coming. Her time
was coming. Soon.
When
Verna dabbed the wet cloth against Warren's forehead, his eyes opened. She let
out a long breath of relief. "How are you feeling?"
He
tried to sit up. With a firm hand on his chest, she gently pushed him back down
into the hay. "Just you lay there and rest." He winced in pain and
then smacked his lips. "I need a drink."
Verna
twisted and lifted the dipper from the bucket. She held it to his lips. His
hands cupped the dented bowl of the dipper as he greedily gulped down all the
water.
He
panted, catching his breath after the long drink. "More." Verna
dragged the dipper through the bucket and let him drink his fill. She smiled
down at him. "Glad to see you awake."
It
looked to be an effort for him to return the smile. "Glad to be awake. How
long have I been out. this time?" She shrugged, discounting his concern.
"A few hours."
He
glanced around the inside of the barn. Verna lifted the lamp so he could see
his surroundings. Rain drummed against the roof, making it feel cozy inside.
Verna
set down the lamp and rested on an elbow beside him. "Not fancy lodging,
but at least it's dry."
He had
been nearly unconscious when they found the farm. The family who owned the farm
was sympathetic. Verna had refused the offer of their bed, not wanting to force
them to sleep in their own barn.
On her
journey of over twenty-odd years, Verna had often slept in such places, and
found the accommodations agreeable, if a little rough. She liked the smell of
hay. When she was on her journey, she had thought she hated it, but once
returned to the cloistered life at the Palace of the Prophets, she changed her
opinion, and found herself longing for the smell of hay, dirt, grass, and
rain-clean air.
Warren
laid a gentle hand over hers. "Verna, I'm sorry I'm slowing us down
so."
Verna
smiled. She recalled a time when her impatient nature would have had her pacing
and fretting. Warren, and his love, brought out a little of her calmer nature.
He was good for her. He was everything to her.
She
pushed back his curly blond hair and kissed his forehead. "Nonsense. We
had to stop for the night anyway. The rain would have made traveling slow and
miserable. A good rest will result in more progress in the end. Take my word;
I've had plenty of experience at such things." "But I feel
so-useless."
"You
are a prophet. That provides us with information that is far from useless. That
in itself has saved us from traveling days in a wrong direction."
His
troubled blue eyes turned to the rafters. "The headaches are coming more
often with time. I fear to think that when I close my eyes, I may never come
awake again."
She
scowled for the first time that night. "I'll not hear that sort of talk,
Warren., We will make it."
He hesitated,
not wanting to argue with her. "If you say so, Verna. But I'm slowing us
down more all the time." "I've taken care of that." "You
have? What have you done?" "I hired us transportation. For a ways, at
least."
"Verna,
you said you didn't want to hire a coach, that it would draw attention to us.
You said you didn't want to risk being recognized, and you didn't want nosy
people inquiring as to who was riding a coach."
"Not
a coach. And I don't want to hear a string of objections. I hired this farmer
to take us south for a ways in his hay cart. He said we could lay in the back
and
you
could rest. He'll cover us with hay so we won't have to worry about people
bothering us."
Warren
frowned. "Why would he do this for us?"
"I
paid him well. More than that. though, he and his family are loyal to the
Light. He respects the Sisters of the Light."
Warren
relaxed back into the hay. "Well. I guess that sounds good. You're sure
he's willing? You didn't twist his nose. did you?" "He was going
anyway." "Really? Why?"
Verna
sighed. "He has a sick daughter. She's only twelve. He wants to go to get
some tonic for her."
Suspicion
darkened Warren's expression. "Why didn't you cure the girl?" Verna
held his gaze. "I tried. I couldn't cure her. She has a high fever, she's
cramping and vomiting. I tried my best. I would have given nearly anything to
have been able to cure that poor child of her suffering, but I couldn't."
"Any idea why not?"
Verna
shook her head sadly. "The gift doesn't cure everything. Warren. You know
that. If she had a broken bone. I could help her. If she had any number of
ills. I could help her, but the gift is of limited use for fever."
Warren
looked away. "Seems unfair. They offer to help us. and we can do next to
nothing for them." "I know." Verna whispered. She listened to
the rain against the roof for a time.
"I
was able to ease the pain in her gut. at least. She'll rest a little more
comfortably."
"Good.
That's good. at least." Warren fussed with a piece of straw. "Have
you been able to get in contact with Prelate Annalina? Has she left you a
message in the journey book yet?"
Verna
tried not to betray how troubled she was. "No. She hasn't answered my
messages, nor has she sent one of her own. She's probably busy. She doesn't
need to be bothered by our little problems. We'll hear from her when she has
time."
Warren
nodded. Verna blew out the lamp. She snuggled up to him. putting her forehead
against his shoulder. She rested her arm across his chest. "We best get
some sleep. At sunrise we'll be moving on." "I love you. Verna. If I
die in my sleep, I want you to know that." Verna's fingers stroked the
side of his face in answer.
Clarissa
rubbed the sleep from her eyes. Dawn was leaking in around the edges of the
heavy, dark green drapes. She sat up in the bed. She didn't think she had ever
awakened feeling this good. She reached over to tell Nathan as much. Nathan
wasn't with her.
Clarissa
sat up and swung her legs over the edge of the bed. When she stretched, her leg
muscles protested: they were sore from the night's activities. She guessed it
was simply the thought of the cause that made her smile at the mild ache. She
had never known that sore muscles could be so pleasant.
She
stuffed her arms through the lovely pink robe Nathan had bought for her. She
snugged the ruffles up around her neck and then tied the silk belt. She wiggled
her toes in the thick carpet, luxuriating in the feeling.
Nathan
was at the writing desk, bent over a letter. He smiled up at her as she stood
in the doorway. "Sleep well?"
Clarissa
half-closed her eyes and sighed. "I should say so." She grinned.
"What sleep I got, anyway."
Nathan
linked at her. He dipped the pen in a bottle of blue ink and went back to his
scratching. Clarissa strolled around behind him and put her hands on his
shoulders. He was wearing his trousers, and nothing else. With her thumbs she
kneaded the muscles at the base of his neck. He made an agreeable sound deep in
his throat, so she continued. She liked to hear his sounds of pleasure, and liked
even more being their cause.
As her
thumbs worked along the muscles of his shoulders, she glanced down at what he
was writing. Scanning the letter, she saw that it was instructions about moving
troops to places she had never heard of. Nathan wrote on, admonishing a general
about the bond to the Lord Rahl, and the dire repercussion should he ignore it.
The tone of the letter was the same authoritative tone he used when he expected
people to treat him as the man of importance that he was. He signed the letter:
"Lord Rahl."
Clarissa
bent and nuzzled his neck, giving his ear a little nip. "Nathan, last
night was beyond wonderful. It was magic. You were magnificent. I'm the
luckiest woman in the world."
He gave
her a roguish grin. "Magic. Yes, there was some of that in it, too. I'm an
old man; I need to use what I've got."
She
combed her fingers through his hair, ordering it. "Old man? I don't think
so, Nathan. I hope I was half as pleasing to you as you were to me."
He
laughed as he folded his letter. "I guess I did manage to keep up with
you." He slipped a hand inside her robe and pinched her bare bottom. She
jumped with a squeak. "It was one of the high points of my life, to be
with such a beautiful and loving woman."
She
hugged his head to her breasts. "Well, we're still alive. No reason we
can't reach for some more of those high points."
His sly
smile grew as he put his hand back on her bare bottom and gave it a squeeze. He
had that lusty twinkle in his eye.
"Let
me dispense with this bit of business, and we'll see about getting our money's
worth out of that big bed."
With a
diminutive copper spoon, he scooped little nuggets of red wax from a tin and
dumped the tiny spoonful on the folded letter. ;�� "Nathan, silly, you're supposed to melt the sealing wax
onto the letter."
One of
his eyebrows arched. "You should know by now, my dear, that my way is
better."
She let
out a throaty laugh. "My mistake." He twirled a finger over the
nuggets of wax. Sparkles of light danced from his finger onto the lumps of wax.
They glowed briefly and then melted into a red puddle on the letter. She gasped
with delight. Nathan was one never-ending little surprise after another. She
felt her cheeks warm as she remembered that his fingers were magic in more ways
than one.
She
bent and whispered intimately in his ear. "I'd like you and that magic
finger of yours back in bed with me, Lord Rahl."
Nathan
lifted his magic finger in proclamation. "And it shall be, my dear, just
as soon as I send this letter on its way."
He again
twirled the finger over the letter, and it lifted off the desk as if of its own
accord. Clarissa's eyebrows rose in astonishment. The letter floated in the air
ahead of him as he walked to the door. He twirled his other hand dramatically,
and the door glided open.
A
soldier, sitting on the floor in the hall, leaning against the opposite wall,
rose to his feet. He saluted with a fist to his heart.
Nathan,
standing there in only his trousers, with his white hair hanging down to his
shoulders, had the look of a wild man. She knew he wasn't, but standing there,
as tall as he was, as commanding as he was, she knew he must look that way to
others.
People
were afraid of Nathan. She could see it in their eyes. She could understand
their fear, though; she remembered how much she had feared him, before she had
come to know him. She could hardly remember, now, just how much the sight of
the towering prophet had terrified her.
When he
turned those azure eyes on people, and his hawklike brow lowered in displeasure,
she thought he could make a whole army turn and run.
Nathan
stretched his arm out, and the letter floated to the grim-faced soldier.
"You remember all my instructions, don't you, Walsh?"
The
soldier snatched the letter out of the air and stuffed it inside his tunic.
This soldier, though respectful, didn't seem intimidated by Nathan. "Of
course. You know me better than that, Nathan."
Nathan
lost a bit of his lofty attitude and scratched his head. "I guess I
do." Clarissa wondered where Nathan had found the soldier, and when he had
had time to give him instructions. She guessed he must have gone out while she
was asleep.
This
soldier looked to be somewhat different from most of the others she had seen.
He had a traveling cloak, with leather packs at his belt, and his clothes were
of a higher quality than those of the regular soldiers she was getting used to
seeing. His sword was shorter, too. and his knife longer. He was not a small
man, either. He was as big as Nathan, but Nathan's bearing made him seem bigger
than anyone to her.
"Give
the letter to General Reibisch," Nathan said. "And don't forget, if
any of those Sisters start asking you questions, you warn them about what I
said, and tell them that Lord Rahl ordered you to keep what you were told to yourself.
That will keep their jaws locked tight."
The
soldier smiled knowingly. "I understand . . . Lord Rahl." Nathan
nodded. "Good. What about the others?"
Soldier
Walsh gestured vaguely. "Bollesdun will be around to let you know what he
finds out. I'm pretty sure it was only Jagang's expeditionary force, but
Bollesdun will find out for sure. Large as it was. it wasn't much compared to
the main force. I don't see any evidence that his main force down near Grafan
Harbor has come north yet.
"From
what I've heard, Jagang is content to sit and wait for something. I don't know
what that something is, but he's not rushing troops north, into the New
World."
"He
thrust the army I saw deep into the New World." "I still think it was
just his expeditionary force. Jagang is a patient man. It took
him
years to conquer and consolidate the Old World under his rule. He used much the
same tactics: sending out the expeditionary force to take a key city, or
capture information of one sort or another, mostly records and books. Those men
are brutal, that's part of their purpose, too, but it's the books they're sent
to get.
"They
would send back whatever they captured, and wait to go wherever Jagang sends
them next. Bollesdun has some of our men checking into it, but they have to be
careful, and it may take them awhile, so just enjoy the wait."
Nathan
stroked his chin as he pondered. "Yes, I imagine Jagang isn't eager to
send his army into the New World, yet." He returned his gaze to Walsh.
"You'd best be on your way."
Walsh
nodded. His gaze shifted and his eyes met Clarissa's. He looked back to Nathan,
a small smile coming to his lips. "A man after my own heart."
Nathan
chuckled softly. "One of nature's wonders, matters of the heart." The
way Nathan said the words made Clarissa's own heart swell with pride to be
included in matters of his heart.
"You
be careful, here in the rat's nest, eh, Nathan? I'd not like to hear that you
don't have eyes in the back of your head, after all." He patted his tunic
where he had put the letter. "Especially not after I deliver this."
"I will, lad. You just be sure you get that letter delivered."
"You have my word."
After
Nathan shut the door, and business was finished, he turned to her. He had that
twinkle in his eye. That lusty twinkle. His sly smile returned. "Alone at
last, my dear." Clarissa squealed and ran for the bed in mock fright.
345
CHAPTER������������ 45
What do
you think is going on?" Ann asked.
Zedd
stretched his head up to try to see. It was hard to get much of a look past the
wall of legs around them. The Nangtong spirit hunters jabbered orders, which he
couldn't understand, but some of the spears pointing down from the circle
surrounding them settled on his shoulders, delivering an unequivocal message
that he had better stay where he was.
He and
Ann sat cross-legged on the ground, guarded by a ring of Nangtong, while others
of them were sitting in conference a ways off with a party of Si Doak.
"They're
too far away to hear clearly, but even if we could hear them. it probably
wouldn't help much. I only speak a few words of Si Doak."
Ann
plucked a long blade of grass and wound it around a finger. She didn't glance
over at Zedd. They didn't want to give their captors the idea that they were
sane and capable of plotting.
Ann let
out a high-pitched cackle, just to keep up appearances. "What do you know
about these Si Doak?"
Zedd
flapped his arms like a bird about to take to wing. "I know they don't
sacrifice people."
A guard
thunked a spear shaft on Zedd's head. as if to discourage him from any ideas of
flying off. Zedd howled with laughter, instead of cursing, which he was longing
to do.
Ann
glanced over out of the corner of her eye. "Beginning to reconsider your
attitude about letting these Nangtong live as they wish?"
Zedd
smiled. "If I wanted to let them live as they wish. we'd be in the spirit
world by now. Just because you believe in letting wolves be. that doesn't mean
you have to let them eat your flock at will." She grunted to concede the
point.
Off in
the distance, beside a slight rise. the negotiations dragged on. About ten of
the Nangtong and an equal number of the Si Doak sat cross-legged in a circle.
The Nangtong counted out loud. accompanied by exaggerated arm movements. They
pointed Zedd's way. They made unintelligible but seemingly heartfelt speeches.
Zedd
leaned toward Ann and whispered, "The Si Doak are peaceful enough, as far
as I know; I've never heard of them making war or using force against
neighbors. even weaker neighbors, but when it comes to matters of trade,
they're ruthless. Most people in this part of the wilds would just as soon
bargain with a wolf. Other peoples teach their young people to fight: the Si
Doak teach them to barter."
Ann
looked off in the other direction, as if disinterested. "What makes them
so good at it?"
Zedd
glanced up at their guards. They were all watching the bargaining, and paying
little attention to the helpless prisoners.
"They
have the rare ability to walk away from a deal. Others get their mind set on
something and soon start settling for less, just to have a deal. The Si Doak
won't do that. They'll simply walk. When need be, they'll cut their losses
without regret and move on to something else."
One of
the Si Doak, the one wearing a rabbit fur over his head, slapped a pile of
blankets in the center of the circle. He pointed off to a small heard of goats
and made an offer Zedd understood to include two of the animals.
The
offer seemed to incense the Nangtong. Their chief negotiator leaped to his feet
and stabbed his spear at the sky repeatedly, apparently to express his outrage
at the low price. Zedd noted that he didn't walk away. There was honor
involved; the Nangtong had that much invested.
Zedd
nudged Ann. He tilled his head back and howled like a coyote. Ann, getting the
message, joined in. They both yelped and bayed as loud as they could.
The
negotiators fell silent as they all looked toward the prisoners. The head
Nangtong negotiator sat back down.
A thunk
on both their heads silenced Zedd and Ann. Talking resumed over at the
bartering session. A Nangtong emissary was sent to have a better look at the
goats.
Zedd
scratched his shoulder. The dry mud was getting uncomfortable. He guessed it
was less uncomfortable than having his heart cut out, or his head cut off, or
whatever it was the Nangtong did to sacrifices.
"I'm
hungry," he muttered. 'They haven't fed us all day. It's near to
mid-afternoon, and they haven't fed us."
He
barked at his captors to show his displeasure. The negotiations halted for a
moment while they once again looked toward the prisoners. The Si Doak all
folded their arms and remained silent as they stared at the Nangtong.
The
Nangtong quickly resumed talking, their tone changing, becoming conciliatory.
Chuckling interspersed their casual chatter. The Si Doaks' response was short
and curt. The one with the rabbit skin on his head gestured toward the
afternoon sun and then off toward his home.
The
Nangtong man in charge pulled a blanket from the stack in the center and
inspected it with grudging admiration. He passed the blanket to his fellows.
They nodded with appreciation of its worth, as if just discovering it. The man
sent to have a look at the goats returned with two. He showed them off to his
associates, and they oohed and aahed, as if realizing for the first time that
these goats were much more impressive than they had at first thought, and not
at all the scraggly animals they had expected lo find.
The
Nangtong had apparently decided that, no matter what, they didn't want to return
home with the prisoners. Any useful commodities were better than two crazy
people. They couldn't very well send the spirits two crazy people. Any exchange
for them was better than nothing, especially in view of the waning interest of
the Si Doak.
The Si
Doak remained stone-faced. The Nangtong had made a mistake; they had betrayed
their need to sell what they had. There was nothing the Si Doak valued more
than a motivated seller.
A
price, whatever it was Zedd couldn't tell, was suddenly agreed upon. The head
Si Doak and the head Nangtong stood, hooked arms at the elbows, and turned
around each other three times while so locked together. When they parted, both
sides fell to happy chatter. A bargain had been struck.
The
Nangtong started lifting blankets. The goats were tethered. The Si Doak headed
for their prizes. The guards thunked Zedd and Ann on the head as the Si Doak
approached, apparently in warning not to spoil the deal.
Zedd
had no intention of spoiling the deal. The Si Doak didn't sacrifice people. As
far as he knew. they were gentle people: the worst punishment they dispensed to
someone who committed a grievous wrong was banishment. A banished Si Doak
sometimes starved to death because he was so heartsick at being sent from the
only home he knew. A misbehaving child was set straight by everyone ignoring
him for a day. It was a horrifying punishment to a Si Doak child, and resulted
in best behavior for a good long time after.
Of
course. Zedd and Ann weren't members of the Si Doak community, so it was
entirely possible, in fact probable, that such treatment didn't extend to them.
Zedd
leaned toward Ann and whispered. "I don't think these people would hurt
us. so keep that in mind. If they decide not to take us. the Nangtong may just
slit our throats rather than have to suffer the humiliation of having to return
with two crazy people."
"First
you want me to play in the mud and now you want me to be a good little
girl?"
Zedd
smiled at her sarcasm. "Just until our new keepers take us away from the
old." The Si Doak elder, the one with the rabbit fur over his head.
squatted before his new acquisitions. He reached out and felt Zedd's arm
muscles. He grunted disapprovingly. He felt Ann's arms and made a sound as if
pleased at what he found.
Ann lifted
an eyebrow to Zedd. "Seems I'm more agreeable to them than a skinny old
man."
Zedd
smiled. "I think they find you better suited as a human oxen. They'll give
you the hard work."
Her
satisfied expression vanished. "What do you mean?" He shushed her.
Another Si Doak squatted down beside the elder. He had goat antlers fixed to
his head. He wore what had to be a hundred necklaces over his buckskin tunic.
The necklaces, some hanging to his crotch, others tight at his throat, and the
rest every length in between, held teeth, beads, bones, feathers, pottery
shards, metal disks, gold coins, small leather pouches, and carved amulets. He
was the Si Doak shaman.
The
shaman took Zedd's hand and gently held his arm out. He released it. Zedd let
it drop. The shaman chattered his disapproval. Zedd understood enough to gather
that he was supposed to hold his arm up. He didn't let on that he understood
any of the words, and instead let the shaman lift the arm out again, and use a
hand signal to indicate he meant Zedd to hold it there.
While
the Nangtong guards still held spears on the two prisoners, the shaman
retrieved long, coiled stalks of grass from one of the pouches at his waist. He
chanted as he wove the grass around Zedd's wrist. When finished, he wove the grass
around Zedd's other wrist, and then did the same to Ann. "Any idea what
this is about?" she asked.
"It
binds our magic. The Nangtong need do nothing to render our magic useless, but
the Si Doak have to use some kind of magic of their own to suppress ours. This
shaman is a man of magic. He has the gift. He's something like the Si Doaks'
wizard." Zedd glanced at her out of the corner of his eye. "Or maybe
you could say he's like the Sisters of the Light, with their collars. Like the
collars, we won't be able to get these wristbands off."
Once
they had the grass woven around their wrists, the Nangtong withdrew their
weapons, picked up their portion of the blankets, collected their two goats,
and quickly made good their escape.
The
elder, the one with the rabbit skin on his head, leaned toward Zedd and spoke.
When Zedd frowned and shrugged that he didn't understand, the man added sign
language seemingly invented on the spot. He indicated chores to be done, and
time, by showing the seasons: digging at the ground and pretending to plant,
the heat of summer, and the freezing of winter. Zedd couldn't understand a
great deal of it, but he understood enough.
He
turned to Ann. "I believe that these fellows here have purchased us out of
our death sentence. We are to be in servitude to them for a period of about two
years, to repay them for our cost, plus a profit for their trouble."
"We've been sold into slavery?"
"It
would appear so. But only for a couple of years. Quite generous of them,
actually, considering that the Nangtong were going to kill us."
"Maybe we could buy our way out."
'To the
Si Doak, this is a personal debt we owe them, and can only be repaid with
personal servitude. To their way of looking at it, they have returned our lives
to us, and so we must use part of those lives to show our gratitude. And to
clean up after them."
"Clean
up? We're to scrub floors to repay our debt?"
"I
imagine they'll want us to cook, carry things, sew, care for their animals,
those sorts of things."
As if
to confirm what Zedd had told her, the Si Doak began pulling the thongs holding
their waterskins off over their heads and passing them to Zedd and Ann.
"What do they want?" Ann asked him. Zedd lifted an eyebrow.
"They want us to carry their water." Three more of the Si Doak
appeared with the remaining blankets, divided them, and handed them to their
new bearers.
"Do
you mean to tell me," Ann growled, "that the First Wizard of the
Midlands and the Prelate of the Sisters of the Light have been sold into
slavery for the price of some blankets and two goats!"
With a
shove from behind, Zedd staggered after the departing Si Doak. "I know
what you mean," he said over his shoulder. "For the first time I know
of, the Si Doak have overpaid."
Zedd
stumbled and dropped half his load of waterskins. As he regained his balance,
he stepped on one that had snagged a thorny berry bush. Bending to retrieve the
waterskins, his stack of blankets toppled into the mud puddle created by the
burst waterskin. He put a knee to the ground to regain his balance as he
gathered up the scattered waterskins. His knee squashed the berries under the
blanket. "Oops." He waved an apology to the Si Doak.
"Sorry." The Si Doak leaped about in agitation, demanding he pick
everything up at once. The man whose waterskin Zedd had ripped open over a
thorn bush pointed angrily at his damaged property while jabbering demands of
recompense.
"I
said I was sorry," Zedd protested, even though they couldn't understand
him. He bent to gather up the wet blankets. He lifted one up high and held it
out between his widespread arms. inspecting it. "Oh dear. Look at that.
We'll never get that stain out."
CHAPTER������������ 46
Lord
Rahl. you have had a hard ride." Berdine said. "I think you should be
resting. We should go back. So you can rest. I mean."
The
massive rampart, lit by the mellow light of the low sun. spread out before the
three of them like a broad road. He wanted to be out of the Keep before dark.
Not that the light of day would save him from dangerous magic, but somehow
being in the Wizard's Keep after dark seemed worse. Raina leaned past him to
speak. "It was your idea. Berdine." "My idea? I never suggested
any such thing!" "Quiet, both of you." Richard murmured.
He was
considering the feel of magic against his skin. They had advanced halfway
across the long rampart toward the First Wizard's private enclave before the
distinct caress of magic began tingling against his flesh. Both Mord-Sith had
balked at its feel.
Kahlan
had told him about this place, about the First Wizard's private enclave. She
said that she used to come up to this rampart because it provided a beautiful
view of Aydindril, and indeed there was that, but there was also the magic of
powerful shields. Those shields kept everyone out of this small corner of the
Wizard's Keep.
Kahlan
had told him that in her life there had never been a wizard with enough power
to pass these shields. Wizards had tried, but failed. The wizards living and
working in the Keep as Kahlan was growing up simply didn't have the magic
required to enter this part of it. Zedd was the First Wizard: no one had been
in the First Wizard's enclave since before Kahlan and Richard were born. when
Zedd had left the Midlands.
Kahlan
had said that these shields exerted more magic as you got closer, that they
made your hair stand on end and made it difficult to breathe. She had also said
that if a person didn't have enough magic of their own. just getting too close
to the shields could be deadly. Richard didn't discount in the slightest what
she had said. but he had need to go in there.
Kahlan
had also said that to enter required placing your hand on the cold metal plate
beside the door. something no wizard she knew had ever been able to do. Richard
had encountered shields like this one at the Palace of the Prophets, ones
passed by touching a metal plate, but as far as he knew none of those were
potentially deadly. He had been able to pass those shields, and he had been
able to pass others in the Keep that required magic only he possessed, so he
reasoned that he might be able to pass this one. He needed to get in there.
Berdine
rubbed her arms. distressed by the tingle of the magic. "Are you sure you
aren't tired? You rode all that way." "It wasn't that hard a
ride," Richard said. "I'm not tired." He was too worried to
rest. He had thought Kahlan would be back by now. He
had
been sure he would find her back home when he returned from Mount Kymer-mosst.
She should have been back by now. But she wasn't. He would wait only until
morning.
"I
still don't think we should be doing this," Berdine muttered. "How is
your foot? I don't think you should be on it."
Richard
finally looked down at her. She was pressed up against his left side. Raina was
pressed to his right. Each held her Agiel in her fist.
"My
foot is just fine, thank you." He shifted his body to force them away a
bit to give himself breathing room. "I only need one of you. No loss of
face if you wish to remain here. Raina can go, if you don't want to."
Berdine
scowled up at him. "I didn't say I wasn't going. I said you shouldn't be
doing it."
"I
have to. It wasn't anywhere else. It has to be here. I was told that important
things, things not meant to be seen by just anyone, were kept in the First
Wizard's enclave."
Berdine
rolled her shoulders, easing the tension in her muscles. "If you insist on
going, then I'm going, too. I'll not let you walk in there without me."
"Raina?" he asked. "I don't need both of you. Do you want to
wait here?" Raina gave him a dark, Mord-Sith glare in answer.
"All
right, then. Now, listen to me. I know that the shields here are dangerous, but
that's all I know about them. They may not be like the others I've taken you
through.
' 1
have to touch that metal plate down there on the wall. I want you two to wait
here while I go see if I have the proper magic to open the door. If it opens,
then you both can come the rest of the way."
"This
isn't a trick, is it?" Raina asked. "You tricked us one other time to
keep us out, to keep us from going where there was danger. Mord-Sith are not
afraid of danger."
The
wind lifted his gold cloak. "No, Raina, it's not a trick. This is
important, but I don't want either of you risking your lives needlessly. If I
can open the door, then I promise to take you both with me. Satisfied?"
Both
women nodded. Richard gave them each an appreciative squeeze on the shoulder.
He absently adjusted the metal bands on his wrists as he gazed at the towering
bastion waiting at the end of the rampart.
A cold
wind buffeted him as he started across. He could feel the pressure of the
shield, like the weight of water when you swam toward the bottom of a pond. The
fine hairs at the back of his neck stiffened as he progressed. The pressure
made it difficult but not impossible to draw a breath, as Kahlan had said she
had experienced.
Six
immense columns of variegated red stone stood to each side of the gold-clad
door, holding up a protruding entablature of dark stone. The architrave was
decorated with brass plaques. As Richard approached it, he recognized some of
their symbols as the same ones on his wristbands, belt, and boot pins. The
frieze held round metal disks with other of the more circular symbols. The more
linear of symbols he wore were also carved into the stone of the cornice.
Seeing
the symbols he recognized reassured him, even though he didn't know their
meaning. He wore these things by obligation, duty, and right-he was born to
them, that much he knew. Why, he didn't know. Even if he wished it could be
otherwise, it wasn't; he was a war wizard.
Distracted
by the uncomfortable pressure and tingling of the shields, he reached the door
almost before he realized it. The door was at least twelve feet tall, and a
good four feet wide, gold-clad and embellished in the same symbolic motifs.
Embossed
in the center was the more prominent of the symbols he wore: two rough
triangles, with a sinuous double line running around and through them. Richard
rested his left hand on the hilt of his sword as he fingered the symbol with
his other hand, tracing its oval, undulating outer margin.
With
the act of touching it, tracing it, following its pattern, he understood. The
spirits who had used the Sword of Truth before him passed their knowledge on to
him as he used the sword, but they didn't always convey that knowledge in
words; in the heat of combat there wasn't always time. Sometimes it came to him
in images, symbols: these symbols. This one on the door, like the ones on his
wristbands, was a kind of dance used for fighting when outnumbered. It conveyed
a sense of the movements of the dance, movements without form. The dance with
death.
It made
sense. He wore the outfit of a war wizard. Richard had learned from Kolo's
journal that in Kolo's time the First Wizard, named Baraccus, had also been a war
wizard, as was Richard. These symbols had meaning to a war wizard. Much as a
tailor painted shears on his window, or a tavern sign had a mug on it, or a
blacksmith nailed up horseshoes, or a weapons maker displayed knives, these
symbols were signs of his craft: bringing death.
Richard
realized that his fear had vanished. He stood in the Wizard's Keep, which had
always before set his nerves on edge and worse, stood now before the most
restricted and protected place in the Keep, yet he felt calm. He touched a
starburst symbol on the door. This symbol was an admonition. Keep your vision
all-inclusive, never allowing it to lock on any one thing. That was the meaning
of the starburst symbol: look everywhere at once, see nothing to the exclusion
of all else-don't allow the enemy to direct your vision, or you will see what
he wishes you to see. He will then come at you as you become bewildered,
looking for his attack, and you will lose.
Instead,
your vision must open to all there is, never settling, even when cutting. Know
your enemy's moves by instinct, not by waiting to see them. To dance with death
meant to know the enemy's sword and its speed without waiting to see it.
Dancing with death meant being one with the enemy, without looking fixedly, so
that you could kill him. Dancing with death meant being committed to killing,
committed with your heart and soul. Dancing with death meant that you were the
incarnation of death, come to reap the living. Berdine's voice drifted across
the rampart. "Lord Rahl?" Richard looked over his shoulder.
"What? What's wrong?" Berdine shifted her weight to her other foot.
"Well, are you all right? You've been standing there for a long time,
staring at the door. Are you all right?"
Richard
wiped a hand across his face. "Yes. I'm fine. I was just . . . just
looking at the things written on the door, that's all."
He
turned, and without thinking, slapped his hand to the cold metal plate in the
polished gray granite wall. Kahlan had told him it was said that to touch that
metal plate was like touching the cold, dead heart of the Keeper himself. The
metal plate warmed. The gold door silently swung inward. Dim light came from
beyond. Richard took a careful step into the doorway. Like
a wick
on a lamp being slowly turned up, the dim light coming from inside brightened.
He took another step, and the light brightened more.
He
scanned the inside as he motioned the two waiting Mord-Sith forward. Whatever
magic prevented people from approaching apparently was now withdrawn; Berdine
and Raina walked to him without any difficulty. "That wasn't so bad,"
Raina said. "I didn't feel anything." "So far, so good,"
Richard said.
Inside,
there were glass spheres, about a hand-width in diameter, set atop green marble
pedestals against the wall to his left and right. Richard had seen glass
spheres similar to these before, down in the lower reaches of the Keep. Like
those, these too provided light.
The
inside of the First Wizard's enclave was an immense cavern of ornate stonework.
Four columns of polished black marble, at least ten feet in diameter, formed a
square that supported arches just beyond the outer edges of a central dome
dotted by a high ring of windows. Between each pair of columns a wing ran off
from the vast central chamber. He noticed that much of the stonework repeated
the palm-leaf pattern that adorned the gold capitals atop the black marble
columns. The polish of the marble was so high that it reflected images like
glass.
Finely
worked wrought-iron sconces decorated with the same palm-leaf pattern held
candles. Fluidly worked iron formed railings at the edge of the expansive,
sunken central floor.
This
was not the sinister lair Richard expected. This was a place of grand splendor
to match any he had seen. The place was so beautiful that it left him
awestricken.
The
wing in which the three of them stood, the entry hall, appeared to be by far
the smallest of the four wings. Six-foot-tall white marble pedestals marched in
a long double row beside the walkway laid with a long red carpet over a
gold-flecked dark brown marble floor.
Richard
wouldn't have been able to touch fingers were he to put his arms around one of
the pedestals. The ribbed, barrel ceiling thirty feet overhead made the fat
pedestals look miniscule.
Sitting
atop some of the pedestals were objects Richard recognized: ornate knives, gems
set in brooches or at the ends of gold-worked chains, a silver chalice,
filigree bowls, and delicately worked boxes. Some sat on squares of cloth
trimmed with gold or silver embroidery, others on stands carved from buried
wood.
Other
pedestals held contorted objects that made no sense to him. He would have sworn
that they changed shape when he looked at them. He decided it would be best not
to look directly at such things of magic, and warned the other two.
The
distant wing opposite them, across the central area under the huge dome, ended
at a round-topped window that had to be thirty feet tall. Before the window was
a huge table piled with a clutter of objects: glass jars, bowls, and coiled
tubes; a massive but simple iron candelabrum covered with ages of wax; stacks
of scrolls; several human skulls; and a chaos of smaller items Richard couldn't
make out from such a distance. The floor all around the table was similarly
cluttered, along with things stacked up and leaning against the table.
The
wing to the right was dark. Richard felt uncomfortable even looking in that
direction. He heeded the warning, and looked to the left. In that wing, he saw
books. Thousands of them.
"There,"
Richard said, as he gestured to the left. "That's what we're here for.
Remember what I told you. Don't touch anything." He glanced at them both
as
they
looked about with wide eyes. "I mean it. I don't know how to save you if
you get in trouble touching something in here." Both pairs of eyes looked
back at him. "We remember," Berdine said.
"We
know better than to tempt magic," Raina said. "We' re just looking
around, that's all. We wouldn't touch anything."
"Good.
But I suggest that you don't even look at anything, either, except what we need
to look at. For all I know, simply looking at something in here could trigger
its magic."
"Do
you think?" Raina asked in astonishment.
"What
I think is that I'd rather not find out after it's too late. Come on. Let's get
this over with so we can get out of here."
Oddly,
even though he had said the words, and knew they made sense, he didn't really
feel like leaving. As potentially dangerous as he knew the place to be, he
found that he liked the First Wizard's enclave. Berdine smirked. "Lord
Rahl fears magic as much as we do." "You're wrong, Berdine. I know a
little about magic." He started down the red carpet. "I fear it
more."
Ten
broad steps at the end led down into the central area. An expanse of
cream-colored marble covered the floor. A border of darker brown marble ran
around the floor near the edge. When Richard reached the bottom step and his
foot touched the floor, it hummed and began to glow. He quickly retreated back
up onto the red carpet. The glow extinguished. "What now?" Raina
asked.
He
pried her fingers from his arm. "Did either of you put your foot to the
floor?" They both shook their heads. "Try."
As
Richard waited on the step, Berdine gingerly tried to test the marble. She
withdrew her foot.
"I
can't. Something stops my foot before I can get it on the floor." Richard
stepped out onto the marble again. Again it glowed and hummed. "It must be
a shield, then. Here, take my hand and try again." Holding Richard's hand,
Berdine was able to step onto the marble with him. Raina took his other hand
and followed.
"All
right," he said, "since it's some kind of shield, don't let go of my
hand while we're on this part. We don't know what would happen. For all I know,
if you let go of my hand you could fry like bacon on a griddle."
Their
grips on his hands tightened. As they stepped onto the steps up to the wing
with the books, the floor went silent. Without Richard to hold their hands on
the way out, they would be trapped inside this place, unable to return across
the central floor. The wing with the books wasn't the kind of library he had
expected. There were rows of shelves, but they were in disarray, with books
stacked every which way. Chunks of rock served as bookends for the few standing
upright among the disorder. Here and there books were in piles, as if someone
had pulled them from the shelves and simply tossed them in a heap. Most were
closed, but a significant number lay open. some face-up, some facedown. But
that wasn't the biggest surprise. Everywhere, it seemed, there were books
stacked up on the floor. A few stacks were short, maybe three or four feet
tall, but many more were tall pillars of books. Some of the irregular stacks
lowered twelve or fourteen feet. They looked as if the mere act of breathing could
make them topple. The columns of books were every-
where,
creating a maze. Richard couldn't fathom the reason for the books being stacked
in such disarray, but the mystery of it made him sweat.
Richard
took an arm of each woman. "My grandfather told me that there were books
in the Keep that were extremely dangerous. Kahlan told me that the most
dangerous things were kept in here, where no one could get to them, not even
the wizards she knew."
Berdine
shot him a look. "You mean, you think that the books themselves could be
dangerous? Not just the information in them, but the actual books?"
Richard
thought of the description of a book that Sister Amelia had used to start the
plague. "I'm not sure, but we had better treat them as such. Look, but
don't touch."
Berdine's
brow drew down with a dubious frown. "Lord Rahl, there must be thousands
of books I can see just standing here. There are bound to be more down the
aisles. It will take us weeks to find the one we want-if it's even here."
Richard
took a deep breath. Berdine was right. He hadn't expected to find so many books
in here. He thought the libraries held most of the books, and there would only
be a few in here.
"If
you want to be out of here before dark, we don't have long," Raina said.
"We might as well come back tomorrow and get an early start."
Richard
was beginning to feel intimidated by the task ahead. "We'll just have to
stay after dark. We'll stay all night if we have to." Raina rolled her
Agiel in her fingers. "If you say so. Lord Rahl." Richard's heart
sank as he stood staring at the forest of books. He needed information, not a
search for one leaf in a forest. If only he could use magic to find that one
leaf.
He idly
adjusted the bands at his wrist. Under his fingers he felt the starburst
pattern on one of them. Look without fixing your sight.
"I
have an idea," he said. "Wait here. I'll be right back." Richard
returned to the pillars. He went to one that held a crackled-glass bowl upon a
large square of black cloth.
"What
good is that going to do?" Raina asked, when he came back holding the
cloth out for them.
"There's
too much to see. I'm going to use this as a blindfold, so I won't see all the
things I don't want to see."
Berdine's
face twisted with incredulity. "If you're blindfolded, then how are you
going to see the thing we're looking for?"
"With
magic. I'm going to try to let my gift guide me. Sometimes it works that
way-through need. All these books are too confusing. If I'm blindfolded, I
won't see them, and I'll be able to feel the one I'm looking for. At least,
that's what I hope."
Raina
gazed out over all the books. "Well, you are the Lord Rahl. You have
magic. If it has a chance of getting us out of spending the night in here, then
I say do it."
Richard
placed the black cloth over his eyes and began tying its tails behind his head.
"Just guide me and keep me from touching anything. Don't forget what I
said about you two not touching anything, either."
"Don't
worry about us. Lord Rahl." Raina said. "We're not about to touch
anything." When he finished tying the blindfold over his eyes, Richard
turned his head this
way and
that. testing to make sure that he couldn't see. He rubbed a finger over the
starburst on his wristband.
His
world was pitch-black. He sought the inner peace, the inner calm. where dwelled
his gift.
If the
plague was started by magic from the Temple of the Winds, then maybe they had a
chance to halt it. If he did nothing, then untold thousands of people were
going to die. He needed that book.
He thought
about the boy he had watched die. About the little girl. Lily. who told him
about the Sister of the Dark showing her the book. That was how the plague
started. He knew it was.
That
precious child had the tokens on her. Richard hadn't inquired, but he knew that
she. at least, would be dead by now. He couldn't bear to inquire. He needed
that book.
He put
a foot out. ' 'Nudge me with your fingers if I'm about to run into anything.
Try not to talk, but if you must, don't be afraid to speak up."
He felt
their fingers lightly touch his arm as he stepped forward. They guided him with
that touch, keeping him from colliding with the towering stacks of books as he
waded deeper into the maze.
Richard
didn't know what it was he should feel. He didn't know if it was magic. a
hunch, or his imagination guiding him. By the way he seemed to he winding up
and down aisles and snaking through the stacks, he feared it was no more than
his imagination. He tried to ignore the things that kept his thoughts skipping
about and running in every direction.
He
tried to concentrate on the book and his need to find it. Thinking of the sick
children, he was able to focus better. They needed him. They were helpless.
Richard
felt himself jerk to a halt. He wondered why. He turned left when he expected
that he was going to turn right. It had to be the gift. With that thought, his
thoughts scattered in every direction again. He focused once more.
The two
Mord-Sith forcibly snatched his arm to halt him. He understood. Another step,
and he would have collided with a stack.
Wondering
which way he would be turned, he found himself squatting instead. His arm
lifted and he reached out.
"Careful,"
Berdine whispered. "Its a big. irregular stack. Be careful, or you'll
knock it over."
Richard
nodded, not wanting to distract himself by answering with words. He was
concentrating on feeling the object of his need. He felt it near. His fingers
lightly brushed the books, running down the stack, touching the bindings of
some and the pages of others because they were turned around the other way. His
fingers stopped on a binding.
"This
one." He tapped the leather binding. "This one. What does it
say?" Berdine propped a hand on his thigh to support herself as she leaned
in. "It's High D'Haran, Something about the Temple of the
Winds-'Tagenricht osf fuer Mosst Verlaschendreckmch Greschlechten.'"
"Temple
of the Winds Inquisition and Trial," Richard translated in a whisper.
"We've found it."
CHAPTER������������� 47
Breathe,
the sliph said.
Kahlan
let go the silken essence and pulled a deep breath of the alien air. The dim
world of the sliph's well down in the Keep whirled around her. Stone of the
walls and floor finally settled in her vision. The dome overhead seemed to slow
its spinning.
Something
unexpected waited in the sliph's room.
Tilled
back in the chair, with her feet propped up on the table, sat a figure in red
leather. Kahlan sat down, dangling her feet over the edge of the stone wall, to
gather her senses.
The
front legs of the chair thunked down. "Well, well, the wandering Mother
Confessor returns at last."
Kahlan
hopped down onto the floor. She almost lost her footing with the way it seemed
to twist and tilt. "Cara, what are you doing down here?"
Cara
gripped Kahlan under her arm. "You better sit down until you regain your
feet."
"I'm
all right." Kahlan glanced over her shoulder to the silver face behind
her. "Thank you, sliph."
"Do
you wish to travel?" The sliph's haunting voice echoed off the walls and
dome overhead for a long moment.
"No,
I've had enough traveling for the time being. I'm going to stay here."
"When you wish to travel, call me, and we will travel. You will be
pleased." "I don't know about that," Kahlan muttered as the
sliph seemed to melt back into her well.
"She's
a spooky companion to have down here," Cara said. "She invited me to
travel with her, too, and then told me I didn't have the magic required. She
comes and stares at me with that eerie smile." "Cara, what are you
doing down here?"
Cara
leaned Kahlan back against the sliph's well. She gave Kahlan the strangest look
as she shook her head to herself.
"When
Lord Rahl read your letter, it didn't take him long to figure out what you had
done. Berdine told him how you had brought us here to look for that book on the
trial record. He came down here, but the sliph wouldn't tell him where she had
taken you.
"Lord
Rahl said that now that he knew the sliph was not sleeping, as he had thought,
it wasn't safe to leave her alone. He said that others, like the Sister and
Marlin, could come through." Kahlan hadn't thought about that, about
another one of Jagang's minions coming
to
Aydindril through the sliph. The sliph seemed to have no loyally. She would
travel with anyone who had the required price of magic. "So, Richard left
you here?"
"He
said he couldn't remain down here all the time to guard the sliph." Cara's
chin lifted with pride. "He said that a Mord-Sith must guard the well at
all times, since we have the power to stop someone with magic. The Lord Rahl
has always used the Mord-Sith to protect him against magic."
The
wizards of old obviously had this same problem with the sliph, and had left
wizards like Kolo down here to guard her. Kolo said that the enemy sometimes
arrived suddenly by way of the sliph, and that only the quick reactions of the
one on guard had prevented disaster.
"You
mean he brought you down here and just left you?" "No. He searched
for hours until he found a way without magic so we could get down here on our
own. He didn't want to have to bring each of us down here for our turn, and he
didn't want us trapped down here. either. We have to take shifts. I don't like
it. because we should be close to Lord Rahl in order to guard him, not this . .
. silver thing, but I guess that we are guarding Lord Rahl by doing this, so I
agreed to it."
Kahlan
found her feet steady at last. "If we had known the sliph was awake, and
had been guarding her before, then Marlin wouldn't have been able to come to
try to assassinate Richard, and the Sister wouldn't have been able to start the
plague."
Kahlan's
chest constricted with a hot. cutting pang of regret. They could have prevented
the whole thing. All the awful things she had learned would not be threatening
her people, her world, and her love. The realization of the chance lost left
her nauseous.
"Lord
Rahl also wanted us to wait until your return from the witch woman, in case you
needed help." "Richard knew where I went?"
"The
sliph wouldn't tell him. but he said he knew anyway. He said you went to the
witch woman." "He knew, and he didn't chase after me?"
Cara
pulled her long blond braid over her shoulder. "I was surprised, too. I
asked him why he wouldn't go after you. He said that he loved you: he did not
own you." "Really? Richard said that?"
"Yes."
A smirk tightened Cara's lips. "You are training him well. Mother
Confessor. I approve. And then he kicked a chair. I think he hurt his foot, but
he denies it." "So, Richard is angry with me?"
Cara
rolled her eyes. "Mother Confessor, this is Richard we are talking about.
The man is fool in love with you. He wouldn't be angry with you if you told him
to marry Nadine instead of you."
Kahlan
swallowed at the renewed twist of pain. "Why would you say that?"
Cara frowned. "I only meant he could never be angry with you. no matter
what. You were supposed to laugh, not jump like I had poked you with my Agiel.
Mother Confessor, he loves you: he is worried sick, but he is not angry with
you." "What about kicking the chair?"
Cara
stroked her long blond braid and smirked again. "He claimed the chair gave
him just cause."
"I
see." Kahlan couldn't seem to find pleasure in Cara's sense of humor.
"How long have I been gone?"
"Not
quite two days. And I expect you to tell me how you managed to slip past those
D'Haran guards out there by the bridge." "It was snowing. They didn't
see me."
Cara
didn't look to believe it. She was giving Kahlan that odd look again. "And
did you kill the witch woman?"
"No."
Kahlan changed the subject. "What has Richard been doing while I was gone?"
"Well,
first he asked the sliph to take him to the Temple of the Winds, but she said
she didn't know that place and couldn't take him there, so he rode to Mount
Kymermosst-"
"He
went there?" Kahlan snatched Cara's arm. "What did he find?"
"Nothing. He said that there was nothing to find. He said that if the
Temple of the Winds was once there, it is now gone."
Kahlan
released Cara's arm. "He went to Mount Kymermosst, and he's back already?'
'
"You
know Lord Rahl; when he gets something in his head, he charges after it. The
men who went with him said they rode hard. They slept little and rode much of
the night. Lord Rahl expected you to return last night and wanted to be back
for you. When you did not return as expected, he paced and fretted, but still
he did not go after you. Whenever he looked like he was about to change his
mind, he read your letter again, and went back to pacing instead."
"I
guess my letter was a little strong," Kahlan said as she glanced down at
the floor.
"Lord
Rahl showed it to me." Cara's face was unreadable. "Sometimes it is
necessary to threaten men, or they get to thinking that they are the ones who
say what will be. You dissuaded him of that idea with your threats."
"I
didn't threaten him." Kahlan thought that her tone sounded too much like a
plea.
Cara
watched Kahlan's eyes for a moment. "You are probably right. The chair
must have given Lord Rahl cause, as he said."
"I
did what I had to do. Richard would understand that. I guess I'd better go
explain it to him."
Cara
gestured behind, to the door. "You just missed him. He was here not long
ago."
"He
came to see if I was back? He must be worried sick." "Berdine told
him about the book you were searching for. He came here and found it."
Kahlan
blinked in astonishment. "He found it? But we looked. It wasn't there. How
did he find it?"
"He
went to a place he called the First Wizard's enclave, and found it there."
Kahlan's jaw dropped. "He went in there? He went into the First Wizard's
enclave? Alone, without me? He shouldn't have gone there! That's a dangerous
place!"
"Really."
Cara folded her arms. "And of course you would never do anything so
foolish as to get it in your head to go run off alone to a dangerous place.
Maybe
you
should reprimand Lord Rahl for his impulsive behavior, since you are so prudent
and above such reckless conduct yourself."
The
echo of Cara's voice lingered uncomfortably before it died out. Kahlan
understood. Even though Richard did as she had asked by not coming after her,
Cara had tried. Even though she didn't like magic. Cara had tried to go to
protect Kahlan.
"Cara."
she said in a meek voice. "I'm sorry I tricked you. too." Cara
shrugged, but still showed no emotion. "I am just a guard. You have no
obligation to me."
"Yes.
I do. You are not 'just a guard.' You may be our protector, but you are more. I
consider you my friend. You are a sister of the Agiel. I should have told you
what I was doing, but I feared that if I did. Richard would be angry with you
for not stopping me. I didn't want that."
Cara
said nothing. Still, she showed no emotion. Kahlan breached the uncomfortable
silence. "Cara, I'm sorry. I guess I was afraid you would try to stop me.
I tricked you. You're a sister of the Agiel: I should have trusted you and
taken you into my confidence. Please, Cara. I was wrong. I beg you forgive
me."
A smile
finally spread on Cara's face. "We are sisters of the Agiel. I forgive
you."
Kahlan
managed a small smile. "Do you think Richard will be as understanding as
you?"
Cara
let out an amused grunt. "Well. you have better ways to persuade him to
forgive you. It is not so difficult to melt a man's frown."
"I
only wish I had good news, so I could bring a smile to his face. but I
don't." She paused at the doorway. "What has Nadine been up to while
I've been gone?"
"Well,
I've been down here guarding the sliph much of the time, but from what I've
seen, she has been giving the staff herbs to try to protect them. and to use in
smoking the palace. It's a good thing the place is made mostly of stone or it
would have been burned down by now. She has been conferring with Drefan and
helping him in talking to the staff and others who come for advice.
"Lord
Rahl asked her to go out to visit herb sellers and such. to make sure they are
not hucksters out to swindle people who are in fear for their lives. The city
seems to be sprouting shameless mountebanks the way the sudden warmth seems to
be bringing green grass. Nadine also gives reports to Lord Rahl. but he has
been gone much of the time. and as busy as she seems to be trying to help
people, the visits since he returned are short." Kahlan tapped the side of
her fist against the doorway.
"Thanks,
Cara." She looked into the other's blue eyes. "There are rats down
here. Are you all right?" "There are worse things than rats."
"Indeed there are," Kahlan whispered.
CHAPTER������������� 48
It was
late, and with the dark, people on the streets didn't recognize her. Without
her usual escort of guards, they had no reason to give her a second look, no
reason to suspect she was the Mother Confessor out among them. Just as well;
there were some people who wished the Mother Confessor harm. Mostly, people
kept their distance from her, as they did with everyone else, hoping to keep
the plague from themselves.
As Cara
had said, there were hucksters everywhere, hawking potions to ward off the
plague, or to cure your loved ones already stricken. Others strolled the
streets with trays, held up on straps over their shoulders, neatly laid out
with amulets possessing magic to protect against the plague. Kahlan remembered
seeing some of these same people not long ago selling the same amulets as magic
to find a husband or wife, or to enthrall an unfaithful spouse. Old women with
small carts or simple wooden stands sold carved spell-invested plaques made to
hang over the door to a home as a sure way to keep the plague from entering the
house. As late as it was, business seemed brisk. Even the vendors selling meats
and produce extolled the healthful virtues of their goods and their value in
promoting continued health, if eaten regularly, of course.
Kahlan
would send the soldiers out to put a stop to some of these swindlers, but she
knew that such intervention would likely be viewed with hostility on the part
of the buyers. If she tried to use the army to stop such foolish practices,
desperate people would concoct theories about those in power wanting to stop
the cures so that the decent, working folk would get the plague. Despite common
sense, or evidence to the contrary, many people believed that those in power
were always scheming to harm them; if they only knew the truth.
If
Kahlan were to order the sale of these items stopped, the "cures"
would be sold in secret, and for a higher price. No matter how insupportable
the claims of these cures, their benefits would be vehemently supported as
self-evident truth.
Wizard's
First Rule: people would believe any lie, either because they wanted to believe
it was true. or because they feared it was. These people were desperate, and would
become more so, yet. Many wanted to believe.
Kahlan
tried to imagine what she would do if Richard had the plague. Would she be
despairing enough to put her faith in such trickery, hoping against hope that
it would save him? Sometimes hope was all people had. Groundless as it was, she
couldn't take that hope away from them: it was all they had, and all they could
do. It was up to Kahlan and Richard to do that which would help these people.
As she made her way through the familiar splendor of the Confessors' Palace, on
her way to find Richard, Kahlan paused at the open double doors to a large room
used for formal receptions. The room was a calming blue color, with dark blue
drapes over the tall, narrow windows. The granite floor had a starburst pattern
of
darker
and lighter stone radiating out from the center. Lamps on cherrywood stands
around the edge of the room lent a mellow light to the gathering hall. The
table where small foods were sometimes set out for guests now held only an
array of candles.
Kahlan's
attention had been drawn by the sound of Drefan's voice. He stood to the right,
before the table with the candles, speaking to perhaps fifty or sixty people.
They sat cross-legged on the floor before him, listening with rapt attention as
he spoke of the way of health, of keeping the body sound by being in touch with
the inner self.
Most of
the people nodded absently as they listened to Drefan explaining how, by
defiling their bodies with unhealthy thoughts and actions, people opened the
pathway for sickness to enter. He told them that the Creator had endowed them
with the ability to fight off things such as the plague, if only they would do
as nature provided, by eating the right foods that would strengthen the auras
that defended the body, and by using inner reflection to direct the vigor of
various energy fields to their proper function in harmony with the whole.
Many of
the things he said made sense: not eating foods that you knew gave you
headaches, because it interfered with the mind's ability to regulate the body:
not eating foods that you knew caused pains and cramps in the gut. because it
interfered with the body's ability to digest the good foods you needed: not
eating heavy meals right before sleeping, because it interfered with your body
getting the rest it needed to remain strong, and how all of these things
disrupt the auras that give us strength and protect health.
People
marveled openly that Drefan could make it all so simple for them to understand.
They spoke as if they had been blind, and now for the first time had vision.
They watched with unblinking eyes as he went on. telling them that we had
within us the power to control our own bodies, and that disease could only
afflict us if we allowed it to. He spoke of herbs and foods that purged poisons
from the body and left people truly healthy for perhaps the first time since
their birth.
These
people weren't listening to Lord Rahl's brother, they were listening to Drefan
Rahl, High Priest of the Raug'Moss.
As one,
they followed the High Priest's instructions when he told them to close their
eyes and draw the breath of life and healthy steams through their noses and
down into their inner core by using the muscles low in their bellies. He
explained how to let it reach deep into the source of the power of each
person's unique aura. to draw out the poisons from the furthest, darkest
coiners of their beings and expel it out through the mouth, to be replaced with
a renewing breath of life drawn in again through the nose.
Better,
Kahlan guessed, that these people would come to Drefan for advice that might
help them, and at least sounded like it could do no harm. than spend their
savings on false hope from the hucksters in the street. Paying attention to
their body's needs with things like proper food and rest seemed sound advice.
As they
all drew the slow, deep breaths in through their noses. Drefan turned his head
and locked his Darken Rahl eyes on Kahlan, as if he had known all along that
she had been standing there outside the doorway. He gave her a kind-hearted
smile that sparkled benevolently in his blue eyes. She could see why these
people put their trust in him. She made herself return a little smile. Kahlan
remembered the talk she had had with Shota about how difficult it was
to banish
unpleasant memories. Kahlan wished she could forget Drefan's hand between
Cara's legs.
Drefan
was trying to help people. He was doing everything he could to halt the plague.
He was a great healer-the High Priest of the Raug'Moss. She tried to put the image
of him comforting those sick children in place of the memory of his forcing his
big hand down between Cara's legs.
Drefan
had explained, at the time, why he had done that to Cara. He had saved Cara's
life. A Mord-Sith, screaming in pain, then unconscious, and Drefan had brought
her back. Richard found comfort in Drefan, as did everyone else. Kahlan broke
eye contact with him and continued on her way to find Richard.
Tristan
Bashkar, the Jarian ambassador staying at the Confessors' Palace while he waited
for further signs from the stars, further word from above, before surrendering,
paused at a balcony as she passed below. As was his habit, he drew back his
coat and rested his hand on his hip. It displayed the wicked dagger he wore at
his belt. Oftentimes, in conversation, he would also put a boot up on a chair
or stool and casually rest his forearm on his knee. It provided those in
conversation with him the opportunity to see also the knife he kept in his
boot.
The
more she saw Tristan in the palace, watching her with his cunning eyes, the
more she disliked his presence. If there was a man who acted more childish,
Kahlan didn't know him.
Tristan
watched silently as she hurried on her way. Kahlan was glad he was up on a
balcony, so that she wouldn't have to waste time playing word games with him.
Ulic
and Egan gave Kahlan an odd look as she greeted them before whisking through
the door to the small room Richard liked to use to study Kolo's journal. He was
sitting with his head in his hands, his fingers buried in his hair, as he read
from another book that lay open on the table. Two candles and a lamp on the
table beside him provided light, and a small, fragrant fire of birch logs added
warmth to the cozy room. His cloak lay over a nearby chair, but he wore his
sword.
Richard
looked up. When he saw her, he shot to his feet. Without the gold cloak, he was
like a big, black shadow gliding across the room. Before he could speak, Kahlan
rushed into his arms.
Kahlan
pressed the side of her face to his chest as she hugged him. "Please,
Richard, don't yell at me. Please, just hold me." Tears choked her voice.
"Please, don't say anything-just hold me."
It was
ecstasy being with him again. It never failed to astound her, whenever she saw
him, just how much she needed and loved him.
Richard's
arms enclosed her in comforting shelter. She listened to the fire crackle, and
the sound of his heart under her ear. She could almost imagine, in the safety
of his strong arms. that everything was fine, and that they had a future. She
remembered her mother's words. Confessors don't have love, Kahlan. They have
duty.
Kahlan
clutched his black shirt as she fought a losing battle to hold back tears. He
held her and stroked her hair. She had asked him to hold her and not speak, and
he was doing just that. That only made her feel worse.
He must
have questions. He must want to say something to her, to tell her how relieved
he was to see her sate, to tell her how worried he had been, to ask her where
she had been and what she had found out, to tell her what he had found, to
yell at
her; but he didn't. Instead, without protest, he did as she had asked,
relegating his own desires to secondary, after hers.
How
would she go on without his love? How would she draw a breath? How would she
manage to make herself go on until she was old and could finally finish her
duty and at last die?
"Richard
. . . I'm so sorry I made that letter sound threatening. I didn't mean to
threaten you, I swear. I just wanted you to be safe. I'm so sorry if I hurt
you."
He
squeezed her a little tighter and kissed the top of her head. Kahlan wished she
could just die in his arms. now. and not have to face her duty. not have to
face the finality of the future, the finality of losing him. "How's your
foot?" she asked. "My foot?"
"Cara
said you hurt it on a chair."
"Oh.
My foot is fine. The chair died, but I don't think it suffered." Against
all odds, Kahlan laughed. She looked up through her tears into his gentle
smile.
"All
right. I think your hug has revived me. You can yell at me now." He kissed
her instead. The feeling of being pulled up in his arms was rapture. Being in
the sliph didn't even come close.
"So."
he finally said. "what did our ancestors' spirits have to say?"
"Our ancestors' . . . how did you know that I went to the Mud
People?" Richard's brow curved into a bewildered cast. "Kahlan, your
face is all painted so the ancestors' spirits could see you in a gathering. Did
you think I wouldn't notice?' '
Kahlan
touched her fingers to her forehead, to her cheek. "I was in such a hurry,
I never even gave it any thought. No wonder people have been giving me such odd
looks."
As she
had raced through the palace looking for him. three different women on the
staff had offered to draw her a bath. Everyone must have thought she had gone
mad.
Richard's
expression turned serious as he settled his arms around her waist. "So,
what did the ancestors' spirits have to say?"
Kahlan
steeled herself. She tilted her head, indicating the bone knife on her arm.
"Grandfather's spirit called me, through his bone knife. He had to speak
with me. He told me that the plague isn't confined to Aydindril. It's spread
all over the Midlands."
Richard
tensed. "Do you think it's true?"
"Elder
Breginderin had the tokens on his legs. He's probably dead by now. Some
children reported that they saw a woman near the Mud People's village. She
showed them something with colored light, just like what Lily told us she saw.
One of those children has already died. Sister Amelia was there." "Dear
spirits," Richard whispered.
"It
gets worse. The spirit showed me other places I know in the Midlands. He said
that the plague has spread to all these places, too. The spirit showed me what
will be if the plague isn't stopped. Death will sweep the land. Few will
survive.
"The
spirit told me that magic stolen from the Temple of the Winds started the
plague, but that the plague itself isn't magic. Jagang has used magic more
powerful than he understands. If allowed to rage unchecked, the plague could eventually
sweep into the Old World, too."
"Small
consolation. Did the spirit say how Jagang stole this magic from the Temple of
the Winds?"
Kahlan
nodded as she looked away from his eyes. "You were right about the red
moons. It was a warning that the Temple of the Winds had been violated."
Kahlan
told him about the Hall of the Betrayer, and how Sister Amelia had been able to
tread that path. Kahlan recounted the rest of her meeting with the spirit of
Chandalen's grandfather, as best as she could remember it, including the part
about the temple being at least partially sentient, as Richard had suspected.
Richard
leaned an arm against the mantel as he stared into the fire. He pinched his
lower lip as he listened patiently.
Kahlan
told him how the spirit had told her that to stop the plague, they must get
into the Temple of the Winds, how it existed in both worlds at the same time,
and how both the good and the evil spirits were involved and had a say in this.
"And
the ancestor's spirit could give you no indication how we were to get to the
Temple of the Winds?"
"No,"
Kahlan said. "In fact, he wasn't interested in that part of it. He said
that the temple would reveal what must be done. Shota said the same
thing."
Engrossed
in thought, Richard nodded while he considered her words. Kahlan twisted her
fingers together while she waited.
"What
about Shota?" he asked at last. "What happened with her?" Kahlan
hesitated. She knew she had to tell him at least some of it, but she was
reluctant to tell him all of what Shota had said. "Richard, I don't
believe Shota was trying to cause trouble." He looked back over his
shoulder. "She sends Nadine to marry me, and you don't think that kind of
interference trouble?"
Kahlan
cleared her throat into her fist. "Shota didn't send Nadine,
exactly." Richard's hawklike gaze continued to fix on her, so she went on.
"The message about the winds hunting you was not her idea. The Temple of
the Winds was sending you a message, through her. just as it was sending you a
message through that boy who died. Shota wasn't trying to harm us."
Richard's
brow lowered. "What else did the witch woman tell you?" Kahlan
interlocked her fingers behind her back. She looked away from his penetrating
glare.
"Richard,
I went there to put an end to Shota's interference. I was prepared to kill her,
if she threatened you or tried to harm me. I thought the worst of her. I did. I
was convinced she was trying to harm us.
"I
talked with her. Really talked. Shota isn't as . . . malicious as I thought.
She admitted she doesn't want us to have a child, but this isn't about trying
to keep us apart.
"She
has a talent for seeing the future, and she is only telling us what she sees-
to try to help you. She's just the messenger in this. She's not directing these
events. She said the same thing as the ancestor's spirit, that the plague was
started by magic, and not of its own accord."
With
three strides, Richard closed the distance between them. He seized her by the
upper arm.
"She
sent Nadine to marry me! She sent Nadine to keep us apart! She's trying to put
a wedge between us, and you are taken in by her tricks?"
Kahlan
backed away from him. "No, Richard, you have it wrong, as did 1. The
spirits sent you a bride. Shota was only able to influence who it would be. She
used
that
influence so that the bride sent would be Nadine. Shota says she sees that you
will marry this bride sent by the spirits, and so she wanted it to be someone
you knew. She was only trying to ease your pain in this." "And you
believe her? Have you lost your mind!" "Richard, you're hurting my
arm."
He
released her. "Sorry." he muttered, as he withdrew to the hearth.
Kahlan could see the muscles in his jaw flexing as he ground his teeth.
"You
said she told you the same as the ancestor's spirit. Do you remember her
words?"
Kahlan
tried frantically to separate what she knew she had to tell him from what she
didn't want him to know. She realized how unwise it was to try to hide
information from Richard, but she reasoned that if she had to. she could always
tell him everything. If she could get away with withholding some of it. though
. . .
"Shota
said we have not heard the last message from the winds. She said we will
receive one more, involving the moon." "Involving the moon?
How?"
"I
don't know. Just like the spirit, the 'how' didn't seem to be important to her.
What she did say was that this message from the moon will be the 'consequential
communion.' as she called it. She said we must not ignore or dismiss it."
"Did she, now. And did she say why. exactly?"
"She
said our future-and the future of all those innocent people-will hinge on this
event. She said it would be our only chance to carry out our duty to save the
innocent lives of all those who depend upon us to do what they cannot."
Richard
turned to her. It was like death itself rounding on her. His eyes had that
look. like Drefan's. Like Darken Rahl's.
"She
told you something else that you're holding back. What is it?" he growled.
It wasn't Richard speaking, it was the Seeker. She knew in that instant why a
Seeker was so feared: he was a law unto himself. Those gray eyes were looking
right into her.
"Richard,"
she whispered, "please leave it at that." His glare cut to her soul.
"What did she tell you?"
Kahlan
swallowed as she panted with dread. She could feel hot tears coursing down her
face.
"Shota
saw the future." Kahlan heard herself speaking, even though she had
intended to remain silent. "She saw that you will wed another. She used
her influence to make it someone you knew." Under his glare, she found
remaining silent impossible. "She could not influence who I am to wed. I
will be married. too. It will not be you who becomes my husband."
Richard
stood frozen for a moment, a boiling thunderhead gathering. He yanked the
baldric off over his head and tossed it and the scabbard holding the sword on a
chair.
"Richard,
what are you doing?"
And
then he was moving. He went for the door. Kahlan put herself in front of him.
It was like stepping in front of an enraged mountain. "Richard, what are
you going to do?"
He
grasped her by the waist, picked her up. and set her aside as if she were no
more than a child in his way. "I'm going to kill her." Kahlan threw
her arms around his waist from behind, trying to drag him to a
halt.
It slowed him no more than if she had been a gnat. He was leaving his sword
because he couldn't travel in the sliph with the magic of the Sword of Truth.
"Richard! Richard, please, stop! If you love me, stop!" He halted and
turned his wrathful glare on her. His voice came like a crack of thunder.
"What?"
"Richard,
do you think I'm stupid?" "Of course not."
"Then
do you believe I want to marry someone else?" "No."
"Richard,
you have to listen to me. Shota said she saw the future. She isn't making the
future, she just saw it. She told me these things so that what she saw might
help us."
"I've
had all of the 'help' from Shota I intend to have. I'll have no more of it. She
has taken one liberty too many. It will be her last."
"Richard,
we have to figure out what to do. We have to do what we can to stop this
plague. You saw those sick, dying children. The spirit of Chandalen's
grandfather showed me countless other dead children-dead people of all sorts.
That will be the future if you do this. Do you want those children and their
parents to die because you refuse to use your head?"
His
fist was gripping some sort of ornament on an elaborate necklace. She realized
she had never seen it before.
Even
though he wasn't wearing his sword, its magic drove him. He was a cauldron of
lethal rage. Death was dancing in his eyes.
"I
don't care what Shota says, I'll not marry Nadine. Nor will I stand by while
you-"
"I
know," she whispered. "Richard, I know how you feel. How do you think
this makes me feel? But use your head. This is not the way to change what Shota
says. You always said before that the future is not yet decided, and that we
couldn't act on what Shota says. You always said that we couldn't allow
ourselves to put our faith in what she says, and let it direct our actions."
His eyes shone with deadly wrath. "You believe her."
Kahlan
took a calming breath, trying to regain her composure. "I believe she saw
the future. Richard, don't you remember how she also said that I would touch
you with my power? Look at how that turned out. She was right, but it wasn't
the calamitous event I feared. It was what brought us together, and allowed us
to have our love."
"How
can your marrying someone else turn out good?" Kahlan abruptly realized
what this was really about: he was jealous. She had never seen him this jealous
before. But that's what it was-a jealous rage.
"I
would be lying if I told you I knew." Kahlan gripped his broad shoulders.
"Richard, I love you, and that's the truth. I could never love anyone
else. You believe me, don't you? I trust in your love for me, and I know that
you don't love Nadine. Don't you believe in me? Don't you trust me?"
He
visibly cooled. "Of course I do. I do trust you." Frustration
replaced the rage in his eyes. He released the amulet in his fist.
"But-"
"But
nothing. We love each other, and that's all there is to it. Whatever happens,
we have to believe in each other. If we don't believe in each other, then we
are lost in this."
At
last, he pulled her into his arms. She knew his anguish. She felt it, too.
Hers, though, was worse, because she didn't believe there was a way out of
Shota's prediction.
Kahlan
lifted the strange amulet at his neck. In the center, surrounded by a complex
of gold and silver lines, was a teardrop-shaped ruby as big as her thumbnail.
"Richard, what is this? Where did you get it?"
He
lifted the gold and silver object from her fingers to peer down at it.
"It's a symbol, like the others I wear. I found it in the Keep."
"In the First Wizard's enclave?"
"Yes.
It was part of this outfit, but unlike the rest of it. this was left in the
First Wizard's enclave. The man who wore it was the First Wizard in Kolo's
time. His name was Baraccus."
"Cara
told me that you found the record of the trial. What did it look like in there?"
Richard
stared off. "It was . . . beautiful. I didn't want to leave."
"Have you found out anything from the book yet?"
"No.
It's in High D'Haran. Berdine is working on Kolo's journal; I'll work on this
one. I've only had an hour or so to start translating it. I haven't really done
much yet: I was too worried about you to be able to think about anything
else."
Kahlan
touched the amulet hanging around his neck. "Do you know what this symbol
represents?"
"Yes.
The ruby is meant to represent a drop of blood. It is the symbolic
representation of the way of the primary edict." "The primary
edict?"
His
voice turned distant, as if speaking to himself more than to her. "It
means only one thing, and everything: cut. Once committed to fight, cut.
Everything else is secondary. Cut. That is your duty, your purpose, your
hunger. There is no rule more important, no commitment that overrides that one.
Cut." His words chilled her to the bone as he went on.
' The
lines are a portrayal of the dance. Cut from the void, not from bewilderment.
Cut the enemy as quickly and directly as possible. Cut with certainty. Cut
decisively, resolutely. Cut into his strength. Flow through the gaps in his
guard. Cut him. Cut him down utterly. Don't allow him a breath. Crush him. Cut
him without mercy to the depths of his spirit.
"It
is the balance to life: death. It is the dance with death. "It is the law
a war wizard lives by. or he dies."
CHAPTER������������� 49
Clarissa
sat curled up in a chair, sewing the hem of a new dress Nathan had bought for
her. He had wanted to let the seamstress do the work, but she had insisted on
doing it herself, mostly to have something to do. Nathan had smiled and told
her that if it would please her, then it was all right with him. She didn't
know what she would do with all the dresses he kept buying for her. She had
told him to stop, but he just kept doing it.
Nathan
returned from the door, having had a long discussion with a soldier named
Bollesdun about the movements of Jagang's expeditionary force. They were the
men who had attacked her home of Renwold, Clarissa had learned. She tried not
to listen to Nathan's talks with his soldier friends who showed up from time to
time.
She
didn't like to think about the nightmare of Renwold. Nathan told her that he
wanted to end the killing, so there would be no more Renwolds. He called it a
waste of life.
Clarissa
touched Nathan's leg when he came close. "Is there anything I can do to
help?"
His
blue eyes turned toward her, watching her for a long moment. "No, not yet.
I must write a letter. I'm expecting someone soon. Don't go into the bedroom to
answer the door when they come. Stay in here. I don't want them to get a look
at you. You don't have magic, so they won't know you're in here."
Clarissa
caught the tone of disquiet in his voice. "Do you think they will cause
trouble? They won't try to hurt you, will they?"
A sly
smile took his face. ' 'That would be the last mistake they ever made. I've
laid so many traps around this place that the Keeper himself wouldn't dare to
try to take me here." He winked at her, as if to reassure her. "Watch
through the keyhole, if you wish. It may be good for you to remember the faces
of these people. They're dangerous."
Her
stomach churning with anxiety, Clarissa began embroidering little vines and
leaves along the hem of the dress, because she thought they would be pretty,
and to pass the time while Nathan wrote his letter. When he finished, he
clasped his hands behind his back and paced.
When
the knock finally came, he looked toward the bedroom, where stood the door to
the hall. He turned to her and crossed his lips with a finger. Clarissa nodded.
He shut the door to the sitting room as he went to answer the knock. She set
aside her needlework and knelt at the door to peek through the keyhole.
She had
a good view of the hall door as Nathan pulled it open. Two attractive women,
about Clarissa's age, stood in the hall. Two young men waited behind them. The
scowls on the women could have cut stone.
Clarissa
was astonished to see that each woman had a small gold ring through her lower
lip, as did Clarissa.
"Well.
well." one of the women said contemptuously, "if it isn't the prophet
himself. We thought it was probably you. Nathan, messing about in things that
aren't your business."
Nathan
grinned as he bowed dramatically from the waist. "Sister Jodelle. Sister
Willamina. How nice to see you again. And that's Lord Rahl. Even to you, Sister
Jodelle."
"Lord
Rahl." Sister Jodelle said in a flat. mocking voice. "So we've heard."
Nathan waggled his fingers in greeting to the two young men standing out in the
hall behind the two women. "Vincent, Pierce, how good to see you two boy
wizards again. Still trying to master prophecy, are you? Come for some advice?
Maybe a lesson?"
"In
a little over your head, aren't you. old man?" one of the young men asked.
Nathan's amusement vanished. He flicked his finger. The young man cried out and
dropped to the floor.
"I
told you. Pierce, it's Lord Rahl." Nathan's voice turned as deadly as
Clarissa had ever heard it. "Don't test me again."
Sister
Willamina scowled back at Pierce, whispering a harsh admonishment as he
staggered to his feet.
Nathan
held his arm out in invitation. "Won't you ladies please come in? Bring
your boys, too."
Clarissa
didn't think they really looked like boys. as Nathan called them. She thought
they looked to be in their late twenties, at least. The four warily stepped
inside and stood in a bunch, hands clasped before them. while Nathan shut the
door.
"Pretty
risky, Na ... Lord Rahl, to let the four of us get this close," Sister
Jodelle said. "I wouldn't think you would be this careless, now that
you've somehow convinced some feeble-minded Sister to take pity on you and
remove your Rada'Han."
Nathan
slapped his knee and howled with laughter. None of the other four so much as
cracked a smile.
"Risky?"
he asked, as his fit of laughter died out. "Why, what have I to fear from
the likes of you four? And I'll have you know that I took off the Rada'Han by
myself. I think it only fair to tell you that while you foolishly chose to view
me as a crazy old man, I was studying things you can't even fathom. While all
of you Sisters-"
"Get
to the point," Sister Jodelle growled.
Nathan
held up a finger. "The point is, my fine people, that I have no ill will
toward you or your leader, but I can weave webs you couldn't even understand,
much less defend against, should you wish me harm. For example. I'm sure you
detect the simple shields I've placed here and there, but there is more. hidden
beyond those things you sense. Should you-"
Sister
Jodelle lost her patience and cut him off again. "We didn't come here to
listen to the babble of a doddering old man. Do you think us stupid? We
detected the pathetic magic you have so proudly laced about this place, and I
can tell you with confidence there's not a bit of it that one of us alone
couldn't slice apart with ease. while at the same time enjoying a bowl of
soup!" Vincent shoved the two Sisters aside. "I've heard just about
enough from this
dried-up
old jackass. He always was full of himself. It's about time he learned just who
he's dealing with!"
Nathan
made no move to defend himself as Vincent lifted his hands. Clarissa's eyes
went wide in fright as the young man's fingers curled and his face twisted with
hate. Clarissa covered her mouth in terror as light shot from Vincent's hands
toward Nathan.
A brief
whine sang through the air. The light from the young man scattered. There was a
thump that Clarissa could feel in the floor as light flared through the other
room.
When
the sound and light cleared, Vincent was gone.
On the
floor, where he had stood, Clarissa could see a small pile of white ash. Nathan
went to the wall and retrieved a broom leaned there, just behind a curtain. He
opened the door and swept the ash out through the door into the hall.
"Thank
you for coming, Vincent. Sorry you have to leave now. Let me show you
out."
With a
flourish, Nathan swept the last of the ash out into the hall, creating a small
cloud as he did so. He shut the door and turned back to the gaping gazes of the
three people left.
"Now,
as I was saying, you will be making the last mistake of your lives if you
underestimate me or what it is you think me capable of. Your negligible
intellects couldn't even understand it if I showed it to you." Nathan's
brow drew down in a way that frightened even Clarissa. "Now, show proper
respect and bow to the Lord Rahl."
Reluctantly,
the three people bowed, each touching a knee to the floor. "What is it you
want?" Sister Jodelle asked after she had straightened. Her voice had lost
some of its edge. "You can tell Jagang that I'm interested in peace."
"Peace?"
Sister Jodelle fussed back some of her dark hair. "What position are you
in that you could make such an offer?' '
Nathan
lifted his chin. "I am Lord Rahl. I will soon be Master of D'Hara. I will
be in command of the New World. I believe it is a war with the New World in
which Jagang is embroiled."
Sister
Jodelle's eyes narrowed. "What do you mean, you are soon to be the Master
of D'Hara?"
"Just
tell Jagang that his daring plan is about to be successfully completed; he will
soon have eliminated the present Lord Rahl. Jagang has made a mistake, though.
He forgot about me."
"But
. . . but - . ." Sister Jodelle sputtered, "you aren't the Lord
Rahl." Nathan leaned toward them with a sly smile. "If Jagang
succeeds, which as a prophet I can foresee he will, then I will be the Lord
Rahl. I am a Rahl, born with the gift. All D'Harans will become bonded to me.
As you know, that bond will prevent the dream walker from using his talent to
take the New World.
"Jagang
has made a mistake." Nathan thunked Pierce on the head. "He's been
using amateur prophets, like this witless tadpole." Pierce turned red.
"I'm no amateur prophet!"
Nathan
regarded him with a look of contempt. "Really? Then why didn't you warn
Jagang that by using prophecy to eliminate Richard Rahl, it would get him
nowhere but into a worse predicament, because it would leave me to become the
Lord Rahl, Master of D'Hara and most of the major powers in the New World?
Did you
warn him about that result? While Richard may be determined, he knows next to
nothing about magic, whereas I know a great deal about it. A very great
deal."
Nathan
lowered over Pierce. "Just ask Vincent. A real prophet would have realized
the danger lurking behind my simple shields, waiting to be triggered if anyone
attacked. Did you?"
Sister
Willamina put out an arm. forcing Pierce back. and just in time. it appeared to
Clarissa, as Nathan looked to be about to make another pile of white dust.
"What is it you want. Lord Rahl?" she asked.
"Jagang
can either listen to my terms, or he can have really big trouble on his hands.
Trouble a lot worse than Richard Rahl." "Terms?" Sister Jodelle
drew the word out suspiciously. "The present Lord Rahl is young and
idealistic: he would never surrender to Jagang. I, on the other hand, am older
and wiser. I know the foolishness of a war that would take the lives of
countless people. And to what purpose? Just for the right to put a name to the
one who is the leader?
"Richard
is a young fool who doesn't know how to use his power. I am not a young fool,
and, as you saw, I know how to use my gift. I'm willing to entertain the
possibility of letting Jagang rule the New World as he wishes." "And
in return?"
Nathan
casually flicked his hand. "I simply want some of the spoils for myself-
in return for my assistance. I will have the rule of D'Hara. Under his
leadership, of course. I will be his man, running the affairs of D'Hara. Other
than Jagang, no one will outrank me. Quite fair I think."
The
young Pierce was still white as a sheet, and trying to look invisible behind
the two women. The two Sisters, on the other hand, were looking suddenly a lot
less unhappy. They wore small, interested smiles. "How would Jagang know
that you could be trusted?"
"Trusted?
Does he think I'm as stupid as the young Lord Rahl leading the New World right
now? I saw what was done to Renwold. If I didn't rule D'Hara as Jagang wished,
allowing him generous tribute, he might come in and try to crush us. Wars are
expensive. I'd rather have the wealth for myself."
Sister
Jodelle smiled politely. "And in the meantime? How do we know you really
mean this?"
"So.
it's assurance you want?" Nathan rubbed his chin as he stared up at the
ceiling. "There is a D'Haran army, of close to a hundred thousand men.
north of here. You'll never find them without my help, until they descend on
Jagang's expeditionary force. When Jagang finishes eliminating the present Lord
Rahl, then this army's bond will transfer to me. They will be loyal to me. As
soon as that happens. I will surrender that army to his, giving him even more
men at arms. D'Harans have a long tradition of warring for plunder. They'll fit
right in with Jagang's force."
"Surrender
an army," Sister Jodelle said in a reflective tone. "You see, my kind
Sisters, Jagang is trying to use prophecy to win this war. In that. he has made
a mistake; he is using wizards who are not real prophets. I could provide the
expert service of a real prophet. His alternative is to have a real prophet as
his enemy, and amateurs to aid him. The aid of amateurs is what got him into
this . . . predicament, don't you see? "For a small, insignificant slice
of the spoils. I can get him out of it. I'm sure
you can
understand that after all those years under the care of you fine Sisters, I'd
like to spend my few remaining years enjoying the pleasures of life.
"With
my help, there will be no more resistance from the New World than that offered
by Renwold. If Jagang should choose to be unreasonable, well, who knows, with a
real prophet on the side of the New World, they might even win." Sister
Jodelle studied Nathan's eyes. "Yes. I see what you mean." Nathan held
out his letter. "Here. Give this to Jagang. It explains my proposal and
terms, in return for my surrender of the New World. As I said. I'm sure he will
find me much more reasonable than the present Lord Rahl; I know that there is
no profit in war. One leader or another, it means little. Why should hundreds
of thousands of people die over the name put to that leader?"
Both
Sisters glanced around the luxurious room and smiled conspiratorially at
Nathan.
"Why,
you crafty old man," Sister Jodelle said. "And here, all this time,
we thought you were just an old fool, living out your life down in your
apartments. Well, Lord Rahl, we will pass your words along to Emperor Jagang. I
think he will find them most interesting. Had the present Lord Rahl been so
reasonable, he wouldn't be in his present, fatal difficulties." "All
those years do give a man time to think."
Sister
Jodelle turned back from the door. "I can't speak for the emperor, Lord
Rahl, but I think he will be most pleased with this news. I think we can dare
to see the end to this war, and the victory that will result in Jagang being
the name put to the leader of all people."
"I
just want the killing to stop. It would profit us all. Sister. Oh, and tell
Jagang that I am sorry about Vincent, but the boy wasn't really serving him
well, anyway." Sister Jodelle shrugged. "You're right, Lord Rahl, he
wasn't."
CHAPTER������������� 50
Richard
ran his fingers through his hair as he rested his forehead in his palms. He
looked up when he heard someone enter the room. It was Kahlan.
His
heart lifted at her smile, her bright green eyes. the lush fall of her thick
hair, at how beautiful she was. He marveled at her beauty, and that she loved
him.
The
safety he felt in that love was something he had never imagined he would feel.
He had always imagined being in love with someone, but he had never imagined
the feeling of security and peace it would bring to his soul. If Shota ever did
anything to harm that security . . .
Kahlan
carried a steaming bowl of soup. "I thought you might like something to
eat. You've been at this for a hand of days now: I think you need to get more
sleep, too."
He
glanced at the big white bowl in her hands. "Thanks." Her brow
wrinkled. "Richard, what's wrong? Your face is white as ashes." He
leaned back in his chair and sighed. "I feel a little sick." She
turned white as ashes, too. "Sick. Richard, it isn't-" "No, it's
not that. It's this book on the Temple of the Winds inquisition and trial. I
almost wish I'd never found it."
Kahlan
leaned over as she set down the bowl. "Here. Eat some of this."
"What is it?" Richard asked, as he watched the lush curve of her
cleavage rise and fall above the square neckline of her white Confessor's
dress. "Lentil porridge. Eat some. What have you found out?" Richard
sucked in through his mouth to cool the spoonful of porridge. "I haven't
translated much yet, it's taking forever, but from just the little bit I've
been able to figure out. these people, these wizards . . . they . . . they
executed all the wizards who sent away the Temple of the Winds. The temple
team. they called them. Almost a hundred men." He pulled a finger across
his throat.
Kahlan
sat on the edge of the table opposite him. "What did they do to warrant
death?"
Richard
stirred the porridge. "Well, for one thing, they left a way into the
Temple of the Winds, as they were directed to do. but they made it so hard to
get back into the temple that when these people wanted to get back in to
retrieve some magic, in order to fight the war, they couldn't."
"Kolo
said that there were the red moons, that the temple sent the warning. You mean,
the wizards of old were never able to answer the warning?"
"That
wasn't the way it worked. They did get back in." He waved his spoon for
emphasis. "In fact, that was the reason for the red moon. It was the
second attempt to get in, to answer the red moons caused by the first person
sent. that they failed at."
Kahlan
leaned toward him while Richard ate a spoonful of porridge. "But this
first person got in?"
"Oh
yes, he got in. In that was the problem." Kahlan shook her head. "I'm
not following this."
Richard
set down his spoon and leaned back in his chair. He met her gaze. "The
temple team, who sent away the Temple of the Winds, were also the ones who
placed the magic in it. You know about some of the terrible magical creations
that were made in the war? Things made out of people? Like the mriswith? Like
the dream walkers?
"Well,
the people of the New World were fighting the people of the Old World, who
wanted to eliminate magic, much as Jagang does today. These wizards who took
the things of power to the safety of the temple were somewhat in sympathy with
those in the Old World who wanted to eliminate magic. They thought that using
people lo create these terrible weapons was as evil as some of the very things
they fought against."
Fascinated,
Kahlan leaned toward him. "You mean they turned to the side of the enemy?
They were really working for those in the Old World, to eliminate magic?' '
"No,
they weren't working to defeat the New World, or to stop all magic, but they
felt that they viewed the whole matter on a wider scope than just the war,
unlike the wizards in charge, here, at the Keep. They sought the middle ground.
They decided that, to an extent, the war, and all their troubles, were related
to the misuse of magic.
"They
decided that something had to be done." Kahlan hooked some hair behind her
ear. "Done? Like what?" "You know the way the Keep used to be
full of wizards? The way wizards used to have both sides of the magic? The way
the wizards of old wielded much more power than even Zedd does now as First
Wizard? The way those born with the gift are more and more rare all the time?
"I
think these wizards used the Temple of the Winds to withdraw some of magic's
power from this world-they locked it away in the underworld, where it couldn't
be used to cause harm, as they saw it, in this world."
Kahlan
put a hand to her chest. "Dear spirits. What gave them the right to decide
this? They are not the Creator who gave all things, including magic."
Richard
smiled. "The head of the inquisition said much the same thing. He demanded
to know exactly what they had done." "And have you found the
answer?"
' 1
haven't translated much, yet, and I don't understand the way the magic worked,
but I think that what the temple team did was to lock away the Subtractive
portion of the wizards' magic. It's the Subtractive part that was used to turn
people into these weapons; with it, (hey took away parts of who these people
were. the parts these wizards didn't want, and then with Additive Magic, the
wizards added in the things they did want, so they could use these people as
weapons."
"What
about you? You were born with both sides. If the power was locked away, how
does that explain your gift? I, too, have an element of Subtractive Magic to my
Confessor's power. Darken Rahl used Subtractive Magic, as do some of the
Sisters. There are creatures yet today who have some of this element to their
magic." Richard wiped a weary hand across his face. "I don't know.
I'm not even positive
about
what I've told you. There's still most of this book to translate. I've only
just begun.
"Even
when I translate it all. I'm not sure it will provide the answers we want. This
was an inquisition and trial: they weren't trying to teach me history. It was
common knowledge at the time. They didn't need to explain it.
"What
I'm beginning to think the temple team did was to halt Subtractive Magic's
ability to be passed on to the offspring of wizards. Your magic isn't passed on
from a wizard, so perhaps that's why it wasn't affected. Darken Rahl learned to
use Subtractive Magic: he wasn't born with it. Therein, perhaps, lies the
difference. Maybe they miscalculated how taking Subtractive Magic out of those
born with the wizard's gift would affect the balance, and so didn't anticipate
the way it would cause fewer and fewer to be born with the gift.
"Maybe
they did know. Maybe that's what they wanted. Maybe that's why they were
executed." "What about the red moons?"
"Well,
when those in charge found all this out. they sent someone to undo what these
wizards had done. They needed one with tremendous power, and conviction. hoping
he would have enough strength to succeed. They sent the most zealous proponent
of magic among them, a fanatic-the head prosecutor, a powerful wizard named
Lothain-to the Temple of the Winds to undo the damage." Kahlan drew her
lower lip between her teeth. "What happened?" "He got in,
through Betrayer's Hall, just like you told me. It worked just as you said;
Lothain entered, but in so doing, he betrayed them. I'm not sure what it was
that he did: many of the words, I think, have to do with specific magic that I
don't understand. But from what I gather, he reinforced what the wizards who
sent the temple away had done. and made it even worse.
"He
betrayed those in the New World. Because he had to alter the way the Temple of
the Winds held this magic, it set off the warnings of the red moons.
"When
the Temple sent the red moons, and the call for aid, a wizard was sent. Because
the temple was sending for help, the wizards were glad for the call. since it
meant that they wouldn't have to enter through Betrayer's Hall. They thought
they would be able to get in and at last remedy the problem. He never came
back. They sent another, more powerful and experienced wizard. He never
returned, either.
"Finally,
in view of the seriousness of the situation, the First Wizard himself went to
the Temple of the Winds." Richard lifted the amulet at his chest.
"Baraccus." "Baraccus," Kahlan breathed in wonder.
"Did he get into the temple?" "They were never sure."
Richard pushed his thumb back and forth along the edge of the table.
"Baraccus came back in a dazed stupor. They followed after him, but he
didn't react or respond to anything they said or did.
"He
went into the First Wizard's enclave-his retreat-and left this there."
Richard held up the amulet at his chest, showing it to her. "He came out,
removed the rest of his outfit-these things I wear-and then walked to the edge
of the rampart and jumped off the side of the mountain to his death."
Kahlan
sat back up straight while Richard cleared his throat and gathered his voice
before going on.
"After
that, the wizards abandoned any further attempt to get into the Temple of the
Winds, to answer the call of the red moons, as impossible. They were never able
to get in to undo the damage the temple team and then Lothain had done."
Kahlan
watched him with a sober look as he stared off at nothing. "How did they
know all this?"
Richard's
fist tightened around the amulet at his chest. "They used a Confessor.
Magda Searus. The first Mother Confessor herself." "She lived in that
lime? She was there, in this war? I never knew that." Richard rubbed his
fingertips across the furrows on his brow. "Lothain wouldn't tell them
what he had done. The wizards conducting the trial were the ones who ordered
the creation of the Confessors. Magda Searus was the first. They knew that they
wouldn't be able to torture the truth out of Lothain-they tried-so they took
this woman, Magda Searus, created the magic of the Confessors, and instilled
the power in her.
"She
touched Lothain with her power and got the truth out of him. He confessed the
extent of what the temple team had done, and what he had done."
Richard
looked away from her green eyes. "The wizard who did this to Magda Searus,
created the Confessors' power, was named Merritt. The tribunal was so pleased
with the results of Merritt's conjuring that they commanded an order of
Confessors to be created, and wizards assigned to safeguard them.
"Merritt
became protector to Magda Searus, her wizard, in return for the life, the duty,
to which he had condemned her, to which he had condemned all the descendants of
Confessors to follow."
The room
fell silent. Kahlan was wearing her Confessor's face: the blank expression that
showed nothing of her feelings. He didn't need to see an expression on her face
to know her feelings. Richard pulled the porridge back and ate some more. It
had cooled considerably.
"Richard,"
Kahlan finally whispered, "if these wizards, with all that power, with all
that knowledge . . . if even they couldn't get into the Temple of the Winds
after it sent its warning with the red moons, then .. ." Her voice trailed
off. Richard put words to the rest of it. "Then how can I hope to?"
Richard
ate lentil porridge as the uncomfortable silence dragged on.
"Richard," Kahlan said in a quiet voice, "if we don't get into
the temple, then what the spirit showed me will come to pass. Death will sweep
the land. Untold numbers of people will die."
Richard
nearly leaped lo his feet and screamed at her that he knew that. Nearly
screamed, asking what she expected him to do. Instead, he swallowed back the
screams along with the porridge. "I know," he whispered.
He went
back to eating his porridge in silence. When he had finished, and was sure he
had composed himself, he went on.
"One
of the temple team, a wizard named Ricker, made a statement before they
executed him." Richard pulled the piece of paper with the translation out
of the disorderly stack and read it to her. " 1 can no longer countenance
what we do with our gift. We are not the Creator, nor are we the Keeper. Even a
vexatious prostitute has the right to live her life.' " "What was he
talking about?" Kahlan asked.
"I
think that when the wizards used people-destroyed them-to create the things
they needed to right the war, I think they used people who were troublesome for
one reason or another-people they didn't mind destroying. I've heard it said
that a wizard must use people. I doubt they knew the ghastly origin of the
maxim."
He saw
dismay haunting her eves.
"Richard,
do you think then. from what you've read. that it's hopeless? Do you think we
can do nothing, then?"
Richard
didn't know what to say. He reached over and clasped her hand. "The temple
team, before they were executed, said in their own defense that they hadn't
sealed the temple away for good. as they might have easily done. but instead
left a way in to answer the call. They said that if the need was truly great
enough, it could still be entered. "I will get in. Kahlan. I swear
it."
A small
measure of relief came briefly to her beautiful eyes, but the haunted look
settled back into them. Richard knew what she was thinking. It was the same as
he'd wondered himself as he read of the madness that was the war. and of what
people had done to each other.
"Kahlan,
we don't use magic to destroy people for our own purposes. We use it to fight
against a cause that murders helpless children. We tight for freedom from
terror and killing."
A small
smile returned as she squeezed his hand. They both looked up when they heard a
knock on the open door. It was Drefan. "Can I come in? I'm not
interrupting anything, am I?" "No, it's all right." Richard
said. "Come in."
"I
just wanted you to know that I ordered the carts, like you wanted. It's gotten
to that point."
Richard
rubbed his fingertips across his forehead. "How many?" "A little
over three hundred last night, if the reports are all in. As you suspected
might be the case, the people can't handle that many dead anymore, and the
numbers grow each day."
Richard
nodded. "We can't let the dead wait. It could spread the plague even
faster to have them rotting in the open air. They have to be buried as soon as
they die. Tell the men I want the dead-carts sent out just as soon as they have
it organized. I give them until sunset."
"I
already told them. As you say, we can't allow bodies infected with the plague
to go untended: it could make the plague worse." "It can get
worse?" Richard mocked. Drefan didn't answer.
"I'm
sorry," Richard said. "That wasn't called for. Have you found
anything that is of any use?"
Drefan
tugged down the sleeves of his white shirt. "Richard, there is no cure for
the plague. At least, I know of none. The only hope is to stay healthy.
Speaking of which, it isn't healthy to sit in here all day and most of the
night. You aren't getting enough sleep, again. I can see it in your eyes. I've
warned you about that before. And you need to walk around, get some air."
Richard
was sick of trying to translate the book, and sick of the things he found out
when he succeeded. He flipped it closed and pushed back his chair.
"This
is doing no good. anyway. Let's go for that walk you suggested." Richard
yawned as he stretched. "And what have you been doing to keep busy."
he asked Kahlan, "while I've been shut up in this stuffy room?"
Kahlan
cast a furtive glance at Drefan. "I-I've been helping Drefan and
Nadine." "Helping them? Helping them do what?"
Drefan
smoothed the ruffles on the front of his shirt. "Kahlan has been helping
with the staff. Some of them are . . . ill."
Richard
looked from Kahlan's eyes to Drefan's. "The plague is in the palace?"
"I'm afraid so. Sixteen of them have come down sick. A few are common
illnesses, the rest-" Richard heaved a weary sigh. "I see."
Raina
was standing guard outside his room. She straightened when Richard came through
the door.
"Raina,
we're going for a walk. I suppose you'd better come along, or I'll never hear
the end of it from Cara."
Raina
smiled as she brushed back a wisp of dark hair. She knew he was right. and was
obviously glad he was cooperating.
"Lord
Rahl," Raina said, "I didn't want to disturb you while you were working,
but the captain of the city guard came by with a report." "I know. I
heard. Three hundred people died last night." Raina's leather creaked as
she shifted her weight. "That, too, but they wanted me to tell you that
they found another woman last night. She was cut up like the other four."
Richard
closed his eyes as he wiped a hand across his mouth. He noticed that he hadn't
remembered to shave that day. "Dear spirits. Don't we have enough people
dying without some madman going around killing more of them?' ' "Was this
one a prostitute, like the others?" Drefan asked. "The captain said
he wasn't positive, but he was pretty sure she was." Drefan shook his head
with disgust. "You'd think he'd be worried about the plague, if not getting
caught. The plague is running wild among the prostitutes, more so than among
the populace at large."
Richard
caught sight of Berdine coming up the hall. "As much as I'd like to do
something about it, we have bigger worries." He turned to Raina.
"When we get back, tell the captain that I want his men to spread the word
among those women that there's a killer among them, and that for their own
safety we hope they will cease their profession, at least for the time being.
"I'm
sure the soldiers will know where to find all the prostitutes," he added
under his breath. "Have them get the word out at once. If these women
don't stop selling their bodies, they're likely to find themselves in the
company of the wrong customer. Their last customer."
Richard
waited until Berdine reached them. "Aren't you supposed to be up in the
Keep taking your turn guarding the sliph?" Richard asked her.
Berdine
shrugged. "I went up there, to relieve Cara, but she said she wanted to
stay for another watch."
Richard
raked back his hair. "Why would she want to do that?" Berdine
shrugged again. "She didn't say." Kahlan took his arm. "I think
it's the rats." "What?"
"I
think she's trying to prove something to herself." Kahlan hesitated.
"Cara doesn't like rats." "I don't blame her," Raina
muttered.
"Filthy
creatures," Drefan put in. "I don't blame her, either." "If
any of you tease her about it," Kahlan warned, "you will answer to
me- when Cara's done with you. It's not funny."
No one
looked in the mood to challenge Kahlan, nor were any of them in a mood to see
anything as funny. "Where are you going?" Berdine asked.
"We're
going for a walk." Richard said. "You've probably been sitting as
much as I have. If you'd like. come along."
Nadine
came around the corner and caught sight of them just as they started out.
"What's going on?"
"Nothing."
Richard said. "How are you doing. Nadine?" Nadine smiled. "Fine.
thank you. I've been busy smoking sick rooms, as Drefan asked."
"We
were just going out for a walk," Kahlan said. "You've been working
hard, Nadine. Why don't you come along with us?" Richard frowned at
Kahlan. She didn't look back at him. Nadine studied Kahlan's eyes for a moment.
"Sure. I'd like that." The six of them made their way through the
marble halls, past imposing tapestries and elegant furniture, and across
sumptuous carpets on their way toward the main palace gates. Soldiers on patrol
bowed or clapped fists over heart as the six of them passed. The staff Richard
saw going about their business seemed to be in a state of shock. He saw people weeping
as they hurried about their tasks.
Before
they made the door. they encountered Tristan Bashkar. Richard was in no mood to
speak with the Jarian ambassador. Tristan sauntered to a halt before them.
There would be no avoiding him this time.
Tristan
bowed his head. "Mother Confessor, Lord Rahl. I'm glad I ran into
you."
"What
do you want, Tristan?" Kahlan asked in a level tone. He watched her
cleavage as she spoke. His gaze moved to Richard. "I want to know-"
Richard
cut him off. "Did you come to offer Jara's surrender?" Tristan pulled
his coat back and rested his fist on his hip. "The time I was allotted is
not yet expired. I'm concerned about this plague. You're Lord Rahl. You're
supposed to be running everything, now. I want lo know what you're going to do
about the plague." Richard restrained himself. "What we can."
Tristan
glanced to Kahlan's chest again. "Well. I'm sure that you can understand
that I need assurance." His gaze returned to Richard. A sly smile spread
on his face. "After all, how can I, in good conscience, surrender my land
to a man overseeing what may prove to be the greatest cataclysm in the history
of the Midlands? No offense intended. The skies speak the truth to me. I'm sure
you can understand my position."
Richard
leaned toward the pompous ambassador. "You are rapidly running out of
time, ambassador. You had better be prepared to surrender Jara soon, or I will
see to it-my way. Now, if you'll excuse us, we're going to get some fresh air.
It suddenly stinks in here." Tristan Bashkar's expression darkened.
When
his eyes turned toward Kahlan again, Richard yanked the knife from Tristan's
belt scabbard before he could so much as blink. Everyone froze. Richard pressed
the point to the man's chest.
"And
if I ever again catch your lecherous eyes anywhere on Kahlan but her face, I'll
cut out your heart."
Richard
turned and loosed the knife, burying it in a round oak ball atop a nearby
newel. The twang echoed through the marble halls. Without waiting for a
response, he took Kahlan by the arm and marched away, his golden cloak
billowing out behind. Kahlan's face was red. The two Mord-Sith followed,
grinning broadly. Drefan smiled, too, as he followed after. Nadine showed no
reaction.
CHAPTER������������ 51
In the
distance, a dog barked as Richard led them lip the cobbled alley. He brought
his escorts to a halt outside the small yard behind the Anderson family's home.
The yard was still cluttered with cutoffs, wood scraps, shavings, stickered
lumber, and the two carving benches.
Richard
heard neither the sound of wood being worked nor voices. He swung open the gate
and made his way through the clutter. The workshop remained silent. A knock
produced no response. Richard pushed open one of the double doors and called
out. There was no reply.
"Clive!"
Richard called again. "Darby! Erling! Is anyone home?" Old chairs and
templates still hung from pegs on the dusty walls, and the cobwebs still hung
in all the corners. Upstairs, instead of the aroma of meat pies and boiling turnips,
like the last time Richard had been to the Anderson home. there was the heavy
stench of death.
In one
of the chairs he had made sat Clive Anderson. He was dead. In his arms, he was
holding the stiff corpse of his wife.
Richard
stood stunned at the sight. Behind, he heard Kahlan let out a mournful cry.
Drefan
went to the bedrooms. After a brief look. he returned and shook his head.
Richard stood staring at the dead husband and wife. He tried to imagine Clive's
misery as he sat there, sick with the plague, holding his dead wife in his
arms- his dreams and hopes dead in his arms.
Drefan
eased a hand under Richard's arm and pulled him away. "Richard, there's
nothing to be done. We'd best go and have a dead-cart sent." Kahlan
pressed her face against his shoulder as she wept. He saw the stricken look on
the faces of Berdine and Raina. He saw their fingers find one another and curl
together-a furtive comforting touch. Nadine glanced away from the rest of them.
Richard felt sudden sorrow for her: she was alone among them. Thankfully,
Drefan rested a comforting hand on her shoulder. The room droned with painful
silence.
Richard
held Kahlan to him as they went down the stairs. The others followed behind.
When they reached the workshop, he took a breath, at last. The stench upstairs
had nearly gagged him.
Just
then. Erling. the grandfather, walked through the door. He started at seeing
the six people standing in his workshop.
"I'm
sorry. Erling." Richard said. "We didn't mean to invade your home. We
came to check. We came ..."
Erling
nodded distantly. "My boy's dead. Hattie. too. I had to ... go out. I
couldn't carry them by myself."
"We'll
have a cart sent right away. There are some soldiers on the next street over.
I'll send them right away to help you." Erling nodded again. "That
would be kind of you." "The . . . rest of them? Are they-"
Erling's
bloodshot eyes turned up. "My wife, daughter, son, his wife, Darby, and
little Lily-all dead." His mouth worked as his eyes watered up.
"Beth, she recovered. Got well again, she did. I couldn't care for her. I
just now took her to Hattie's sister. So far, their home is still sound."
Richard
laid a hand gently on Erling's arm. "I'm so sorry. Dear spirits. I'm so
sorry."
Erling
nodded. "Thank you." He cleared his throat. "Long as I've lived,
you'd think it would be me, not the young'uns. The spirits weren't fair in
this. Not fair at all."
"I
know," Richard said. "They're at a place of peace now. We all go
there, sooner or later. They'll be with you again."
Out in
the alley, after they had made sure that Erling didn't need anything, they all
paused to gather their wits.
"Raina,"
Richard said, "please run over to the next street, where we saw those
soldiers. Get them over here right now. Tell them to get those bodies out of
there for Erling."
"Of
course," she said before dashing away. Her dark braid flew behind as she
ran.
"I
don't know what to do," Richard whispered. "What do you do for
someone who has just lost his whole family? Everyone he loved? I felt a fool. I
didn't know what to say."
Drefan
squeezed Richard's shoulder. "You said the right things, Richard. You
did."
"He
took comfort in your words, Richard," Nadine said. "That was all you
could do."
"All
I can do," Richard repeated as he stared off.
Kahlan
squeezed his hand. Berdine's hand touched his. He gripped it. The three of them
stood linked in shared sorrow.
Richard
paced as he waited for Raina to return. The sun was almost down. It would be
dark before they got back to the palace. The least he could do was wait until
Erling had help getting his dead son and daughter-in-law out of the house.
Kahlan
and Berdine stood close together, leaning against the wall beside the
Andersons' yard. Drefan, hands clasped behind his back, looking to be lost in
thought, strolled a ways back down the alley. Nadine went to the other side of
the alley, alone, and leaned against the clapboard wall.
Richard
paced as he thought about the Temple of the Winds and the magic stolen by
Jagang's order. Richard could think of no way to stop this slaughter. When he
thought about Tristan Bashkar's eyes on Kahlan. Richard's blood boiled.
Richard
paused. His head came up. Nadine was behind him. He had the oddest sensation.
The
hair on the back of his neck stiffened. Richard heard the air whine as he spun.
The
world slowed. Sound dragged. He floated as he moved. The air felt as thick as
mud. Everyone seemed a statue in his vision. Time was his.
His arm
stretched out as he drifted ahead. He commanded the thickness of the air. In
the eerie silence, he could hear the feathers singing. He could hear the hiss
of blade. Time was his. Nadine's startled blink took forever. He closed his
fist.
With a
slam of sound, the world crashed back with a wild rush. In his fist, Richard
held a bolt from a crossbow. The blade wasn't three inches from Nadine's wide
eyes.
A
fraction of a second more and it would have killed her. That fraction of a
second had been an hour to him.
"Richard."
Nadine panted, "how did you catch that arrow? I hope you can understand
that it gives me the creeps. Not that I'm complaining." she was quick to
add.
Drefan
was there, his jaw hanging open. "How did you do that?" he whispered.
"I'm a wizard, remember?" Richard said as he turned, looking in the
direction from which the arrow had come. He thought he saw movement. Kahlan
clutched a trembling Nadine. "Are you all right?" Nadine nodded and
let out a belated, frightened cry as Kahlan pulled her to her in a reassuring
embrace.
Richard's
eyes locked on a movement as his fist snapped the arrow in half. He took off.
running. Berdine raced after him..
Richard
turned as he ran. "Find some soldiers! I want this whole area closed off!
I want him caught!"
Berdine
cut down a street, going after soldiers. Richard ran like the wind on a storm.
Rage inundated him. Someone had tried to kill Nadine.
In that
instant, Nadine wasn't a woman sent by Shota to marry him. a woman who was
causing him trouble; in that instant, she was simply an old friend from home.
The full fury of the magic took him.
Buildings
flashed by. Dogs barked as he raced past. People in the alley cried out and
dived for safety. A woman screamed as she cowered against a small, crooked
storage building.
Richard
vaulted the low board fence where he had seen the movement. In mid-leap, he
drew his sword. The air rang with the unique sound of steel.
He
rolled as he landed, coming to his feet with the sword in both hands. He found
himself face-to-face with a white goat. There was no man there. A crossbow lay
on the ground, between the board fence and a squat goat shed.
Richard
looked around in all directions. Sheets and shirts hung from lines. A woman,
her hair wrapped in a blue scarf, stood on a balcony beyond the flapping
laundry.
Richard
slid his sword back into its scabbard and cupped his hands around his mouth.
"Did you see a man here?" he yelled up at the woman.
She
lifted her arm, pointing off to her right. "I saw someone running that
way," she called from the distance.
Richard
dashed off in the direction the woman had pointed. The alley narrowed. Beyond
the tunnel of buildings, the passageway opened onto a street. He looked both
ways.
He
seized the arm of a young woman. "A man came through here. Which way did
he go?"
In
fright she tried to pull away, at the same time holding her hat on with her
other hand. 'There be people all about. Which man?"
Richard
released her arm. Up the street to his left, he saw a man righting an
overturned handcart full of fresh greens. The man looked up when Richard
skidded to a panting halt before him.
"What
did he look like? The man who ran through here-what did he look like?"
The man
straightened his broad-rimmed hat. "Don't know." He pointed. "I
was looking for a good spot. I heard the sound as my cart fell over. I saw a
dark shape, running up that way."
Richard
ran on. The ancient part of the city branched into a warren of alleys, streets,
and twisting passageways. Only by keeping track of the golden glow in the
western sky could he keep his bearings. That didn't mean, though, that the man
he chased had run in a specific direction. He was probably just running, trying
to get away.
Richard
came across a patrol of a dozen soldiers. Before they had time to salute, he
was talking.
"A
man came running through here, somewhere. Did any of you see him?"
"We saw no one running. What did he look like?"
"I
don't know. He attacked us with a crossbow and then ran. I want him found.
Spread out and start searching."
Before
they could be on their way, Raina came running up the street with a good fifty
men.
"Did
you see where he went?" she asked, gasping for breath. "No. I lost
him in here somewhere. I want all of you to spread out and find him."
One of
the soldiers, a sergeant, spoke up. "Lord Rahl, a man who wants to escape
would make himself obvious by running. A man with any sense at all would simply
round a corner and walk away."
The
sergeant gestured back up the street to make his point. There were people
everywhere going about their business, although a good many were staring at the
excitement on their street. Any number of them could have been the man he was
chasing.
"Any
idea at all what this assassin looks like?"
Richard
shook his head in frustration. "I never got a look at him." He raked
back his hair as he caught his breath. "Split up. Half of you go back in
the direction we came from. Question everyone you can find, to see if anyone
got a look at him, at a man running. He may be walking now, but until he got
somewhere along in here he was running."
Raina,
Agiel in hand, took up her defensive position close beside him. "The rest
of you come with me," Richard said. "We'll pick up some more men. I
want to keep searching. Maybe we'll come across someone walking and he'll panic
and try to run again. If he does, I want him. Alive."
It was late
in the night by the time they returned to the Confessors' Palace. Soldiers
there were already on high alert. Men stood with swords and battle-axes to
hand, arrows nocked, and spears leveled. Others patrolled the expansive
grounds. A mouse wouldn't have escaped their intense scrutiny.
As
Kahlan, Berdine. Raina, Drefan, and Nadine accompanied him into the gathering
hall inside. Richard saw Tristan Bashkar waiting there, hands clasped behind
his back as he paced. He halted and looked up when he heard them coming.
Richard
drifted to a stop as the contrite-looking ambassador approached. Those
escorting Richard gathered in a knot behind him. except Kahlan, who stood close
at his side. With a hand in the air. Tristan hailed them. "Lord Rahl, may
I have a word with you, please?"
Richard
swept his gaze over the man. noticing that he didn't rest his hand on a hip so
as to show off his fancy knife. Richard held up a finger. "One moment,
please."
Richard
turned a little to the rest of them. "It's late. We have a lot of work to
do, so I want you to get some rest. Berdine, I want you to go up to the Keep
and stand guard with Cara tonight." Berdine frowned. "Both of
us?"
Richard
scowled. "Isn't that what I said? Yes, both of you. With this trouble, I
don't want to take any chances."
"I
will guard the Mother Confessor's room, then." Raina said. "No,"
Richard lifted a thumb. "I want you guarding Nadine's room. She was the
one who was attacked."
"Yes,
Lord Rahl," Raina stammered. "I'll see to setting up a guard of soldiers
outside the Mother Confessor's room. then."
"If
I wanted soldiers around Kahlan's room. I'd have told you so. now wouldn't
I?" Raina's face reddened. "I want all the soldiers doing their jobs
patrolling the entrances, the palace grounds, and a perimeter around the
grounds. Every one of them! The danger is from out there, not in here. Kahlan
is perfectly safe inside the palace. I don't want men who should be guarding
outside instead sitting on their bottoms around Kahlan's room inside. I'll not
have it, do you hear me?" "But, Lord Rahl-" "Don't question
me. I'm not in the mood."
Kahlan
touched his arm. "Richard." she whispered, "are you sure
that-" "Someone tried to kill Nadine. They nearly succeeded. Or did
some of you miss the significance of that? I'll not take any more chances. I
want her protected, and I don't want to hear any more arguments. Drefan, I want
you to start carrying a sword at once. Healers are a target." Everyone
stared at the floor in silence. "Good." Richard turned his glare on Tristan.
"What is it?" Tristan spread his hands. "Lord Rahl, I just
wanted to say that I'm sorry. I realize I seemed insensitive, but I've been
worried about the people here who are sick and dying. It set my nerves on edge.
I meant to cause no ill will between us. I hope you will accept my
apology."
Richard
studied Tristan's eyes. "Yes. of course. Apology accepted, and I'm sorry
that I lost my temper. I, too, have been out of sorts." Richard put a hand
on Nadine's shoulder. "Someone tried to kill one of my healers-a person
devoted to helping others. People are beginning to blame healers because the
plague continues to spread. I can't allow harm to come to people who are only
trying their best to help."
"Yes,
of course. You are most kind to accept my apology. Thank you. Lord Rahl."
"Just don't forget, ambassador, that your time runs out tomorrow."
Tristan
bowed. "I realize that, and you will know my stand by tomorrow. Lord Rahl.
You have my word. Good night, then."
Richard
rounded on the rest of them. "We have a lot of work to do tomorrow. It's
very late. As Drefan is constantly reminding me, we need to get some sleep. You
all have your orders. Any questions'?" Each answered with a silent shake
of the head.
Two
hours after they had returned to the palace, and Richard had sent them all to
bed, Kahlan thought she saw something move in her room.
The
lamp on the far wall was turned down low. The clouds hid the moon, so there was
no light coming in the glassed doors to the balcony. The thick carpets silenced
the sound of footsteps, if there were any. The weak flame from the lamp was all
that betrayed the shape she thought she saw.
Another
motion came from across the room-a hint of shadowed movement. She hadn't seen a
person enter her rooms; it could be nothing other than her imagination. The day
had left her in an edgy state.
With
the next silent step, there was no doubt: there was someone in her room.
Someone slipped ever closer to her bed. As furtive as the movements were, he
had closed the distance in remarkably short order.
Kahlan
didn't move a muscle as she saw the knife glint in the dim lamplight. She held
her breath.
A
powerful arm stabbed hatefully into her bed. The arm rose and fell, stabbing in
quick succession.
With a
finger, Richard pushed on the balcony door. It swung open on silent hinges.
Berdine glided across the room the instant Richard gave her a hand signal. When
she was in place, he tapped the glass once. Berdine turned up the wick on the
lamp.
Tristan
Bashkar straightened beside Kahlan's bed, knife in hand, panting with the
effort of what he had just been doing.
'Toss
down the knife, ambassador," Richard said in a quiet tone. Tristan spun
the knife in his fingers, seizing the blade in preparation to throw it.
Berdine's
Agiel to the back of his neck dropped him instantly. She pressed the Agiel down
on his shoulder to support herself as she bent and picked up the knife. Tristan
howled in pain.
Berdine
straightened, coming up with three knives. "You were right, Richard,"
Drefan said from behind. "I can't believe it," Nadine said as she
stepped up into the lamplight. "Believe it," General Kerson said as
he, too, came in from the balcony. "I'd say Tristan Bashkar has nullified
his immunity as a diplomat."
Richard
put two fingers between his lips and whistled. Raina charged through the door
ahead of a large contingent of D'Haran soldiers bristling steel. Two of them
lit more lamps.
Richard
hooked his thumbs behind his belt as he stood beside Kahlan, a towering black
form defined with gold trim on his tunic and silver ornaments, buckles, and
wristbands, watching the soldiers haul Tristan to his feet.
"You
were right, Richard," she said. "He attacked Nadine to draw the guard
off me. It was me he was after all along."
For a
while, she had thought he had lost his mind. His performance had convinced
everyone, including Tristan. "Thanks for believing me." Richard
whispered.
When he
had first told her what he was doing. Kahlan had suspected that Richard had
accused Tristan because of the incident earlier. Kahlan had not put words to
it, but she had wondered if Richard was simply acting out of jealousy.
Since
she had told him what Shota said, he had now twice displayed jealousy.
something she had never before seen from him. He didn't have any reason to be
jealous, but Shota's words played on his mind. casting in doubt.
Whenever
she looked at Nadine. Kahlan understood his feelings. Whenever she saw Nadine
so much as standing near him. Kahlan felt the hot claws of jealousy rake
through her insides.
She
knew that Shota and the spirit had told her the truth. She knew that she would
not have Richard. Her mind tried to put rational thought to it. to tell her
that it would work out. that they would be together, but her heart knew better.
Richard would marry Nadine. Kahlan would marry another man.
Richard
refused to believe it. At least, he said he refused to believe it. She
wondered.
In her
mind's eye, Kahlan saw Clive Anderson, sitting dead in his chair, holding his
dead wife. In comparison to the tragedy that had befallen the Anderson family
and so many others, what price was an unhappy marriage? Wouldn't it be worth
that price, if it would stop the appalling suffering and death?
Nadine
slipped up next to Richard on the other side. "Drawing the guard off
Kahlan or not. I'd have been dead. Thank you, Richard. I've never seen anything
like the way you caught that arrow right in front of my face."
Richard
gave her a quick, one-armed hug. "Nadine, you've said thank you enough
times. You'd have done the same for me."
Kahlan
felt those hot claws again. She suppressed the feeling. As Shota had said. if
she loved him, she would want him to have at least the small comfort of it
being someone he knew.
"But
what if he had killed me? I mean. if he just wanted to draw the guard away from
Kahlan, what if he had killed me? What good would that have that done
him?"
"He
knows I have the gift, and counted on that. If he had happened to kill you. it
might still have worked, or he could have faked something similar with Drefan.
reinforcing our belief that the target was healers and not Kahlan."
"Why didn't he just shoot Kahlan with the arrow?"
Richard
watched the one-sided struggle on the other side of Kahlan's bed. "Because
he likes to use that knife of his. He wanted to feel it when he killed
her."
His
words gave Kahlan a chill. She knew Tristan; Richard might be right. Tristan
would have gotten pleasure from it.
The
soldiers wrestled Tristan's arms behind his back as they hauled him to his
feet. He was still full of fight, but he was grossly overpowered. More lamps
were lit as the room filled with soldiers.
Kahlan
felt embarrassed to have all those people in her bedroom. She guessed it was
because the Mother Confessor's rooms had always been a private sanctuary. A safe
place.
A man
had invaded that sanctuary. A man intent on stabbing her to death. "What's
this all about?" Tristan shouted.
"Oh,
we just thought we'd like to watch a man stabbing a nightdress stuffed with
tow," Richard said.
General
Kerson inspected the prisoner to assure himself that Berdine had found all his
weapons. When he was satisfied, he turned to Richard. "What would you like
done, Lord Rahl?" "Behead him."
Kahlan
turned in shock. "Richard, you can't do that." "You saw him. He
thought he was killing you."
"But
he didn't. He only stabbed my empty bed. The spirits mark a difference between
intent and deed." "He tried to kill Nadine, too."
"I
did no such thing!" Tristan shouted. "That wasn't me-1 haven't even
left the palace tonight!"
Richard
turned a cold glare on Tristan. "You have white hairs on your knees. White
goat hairs. You knelt behind that fence while you aimed the crossbow, and got
the goat hairs on you."
Kahlan
glanced down, and saw that Richard was right. "You're crazy! I never did!"
"Richard,"
Kahlan said, "he didn't kill Nadine, either. He may have tried, but he
didn't. You can't execute him for intent."
Richard
closed his fist around the amulet at his chest, the amulet representing the
dance with death. No mercy.
The
general's eyes left Kahlan and returned to Richard. "Lord Rahl?"
"Richard," Kahlan insisted, "you can't."
Richard
glared at Tristan. "He killed those women. He sliced them up with his
fancy knife. You like to cut people, don't you, Tristan?" "What are
you talking about? I never killed anyone-except in war!" "No,"
Richard said, "and you didn't try to kill Kahlan, and you didn't try to
kill Nadine, and there aren't white goat hairs on your pants."
Tristan's
panicked brown eyes turned to Kahlan. "Mother Confessor, I didn't kill
you, I didn't kill her. You said it yourself, the spirits mark a difference
between intent and deed. I didn't kill anyone. You can't let him do this!"
Kahlan
recalled the whispers about Tristan, the whispers that when he went into battle
he drew his knife instead of his sword, and that he got sadistic pleasure from
cutting people.
Those
women were killed for sadistic pleasure.
"What
was it you told me, Tristan? That you often had to resort to the charms of coin
for the company of a woman? And that if you broke our rules, you would expect
to be subjected to our choice of punishment?" "What about a trial?
I've killed no one! Intent is not the same as deed!" "And what was
your intent, Tristan?" Richard asked. "Why did you intend to kill
Kahlan?"
"It
wasn't because I wanted to. It wasn't for pleasure, as you think. It was to
save lives."
Richard
lifted an eyebrow. "Killing to save lives?"
"You've
killed people. You don't do it for the pleasure of killing, but to save the
lives of innocent people. That's all I'm guilty of-trying to save innocent
lives. "The Imperial Order sent representatives to the royal palace in
Sandilar. They
told us
to join with them. or die. Javas Kedar. our star guide, told me f must watch
the skies for a sign.
"When
the red moons came. and the plague started. I knew what they meant. I was going
to kill the Mother Confessor in order to try to gain favor with the Order. so
that they wouldn't send the plague to us. too. I was only trying to save my
people."
Richard's
eyes turned to Kahlan. "How far is Sandilar?" "A month, there
and back. Maybe a few days less."
Richard
looked back at the general. "Get some officers together to take command of
the Jarian forces and capital. Have them take Tristan's head to the royal family
and tell them that he was executed for attempting to kill the Mother Confessor.
"The
officers are to offer Jara surrender to D'Hara under the peaceful terms already
offered. It's a month, there and back. The king himself is to return with the
surrender documents. I expect him. and the D'Haran guard sent to accompany him.
back here within one month from tomorrow.
"Tell
the king that if they don't surrender, and our men don't return safely. I will
personally ride into Sandilar at the head of an army and I will behead every
member of the royal family. We will then conquer Jara and occupy the capital.
The occupation will not be friendly."
General
Kerson clapped a fist to the chain mail over his heart. "It will be as you
say. Lord Rahl."
"Richard."
Kahlan whispered, "what if what he says is true-that he didn't kill those
women? I could touch him with my Confessor's power, and we would know for
sure."
"No!
I'll not have you touching him. or hearing the things he did to those women.
He's a monster: I don't want you to have to touch him." "But what if
he's telling the truth? What if he didn't kill those women?" Richard's
fist gripped the amulet at his chest. "I'm not having him put to death for
the murder of those women. He tried to kill you. I saw it. As far as I'm
concerned. the intent is the same as the deed. He is going to pay for the
intent, the same as he would have paid for the deed."
Richard
turned a cold, dark glare back to the soldiers. "Last night alone, three
hundred people died of the plague. He would have joined with the murders who
caused it. I want the men on their way to Jara first thing in the morning, and
I want his head to go with them. You have your orders. Get him out of
here."
390
CHAPTER�������������� 52
When
she saw Drefan coming from the other direction, Kahlan set down the basket of
clean bandages and rags she was carrying. Even though Richard had only ordered
it as part of his ruse to convince Tristan that his plan was working, Drefan
was still wearing a sword. Perhaps it wasn't such a bad idea. Some people were
beginning to resent healers because they spoke out against the potions and
cures being sold on the streets. She brushed back her hair. "How are
they?"
Drefan
sighed as he glanced back up the hall. "One died last night. Most are
worse. We have six new ones today." "Dear spirits," she
whispered, "what is to happen to us?" Drefan lifted her chin.
"We will persevere."
Kahlan
nodded. "Drefan, if so many of the staff are coming down sick, and so many
have died already, what good is this infernal smoke doing? I'm sick of
breathing it."
"The
smoke is doing no good for the plague." Kahlan blinked up at him.
"Then why must we keep doing it?" Drefan smiled sadly. "The
people think it helps keep the plague from being worse. It makes them feel
better that we're doing something, and that there is hope. If we stop, then
they will think there is no hope." "Is there? Is there any
hope?" "I don't know," he whispered. "Have you heard last
night's report yet?"
He
nodded. "In the last week the number of dead has continued to rise. Last
night it was up to over six hundred."
Kahlan
looked away despondently. "I wish we could do something." Shota had
told her that a way would come. The spirit had told her that a way would come.
She couldn't bear the thought of losing Richard, but she also couldn't bear the
thought of all the people who were dying. "Well," Drefan said,
"I'm going to make my rounds through the city." Kahlan clasped his
forearm. He flinched. It was a reaction that she, as a Confessor, was used to.
She took her hand back. "I know you can do nothing to stop it, but thank
you for all your aid anyway. Just your words help those living to have
hope."
"A
healer's best aid, words. Most of the time it's all we can do to help. Most
people think being a healer means healing people. That actually happens rarely.
I learned a long time ago that being a healer means living with pain and
suffering." "How's Richard? Have you seen him this morning?"
"He's in his office. He looked fine. I made him get some sleep."
"Good. He needed rest." Drefan's blue eyes searched hers. ''He did
what he had to with that man who
tried
to kill you, but I know that despite how resolute he appeared, it was a
terribly hard thing for him to do. Killing a man, even one who richly deserves
it. is not something that comes easily to Richard."
"I
know." Kahlan said. "I know that condemning a man to death weighs
heavily on him. I, myself, have had to order the deaths of people. In a time of
peace, you have the luxury of order, but in war you must act. Hesitation is
death." "And have you told that to Richard?"
Kahlan
smiled. "Of course I have. He knows he did what he had to. and that those
of us close to him understand. In his place I would have done the same. and I
told him so."
"Someday.
I hope to have a woman of half your strength." Drefan smiled. "To say
nothing of your beauty. Well, I must be off."
Kahlan
watched him walk away. His trousers were still too tight. She blushed at the
thought, and turned back to her work.
Nadine
was in the sick room, tending to people in two rows of beds. The infirmary held
twenty beds, and they were all full, with more people on blankets on the floor.
There were others sick in other rooms.
"Thanks,"
Nadine said, when Kahlan set down the clean things she had brought. Nadine was
putting herbs in pots, making teas. Other women who tended the sick were
changing sheets, cleaning and wrapping open sores, or serving tea to the
patients.
Nadine
plucked a cloth from the basket, dipped it in a basin of water, wrung it out,
and laid it across the forehead of a moaning woman. Nadine patted the woman's
shoulder.
"There
you go, dear. How does that feel?" The woman managed only a weak smile and
nod.
Kahlan
did the same for several more people, dabbing a cool, damp cloth to their
sweaty faces, offering soft words of comfort.
"You
could be a healer," Nadine said as she paused beside Kahlan. "You
have a kind touch."
"That's
the only thing I know to do. I couldn't heal anyone." Nadine leaned close.
"And do you think I am?"
Kahlan
glanced around the room. "I see what you mean. But at least you have
devoted your life to helping people. My life is devoted to duty. To
fighting." "What do you mean?"
"In
the end, I am a warrior. My duty is to hurt people in order to save others. It
is left to people like you to heal those remaining, when people like me are
finished fighting."
Nadine
stood close to her. "Sometimes, I wish I was a warrior, and could fight to
end the suffering, so that there wouldn't be so many wounded for the healers to
tend to."
Kahlan
finally had to leave the room. She couldn't stand the stink, and the smoke was
making her sick. Nadine felt the same, and went with her. They both slid their
backs down the wall and sat on the floor.
"I
feel helpless," Nadine said. "Back home, if someone had a headache.
I'd give him something and he'd get to feeling better. If a woman was pregnant.
I'd help settle her stomach, or I'd help deliver the baby when it was time. It
seemed I was always helping people. "This is different. All I do is
comfort people who are going to die. and wonder
the
whole time if it will be me on the bed tomorrow. I don't know what to do for
any of them. I feel totally useless. I wish I'd come here to help these people,
instead of watching them die."
"I
know," Kahlan whispered. "It must have been a lot more satisfying to
help a woman deliver a baby."
Nadine
stared off in thought. "Sometimes a woman would tell me that it seemed
like it would never happen, that it seemed unreal. She'd wait, knowing it would
happen, but never really believing it, dreading the things she'd heard about
how hard it would be. Dreading the pain. Sometimes they think things will
change, like they'll wake up one day and not be pregnant, or something.
"Then,
the baby would come. Suddenly, she'll be in a panic. The time has come. She'll
be terrified that it's really happening, at last. Sometimes they'll scream just
from that fear, the fear of the pain. That's when I can help them. I'm there
with them. I reassure them that it will be all right.
"For
the first time, for some of them, they finally believe it's happening. I guess
it's only natural to dread such a profound change in their lives. Until it's
over, until the day is upon them, some of them are miserable with dread."
Together,
in the silence of the hall, they sat, resting, listening to the moans from the
sick room.
"Nadine,
you still think you will end up marrying Richard, don't you?" Nadine
glanced over, scratching her freckled nose, but she didn't answer. "I
didn't ask that to-to start in on you, or anything. I just meant, well, like
you said, you might end up on one of those beds in there. I was just thinking .
. . it could be me, too. I could get the plague, or something." Nadine
watched her. "You won't. Don't say that. You won't get it." Kahlan
ran her thumbnail along a joint in the floorboards. "But I could. I was
just thinking that if I did, or something, well, what about Richard? He'd be
alone." "What are you saying?"
Kahlan
looked into Nadine's soft brown eyes. "If for some reason you ended up
being the one with him, instead of me, you'd be good to him, wouldn't you?
You'd always be good to him?" Nadine swallowed. "Of course I
would."
"I'm
serious, Nadine. There's so much happening. I want to know that you wouldn't
ever hurt him." "I'd never hurt Richard." "You hurt him
before."
Nadine
turned away and scratched her shoulder. "That was different. I was trying
to win him. I would have done anything to get him to be with me. I already
explained it to you."
"I
know." Kahlan picked at a little stone stuck in the crack between the
floor-boards. "But if something happened, and it turned out that you were
. . . the one, the one to marry him, I want to know that you'd never do
anything like that to him again.
"I'd
like to hear it from you, that you would never do anything to hurt Richard.
Anything."
Nadine
met Kahlan's eyes for a moment before glancing away. "If I ever ended up
with Richard, I would make him the happiest man in the world. I'd take the best
care of him that any woman ever took of any man. I would love him better
than-well. I'd do my very best to make him happy."
Kahlan
felt the familiar pain gnaw at her insides. She endured it. "Do you swear
that that's the truth?" "Yes."
Kahlan
looked away and wiped at her eyes. "Thanks. Nadine. That's what I wanted
to know." "Why are you asking me such a thing?"
Kahlan
cleared her throat. "As I said. I'm worried that I might get the plague,
too. If anything happens, I could bear it better if I knew that there was
someone who would take care of Richard."
"Near
as I can figure, Richard pretty much takes care of himself. Do you know that
that man can cook better than me?" Kahlan laughed. Nadine laughed with
her.
"Isn't
that the truth?" Kahlan said. "I guess, where Richard is concerned, a
woman can only hope to go along with him for the ride."
"Lord
Rahl!"
Richard
turned to see General Kerson calling out for him. He let go of Kahlan's hand.
Cara glided to a stop behind Kahlan. "Yes, what is it, general?"
The
general came to a halt, waving a letter. A dusty, tired-looking soldier
followed behind, along with the general's usual guard.
"A
message from General Reibisch, with his army to the south." The general
lifted a thumb. "Grissom here just rode in."
Richard
glanced to the young soldier, still panting to get his breath. He smelled like
a horse. Richard thought he would much rather smell like a horse and be out
riding than sitting in a little room day after day translating the mad account
of a trial and execution. He guessed that if his labors were doing him any
good, he might feel differently.
He
broke the seal and opened the letter. When he finished reading it. he handed
the letter to Kahlan.
"Take
a look." While Kahlan read the letter, Richard turned to the messenger.
"How is our army to the south doing?"
"Fine
when I left them, Lord Rahl." Grissom said. "The Sisters of the Light
caught up with us, as they said you told them to do. They're all together with
our men. We're awaiting orders."
The
letter had said much the same thing. When Kahlan had finished reading, Richard
took the letter and handed it to General Kerson. The general idly scratched his
graying hair as he read the letter. He looked up when he had finished.
"What do you think. Lord Rahl?"
"Makes
sense to me. I don't think we should bring all those men back up north right
now. As General Reibisch says, they would be in a position to know about it if
the Order moves very far into the New World. What do you think?' ' Richard
asked, as he passed the letter back to Cara.
The
general hiked up his trousers. "I agree with Reibisch. I'd want to do the
same if I were him. He's already down there, why not put him to good use? As he
says, it would be best to know what the Order is up to, and if the enemy does
come up north to attack us, he will be in a position to bite their ass."
He winced. "Sorry, Mother Confessor."
Kahlan
smiled. "My father was a warrior, general, before he was king. It brings
back memories." She didn't say if they were good memories. "I also
agree about the strategic advantage of having an army in that position."
Cara
handed the letter back to Richard. "He's right about one other thing, too.
If he abandons his position, and the Order went to the northeast, they would be
able to sweep into D'Hara unopposed. We wouldn't even know about it. That part
of D'Hara is sparsely populated. The Order could drive north and we would never
know it until they cut west, back into the Midlands." "Unless they
pushed straight for the People's Palace," the general said. "That
would be a fatal mistake-attacking the heart of D'Hara," Cara said.
"Commander General Trimack of the First File of the Palace Guard would
show the enemy why no army has ever attacked the palace and had so much as a
single soldier live to recount the tale of their bloody defeat. The cavalry
would cut them to pieces out on the Azrith Plains."
"She's
right," the general said. "If the enemy goes there, the vultures will
feast-Trimack will see to that. If they did go northeast up into D'Hara, it
would be to flank us. Best to have Reibisch guarding the gate." Richard
had another reason to want General Reibisch's army to stay south. "Lord
Rahl," the messenger asked, "may I ask a question?" "Of
course. What is it?"
Grissom
fussed with the hilt of his short sword. "What's going on in the city? I
mean, I saw men hauling carts with dead people, and I saw others going through
the streets calling for people to bring out their dead."
Richard
took a deep breath. "That's the other reason we want General Reibisch to
stay down south. The plague is loose in the Midlands. Last night, seven hundred
fifty people died."
"The
spirits preserve us." Grissom wiped his palms on his hips. "I was
afraid it might be something like that."
"I
want you to take my reply back to General Reibisch. Having been here, I don't
want you to carry the plague to him, too. When you get back, you are to pass my
message along verbally.
"Don't
approach any of his men, or any people for that matter, any closer than you
must in order to be heard. When you get to their sentries, tell them to pass
the message on to the general. Tell him that I find his reasoning to be sound.
All of the command here agrees with him. Tell him to carry on with his plans
and to keep us informed.
"Now
that you've been here, you can't return to those men. You'll have to come back
here, when you've delivered the message. I want you to take a good-sized patrol
with you to make sure you get our instructions through, then all of you come
back here."
Grissom
saluted with a fist to his heart. "It shall be as you command, Lord
Rahl."
"I
wish I could let you return to your men, soldier, but we're trying to keep the
plague from getting to the army. We have the soldiers here spread out around
the city so they don't come down sick. You can tell them that, too."
General
Kerson scratched his face. "Ah, Lord Rahl, I have to talk to you about
that. I just found out myself."
Richard
frowned at the general's sudden wincing expression. "What is it?"
"Ah. well, the plague has gotten to our men."
Richard
felt his heart in his throat. "Which group?"
The
general wiped a hand across his mouth. "All of them. Lord Rahl. Seems that
the prostitutes have been visiting the camps. The women thought it would be
safer than plying their trade in the city, what with those murders. I don't
know anything about how sickness spreads, but Drefan told me that that might
have been the way it happened."
Richard
squeezed his temples between his thumb and second finger. He wanted to give up.
He wanted to simply sit down on the floor and give up.
"I
should never have had Tristan Bashkar put to death. I should have let him kill
all those women. In the end, it would have saved countless lives. If I'd have
known this. I'd have killed them all myself." He felt Kahlan's hand touch
his back in sympathy.
"Dear
spirits," he whispered. He could think of nothing else to say. "Dear
spirits, what are we doing to ourselves? Those women have just unwittingly
struck a blow for Jagang."
"Do
you want them executed. Lord Rahl?" General Kerson asked. "No,"
Richard said in a quiet voice. "The deed is done. It would serve no
purpose, now. They didn't do it intentionally to cause harm. They were just
trying to keep themselves safe."
Richard
recalled the words of one of the temple team before he was put to death. / can
no longer countenance what we do with our gift. We are not the Creator, nor are
we the Keeper. Even a vexatious prostitute has the right to live her life.
"Grissom,
get a patrol together, and as soon as you've had some food and rest, get my
message back to General Reibisch."
Grissom
saluted again. "Yes, Lord Rahl. I'll get some food and supplies and be on
my way within the hour." Richard nodded. The messenger took his leave.
"Lord
Rahl," the general said, "if there's nothing else, I'd better see to
my duties."
"Yes,
general, there is one more thing. Cut the sick soldiers out of the camps. Put
them in a separate camp. Let's see if we can limit the extent of the outbreak.
Who knows, maybe we can even contain it.
"And
I don't want any prostitutes in the camps. None. Maybe we can keep the
distemper lighter, that way. Have all the women warned to stay away under
penalty of death. Post archers with the sentries. If they continue to approach
after being challenged, have the archers cut them down."
The
general heaved a sigh. "I understand. Lord Rahl. I'll also separate out
the men who have been with those women and have them tend to the sick
soldiers." "Good idea."
Richard
put his arm around Kahlan's waist as he watched the general and his guard hurry
to their tasks. "Why didn't I think of that before? I might have kept the
plague from the soldiers if only I'd thought of it." Kahlan didn't have an
answer.
"Lord
Rahl," Cara said, "I'm going up to the sliph to relieve
Berdine." "I'll go with you. I want to see if Berdine has learned
anything from the journal. Besides, I need to get out of here for a while. You
want to go, too?" he asked Kahlan. Her arm tightened around him. 'Id like
that."
Berdine
was bent over the journal, reading. The sliph looked Richard's way before
Berdine
did.
"Do
you wish to travel, Master? You will be pleased." "No," Richard
said when the echo of the eerie voice had died out. "Thank you,
sliph,
but not now." Berdine leaned back and yawned as she stretched her arms.
"Glad to see you,
Cara. I
can't stay awake any longer." "You look like you could use some
sleep." Richard gestured to the open journal on the table before her.
"Anything new?" Berdine glanced to the sliph as she stood. She picked
up the journal and turned
it
around, offering it to him. She leaned closer and lowered her voice. "You
remember telling me about what that man said before he was put to death.
What he
said about even a vexatious . . . woman having a right to her life?"
Richard knew what Berdine was talking about. "Yes. You mean Wizard
Ricker." "That's the one. Well, Kolo mentioned it briefly." She
tapped a place in the
journal.
"Read here." Richard studied the sentence a moment until he had it
translated in his head.
"
'Ricker's vexatious prostitute is watching me as I sit here pondering what
damage
the
team has done. I heard today that we have lost Lothain. Ricker has had his
revenge.'
"
"Do
you know who Lothain is?" Berdine asked. "He was the head prosecutor
at the Temple of the Winds trial. He was the one
who
went to undo the damage done by the team." Richard looked up. The sliph
was watching him. He stepped closer. It had never
occurred
to him before. Why hadn't he thought of it before? "Sliph."
"Yes,
Master? You wish to travel? Come. You will be pleased." Richard stepped
closer. "No, I don't wish to travel, but I would like to talk to
you. Do
you remember the time, long ago, when there was a great war going on?"
"Long? I am long enough to travel. Tell me where you wish to go. You will
be
pleased."
"No,
I don't mean traveling. Do you remember any names?" "Names?"
"Names.
Do you remember the name Ricker?" The silver face watched without
expression. "I never betray my clients." "Sliph, you were a person,
once, weren't you? A person like me?" The sliph smiled. "No."
Richard
laid a hand on Kahlan's shoulder. "A person like this?" The silver
smile widened. "Yes. I was a whore, like her." Kahlan cleared her
throat. "I think Richard meant to ask if you were a woman,
sliph."
"Yes,
I was a woman, too." "What was your name?" Richard asked.
"Name?" The sliph frowned, as if puzzled. "I am the sliph."
"Who made you into the sliph?" "Some of my clients."
"Why? Why did they make you into the sliph?"
"Because
I never reveal my clients." "Sliph, could you explain that
better?"
"Some
of the wizards here, in this place, were my clients. The most powerful of them.
I was a very exclusive whore, and very expensive. Many of the wizards contended
for power. Others tried to use me to displace some of those who were my
clients. Some wished to use me for their pleasure, but not the kind of pleasure
I offered. I never reveal my clients."
"You
mean they would have been pleased if you told them the names of the wizards who
visited you, and maybe a little more about those visits."
"Yes.
My clients feared these others would use me for this pleasure, and so they made
me the sliph."
Richard
turned away. He raked his fingers back through his hair. Even as they fought
the enemy, they fought among themselves. When he finally gathered his wits, he
turned back to the beautiful silver face.
"Sliph,
those men are all dead now. There is no one alive who knows these men. There
are no wizards anymore to vie for power. Could you tell me a little more?' '
"They
made me, and told me that I would be unable to speak their names as long as
they lived. They said that their power would prevent it. If it is true that
their spirits have passed from this world, then it will no longer matter and I
will be able to speak their names."
"It
was this man, Lothain, who was one of your clients, wasn't it? And this other
wizard. Ricker, thought he was a hypocrite."
''Lothain.''
The quicksilver face softened as she seemed to test the name. ' 'Wizard Ricker
came to me, and said that this man, Lothain. was the head prosecutor, and that
he was a vile beast, who would turn on me. He wanted my help to depose Lothain.
I refused to name my clients."
Richard
spoke into the silence. "And Ricker's words proved true. Lothain turned on
you. and made you into the sliph so that you couldn't speak out against
him."
"Yes.
I told Lothain that I did not reveal my clients. I told him that he had no need
to fear me speaking. He said that it didn't matter, that I was only a whore,
and the world would never miss me. He twisted my arm and hurt me. He used me
for his pleasure without my permission. When he finished, he laughed, and then
I saw a flash of light in my mind.
"Ricker
came to me after, and told me that he would put an end to Lothain, and wizards
like him. He wept at the edge of my well, and said he was sorry for what they
did to me. He told me that he would put a stop to the way magic destroyed
people."
"Were
you sad?" Berdine asked. "Was it sad to be made into the sliph?"
"They took sadness from me when they made me." "Did they take
happiness, too?" Kahlan whispered. "They left me with duty."
Even in
this, they had made a mistake. They left some of who the sliph had been so that
they could use her. The part they left would submit to anyone with the price
required: magic. They had been tripped up by her nature. They used her. but had
to guard her, because she would offer herself to anyone-even the enemy-who had
the required price.
"Sliph,"
Richard said, "I'm so sorry that we wizards did this to you. They had no
right. I'm so sorry."
The
sliph smiled. "Wizard Ricker told me that if any Master said those words
to me, I should tell them these words from him: 'Ward left in. Ward right out.
Guard your heart from stone.' " "What does that mean?" "He
did not explain the words to me."
Richard
felt sick. Were they going to die because of a three-thousand-year-old fight
for power? Perhaps Jagang was right; perhaps magic had no place in the world
any longer.
Richard
turned back to the others.
"Berdine,
you need to get some sleep. Raina has to be up early to relieve Cara. She needs
to get to bed, too. Set a guard for Kahlan's rooms and then both of you get
some rest. I've had enough of this day, too."
Richard
was in a dead sleep when he awakened to a hand pushing at him. He sat up and
rubbed at his eyes, trying to gather his senses in a panic.
"What?
What is it?" His voice sounded to him like gravel being poured from a
bucket.
"Lord
Rahl?" came a tearful voice. "Are you awake?"
Richard
squinted up at the figure holding a lamp. At first, he couldn't make out who it
was.
"Berdine?"
He had never seen her in anything but her leather uniform before. She was
standing in his room in a white nightdress. Her hair was down. He had never
seen Berdine without her hair in the single braid. It was a disorienting sight.
Richard
swung his legs over the edge of the bed and pulled his pants on in a rush.
"Berdine, what is it? What's wrong?"
She
wiped at the tears on her face. "Lord Rahl, please, come." She let
out a sob. "Raina is sick."
CHAPTER������������ 53
Verna
shut the door as silently as she could after Warren dragged the flailing woman
back into the darkness. His hand was clamped just as tightly over her mouth as
his web was clamped around her gift. Verna wouldn't have been able to control
the woman's magic as well as could Warren. The gift of a wizard was stronger
than a sorceress's-even Verna's-gift.
Verna
lit a small flame above her upturned palm. The woman's eyes widened, and then
filled with tears.
"Yes.
Janet, it's me, Verna. If you promise not to cry out and betray us, I will have
Warren release you."
Janet
nodded earnestly. Verna gripped her dacra in her other fist, held out of sight,
just in case she was wrong. She gave a nod to Warren, signaling him to release
the young woman.
When
she was free, Janet flung her arms around Verna's neck. She rejoiced with a
soft sob. Warren held up his palm, letting a small flame dance above it so they
could see. The tiny room was made of huge blocks of dark stone, as was the rest
of the stronghold. Milky water seeped through some of the joints, leaving
trails of crusty stains down the walls.
"Oh,
Verna," Janet whispered, "you have no idea what a joy it is to see
your face."
Verna embraced
the trembling woman as she wept softly while clutching at Verna's cloak. Verna
still had the dacra in her fist, behind Janet's back.
Verna
eased her away to smile at the tear-stained face. She wiped away some of the
tears, and smoothed back Janet's dark locks.
Janet
kissed her ring finger-an ancient gesture beseeching the Creator's protection.
Even though she had been reasonably sure Janet was loyal to the Light. Verna
was relieved to see such confirmation.
A
Sister of the Dark was sworn to the Keeper of the Underworld, and would never
kiss her ring finger. It was an act that represented a Sister's symbolic
betrothal to the Creator.
It was
the one thing that a Sister of the Dark could not do. A Sister of the Dark
could not hide her loyalty to her true master, the Keeper, by kissing her ring
finger, for kissing that finger would invoke her dark master's wrath.
Verna
slipped the dacra back up her sleeve as Janet glanced back at Warren. They
exchanged smiles.
Both
Verna and Warren took in Janet's bizarre garb. She was barefoot. The baggy
garment, cinched at the waist with a white cord. covered her from ankles to
neck to wrists, but was so sheer that the woman might as well have been naked.
Between
a thumb and finger, Verna tugged out some of the diaphanous material.
"What in the name of Creation are you doing wearing this?"
Janet
glanced down at herself. "Jagang makes all his slaves dress like this.
After a while, you don't even notice anymore."
"I
see." Verna could see that Warren was doing his best to avert his eyes.
"Verna, what are you doing here?" Janet asked in a demure voice.
Verna grinned and pinched Janet's cheek. "I came to get you out of here,
silly. I came to rescue you. We're friends-did you think I'd leave you here?"
Janet blinked in astonishment. "The Prelate let you come after me?"
Verna lifted her hand, showing the woman the sunburst-patterned ring of the
Prelate. "I am the Prelate."
Janet's
jaw fell open. She dropped to the floor and began kissing the hem of Verna's
dress.
Verna
gripped Janet's shoulder and urged her to her feet. "Stop that. There's no
time for that."
"But-but,
how? What happened? How can this be? What has happened?" "Verna,
those webs won't hold for long," Warren cautioned in a thin whisper.
"We've already overstayed our welcome."
"Janet,
listen to me. We can talk later, after we get you out of here. The things we
had to do to get in here only give us a brief time to get back out. It's
dangerous for us to be here."
"I
should say so," Janet said. "Prelate, you must-" "Verna.
We're friends. It's still Verna."
"Verna,
how in Creation did you ever get into Jagang's stronghold? You must get out at
once. If you are found-"
Verna
frowned and touched the ring through Janet's lower lip. "What's
this?" Janet paled. "It marks me as one of Jagang's slaves." She
started shivering. "Verna, save yourself. Get out of here. You must get
out!" she whispered urgently. "I agree," Warren whispered
through gritted teeth. "Let's go!" Verna pushed her cloak back over
her shoulders, out of the way. "I know. Now that we've got you, we can
go."
"Dear
Creator, you have no idea how much I'd like to go with you, but if I did-you
can't imagine what Jagang would do to me. Oh, dear Creator, you can't
imagine."
Her
eyes flooded with tears at the very thought. Verna embraced her for a moment.
"Janet, listen to me. I'm your friend, you know I wouldn't he to
you." She waited until the other nodded. "There is a way to keep the
dream walker from your mind."
Janet
clutched Verna's dress at the shoulders. "Verna, don't torment me with
hope that I know is false. You have no idea how much I'd like to believe you,
but I know-"
"It's
true. Listen to me, Janet. I'm the Prelate, now. Don't you think Jagang would
take me if he could? Why do you think he hasn't taken the others? He can't,
that's why."
Janet
was shivering again, tears running down her cheeks. Warren put a hand to her
back. "What Verna says is true. Sister Janet. Jagang can't get into our
minds. Come with us, and you will be safe. Hurry." "How?" Janet
whispered.
Verna
leaned close. "You remember Richard?" "Of course. Trouble and
wonder in one person." Verna smiled at the truth of that. "He has the
gift, that's why I went after him,
but
there is more to it. He is born with both sides of it. More than that, though,
he is a Rahl.
"Three
thousand years ago, in the great war, Richard's ancestor created a magic to
block the dream walkers of that time from his people's minds. That magic was
passed down to his descendants who have the gift." Janet's fists tightened
on Verna's dress. "How? How does it work?" Verna smiled. "It's
so simple that it's hard to believe. The most powerful magic is sometimes like
that. All that is necessary is to be sworn to him, in your heart, and his magic
protects you from the dream walker. As long as Richard is alive and in this
world, Jagang will never again be able to enter your mind." "I swear
allegiance to Richard, and I'm free of Jagang?" Verna nodded at the
woman's stunned face. "It's true." "What do I have to do?"
Verna
held up a finger to forestall Warren's objections. She went to her knees,
pulling Janet down with her.
"Say
the words with me, and mean them in your heart. Richard is a war wizard, and
leads us in our fight against Jagang. We believe in him. in his heart, with all
our hearts. Say the words with me, and believe, and you will be free."
Janet
nodded as she clasped her hands prayerfully. Tears coursed down her cheeks.
Verna whispered the devotion, pausing so Janet could repeat the words after
her.
"Master
Rahl guide us. Master Rahl teach us. Master Rahl protect us. In your light we
thrive. In your mercy we are sheltered. In your wisdom we are humbled. We live
only to serve. Our lives are yours." Janet's whispered words echoed
Verna's until she was finished. Verna kissed Janet's cheek. "You are free,
my friend. Now hurry, let's get out of here."
Janet
snatched Verna's sleeve. "What about the others?" Verna hesitated.
"Janet, I would like nothing better than to rescue the rest of our
Sisters, too, but I can't, not now. We will try to get them later. If we try
now, Jagang will have us.
"I
came to get you because you are my friend, and I love you. The five of us all
swore to always protect each other. Phoebe is with us already. There is only
you left.
"As
much as I want to rescue the rest of our Sisters, it must be left until later.
I promise you, I won't forget them, or leave them, but we can't do it all now,
all at once."
Janet's
head lowered, and she stared at the floor. "Jagang killed Christabel. I saw
him do it. Her screams still haunt my nightmares. Her screams, and
Jagang."
Verna
felt as if she had been punched in the gut. Christabel had been her best
friend. She didn't want to know the details. Christabel had turned to the
Keeper.
"That's
why I have to get you out of here, Janet. My fear for you, and for what Jagang
has done to you, haunts my nightmares."
Janet's
head came up. "What about Amelia? She was one of us five. We can't leave
her."
Verna
gave Janet a level look. "Amelia is a Sister of the Dark."
"Was," Janet said. "No longer." "What?" Verna
whispered. Warren leaned over. "Once you're sworn to the Keeper, you can't
change your
mind.
You can't trust what she says, Sister Janet. Now, let's get out of here. She's
sworn to the Keeper."
Janet
shook her head. "No longer. Jagang sent her on some sort of mission,
involving magic, and in order to accomplish her task, she was forced to betray
the Keeper." "Impossible," Verna said.
"True,"
Janet insisted. "She's back. She has re-sworn her oath to the Creator.
I've talked to her. She sits and weeps, kissing her ring finger half the night,
praying to the Creator."
Verna
leaned closer, looking into Janet's eyes. "Janet, listen to me. Have you
seen her kiss her ring finger? Have you seen it with your own eyes? Are you
absolutely sure she wasn't kissing another finger?"
"I've
sat with her, trying to comfort her. I've watched her." Janet kissed her
own finger with a whispered supplication that if she wasn't telling the truth
she would be struck dead.
"Just
like that? She kisses her finger just like that?"
"Yes.
She kisses her finger and cries and prays that the Creator will kill her for
the horror of what she has done." "What has she done?"
"I
don't know. When I ask, she practically goes crazy with screaming and weeping.
Jagang won't let her kill herself. He has control of her mind, as he does with
the rest of us. He wouldn't let any of us kill ourselves; we must continue to
serve him.
"Verna,
we can't leave Amelia here. We have to take her with us. I won't leave her
here. I'm the only comfort she has in this world. The things Jagang does to
her..."
Verna
turned away. Her stomach roiled at the thought of leaving Amelia if indeed she
had abandoned the Keeper. The five of them had been best friends for close to
one hundred fifty years, since they were young novices.
The
life of a Sister of the Light was a difficult one. They had sworn oaths always
to protect one another.
"Verna,
she is one of us, a Sister of the Light, again. She is one of us five. Please,
Verna, I'd rather stay with her than leave her here alone." Verna glanced
back to Janet's haunted eyes.
"Verna,
we must call him Excellency," Janet said in a shuddering whisper. "If
we displease him for any reason at all, we have to serve a week in the
tents."
Warren
spoke Verna's name with rising inflection. Verna waved him to silence.
"The tents? What are you saying?"
Janet's
eyes flooded with tears again. "He gives us to his soldiers for a week. We
have gold rings, so they won't kill us, because those with gold rings belong to
Jagang, but they can do whatever else they want. They pass us from tent to tent
for a week. Even the old Sisters are sent to the tents. Jagang calls it a
lesson in discipline that all must learn."
Janet
fell to her knees, convulsing in sobs as she covered her mouth with both hands.
Verna sank down beside her and hugged her.
"You
don't know what Jagang's men do to us," Janet cried. "You don't know,
Verna!"
"I
understand," Verna whispered. "Hush now. It's all right, now. We'll
get you away from here."
Janet
shook her head against Verna's shoulder. "I won't leave Amelia here. I'm
all she has. I'm a Sister of the Light. The Creator would never forgive me if I
abandoned her. If I leave her. I'd be leaving my duty to the Creator. She's my
friend. She came back to the Light. She came back to the Creator.
"Jagang
sent her to the tents, again. If I'm not here when she comes back, she'll go
crazy. No one else will tend to her. The Sisters of the Dark won't go near her.
and the Sisters of the Light won't forgive her. I'm her only friend. I'm the
only one who forgave her and accepted her back to the Light.
"She'll
be a bloody mess when she gets back. You don't know what Jagang's men are like.
Except for broken bones, Jagang won't allow us to use the gift to heal one
another when we come back from the tents. He says it's part of the lesson, that
our souls may belong to the Creator when we die, but in this life, Jagang owns
our bodies.
"We
can have our broken bones knitted by the gift when we come back. but until
then, we have to suffer the agony of that along with everything else. If I'm
not here, no one else will heal that much for her, or comfort her." Janet
was nearly hysterical. "I won't leave without Amelia." Verna felt
dizzy and sick to her stomach. Her heart pounded in terror. Bile rose into her
throat.
Verna's
voice broke. "How do you endure it?"
Janet
held her fists to her heart. "We are Sisters of the Light: we must endure
for the Creator."
Verna
shared a long look with Warren's troubled eyes. "Do you know where we can
find her? Maybe we could go find her and take her with us."
Janet
shook her head. "We're passed among the tents. She could be anywhere. The
army is spread out for miles and miles in every direction.
"Not
long ago, more captured women were sent back here. The screams are everywhere,
so you can't simply follow the sounds of screams. Besides, if we went out among
the tents, we wouldn't last five minutes before we were dragged into one of
them."
"How
long?" Verna asked. "How long until Amelia is back?" "Five
days, but she won't be able to walk for at least a day after that, maybe
two."
Verna
held a tight grip on her rage. "There's nothing saying I can't use my gift
to cure her once she's back."
Janet
looked up. "That's true. Five days, then. Tomorrow night is the full moon.
The fourth day after the full moon."
"Are
you able to leave this place? In order to meet us? I don't think we can get
back in here again."
"Not
very far. I can't even imagine how you could have gotten in here." Verna
showed the woman a tight smile. "I'm not Prelate for nothing. Warren
helped, too. We'll come back, four nights after the full moon."
"Verna,
there's one other thing. If Jagang can't enter my dreams, he will know
something is wrong."
Verna
pressed her hands to her face. "But you've already given the oath. You
can't take it back, or it would mean nothing. You have already given your heart
to Richard." "Then I'll have to be careful." "Can you do
that? Can you get away with it?"
Janet
touched her fingers to her lips. "What choice do I have? I'll have
to." Verna held out her dacra. "Here. At least you can protect
yourself." Janet pushed it away as if it were poison. "If I was
caught with that thing, I'd be sent out to the tents for a year."
"Well,
at least you can use your gift, now that Jagang can't enter your mind to
prevent it."
"It
won't do any good here. Jagang has total control over all those with the gift
who are here-Sisters and wizards. It would be spitting into a storm to try to
use my gift against them."
"I
know. That's why we can't try to take the others right now. We'd never make it.
The Sisters of the Dark would fight us, and with their use of Subtractive
Magic, they would cut us to pieces." Verna pressed her lips together.
"Janet, are you sure about this?"
"If
I don't help a Sister in dire need, then what good is my oath as a Sister of
the Light? One has come back to us from the Keeper; perhaps she can teach us
how to bring the others back."
Verna
had never thought of that. Warren was making impatient eye signals. She could
see the muscles in his jaw flexing.
Janet
saw, too. She gripped Verna by the shoulders and kissed her cheeks. She turned
and hugged Warren.
"Please,
Verna, get out of here before it's too late. I'll be able to endure five days.
I know how to bow and scrape for Jagang. He's been busy; maybe I can stay out
of his sight for that long."
"All
right. Where? We came down the coast to Grafan Harbor, and I don't know the lay
of the land."
"The
coast? Then you would have passed the watch house, near the docks."
"Yes, I saw the place, but it had guards in it."
Janet
leaned close. "As you said, there's nothing stopping you from using your
gift. The guard changes around sundown. Wait until you see the guard change,
and then silence them. That will give you a safe place to wait until nearly
dawn. Sometime in the night, I will be there with Amelia." "The watch
house, then. Fourth night after the full moon." Janet gave her a quick
hug. "Five nights, and we're free. Hurry. Get out of here." Warren
snatched Verna's arm and pulled her through the door.
CHAPTER������������ 54
Soon
after he awoke, just before dawn, Richard stood outside his bedroom, reading
the morning report. For the first time. the number of dead in one night had
climbed over one thousand. A thousand tragedies in one night.
Ulic,
standing not far away with his massive arms folded, asked the number. A rare
event, Ulic asking a question. Richard couldn't speak. He handed the report to
his bodyguard. Ulic sighed heavily when he read the number.
The
city was in shambles. Trade had been disrupted to the point that food was
getting scarce. Firewood, used for both heat and cooking, was hard to come by.
Services of every kind were difficult to secure, either because people were
afraid to bring their wares into the city, they had abandoned their homes and
fled the city, or they were dead.
Only
the cures in the streets were in abundance.
Richard
paused beside a long tapestry of a city market scene as he was headed for his
office. His shadow glided to a silent halt behind him. The thought of going
back to translating the book made him nauseous. He was finding nothing new,
anyway. He was mired in a long report on an inquiry into the dealings Wizard Ricker
had had with a people called the Andolians. It was boring and made little sense
to him.
Richard
couldn't face the book again this early in the day. Besides, he was worried
sick about Raina. In the last week she had only gotten worse. Nothing could be
done for her, any more than anything could be done for the thousand people who
had died the night before.
Shota
had told Kahlan that the Temple of the Winds would send another message, would
send a way to get in. The spirit had told her the same thing. Why hadn't it
come? Would they all be dead before the winds sent word?
Richard
glanced out an east window and saw the first rays of the morning sun coming
from between two mountains. With the gathering clouds he had already seen
coming in from the west, he knew that they wouldn't be seeing the full moon
that night.
He
headed for Kahlan's room. He had to see her face. see something that could lift
his spirits. Ulic took up station beside Egan at the corner of the hall. Egan
had been with Kahlan's guard the night before. Richard was greeted by Nancy,
just coming out the door. "Is Kahlan up?"
Nancy
pulled the door closed behind herself. She glanced up the hall to see Ulic and
Egan. They were too far away to hear.
"Yes,
Lord Rahl. She is just a little slow, this morning. She isn't feeling
well." Richard gripped the woman's arm. He thought that Kahlan had looked
out of
sorts
for the last few days, but she had steadfastly dismissed his concerns. Richard
could feel the blood draining from his face. "What's wrong? Is she . . .
sick? She doesn't-"
"No,
no," Nancy insisted, suddenly realizing that she had frightened the wits
out of him. "Nothing like that." "Then what's wrong?"
Richard pressed.
The
woman patted her lower belly and leaned close. She let her voice drop to little
more than a whisper. "It's just her cycle of the moon, that's all. It'll
be over in a couple more days. I wouldn't say anything, mind you, but with the
plague, I don't want you to worry yourself to death. Just don't tell her I told
you, or she'll bite off my head."
Richard
sighed as he smiled with relief. He squeezed Nancy's hand in appreciation.
"Of
course not. Thank you, Nancy. You don't know how much that eases my mind. I
couldn't endure it if she ..."
Nancy
touched his arm as she gave him a warm smile. "I know. That's the only
reason I said anything."
After
Nancy had trundled off down the hall, Richard knocked on the door. Kahlan had
been just about to open it, and was surprised to find him standing there. She
smiled up at him. "I was wrong." "About what?"
"You
are more handsome than I remembered."
Richard
grinned. She had lifted his spirits. He gave her a quick kiss when she rose on
her toes and puckered her lips.
Richard
gathered up her hand. "I'm on my way to check on Raina. Want to come with
me?"
She
nodded, the mirth ghosting away from her face.
Berdine
met them not far from their room. Her eyes were red and leaden. She wore red
leather. Richard didn't ask why. "Lord Rahl, please . . . Raina is asking
for you."
Richard
enclosed her shoulders with one arm. "We were on our way there. Come
on."
Richard
didn't ask how Berdine was. It was obvious she was sick with worry.
"Berdine, some people have recovered from the plague. No one is stronger
than Raina. She is Mord-Sith. She will be one of the ones who recovers."
Berdine nodded woodenly.
Raina
was lying on her bed. She was wearing her red leather. Standing in the doorway,
Richard leaned toward Berdine and whispered, "Why is she dressed?" He
left the obvious question of why she was wearing her red leather unasked.
Berdine
clutched his arm. "She asked me to dress her in the red leather of a
Mord-Sith"-Berdine stifled a wail-"for the final battle."
Richard
sank to his knees beside the bed. Raina's half-open eyes rolled toward him. Sweat
ran from her face. Her lower lip quivered.
Raina
gripped Richard's arm. "Lord Rahl . . . please, take me out to see
Reggie?" "Reggie?"
"The
chipmunks . . . please take me out to feed Reggie. He's the one missing the end
of his little tail." His heart breaking, he smiled for her. "It would
be my honor."
He
scooped her up in his arms. She had lost a lot of weight. She hardly weighed
anything.
Raina
wrapped a weak arm around his neck as she cuddled her head to his shoulder
while he carried her through the halls.
Berdine
walked beside them, holding Raina's other hand. Kahlan walked at his other
side. Ulic and Egan marched behind.
Soldiers
along the way silently stepped clear, eyes to the ground, giving a salute of
fist to heart as Richard and the procession passed. The salute was for Raina.
Outside,
Richard sat on the stone court, in the light of the dawning sun, holding Raina
in his lap. Berdine sat on her heels by her head. Kahlan sat on his other side.
Ulic and Egan, hands clasped behind their backs, stood not far to the rear.
Richard saw a tear or two wend its way down each of their stony faces.
"Over
there," Richard said to Kahlan, pointing with his chin. "Give me that
box."
Kahlan
turned and saw what he meant. He kept seeds in a box under a stone bench. She
wiggled off the lid and held out the box.
Richard
scooped out a handful of seeds and tossed some on the ground before them. He
trickled the rest into Raina's bony hand.
It
wasn't long before two chipmunks, tails twitching, scampered across the lawn.
Richard had fed them enough so they knew that the appearance of people might
mean food. They stuffed seeds in their cheeks, as best they could, between
sudden, chattering bouts of trying to chase each other away. Raina watched, her
eyes only half opened.
Her
Agiel dangled from the chain on the wrist of the hand that Berdine held. The
two chipmunks, their cheeks full, scurried for their burrows to store their
booty.
Raina
opened her arm out and rested her hand on the paving stone. She uncurled her
fingers. Each shallow breath rattled. Berdine tenderly stroked Raina's
forehead.
Another
chipmunk appeared from under a bush. He came partway toward them, froze stiff
while he checked for threat, and then dashed the rest of the way. He was
missing the end of his tail. "Reggie," Raina breathed.
Raina
smiled as Reggie climbed into her open hand. He sat there, pressing his little
feet against her fingers as he popped seeds into his mouth with his tongue. He
paused, sitting up in her hand, to rearrange the seeds stuffed in his cheeks.
Satisfied, he dropped back down, putting his little feet to Raina's fingers
again. Raina let out a soft giggle.
Berdine
kissed her forehead. "I love you, Raina." she whispered. "I love
you, Berdine."
Richard
felt Raina's muscles go slack as she died in his arms while Reggie sat eating
seeds from her hand.
CHAPTER������������� 55
Kahlan
stood behind Richard as he sat in his chair in his office, her arms circled
around his neck, her cheek laid against the top of his head as she wept.
Richard
rolled Raina's Agiel in his fingers. Berdine said that Raina had wanted him to
have it.
Berdine
had asked for permission to go up to the Keep to tell Cara. She also asked if
she could take her turn at watch over the sliph, as Cara had been up there for
the last three days.
Richard
told her that she could do whatever she wished, for as long as she wished, and
that if she wanted him to take her watch, or to come sit with her, he would.
She had said that she wanted to be alone for a while. "Why hasn't the
temple sent its message?" Kahlan smoothed his hair. "I don't
know."
''What
are we going to do?'' he asked. It wasn't a question for which he expected an
answer. "I just don't know what to do."
Kahlan
rubbed her palms up and down the sides of his shoulders. "Do you think you
might find an answer in the trial record?"
"For
all I know it could be the very last line I translate that gives me any
information I can use." He slowly shook his head. "Long before I can
translate every line, we'll all be dead."
Richard
hooked Raina's Agiel on the chain along with the amulet at his chest. The red
color of the Agiel matched the ruby.
Silence
hung in the air for a time before he said, "Jagang is going to win."
Kahlan turned his head toward her. "Don't say that. Please don't say
that." He forced a smile. "You're right. We'll beat him." A
knock came to the door. Ulic stuck his head in when Richard called to ask who
it was.
"Lord
Rahl, General Kerson wanted to know if he could talk to you for a minute."
Kahlan
patted Richard's shoulder. "I'm going to go tell Drefan and Nadine about
Raina."
Richard
walked to the door with her. General Kerson was waiting outside with his usual
fistful of reports.
"I'll
catch up with you in a few minutes," Richard said. As Kahlan left Richard
to hear the general's reports, Egan fell in with her. It felt odd to be guarded
by Egan alone, without a Mord-Sith. One of them had always seemed to be around.
"Mother Confessor," Egan said, "some people just arrived at the
palace and
wanted
to see you and Lord Rahl. I told them that everyone was busy. I didn't want to
burden Lord Rahl."
"Petitioners'
Hall must be packed with people who want to see us, what with all the
trouble."
"They
aren't in Petitioners' Hall. The guards stopped them as they went into one of
the reception rooms. They aren't exactly arrogant, like some of the
representatives I've seen, but they are insistent, in an odd sort of way."
Kahlan
frowned up at the huge, blond D'Haran. "Did they say who they were? Did
you find out that much, at least?" "They said they were
Andolians."
Kahlan
jerked to a halt, seizing Egan's massive arm. "Andolians! And the guards
let them in? They let Andolians in the palace?"
Egan's
brow drew down. "I didn't hear how they got in. Only that they were here.
Is this a problem. Mother Confessor?"
The
man's hand was already on his sword. "No. it's not that. It's just that .
. . dear spirits, how do you explain the Andolians?" She searched for the
right words. "They aren't exactly-human." "What do you
mean?"
"There
are creatures of magic that live in the Midlands. There are people with magic
who live in the Midlands. It is sometimes difficult to know where to place the
line separating them. Some of these people with magic are part creature-like
the Andolians."
"Magic?"
Egan asked with obvious distaste. "Are they dangerous?" Kahlan heaved
a sigh as she changed her mind about where she was going and instead started
out for the reception hall. "Not exactly. At least, not usually. Not if you
know how to treat them.
' 'No
one knows a great deal about the Andolians. We leave them alone. Most people of
the Midlands have a strong dislike for them. The Andolians steal things. Not
for the wealth of the object, but simply because the Andolians are fascinated
by things. Shiny things, mostly. A piece of glass, a gold piece, or a
button-it's all the same to them.
"People
don't like them because the Andolians look much like you and I, and so people
think they should behave like people, but they aren't people, exactly.
"They
usually show up in places out of simple curiosity. We don't allow them in the
palace because they cause such a disruption. It's best to simply keep them out.
With the magic they have, if you try to discipline them, they can turn nasty.
Very nasty."
"Perhaps
I should have the soldiers get rid of them."
"No.
That could get ugly. Dealing with them requires a very special kind of
protocol. Fortunately, I know the protocol. I'll get rid of them."
"How?"
"The
Andolians like to carry messages. They like that more than anything- more than
shiny objects, even. They love to carry messages for people. I guess it makes
them feel more connected to their human side to be involved in human affairs.
"Some
people in the Midlands use them for that purpose. Andolians will carry a
message more faithfully than any courier. They will do it for a shiny button.
They would even do it for no compensation. They live to convey messages.
"All
I have to do is give them a message to carry, and they will be off to deliver
it. That's the easiest way to get rid of an Andolian." "Will it get
rid of all of them?" Egan asked as he scratched his head. "All of
them? Dear spirits, don't tell me that there are more than a couple?"
"Seven. Six women who all look alike, and one man."
Kahlan
lost a stride. "I don't believe it. That would be the Legate Rishi and his
six wives, all sisters. The six sisters were all born of the same . . .
litter."
The
Andolians believed that only a litter of six females were worthy to be the
legate's wives. Kahlan's head spun as she tried to concentrate through the
depression over Raina's death, over all the deaths. She had to think of a place
to send the Andolians, and a message for them to carry.
Maybe
something about the plague. She could send them somewhere with a warning about
the plague. Maybe down into the wilds. Most of the people of the wilds
tolerated the Andolians better than most other people in the Midlands.
A
throng of guards bristling with weapons filled the halls all around the
reception room. Two guards with pikes opened the tall, mahogany-paneled doors
as Kahlan and Egan approached.
The
reception hall, where waited the Andolians, was one of the smaller ones,
without windows. Sculptures of every sort, from rulers' busts to a farmer and
oxen, most done in pale marble, rested on square granite blocks placed back
against the dark walls. Behind each sculpture, ornamental drapery of a rich
maroon was swagged back to half-columns of dark violet marble set against the
walls between each sculpture. It lent each piece the air of being displayed on
a stage, with curtains opening for them.
Four
separate clusters of ornate lamps with cut-glass chimneys hung on silver
chains. Because of the dark decor, the dozens of lamps were unable to bring
anything brighter than a somber atmosphere to the room. Three heavy, dark
tables sat on the black marble floor.
The
Andolians stood before one of these tables. The six sisters were tall and
slender, and Kahlan couldn't tell one from another. Their hair was dyed a
bright orange with the berries of a basset bush that grew in the Andolians'
homeland. Their homeland wasn't close; they had made a long journey to get to
Aydindril.
Their
big, round black eyes watched Kahlan approach. Their orange hair, woven into
hundreds of small braids, made the women look as if they wore wigs of orange
yarn. Woven into the yarnlike hair were small, shiny things-buttons, pieces of
metal, gold and silver coins, shards of glass, chips of obsidian-any scrap that
they found shiny enough for their taste.
All six
were dressed in simple but elegant white robes of a lustrous, satiny '
material. Despite what Kahlan knew about the Andolians-such as the way a simple
storm could send them puling for protection under a bush or a hole in the
ground- they had a noble air. Kahlan guessed that made sense; they were, after
all, the wives of the legate, the leader of the Andolians.
The
legate himself was shorter than his wives, and much older. Other than his round
black eyes, he looked to be nothing more than a distinguished official, a bit
on the stocky side. A bald pate shone above his fringe of white hair. Some kind
of grease had been rubbed on it so as to make it glossy.
He wore
robes similar lo his wives', but of gold material trimmed with rows of shiny
objects sewn on. Each finger had at least one ring. From a distance, all the
shiny objects made him look opulent. Closer up, he looked more like a crazy
beggar
who had
dug through a midden heap to pluck out worthless items discarded by normal
people.
Legate
Rishi's eyes were red-rimmed and leaden-looking. He wore a doltish grin and
swayed on his feet. Kahlan saw him infrequently, but she didn't remember him
this way.��������������������������������������
The six
sisters formed into a line before him. They straightened, putting their
shoulders back with pride.
"We
share the moon," one of the six said.
"We
share the moon," Kahlan said in their traditional greeting among females.
Her waning cramps reminded her that the greeting had more than one meaning.
The
rest spoke the greeting in turn. The way those big black eyes blinked as they
watched her gave Kahlan shivers. When they had finished with the official
greeting, the six split into two groups of three and backed to either side of
their husband.
The
legate lifted a hand, as if a king greeting a crowd. He grinned moronically.
Kahlan frowned at his odd behavior, although she wasn't at all sure that for an
Andolian it was odd.
"We
share the sun," he said in a slur.������������ '
"We
share the sun," Kahlan answered, but he ignored her as his attention was
diverted by something behind her.
Kahlan
turned and saw Richard striding across the room. a glower heating his
expression.
"What's
this about the moon?" Richard asked as he came up beside Kahlan. She took
his hand. "Richard," she said in a tone of warning, "this is
Legate Rishi and his wives. They are Andolians. I have just given them their
traditional greeting, that's all."
His
expression slackened. "Oh, I see. When they said something about the
moon-I thought."
The
blood suddenly drained from Richard's face.
"Andolians,"
he whispered to himself. "Wizard Ricker was doing something with the
Andolians . . ." He seemed lost in a confusion of thought.
"We
share the sun," Legate Rishi said through his grin, "The females
share the moon. A female and a male share the sun. but not the moon."
Richard
rubbed his brow. He looked engrossed in recollection, or confusion. Kahlan
squeezed his hand, hoping he would get the message to let her handle this. She
turned back to the legate. "Legate Rishi, I would like you to-"��������
"Our
husband has been drinking things that make him happy," one of the wives
said, as if it were a fascinating bit of news. "He has been trading some
of his prizes for this drink." Her expression turned perplexed. "It
makes him slow. too, or we would have been here sooner."
"Thank
you for telling me this," Kahlan said. One had always to thank an Andolian
for any information they offered about themselves. Information about themselves
so given was considered a gift.
Kahlan
turned her attention once more to the legate. "Legate Rishi, I would like
you to carry an important message for me." "Sorry," the legate
said. "We can carry no message for you." Kahlan was dumbfounded. She
had never heard of an Andolian refusing to carry a message.
"But,
why not?"
One of
the six leaned toward Kahlan. "Because we already carry a message of great
importance." "You do?"
Her big
black eyes blinked. "Yes. The greatest of all honors. Husband carries a
message from the moon."
"You
what?" Richard whispered as his head came up.
"The
moon sends a message from the winds," the legate said in a drunken slur.
Kahlan felt as if the world had frozen.
"We
would have been here sooner, but husband had to stop many times to have the
drink of happiness."
Kahlan
felt her whole body tingle with icy dread.
"Been
here sooner," Richard repeated. "While all those people died, you've
been drinking?" His voice boomed like thunder. "Raina died, because
you've been out getting drunk!"
Richard
exploded in a blur of movement, his fist striking Legate Rishi so hard that the
man tumbled back over the table.
"People
are dying, and you're out getting drunk!" Richard roared as he vaulted
over the table.
"Richard,
no!" Kahlan shrieked. "He has magic!"
Kahlan
saw a blur of red racing in from the side. Cara came at a dead run and dived
over the table, knocking Richard sprawling across the floor.
Legate
Rishi rose up in a rage. Blood frothed at his mouth. Strings of it whipped from
his chin.
Wavering
flares of light and undulating flutters of darkness radiated up his arms,
gathering at his chest as he rose up. He was gathering his magic, preparing to
unleash it against Richard. Richard went for his sword.
Cara
shoved Richard again and rebounded back at the legate, backhanding him across
his bloody mouth. The legate whirled, redirecting his rage at her.
Cat-quick,
Cara spun past him, striking him again, turning his attention away from Richard
as he followed her. His magic already gathered, he unleashed it at her. The air
thumped and at the same time seemed to oscillate. The legate went down with a
grunt of pain. Cara was on him before he hit the ground. She pressed her Agiel
to his throat.
"You
are mine, now," she sneered as he gagged in agony. "Your magic is
mine, now."
"Cara!"
Kahlan yelled. "Don't kill him!"
The six
sisters were squatted down in a shivering clump, bugging one another in terror.
Kahlan put a hand to the frightened sisters, reassuring them that they wouldn't
be harmed.
"Cara,
don't hurt him," Kahlan said. "He carries a message from the Temple
of the Winds."
Cara's
head came up. She had a disturbing look in her eyes. "I know. It came to
him with magic. His magic is mine, now. The message he carries is embedded
within his magic."
Richard
let his sword drop back into its scabbard. "You mean, you know the
message?' ' Cara nodded, her blue eyes filling with tears.
"I
know it with him. I share his magic, his knowledge of the message."
"Ulic, Egan," Richard said. "clear the soldiers out. Shut the
doors. Keep everyone out."
As Ulic
and Egan were ushering the soldiers out, Richard seized the legate by the robes
at his throat and lifted him. He heaved him into a chair. Richard lowered over
the suddenly meek-looking, panting Andolian leader.
His
chest heaving, Richard gripped the amulet and Raina's Agiel in a fist. The
muscles in his jaw flexed as he pointed at the legate's face.
"Let's
have the message. And you had better tell it true. Thousands of people have
already died while you delayed your arrival to get drunk."
"The
message from the winds is for two people."
Richard
looked up. The words had come not only from the legate, but also from Cara. She
had spoken the words along with him. "Cara, do you know the message, too?
Just as he does?" Cara looked as surprised as Richard. "I . . . it
came to me, as it came to him. I knew only that he carried a message. He didn't
know it until he spoke it. I knew it when he did." "Who is the
message for?" Kahlan knew.
"For
Wizard Richard Rahl, and for Mother Confessor Kahlan Amnell." Once again,
both had spoken the words. "What is the message?" Richard asked.
Kahlan
knew. She went to Richard's side, taking his hand in hers. holding it for dear
life.
The
room was empty of everyone except Richard. Kahlan. Cara, Legate Rishi, and the
six sisters, cowering under a table. The lamps around the room dimmed, as if
their wicks had been turned down. It cast them all in an eerie, wavering light.
The
legate, his face gone blank, looked to have gone into a trance. He rose from
the chair, blood still dripping from his chin. His arm lifted, pointing at
Richard. Only he spoke, this time.
"The
winds summon you. Wizard Richard Rahl. Magic has been stolen from the winds,
and used in this world to cause harm. You must wed in order to enter the Temple
of the Winds.
"Your
wife is to be one named Nadine Brighton."
Unable
to speak, Richard brought Kahlan's hand to his heart, holding it there in both
of his hands.
Cara's
arm lifted, pointing at Kahlan. Only she spoke, this time, in a frigid,
heartless voice.
"The
winds summon you. Mother Confessor Kahlan Amnell. Magic has been stolen from
the winds, and used in this world to cause harm. You must wed in order to help
Wizard Richard Rahl enter the Temple of the Winds. "You husband is to be
one named Drefan Rahl." Richard dropped to his knees. Kahlan sank down
beside him. She thought she should feel something. She felt only numbness. It
seemed a dream.
She had
thought it would never come. Now that it was happening, it seemed too fast. as
if she were tumbling over a cliff, grasping for a handhold, but finding nothing
to stop her fall as she plunged into icy blackness.
It was
over. Everything was over. Her life, her dreams, her future, her joy, was over.
It only remained to act it out until the end. Richard's ashen face looked up
from Cara's feet.
"Cara,
please. I'm begging you, don't do this to us." His voice broke. "Dear
spirits, please don't do this to us, Cara." Cara's cold blue eyes stared
back.
"I
do not do this to you. I only bear the message from the winds. You must both
agree to this, if you wish to enter the Temple of the Winds." "Why
must Kahlan marry?" "The winds require a virgin bride."
Richard's eyes darted to Kahlan. He looked back to Cara. "She isn't a
virgin." "Yes, she is," Cara said. "No! She's not!"
Kahlan
put her forehead against the side of Richard's face as she gripped his muscular
neck, hugging herself to him.
"Yes.
Richard. I am," she whispered. "In this world, I am. Shota told me
that that was all that mattered to the spirits. In this world, in our world,
the world of life, I am a virgin. We were together in another world. It doesn't
apply here." "That's crazy," he whispered in a hoarse voice. "That's
just crazy." "It fulfills the requirements of the winds," Cara
said.
"This
is the only chance you will be offered," the legate said. "If you do
not take it, then the obligation of the winds to remedy the damage will be
ended."
"Please,
Cara," Richard whispered. "Please . . . don't do this. There has to
be another way."
"This
is the only way." Cara, in her red leather, lowered above them. "It
is up to you whether you will repair the damage. You must agree. If you fail to
answer the call, it will not come again, and the magic released will run
free."
"The
winds wish to know your answer," the legate said. "You must both
agree to this of your free will. It must be a true marriage in all aspects. It
must be for life. You must both be of honest intent in your marriages, and
faithful to the ones you wed."
"He
speaks the truth of the winds. What is your answer?" Cara asked in a voice
like ice.
Kahlan
looked through the watery blur into Richard's eyes. She could see him dying
behind those eyes.
"It
is our duty. Only we can save those people, but I will say no if you wish it,
Richard."
"How
many more Rainas must die in my arms? I couldn't ask you to have me at the cost
of another life."
Kahlan
swallowed the wail. "Is there anything . . . do you know of anything we
could do to stop the plague?"
Richard
shook his head. "I'm sorry. I have failed you. I haven't found a way
around this."
"You
haven't failed me, Richard. I couldn't bear to think we were the cause of more
death, like Raina's, today." She threw her arms around his neck. "I
love you so much, Richard."
Richard's
big hand held her head to him. "We are agreed, then. We must do
this."
Richard
brought her to her feet with him. There was so much she wanted to say
to him.
No words came. When she looked into Richard's eyes, she knew words
weren't
needed.
They
turned to Cara and the legate. "I agree. I will marry Nadine."
"I agree. I will marry Drefan." Kahlan fell into Richard's arms as
she lost control of her tears. She sobbed in
agony.
Richard embraced her, nearly squeezing the life out of her. Cara and the legate
were suddenly there, pulling them apart. "You are each promised to
another," Cara said. "You may not do this now.
You
must each be loyal to your mates." Kahlan looked past the legate into
Richard's eyes, each of them knowing that
they
had embraced for the last time. In that moment, her world ended.
CHAPTER������������� 56
Kahlan
and Richard sat apart, with the legate and Cara between them. Kahlan heard the
doors open. It was Nadine and Drefan. After Ulic had let them in, he closed the
doors.
Richard
raked his hair back as he rose. Kahlan didn't want to test her legs, yet. It
had all slipped through her fingers. Everything was lost to duty.
Nadine
eyed everyone in the room: the legate, his six wives, Cara, Kahlan, and finally
Richard as he walked haltingly to her.
Richard
stared at the floor. "You both know that the plague was started with
magic. I told you both how it was stolen from the Temple of the Winds. The
temple has sent its requirements if I am to be allowed to enter and stop the
plague.
"The
temple requires that both Kahlan and I wed. The temple has named who it is it
requires we wed. I'm sorry that both of you have been . . . tangled in this. I
don't know the reason. The temple will not explain why it must be so, only that
this is our only chance to halt the plague. I can't force either of you to be
part of this; I can only ask."
Richard
cleared his throat, trying to steady his voice. He lifted Nadine's hand. He
couldn't look her in the eye. "Nadine, will you marry me?"
Nadine's
gaze immediately went to Kahlan. Kahlan wore her Confessor's face, as her
mother taught her. Duty, as her mother had taught her. Nadine glanced to the
others, and then back to the top of Richard's head. "Do you love me,
Richard?"
Richard
finally looked up into her eyes. "No. I'm sorry, Nadine, but, no. I don't
love you."
She was
unruffled by the answer. Kahlan was sure that she had expected it. "I'll
marry you, Richard. I'll make you happy. You'll see. You'll come to love me, in
time."
"No,
Nadine," Richard whispered, "I won't. We will be husband and wife, if
you agree to this, and I will be faithful to you, but my heart will always
belong to Kahlan. I'm sorry to say such a harsh thing to you when I'm asking you
to marry me, but I won't deceive you."
Nadine
thought a moment. "Well, many marriages are arranged, and they turn out
well in the end." She smiled at him. To Kahlan, it looked a sympathetic
smile. "The spirits have arranged this one. That means something. I will
marry you, Richard."
Richard
glanced back at Kahlan. It was her turn. She saw in those dead gray eyes a
glimmer of something: rage. Kahlan knew that his insides were being torn apart
the same as were hers.
She
found herself before Drefan before she realized it. The first time she tried,
her voice wouldn't come out. It simply wouldn't. She tried again. "Drefan,
will you . . . be . . . my husband?"
His
blue. Darken Rahl eyes appraised her without emotion. For some reason, she
recalled his hand between Cara's legs, and she almost vomited.
"As
Nadine said. I could do worse than a marriage arranged by the spirits. I don't
suppose there's any chance you will ever come to love me?"
Kahlan's
jaw trembled as she stared at the floor. Her voice wouldn't work. She shook her
head.
"Well,
no matter. We may still have some good times. I'll do it. I will marry you,
Kahlan."
She was
glad that she had never told Richard about what Drefan had done to Cara. If she
had. Richard might have lost control when Drefan said he would marry Kahlan and
pulled free his sword.
Cara
and the legate stepped forward. "It is agreed, then." they said as
one. "The winds are pleased to have the consent of all involved."
"When?"
Richard asked in a hoarse voice. "When will we . . . when do we. . .? And
when can I get into the Temple of the Winds? People are dying. I have to help
the winds put a stop to it."
"Tonight,"
Cara and the legate said as one. "We will leave immediately for Mount
Kymermosst. You will be wed tonight, as soon as we arrive there."
Kahlan
didn't ask how they would get to a place that wasn't there anymore. It didn't
really matter to her. The only thing that really mattered to her was that they
would be wed that very night.
"I'm
sorry about Raina," Nadine said to Richard. "How is Berdine
doing?" "Not well. She's up at the Keep."
Richard
turned to Cara. "Can we stop up there on our way? I must tell her what has
happened. She will have to stay to guard the sliph until I return. I have to
tell her."
"And
I'd like to give her something to help her feel better," Nadine said.
"It is permitted," Cara said in that awful, icy voice.
Berdine
looked terror-stricken when Richard told her. She threw her arms around him and
wept with twin misery. The sliph watched from her well. frowning with
curiosity.
Nadine
mixed things from pouches in her big bag. giving Berdine instructions on when
to take them, promising that it would help her get through her grief. Richard
tried to tell Berdine everything he could think of that she might need to know.
Kahlan
could almost feel time tingling against her flesh as it flew past, as she
plunged and plunged into the black depths.
"We
must go," Cara said, cutting off the stalling. "We must ride hard to
arrive before the full moon rises."
"How
will I find the Temple of the Winds?" Richard asked. "You do not find
the Temple of the Winds," Cara said. "The Temple of the Winds will
find you, if the requirements are met."
Nadine
lifted her bag before Richard. "Can I leave this here, then? It's heavy to
carry if we're coming back here anyway." "Of course," Richard
said, his voice a dead monotone.
Kahlan
was made to walk behind Richard and beside Drefan as they returned to the
horses. Nadine touched Richard's back as she walked beside him. She was doing a
fair job of restraining her joy over her triumph, yet it was a touch meant to
send a message: he belonged to her, now.
At the
bottom of the Keep road, as they turned away from the city, Kahlan could hear
the men with the dead-carts, calling out for people to bring out their dead.
Soon, that would be ended, as the suffering and death of the plague was ended.
Only in that did she find any solace. The children, their parents, would live.
If only
it had come in time for Raina. Berdine hadn't said that, but Kahlan knew that
that thought was screaming in her head.
Richard
had ordered all their guards to remain. When Ulic and Egan had seen the look on
his face, they hadn't argued. Only Richard and Nadine, Kahlan and Drefan, Cara,
the legate, and his six wives rode out for Mount Kymerrmosst.
Kahlan
didn't know how any of it was going to work, getting into the Temple of the
Winds, nor did Richard. She didn't have the slightest curiosity about it. The
only thing she could think about was Richard marrying Nadine. Kahlan was sure
that Richard could think of nothing but her marrying Drefan.
As they
rode, Drefan told stories, trying to keep everyone entertained, trying to lift
their spirits. Kahlan didn't hear much of it. She watched Richard's back; her
only need was to be looking when he glanced back at her, as he did from time to
time.
She
couldn't bear not to look at him, yet meeting his eyes was like a hot knife
searing into her heart.
She
took no joy in the mountainous country they rode into, the greening grass,
unfurling ferns, budding trees. The day was warm, compared to what the weather
had been for spring, so far, but the sky brooded with dark clouds. Before the
day was out, she expected they would encounter a storm. The Andolians cringed
every time their eyes turned up.
Kahlan
pulled her cloak tighter around herself. She thought about her blue wedding
dress back in her room that she had planned to wear when she married Richard.
She
felt herself getting angry at him. He had seduced her into thinking she could
have love, could have happiness. Seduced her into forgetting she had only duty.
Seduced her into loving him.
When
she realized she was angry at him, the tears came again, running down her face
in a silent torrent. This wasn't happening just to her, it was happening to
him, too. They shared this torment.
She
thought about the first time she saw him. It seemed so long ago that she had
been running from Darken Rahl's assassins, and Richard had helped her. She
thought about all the things they had done together, all the times she stood
watch while he slept, and she gazed at him, imagining being just a normal woman
who could fall in love, instead of a Confessor who had to keep her feelings
secret and live a loveless life of duty.
Richard
had found a way, though, found a way that she, a Confessor, could have love.
And now it was in ashes.
Why
would the spirits do this to them? The answer came when she remembered her talk
with Shota, and with the spirit. There were not only good spirits, but evil
spirits, too. Those evil spirits had a hand in this. They were the ones who
wanted this, who demanded it as the price of the path.
The
spirits who demanded that price were worse than evil. Late in the morning, they
stopped to rest the horses and eat. Nadine and Drefan talked with their mouths
full. The legate sat back as his wives fed him. He had a hard time, what with
his cut lip. They rubbed their legs against his. giggling as he took food from
their fingers. They ate between offering him bites. Cara ate in silence. Kahlan
didn't notice what any of them had to eat.
She and
Richard didn't eat. They both sat on the sunny rocks like deadwood, silent,
sullen, staring at nothing.
When
the others had finished with their meal, Richard watched as they all mounted up
again. Even though none of the others noticed it, Kahlan could see the
smoldering rage in his eyes. The spirits had chosen Drefan to wound him. They
could have done nothing worse.
"How's
the arm?" Nadine asked Drefan as they all started out again. Drefan held
it up and flexed his fingers in demonstration. "Nearly good as new."
Kahlan
ignored their conversation. All morning, they had chattered. In her silent
world, it was barely noticed.
"What
is wrong with your arm, master Drefan?" one of the six sisters asked.
"Oh, some miscreant didn't like the way I try to purge the world of
sickness." Big black eyes blinked at him. "What did he do to
you?" Drefan straightened haughtily in his saddle. "Cut me with his
knife. Tried to kill me. the filthy scum." "Why did he not
succeed?"
Drefan
dismissed the incident with an arrogant wave. "Once I showed him some
steel, he ran for his life."
"I
sewed his wound," Nadine told the amazed sisters. "And a deep one it
was, too."
Drefan
cast a glance at Nadine that seemed to make her shrink in her saddle. "I
told you, Nadine, it's nothing. I don't want sympathy. A lot of people are in
much greater need than 1."
He
relented when he saw the sheepish look on her face. "But you did a good
job. As fine as any of my healers would have done. You did a fine job, and I
appreciate it." Nadine smiled as they rode on.
Drefan
pulled up the broad hood of his flaxen cloak. Dear spirits, she thought, that
is to be my husband. For the rest of my life, this is to be my partner in life.
Until she could die, and be with Richard again. Sweet death could not come soon
enough.
Clarissa
wiped her sweaty palms together as she peered through the keyhole and listened
to Nathan speaking with the Sisters in the other room.
"I'm
sure you can understand. Lord Rahl," Sister Jodelle said. "This is
for your own safety, too."
Nathan
chuckled. "How good of the emperor to consider my well-being."
"If, as you say, Richard Rahl will be eliminated tonight, then you have
nothing to be concerned about. We will bring it afterwards. Surely, this would
be satisfactory." Nathan shot them a hot glare. "I told you, Jagang's
plan has worked. Richard
Rahl
will be eradicated tonight. You will learn not to question me after tonight, I
pray."
Clarissa
had to strain to see Nathan through the keyhole as he turned away from the two
Sisters while he considered. He turned back to them. "And he has agreed to
everything else?"
"Everything,"
Sister Willamina assured him. "He looks forward to having you as his
plenipotentiary in D'Hara, and is most agreeable to your offer of aid with the
books of prophecy he has collected over the years."
Nathan
grunted. "Where are they? I don't know that I'm amenable to traveling all
over the Old World just to have a look at worthless volumes. I have business in
D'Haran, after all. As the new Lord Rahl, I will need to consolidate my
authority."
"His
Excellency has anticipated that this would be inconvenient for you, and so has
suggested that he will have his wizards pull out things of interest and have
them sent to you for your analysis."
Clarissa
knew what the Sister was talking about. Before they had arrived, Nathan had
told her that he probably wouldn't be allowed to have a look at the prophecies
Jagang possessed, much less be told where they all were. Jagang would want
Nathan to see only selected volumes that had been screened by others, first.
Nathan finally turned his full attention to the two Sisters. "In due time,
in due time. Once we have worked together and brought the New World to task,
and have come to fully trust one another's word, then I will happily accept
visits by Jagang's lapdogs, but until then. I'm sure our emperor understands
that I am leery of allowing those with the gift to know exactly where I am.
That is why I will be leaving at once."
Sister
Jodelle sighed. "As I said, he would be happy to have it brought to you.
But you can understand that he would have cause for concern to have a wizard of
your power, whose mind is a mystery to him, approach too closely. While he is eager
for this arrangement, he is a man who takes precautions."
"As
am I," Nathan said. "That is why I can't allow the book to be brought
to me. Having you meet me here again today is the last risk I intend to take.
In the meantime, I want that book. Until I have it, I have no way of knowing if
it's safe for me to go to D'Hara."
"His
Excellency understands, and has no disagreement with your request. His
objective will soon be complete, and he therefore has no further need of the
book. Besides, a world without people to work for him would be of little value.
"The
book only works for Sister Amelia, since she was the one who went to the Temple
of the Winds lo recover it. He has offered to let you have either the book, or
Sister Amelia. If you wish, we will send her to you." "So Jagang will
know where I am? I don't think so, Sister. I'll take the book."
"That, too, is agreeable with His Excellency. We can send it, or have
someone meet you, to deliver it to you. He objects only to you, yourself,
coming to get it, for safety reasons, as I've already explained."
Nathan
rubbed his jaw as he thought. "What if I sent someone back with you? A
representative, someone with my interests in mind? Someone loyal to me, so I
had no need to fear that Jagang would delve into their mind and find where I
was to be? Someone without the gift? He would have no need to tear them."
"Without
the gift?" Sister Jodelle thought a moment. "And we could test them,
without your shields around them, to insure that they in fact did not have the
gift?'' "Of course. I want this relationship with Jagang to work for both
of us. I wouldn't
jeopardize
it by trying to deceive him. I want to build trust, not destroy it."
Nathan hesitated, clearing his throat. "But you understand, though, that
this person is . . . valued, to me. If anything were to happen to her. I would
view it in the harshest light." Both Sisters smiled. "Her. Of
course," Sister Willamina said.
"Why.
Nathan"-Sister Jodelle rocked on her heels as she smiled-"you really
have been enjoying your freedom."
"I
mean it," Nathan said in a level tone. "Anything happens to her, and
the entire agreement is ended. I'm sending her as a show of my faith in Jagang,
in our agreement. I'm taking the first step of trust, so that the emperor will
see that I am sincere."
"We
understand, Nathan." Sister Jodelle said, more serious now. "No harm
will come to her."
"When
she leaves with the book. I want her escorted to safety, beyond Jagang's
troops, and then left to be on her way. If she is followed, I will know it. If
she is followed, I will view it in the most unfavorable light-as a sign of
hostility toward me, and an attempt on my life."
Sister
Jodelle nodded. "Understood, and very reasonable. She comes with us, gets
the book. and returns safely to you, without being followed, and we are all
happy."
"Good,"
Nathan said decisively, as if closing the deal. "After tonight, Jagang
will be rid of Richard Rahl. When I have the book safely in hand. then I will
have the southern army surrender to Jagang's expeditionary force, as my part of
the bargain."
Sister
Jodelle bowed. "We have an agreement. Lord Rahl. His Excellency wishes to
welcome you to the empire as his second."
Nathan
turned toward the door Clarissa was kneeling behind. Clarissa jumped up and
rushed to the far window. She drew back the drapes with a hand and pretended to
be gazing out when she heard the door open. "Clarissa," Nathan
called.
She
turned to see him standing in the doorway, holding the doorknob. Beyond him,
she could see the two Sisters watching. "Yes, Nathan? You wish
something?"
"Yes,
Clarissa. I would like you to go on a small journey for me-a bit of business. I
need you to go with my friends out here."
Clarissa
guided her full skirts around the writing table and followed him out into the
other room. Nathan introduced her to the two Sisters.
The two
women wore knowing, smug smiles. They glanced to her cleavage and then at each
other. Clarissa had that feeling of being judged as a whore, again.
"Clarissa,
you will leave at once, with these ladies. When you reach your destination,
they will give you a book. You will then return with it. You remember where I
told you we would be off to, tomorrow?" "Yes, Nathan."
"You
will meet me there, after you have the book. No one. no one at all, is to know
where it is you will be meeting me. Do you understand?" "Yes,
Nathan." "I'll go see to getting her a horse," Sister Willamina
said.
"A
horse?" Clarissa gasped. "I've never ridden a horse in my life. I
can't ride a horse."
Nathan
waved patience at the sudden hitch in their plans. "I have a carriage.
I'll have it brought around, and Clarissa can take that. There, is that
satisfactory to all?"
Sister
Jodelle shrugged. "Horse, carriage, it makes no difference to us, as long
as we can test her for the gift, first."
'Test
her all you want. I will order the carriage while you test her, and then
Clarissa can pack a few things." "Agreed." "Good. That's
settled then."
Nathan
turned to Clarissa, putting his back to the two Sisters. "It won't be
long, my dear, and we'll be together again." He adjusted the locket
hanging from a fine gold chain, straightening it for her. He looked into her
eyes. "I will be waiting for you. I've told these friends of mine that if
anything happens to you, I will be more than unhappy."
Clarissa
stared into his wonderful eyes. "Thank you, Nathan. I will bring the book,
as you ask."
Nathan
kissed her cheek. "Thank you, my dear. That's good of you. Safe journey,
then."
423
CHAPTER������������� 57
Even
with the gathering dark, brooding clouds, an eerie calm hung over the summit of
Mount Kymermosst. The Andolians cast uneasy glances skyward. As Kahlan watched
Richard dismount, his golden cloak hung limp in the unnaturally still air.
Drefan offered her his hand to help her down. Kahlan pretended not to see it.
In the
fading light, the ruins were only ghostly shapes, the bones of some long
extinct monster, waiting to come back to life and swallow her up. Though this
was the night of the full moon, the leaden clouds would totally obscure it.
When the last of the daylight soon left, it would be black as death atop the
forsaken peak.
Nadine
stood close to Richard as he stared off toward the edge of the cliff. Drefan
stood nearby, not wanting to look too forward to the woman who would shortly be
his wife, but not wanting to ignore her, either. Like Nadine, he didn't seem to
view this as the end of his happiness.
After
the horses were secured, the legate and Cara ushered the brides and bridegrooms
to a crumbling, circular garden structure made up of curved stone benches on
one side and broken columns on the other. The top piece, connecting the
columns. was mostly missing, joining only four of the ten stone columns.
In the
distance, in the fading light, Kahlan could still see the knife edge of the
cliff, and the black swath of mountains beyond. Somewhere out there was the
Temple of the Winds.
Kahlan
was directed to sit on a curved stone bench beside Drefan, and Richard, two
benches away, was told to sit beside Nadine. Kahlan glanced over. and
saw-Richard looking back: but then Drefan leaned forward and blocked her view
of Richard. She turned her attention to the legate and Cara standing before
them. The six sisters stood behind their husband.
"We
are gathered here," the legate and Cara said as one. "to wed Richard
Rahl and Nadine Brighton, and to wed Kahlan Amnell and Drefan Rahl. This is the
most solemn of rites; it binds in the most earnest of vows. and commits these
mates for life. This marriage is sanctioned and witnessed by the spirits
themselves."
Kahlan
stared at the weeds sprouting from the cracks in the disintegrating stone floor
as she only partly listened to the words about loyalty, fidelity, and
obligation. It was so warm and muggy that she could hardly breathe. Her white
Mother Confessor's dress was sticking to her back. Sweat trickled down between
her breasts.
Kahlan's
head came up when Drefan started lifting her with a hand under her arm.
"What? What is it?" "It is time," he said.
"Come."
And
then she was standing before the legate and Cara. with Drefan beside her, and
three of the legate's wives at her other side as her attendants. She looked
past
Drefan
to see Richard standing beside Nadine, with the other three Andolians serving
as her attendants. Nadine wore a smile.
"If
anyone has any objections to the wedding of these people, they must speak now,
for once it is done, it cannot be undone." "I have an
objection," Richard said. "What is it?" the legate asked.
"The
winds said that this had to be of our own free will. It is not. We are being
coerced into this. We are being told that people will die if we don't do this.
I don't do this of my own free will; I do this only to save lives."
"Do
you wish to save the lives of the people who will die if the magic stolen from
the Temple of the Winds is not stopped?" the legate asked. "Of course
I do."
"This
wedding is part of that attempt. If you do not go through with it, then they
will die. You wish to save them. This qualifies as your free will as far as the
spirits involved are concerned.
"If
you wish to withdraw your agreement to this, then it must be now, before the
vows. Afterwards, you may not change your mind." Muggy silence hung in the
air.
She was
plummeting helpless into the inky depths. It was all happening too fast. Too
fast for her to get a breath.
"I
wish to speak with Richard, if I am to do this. Before I do this," Kahlan
said. "Alone."
The
legate and Cara stared at her a moment. "Then hurry," they said as
one. "There is not much time. The moon rises."
They
both walked far enough away from the circle that Kahlan could be reasonably
sure they couldn't be heard. She stood close, facing him.
She
wanted Richard to save them from this. He had to save them. He had to do
something, now, or it would be too late.
"Richard,
we're out of time. Is there anything? Can you think of anything at all to stop
this? Any way we can still save those people and not have to do this?"
Richard
stood close to her, and yet a world away. "I'm sorry. I don't have any
other solution. Forgive me," he whispered. "I have failed you."
She
shook her head. "No, you didn't. Don't ever think that, Richard. I don't.
The spirits have made it impossible for us to win. They wish this, and have put
us in a double bind.
"But
at least, if we go through with this, Jagang will not win. That is more
important. How many lovers, like us, will be able to have a life, now, have
happiness, now, have children, now, because of the sacrifice we make this
night?"�������� .
Richard
smiled that smile that melted her heart. "That's one reason I love you so
much: your passion. Even if I never see you again, I've known true happiness
with you. True love. How many ever experience even this small taste?"
Kahlan
swallowed. "Richard, if we do this, we have to be true to our vows, don't
we. We can't . . . still be together . . . sometimes, can we?"
The way
his jaw trembled, and his eyes filled with tears, was more than answer enough.
Just
before they fell into each other's arms, Cara was there, between them. ''It is
time. What are your wishes?"
"I
have a lot of them," Richard said with sudden venom. "Which do you
want to hear?"
"The
winds wish to know if you will do this, or not."
"We
will do it." Richard growled. "But the spirits had better know that I
will have revenge."
''The
winds are simply doing the only thing they can do to stop the death caused by
what was stolen from them," Cara said with sudden compassion, but still
with that haunting quality that told Kahlan that it wasn't Cara speaking, but
the winds. "They do not do this out of animosity."
"A
wise man once told me that dead is dead, no matter the how." Richard said.
He defiantly took Kahlan's hand and walked with her back to the circle of
stone, where they each took their places beside their chosen.
Kahlan
wore her Confessor's face as she stood beside Drefan. She felt pain for
Richard; he had not grown up being taught how to subjugate his emotions, his
longings, his desires-for duty. She had had a lifetime to prepare for this
final torment. He had had a lifetime to prepare for the opposite, expecting he
would have happiness. Kahlan had only briefly felt the warmth of that flame.
With
deliberate care, she ignored the words spoken to Nadine, and then to Drefan,
words of loyalty and devotion to their mate. Kahlan instead focused her mind on
Richard, hoping to pass to him some strength, hoping that he could get through
this, so that they could save those stricken and stop the plague. Richard still
had to get into the Temple of the Winds. He needed strength.
Soon,
the ceremony would be over, and they would head back to Aydindril. Perhaps they
would have to wait until Richard went into the temple, and did what he had to
do, and then they would return to Aydindril. In any event, it wouldn't be long,
and she would be going home, home to the place she had grown up, to a life of
duty to which she had been bred. "Yes or no?" the legate said. Kahlan
looked up. "What?"
He
glanced up at the threatening clouds and then took a hurried breath. "Do
you swear to honor this man, to obey him as the master of your home, to care
for his needs when he is well, and when he is ill, and to be his loyal wife in
this life as long as you both live?"
Kahlan
glanced up at Drefan. She wondered what he had sworn to. "I swear to
whatever it is that is required of me to stop the plague." "Yes or
no?"
Kahlan
let out an angry sigh. "Is this what is required of me to stop the magic
stolen from the winds from killing people?" "It is."
In her
mind, she swore the oath, but to Richard, not Drefan. She would swear words
aloud to Drefan, but her heart would always be Richard's. Kahlan's fists
tightened. "Then, yes, I swear to do what is required to stop the plague.
I swear not one stitch more. nor for one breath longer, than that required of
me."
"Then
in full view of the spirits, and by the power of the spirits, you are now
pronounced husband and wife."
Kahlan
doubled over in sudden pain. It felt as if her insides had been torn apart. She
tried to pull a breath. It wouldn't come. She saw swirling color before her
wide eyes.
Drefan
put his arm around her waist. "What is it? Kahlan, what's wrong?" Her
legs buckled, but he held her up. "It is the spirits," came the
legate and Cara's voice together, "they have bound
her
power. She is to live this marriage as any woman wed to a man. Her power would
have interfered."
"You
can't do that!" Richard screamed. "She'll be defenseless! You can't
take her power!"
"Her
power was not taken, but walled away so she cannot use it for the term of her vows
to her husband, Drefan Rahl. It is done," the two said together. "You
will now swear to the vows, or you will lose your chance to help the
winds."
Kahlan
stared at the ground, feeling a swirl of emptiness, feeling the void between
her mind and her power, as she listened to similar words spoken before Richard.
She couldn't hear his answer, but he must have said what was required because
the legate pronounced him and Nadine husband and wife.
They
had not only taken her love, but her Confessor's power, as the price of the
path. The emptiness threatened to smother her. The profound and sudden sense of
loss clouded her mind with blackness darker than the falling night.
Drefan
took her arm. "Here, you'd better sit down. Even in this light, as a
healer I can see that you are not well."
Kahlan
let him guide her back to a bench and help her to sit. "Your wife will be
fine," the legate said. He looked up at the boiling sky. "Richard
Rahl, Drefan Rahl, come with me." "Where are we going?" Richard
wanted to know. "We are to prepare you to consummate the marriage."
Kahlan's
head came up. Even in the darkness, she could see that Richard was near to
exploding in rage. His hand was on his sword.
Drefan
rubbed Kahlan's back in sympathy. "You will be all right. Everything will
be all right. Don't worry, I will take care of you, as I promised."
"Thank you, Drefan," she managed through the anguish. Drefan left her
and strode to Richard. Drefan gripped Richard's arm and bent close, speaking to
him in a whisper. Kahlan could see Richard rake his hands back through his hair
and nod occasionally. Whatever Drefan was saying was cooling Richard.
After
Drefan and Richard parted, the legate and Cara looked back to Nadine and
Kahlan. "You two will wait here."
Kahlan
huddled on the stone bench as Richard and Drefan were led off in the darkness
toward the cliff, toward the two buildings, one to either side of the road that
ended abruptly at the edge. It was becoming so dark that Kahlan could hardly
make out Nadine's face as she sat down beside her on the stone bench. The six
sisters had gone back to the horses, sucking their fingers as they watched the
sky.
"I'm
sorry. About your magic, I mean. I didn't know they would do that to you. I
guess you'll be like any other woman, now." "I guess."
"Kahlan,"
Nadine said, "I won't lie to you and tell you that I'm sorry that I'm the
one who married Richard, but I will tell you that I'll do my best to make him
happy."
"Nadine,
you just don't understand, do you? You can be as kind as pudding to him, or you
can be as mean as nettles, and it won't make any difference. With the pain he's
in, if you do your worst, it would be a bee sting after a beheading."
Nadine
giggled uncomfortably. "Well, I know a poultice for a bee sting. Richard
will see. I will-" "You have already promised me that you would be
kind to him, Nadine. I
appreciate
that you will be kind to him, but at the moment. I'm not in the mood to hear
the details of just how kind you are going to be."
"Sure.
I understand." Nadine picked at the stone on the bench. "Not the way
I had my wedding pictured in my head." "Me neither."
"Maybe
I can make the rest of it the way I pictured." Her tone had turned cold
and vindictive. "You've made me to feel a fool for wanting Richard, for
thinking I might have him. You've taken the pleasure out of my wedding day, but
you won't take the pleasure out of the rest of it." "I'm sorry,
Nadine, if you think that I have-"
"Now
that I have him, I intend to show him how a woman can really please a man. He'll
see. He'll see that I can be just as good a woman for him as you. You think I
can't, but I can."
Nadine
leaned close. "I'll have Richard's eyes spinning in his head before this
night is out. Then we'll see who the better woman is. and how much he misses
you. When you're lying there with Richard's brother, listen close, and you'll
hear my screams of pleasure. The screams of pleasure Richard gives me. Not you-
me!"
Nadine
stormed away to stand with her arms folded in a huff. Kahlan put her face in
her hands. The spirits weren't content to destroy her, they had to twist the
knife.
Cara
and the legate returned. "It is time," they said as one. Kahlan rose
woodenly, to stand, waiting to be told what to do next. The legate turned to
Cara.
''This
storm is going to break soon." The legate turned to peer up at the
blackness. "My wives and I must be off this mountain." He gripped
Cara's arm. "The winds speak to you the same as they speak to me. Can you
take them?"
"Yes.
It is nearly done. I can finish it," Cara said. "The winds will pass
the message through me as well as through you." Without further word, he
scurried off into the darkness.
Cara's
strong fingers gripped under Kahlan's arm. "Come with me," she said
in that icy voice of the winds. Kahlan dug in her heels. "Cara, please. I
can't."
"You
can, and you will, or the chance will pass and the plague will rage on."
Kahlan pulled back. "No, you don't understand. I can't. I'm having my moon
flow. It isn't finished yet. I can't . . . do this. Not now."
Cara's
sinister glare drew close. "It will not prevent you from consummating your
marriage. You will do this, or all hope of stopping the plague is lost. It is
not finished, yet. You must do your part in this-indulge in this. It must be
now. Tonight. Or would you rather the dying continue unabated?"
With
Nadine on one side of her, and Kahlan on the other. Cara led them down the
road, through the darkness, toward the edge of the cliff.
Standing
in the black night at the edge of the cliff, Kahlan felt numb and lost. She
didn't know how long Cara was gone with Nadine, taking her to Richard in the
crumbling building to the right. She felt Cara's hand under her arm again.
"This way," came the icy voice. Kahlan let the woman lead her to the
ruins on the left. Kahlan could hardly see
a
thing. Cara, led by the winds, had no trouble negotiating the halls and rooms
in the wreck of a building.
They
came to a doorway. Kahlan could just make out Drefan's sword standing up
against the wall outside. Her fingers rested on its leatherbound hilt. Inside,
she could just discern the rectangles where windows once stood. Beyond was the
edge of the cliff, and the emptiness where the Temple of the Winds had once
been.
"This
is your wife," Cara said with that icy, horrid voice as she spoke into the
room. "Here is your husband," she said to Kahlan.
"This
marriage must be consummated. It is now your duty to do so. The winds have
requirements. You may ask no more questions. Do not speak. The winds have
reasons, and it is not for you to know them, only to obey, if you wish to end
the death.
"As
the test narrows, it becomes more intense.
"You
must now lie as husband and wife. If either of you utters so much as one word,
the test will end, and entry into the Temple of the Winds will be denied. There
can be no appeal. The stolen magic will rage on, as will the death caused by
it.
"Only
after you have fulfilled the requirements of the consummation will the winds
come. After the winds come-and you will have no doubt that it has happened-you
may then speak to one another. Not before."
Cara
turned Kahlan around and helped her out of her dress and the rest of her
things. It wasn't hard for Kahlan not to speak; she had nothing to say.
Kahlan
felt the black night air on her naked flesh. She glanced down at Drefan's
sword, thinking briefly that when it was over, she could always use it on
herself. If not, if he denied her access to it, there was always the cliff.
Cara
gripped Kahlan by the wrist and led her forward. Forcefully, Cara made her kneel
down, and then lean forward until Kahlan felt the edge of the pallet.
"Your husband awaits you here. Go to him." Kahlan heard Cara's
footsteps fade into the distance. Then she was alone with Drefan.
CHAPTER������������� 58
As
Kahlan felt her way, her hand brushed Drefan's hairy leg. She moved off to the
side, to lie down beside him. There was a blanket over straw, or something
softer than bare wood, anyway. At least it didn't hurt her back as would have
the hard ground.
She lay
on the pallet, staring up into the blackness with wide eyes. She couldn't see
anything, other than the vague indication of the windows before them. She made
an effort to slow her breathing, although she could do nothing to slow her
panicked pulse.
This
wasn't the worst thing, she told herself. Not the worst thing in the world. Not
at all. This wasn't rape. Exactly.
After a
time, she felt Drefan's hand settle on her belly. Kahlan shoved it away as she
stifled a cry.
She
shouldn't have done that, she told herself. What was a hand, compared to the
plague? How many people in agony with the plague would gladly have traded
places with her? Not the worst thing at all, a gentle hand.
Drefan's
hand found hers, trying to give it a squeeze of reassurance. She yanked her
hand away as if a snake had touched her. She didn't want his reassurance. She
had not vowed to hold his hand. She had not vowed to accept his reassurance.
She had committed to being his wife. not to holding his hand. She would let him
do to her what she must let him do to her, but she didn't have to hold his
hand.
Kahlan
frantically tried to reason with herself. Richard had to get into the Temple of
the Winds. The Temple of the Winds demanded this as the price of the path. The
spirit of Chandalen's grandfather had warned her that she must not shirk her
duty. She remembered his words all too well:
/ have
not been shown the price, but I forewarn you that I do know that there is no
way for you to circumvent or avoid it. It must be as it will he revealed to
you, or all will be lost. I ask that when the winds show you the path. you take
it, lest what I have shown you comes to be.
Kahlan
remembered the scenes of mass death the spirit had shown her. If she failed to
do as the winds asked, what she had been shown would come to pass. She had to
let Drefan do this. Stalling would not make it any easier. This couldn't be
easy for Drefan. Couldn't be easy at all, what with the way she shoved away his
attempts at tenderness. That made her angry all over again. She didn't want his
tenderness.
What
did she want? Did she want him to be rough? Of course she had to let him touch
her. How could he do this if he didn't touch her? Richard had to get into the
Temple of the Winds. She had to let Drefan do this.
Kahlan
reached over and took Drefan's wrist. She put his hand back where he had tried
to put it before, on her belly. She let go of his hand. It stayed there.
What
was he waiting for? She wanted to scream at him to get it over with, to do it
and be done. To take what was his brother's by heart if not by vow.
She lay
there, with Drefan's hand on her, listening to the dead silence of the night.
She realized that she was listening for sounds coming from Nadine and Richard.
She shut her eyes.
Drefan's
hand moved to her breast. Fists at her sides, she forced herself to remain
still. She had to let him. She tried to think of other things. She silently
recited rote language lessons of her youth, trying to ignore his hand. But she
couldn't.
He was
being gentle, but that was no consolation. Even his touch was a violation. How
gently he did it made no difference, didn't make it right. That he was now her
husband made no difference to her. She knew in her heart it was wrong, and that
made it a violation.
In her
mind, she screamed at herself. She was being worse than childish. She was the
Mother Confessor, and had faced much worse than this, much worse than a man for
whom she had no feelings being this close, this intimate.
But she
was no longer the Mother Confessor. The Temple of the Winds, the spirits, had
taken that, too, from her.
Kahlan
gasped in a breath and held it tight as Drefan's hand roamed down her belly and
finally settled between her legs. She remembered Drefan doing that to Cara. Now
he did it to her.
She
hated him. She was married to a man she hated.
Cara
had felt it, the same as Kahlan could feel it, now. Cara hadn't been so
childish about it. Cara wouldn't be this foolish. Kahlan let Drefan's hand do
what it would.
This
was to save lives. She had to save all those innocent people from the plague
sent by Jagang. Her people couldn't be saved without her. It was her duty.
Drefan
suddenly rose up. The dark shape of him hovered over her. His knee pushed
gently between her thighs, urging her to open her legs. It would be over soon,
she told herself, as he put his other knee between her legs, too.
The
hulking shape of him lowered over her. He was big, as big as Richard. She
feared he was going crush her, but he didn't. He held himself up on his elbows,
so he wouldn't hurt her. He was being tender, and she was only making it harder
for him. He had to do this, and she had to let him.
Kahlan
grimaced. She wasn't ready. She held her breath. It was too late not to be
ready; Drefan was there. She bit her lower lip as she winced.
She felt
as helpless as she had ever felt in her entire life. She was married to Drefan,
not Richard, and Drefan, not Richard, was having her. Everything was lost.
Her
eyes squeezed shut, Kahlan pressed her fists to her shoulders as he moved in
her. Tears trickled from the corners of her eyes. Her nose stuffed up as she
wept silently, and she had to open her mouth to breathe. She wanted to wail in
anguish, but she instead had to remind herself to breathe. She couldn't seem to
stop holding her breath.
It took
longer than she had hoped, but not as long as she feared. Finished at last,
Drefan rolled off her, onto his back. He had accomplished his task, but he
seemed not to have relished it. She was somehow relieved that he hadn't enjoyed
it. He lay there, recovering his breath, as she finally let hers out. It was
over. She told herself that it hadn't been so bad. It was nothing, really. She
hardly felt
anything.
She had foolishly balked, and here it was. over already. It wasn't so bad as
she had feared. It was nothing, really. But it was. She did feel something. She
felt defiled.
Drefan
reached out, his fingers tenderly, sympathetically brushing a tear from her
cheek. She shoved his hand away. She didn't want his sympathy. She didn't want
him touching her. She hadn't agreed to him touching her. just to consummating
the marriage. His touch wasn't part of it.
She
remembered being with Richard. She remembered her hot need of him. She
remembered the wild passion. She remembered her screams of sheer pleasure. Why
was this so different?
Because
she didn't love Drefan, that was why. In fact. she was beginning to realize
that she loathed him. There was something about him that she didn't like, and
it was more than just that memory of his hand on Cara. There was something deceptive
about him, something devious. She hadn't consciously realized it before, but
she could see guile in his blue eyes.
Kahlan
wondered why she would think that. He had just consummated their marriage, and
he had been as gentle as he possibly could be while still doing it. He could
easily have done anything he wanted; her power was locked away. She couldn't
stop him. Yet he had tried to be sympathetic, understanding.
Still,
it seemed a wonder to her that it could be so different from when she had been
with Richard. She would give anything, almost, to have that pleasure again. She
longed for that fulfillment, that satisfaction. The sating of lust.
Drefan's
breathing evened out after a time. Kahlan lay there, in the darkness, beside
him, beside her new husband, waiting. Why hadn't the Temple of the Winds come?
She had done her part.
Maybe
Richard hadn't. Kahlan wondered if he could. After all, she had only to lie
there. Richard had to be aroused. How could he be aroused, over there, knowing
that his brother was over here, having his way with the woman Richard loved?
Kahlan
had seen the look in Richard's eyes, the look of wild jealousy, at the mere
mention of what Shota said-that Kahlan would marry another. Kahlan had never
seen such a look in his eyes before, and at the time there hadn't really been a
reason for it. Now there was.
No,
Nadine would see to it that Richard did what he needed to do. If there was one
thing Kahlan had confidence in, it was Nadine's desire to consummate that
marriage.
Nadine
was a beautiful woman. She was more than enthusiastic. How could Richard not be
aroused? He knew he had to do it. He would have no reason to try to resist her
urging. Maybe Richard was thinking of it as revenge against his brother,
Michael, for taking Nadine. Perhaps that was how he would get through it.
Kahlan
knew that Nadine was having the time of her life. This was Nadine's dream. This
was Kahlan's nightmare.
The
dark sky she could just perceive out the windows seemed to boil, as it had all
day and all night. The air remained dead still and sticky. The storm wouldn't
break. It threatened, but it would not come.
Kahlan
laid her wrist over her forehead as she rested, waiting. Her legs hurt, and she
realized that it was because she was pressing her knees together. She let her
legs relax. Drefan had done his duty. He was finished. It was over. She could
relax.
Kahlan
shut her eyes when she heard Nadine's distant laughter drifting through the
night air. The woman was as good as her word. Did Richard have to make her
laugh? Couldn't he just do his duty? No, Richard would not make Nadine laugh.
Nadine laughed for Kahlan's benefit.
The
night dragged on endlessly. Where was the Temple of the Winds? Drefan made no
attempt to touch her again, and she was thankful for that. He lay there, on his
back, waiting with her.
Each
hour that passed brought no change. From time to time, Kahlan drifted off to
sleep. Nadine's throaty laughter brought her awake with a jolt.
Kahlan
wanted to slap Richard. How long was he going to make this go on? He could have
had Nadine three times by now. Maybe he had. Maybe when the Temple of the Winds
didn't come, he kept trying. Nadine would like that. Kahlan felt her cheeks
burning.
Drefan
was silent as he lay beside her. The winds had said that they couldn't talk.
She guessed that Nadine's laughter didn't count; she used no words. Her
laughter carried message enough.
Kahlan
sighed. Sooner or later, the winds would come. They had all done as required.
Had she, though? What was it Cara had said? You must do your part in
this-indulge in this.
Drefan
had indulged. He had been satisfied. Nadine certainly was indulging. Richard
must have. Kahlan hadn't. She hadn't "indulged."
She
dismissed the idea. It had to be something else. Maybe the winds were just
waiting for Nadine to finally have enough. That would fit the way the Temple of
the Winds had done everything else, twisting the pain for Richard and Kahlan.
Making them suffer.
As the
night dragged on, and recollecting Cara's words about indulging, Kahlan thought
again about the time she had been with Richard in that place between worlds.
She had felt the kind of pleasure that other woman felt-the indulgence not only
in love, but in lust.
Kahlan
had been so frustrated lately, waiting to be with Richard, waiting for that
closeness again, waiting to be married to him so they could be together as
husband and wife. Waiting for that satisfaction again. It was so near, she had
been so close, so ready, and then it all fell apart, leaving her hopes dashed
and needs unfulfilled.
Now,
for the first time, she was free of her Confessor's power, free to take
pleasure from a man, not for love, but for the sheer indulgence of pleasure.
She was free to enjoy what other women enjoyed. Here she was, lying next to her
husband, and not an unattractive man at all, and she was feeling frustration
for the need of Richard.
Was she
to live the rest of her life being denied a simple pleasure of life that she
was now free to indulge?
But she
didn't love Drefan. Without love, the passion was empty. Still, it was passion,
and if not ideal, at least she could have that much satisfaction. The spirits
had taken everything else from her. They had taken Richard, the only thing she
really wanted out of life. Would she let them take simple pleasure, too? What
else had she. now? This was her husband. She was condemned to live the rest of
her life with him.
Must it
be without at least some small release of pent-up need? Wasn't she entitled to
at least that much after all she had sacrificed? They had taken everything else
from her: her only love in life; her Confessor's power. You must do your part
in this-indulge in this.
What if
that was why the winds hadn't come? What if it was because she hadn't indulged?
Drefan
rolled over on his stomach and sighed. He was frustrated by the wait, too. Or
maybe he was tending to his auras.
She
thought about Drefan's tight trousers, and the way she caught herself looking.
Drefan was a handsome man; he was built like Richard. Drefan was her husband.
Her
anger at the spirits for taking everything from her was what finally made
something inside her snap. This was all she had. She was entitled to this much-
to release.
When
her hand touched Drefan's back, he jumped. Kahlan smoothed her hand across the
muscles of his back. and he settled. She let herself feel his muscles, as she
used to feel Richard's muscles, feel his shape. She took a deep breath, and she
let herself go.
Kahlan's
hand moved down Drefan's back. She gritted her teeth as she gripped his
buttocks. They were as tight as they looked in his trousers. She was lucky, she
guessed; the spirits could have insisted that she marry a repulsive man.
Instead, they had insisted that she marry Drefan, and he was far from
repulsive. He wasn't as handsome as Richard, no one was as handsome to her as
Richard, but women were always fawning over Drefan. Now, he was her husband. He
had pledged to be loyal to her. She had pledged to be loyal to him.
This
was the only pleasure she was to be allowed. This was all the spirits had left
her. At least she could have this much-have what she was entitled to.
Kahlan
seized Drefan's hip and rolled him over, toward her. She hooked her leg over
his, and let her hand roam over his chest. Drefan didn't react. Maybe he was
surprised by her change of behavior. Maybe he was confused. She would have to
unconfuse him. She gently pinched one of his nipples, then let her hand slide
across his flat stomach, and down.
Kahlan
found that Drefan was in no condition to do her any good. If she wanted to have
her pleasure, she would have to change that.
She
kissed his chest. She trailed wet kisses down his stomach. His breathing seemed
slow. Kahlan felt frustrated anger that he wasn't taking the hint. She was
tired of being frustrated, while everyone else wasn't.
She
decided that if she wanted to have satisfaction, it was up to her to see to it
that she got what she wanted. No one would give it to her-she would have to
take it. Kahlan let her tongue, her kisses, glide the rest of the way down
Drefan's taut belly.
When
she took him in her mouth, she tasted her own blood. She forced herself to
ignore the taste as she urged him to react.
At
first she thought he wasn't going to, but when she lost herself in the erotic
nature of what she was doing, he finally did. He came back as strong as before.
By the
time Drefan was fully ready, Kahlan was panting with need. Once she had decided
to have her pleasure, she became insistent. Drefan was her husband now. It was
his duty to fulfill her needs, too, not just his own. Kahlan's head was
spinning with the want of release. That it was Drefan no
longer
mattered. In her mind, she imagined it was Richard. At that thought, she moaned
with longing and climbed atop him, straddling his hips.
This
time, she was ready to accept him. This time, she wanted him. She shut it out
of her mind that this was Drefan and imagined it was Richard. Since she
couldn't see Drefan's blue eyes, it wasn't hard to envision it was Richard,
instead.
She
remembered the things she did with Richard, and did those things. She relived
that experience in her imagination. Her mouth gaped. She gasped for air. Sweat
ran down her body as she moved atop him, writhing forcefully against him.
Drefan
was panting now, too. She needed to have release from all the frustration that
had built up for so long-all the times she had kissed Richard, and wanted to do
more; all the times he had touched her, and she had wanted him to do more. Now,
he was.
Kahlan
leaned forward, to kiss him. Drefan turned his face away. She scooped her arm
under his head, and held him to her chest, instead. His face felt hot against
her breasts. The roughness of his unshaved face excited her as she slid her
sweaty flesh against him. It made her pant all the more.
She was
just about to scream at him to put his hands on her, when she remembered that
she wasn't allowed to utter so much as a word. She seized his wrist and put
first one hand where she wanted it, and then the other, to hold her bottom
while she moved-so she could imagine it was Richard holding her again, needing
her. She wanted to feel him gripping her in his big hands while she moved.
For the
first time since she had last been with Richard, she felt wild pleasure, wild
lust, a wild, desperate need. That it was with Drefan no longer mattered to
her. She wanted only release.
It came
with stunning, ridged shivers. Her sharp moan shook her shoulders. Her legs
stiffened to stone. Her toes clawed. She slammed herself down on him as the
wanton fulfillment of lust inundated her. She gave herself over to it
completely, and with helpless, unbridled abandon let it run free. She gasped
sharply again, the cry following in the echoing wake of the first. It seemed
that it lasted an eternity, as if it was almost too much to endure. With a
final convulsion, it subsided. At last, it was over.
For one
twisting moment, she had been free. There was no plague, no people dying, no
responsibility, no duty, no marriage to Drefan, no Nadine. For that one moment,
she had been free of it all, and she had been immersed in gratification. For
that one moment, her heart and her lust had been with Richard again.
Kahlan
collapsed to the side of Drefan, panting, getting her wind back, pushing her
wet hair back off her face. It occurred to her that he hadn't reached any
satisfaction this second time. She didn't care. She had. At the moment, that
was all that mattered: sweet release.
For a
wonderful moment, she had been free of everything, and had been with her love,
if only in her imagination. Kahlan realized that she was weeping with the joy
of it.
She lay
on her side, turned away from Drefan, as she recovered. She wiped the tears of
pleasure from her face. In the absence of need, she unexpectedly began to feel
ashamed.
Dear
spirits, what had she just done? She had enjoyed herself, that was all. She had
needed the release. Then why did she suddenly feel so dirty? Distant thunder
rumbled toward them. A hint of embedded lightning flickered
in the
sky. Kahlan looked up. out the windows. Another flash, closer, ripped through
the insides of the roiling clouds, briefly lighting the mountaintop.
From
the other building. Kahlan heard a long scream from Nadine. Kahlan blocked it
from her mind. As much as Nadine's scream rankled Kahlan, it at least didn't
leave her as frustrated as it had before.
Three
more screams came from Nadine. Short, piercing, urgent. Kahlan pressed her
hands to her ears. Nadine had made her point, couldn't she just let it be. now?
The
wind came up, abruptly, as if a great, huge door had opened. The blast of air
hit like an avalanche. The building shuddered. The entire mountain quaked.
Kahlan
propped herself up on her elbows, peering out the windows. Distant lightning
flickered through the turbulent clouds. Thunder rumbled, reverberating through
the mountains. Each strike came a little closer.
The
Temple of the Winds was coming-there was no doubt in her mind. That took her
thoughts back to Richard, because it was coming for him. She felt sudden shame.
How could she so easily lose track of her heart? How could she find such
pleasure from another man? What was she thinking?
She had
never felt so dirty in her whole life as she suddenly did now. With Richard,
she had felt wonderful afterward. Now, she was feeling worse by the moment. If
Richard ever found out, he would never understand.
Richard
would never know. There was no way for him to find out. Unless Drefan told him.
Her heart pounded. She thought about the guile she thought she had seen in
Drefan's eyes. No. he wouldn't tell Richard. But what if he did?
With a
sudden, close strike of lightning. Kahlan sat up straight. She saw something
out the window-a structure. As the winds had said, there was no doubt. She
could talk. now.
She
spun back to Drefan. She had to secure his silence in this before they left
this place. If Richard ever found out ... The wind lashed at the mountaintop.
The thunder boomed, In the darkness, she reached out and clutched his arm.
"Drefan,
listen to me. You must promise. You can never tell what just happened, what I
just did with you." Her hand tightened. Her fingernails dug into his arm.
"I'll do whatever you tell me to do for the rest of my life. but you must
promise me that you will never tell"-ribbons of lightning lit the
room-"Richard . . ."
Thunder
crashed, jarring the ground. Lightning snaked along the bottoms of the clouds,
lighting the room with a harsh glare. In the flickering flashes, gray eyes were
fixed on her. "I think 'Richard' already knows." Kahlan screamed.
CHAPTER����� ��������59
Kahlan
froze. Thoughts crashed through her mind in a confusion of thundering terror.
Her
scream came again, ripping through the night, loud enough to be heard over the
sound of the thunder. She couldn't make herself blink. She couldn't tear her
eyes from Richard's face.
She
couldn't understand, couldn't make sense of it. The world felt as if it had
turned upside down. Everything tumbled around in her mind, making it impossible
to think.
As the
lightning lit the room again, she knew only one thing: this was Richard, not
Drefan.
No look
she had ever seen on Richard's face was as terrifying to Kahlan as the one she
saw now. There was nothing in his eyes. Not rage, not lethal commitment, not
determination, not a deadly calm countenance, not jealousy, not even empty
disinterest.
There
was no . . . soul, in those gray eyes. No heart.
Kahlan
covered her mouth with both trembling hands. She backed away until her back
smacked into the stone wall.
He had
known from the first instant she had come into the room. Richard could tell it
was her coming into a room. He had known it was her the whole time-from the
first instant Cara had led her in here.
He
knew. He had tried to squeeze her hand, to reassure her, to let her know. She
had pushed his hand away. He had been as gentle as he could. He had tried to
brush her tears away, after. She had pushed his hand away. She hadn't let him
show her that it was him.
Kahlan
collapsed to the floor with a wail of horror. "No! Dear spirits, no!"
Richard
didn't rush to her, didn't speak words of comfort, didn't yell. Instead, he
went to where his clothes were lying, near the door, and began getting dressed.
Kahlan
scurried to her things nearby. She raced to pull on her underthings, suddenly
feeling the humiliation of her nakedness, its reminder of what she had just
done.
She
scooped up her dress. She paused, tears streaming down her face. She reached
around the outside of the doorway and brought the sword and scabbard up before
her face. It had a leather handle, just as she remembered seeing, not a
wire-wound hilt. It wasn't the Sword of Truth, Richard's sword. It was Drefan's
sword.
Kahlan
gripped Richard by his wrist as he picked up his pants. "How . . . this is
Drefan's sword, not yours. It's Drefan's sword!"
Richard
took it from her and leaned it against the wall. "They took your power.
You have no way to defend yourself. Drefan will be the one near you, now, not
me. I
gave him the Sword of Truth so that he could protect you." His eyes
finally met hers. "I guess this one finds the truth just as well as the
other."������������������������
-Richard stuffed his leg into his pants. Kahlan snatched his arm again.
"Richard, don't you see? It was you. It was you in here with me, not
Drefan. The spirits mark a distinction-between intent and deed. It wasn't him.
it was you all along!"
He
pulled his arm away. The spirits might mark a distinction, but he didn't. To
Richard, the intent was the same as the deed. "Richard, you don't
understand. It wasn't what you think." He shot her a glare of such power
that it staggered her back a step. He waited as she stood frozen, unable to
find any words to explain. He went back to dressing.
Kahlan
pulled on her white Confessor's dress. Outside, the lightning was coming
closer. During some of the closer strikes, she could see an immense structure
rising up at the edge of the cliff: the Temple of the Winds. When the flash
extinguished. the temple vanished again, and she could see the distant
mountains beyond, lit by the lightning farther away.
"Richard."
she wept as he pulled on a boot, "please, talk to me. Say something. Ask
me to explain. Tell me there can be no explanation. Veil at me. Call me a
whore. Tell me you hate me. Hit me. Do something! Don't ignore me!"
He
turned and picked up his black sleeveless undershirt. As he pulled it on over
his head. she scooped up his black shirt and held it to her breast, hoping to
halt his dressing. "Richard, please! I love you!"
His
gaze again rose to hers. She thought he was going to say something, but instead
he turned away and retrieved his belt with the leather packs on it. He snapped
on his wristbands.
Kahlan
held his shirt to her chest and shook as she watched him hook his belt
together. She didn't know what to do. He picked up Drefan's sword and buckled
it on.
"Richard,
please talk to me. Say something. This is the doing of the spirits. Don't you
remember what I told you that grandfather's spirit told me? The winds have
decided that you are the path of the price. They did this to us!"
He shot
her a look again. The intensity in his eyes extinguished. He saw that she
wasn't going to surrender his shirt, so he threw his golden cloak around his
shoulders.
As he
turned toward the door. Kahlan seized his arm with both her hands and turned
him back to her.
"Richard,
I love you. You've got to believe me. I'll explain this in here to you later,
but for now, you have to believe me. I love you. No other. My heart is yours
alone. Dear spirits, please believe me."
Richard
gripped her jaw in his hand and wiped a thumb across her lips. He held his
thumb up for her to see in the pandemonium of lightning. ". . . for the
one in white, his true beloved, will betray him in her blood." His words
ripped her heart.
Kahlan
covered her scream with his shirt as he swept out the door. The one thing she
had sworn she would never do, she had done: she had betrayed him. It could have
been no worse betrayal. It was a betrayal that had destroyed his heart.
Crying
hysterically, Kahlan raced after him. out into the wild night. She had to do
something to mend that heart. She couldn't let him endure the pain she had
caused
him. She loved him more than life itself, and she had done the worst thing
possible lo him.
Outside,
the wind howled across the mountain. She could see his black shape, his bare
arms, in the flashes of lightning as he headed for the road.
As he
reached the edge of the cliff at the end of the road, Kahlan threw herself on
him, dragging him to a halt.
The sky
was a savage show of violent discharges. Thunder thumped in her bones.
Lightning ripped across the sky followed by deafening booms. Beyond the edge,
when the most powerful of those bolts struck, the Temple of the Winds was
there- but only during those fierce strikes. Between those strikes, there was
nothing but empty space.
"Richard,
what are you going to do?" "I'm going to stop the plague."
"When
will you be back? I'll wait here. When will you be back?" He stared into
her eyes a long moment as the storm raged around them. "There is nothing
here for me."
Kahlan
clutched at him. "Richard, you have to come back. Come back. I'll be here,
waiting. I love you. Dear spirits, I need you. Richard, you have to come back
to me!"
"You
have a husband. You have given him an oath . . . and everything else."
"Richard, don't leave me alone," Kahlan wailed, on the edge of
hysteria. "If you don't come back, I'll never forgive you." Richard
turned to the edge of the cliff. "Richard, you have a wife! You have to
come back!" Thunder shuddered the mountain.
He
looked back over his shoulder. "Nadine is dead. I am no longer bound by my
oath to her. You have a husband, and an oath. There is nothing here for
me."
Brutal
cords of lightning slammed into the road beyond the edge of the cliff, bringing
the Temple of the Winds into full view. Golden cloak billowing out behind,
Richard leaped into the lightning. "Richard! I'm here! I'm here for you!
We can find a way! Please come back to me! ''
When
the frenetic flash cut off, the temple was gone. Another flash came, and the soaring
towers were back for a second, weaker this time, and then gone again.
Kahlan
dropped to the ground, clutching Richard's black shirt to herself. She had
destroyed him.
From
the side, Kahlan saw a streak of red. It was Cara, racing for the edge of the
cliff. She leaped just as another flash erupted, lighting the Temple of the
Winds into the world of life. She landed on the road in the sky, and when the
flash was gone, so was the Temple of the Winds, Richard, and Cara.
Devastated,
Kahlan stared silently at the rampaging storm, seeing from time to time the
towering, phantom temple in another world. It never looked solid enough again,
or she would have jumped across. She should have. She couldn't understand why
she hadn't. Why had she just stood here? Because Richard didn't want her. She
had betrayed him.
How
could he do this to her? He said he would always love her. He said they would
be together in the next world. He made her promises. He swore his eternal love.
So had she, and she had betrayed him.
From
somewhere out in the storm. Kahlan heard the distant sound of laughter. The
malevolent chuckle made her skin crawl. Drefan strolled up beside her. He was
alone. "Where's Nadine?" Kahlan asked.
Drefan
cleared his throat. "When the lightning came. and she saw it was me, and
not Richard, she screamed. She went crazy. She leaped over the edge of the
mountain."
Kahlan
stared up at him. Richard knew. He told her Nadine was dead. Richard was a
wizard. She had seen that, too, in his eyes, at the end, before he jumped
across. She saw magic in his eyes. "Where's Richard?" Kahlan stared
out at the empty air. at the black wall of night. "Gone."
On the
road to the Temple of the Winds, in the eerie silence, Richard drew his sword.
Its alien feel surprised him for an instant, until he recalled whose sword it
was.
He was
no longer the Seeker of Truth. He had had all the truth he could stand. It
wasn't night, here, nor day, yet there was light. It wasn't like sunlight-more
like an overcast day, with no hint of exactly where the sun was. But he knew
that there was no sun here. This was not the world of life.
This
was a part of the underworld-an isolated, remote, obscure niche in the world of
the dead. It was as if the wizards had found an out-of-the-way hole in which to
hide the Temple of the Winds. It had been similarly hidden when in the world of
life.
The
dark walls of the immense Temple of the Winds rose up before him, the twin
towers soaring up into trailers of mist. The entire side of Mount Kymermosst
was here-the whole part that was missing in the world of life.
Richard
knew where he was going. He knew more than he had ever known before. Knowledge
was flooding into his mind. He was a war wizard. The Temple of the Winds had
opened a floodgate into his mind. It was feeding him all he needed to know, and
more.
He felt
as if he were sentient for the first time. Recompense, for the price demanded.
"Lord Rahl!"
A
breathless Cara ran up beside him. Agiel in hand, she took up a defensive
position. Her Agiel would be useless here. For that matter, it would be useless
back in the world of life now.
Richard
turned to the winds and started out again. It wasn't far. Not far at all. He
knew the way in. "Cara, go home. You don't belong here." "Lord
Rahl, what happened? I-" "Go home."
She
scowled at him as she pushed past to clear his way of any danger. She had no
concept of the dangers here.
"I
am Mord-Sith. I am here to protect the Lord Rahl." "I am no longer
the Lord Rahl," Richard whispered.
She
gazed up at the huge black stone pillars beside the entrance ahead. Beside them
on walls of inky stone banded with copper-colored caps. frozen in raven-black
granite,
stood the skrin, guardians of the boundary between worlds. Frozen only to
Cara's eyes, not to his.
Cara
lifted a hand, bidding him to stay back as she peered down the passageway to
the distant entry, checking for danger. There were bones at their feet.
"Lord Rahl, what is this place?" "You can't go in here,
Cara." "Why not?"
Richard
turned and looked back toward the way he had come-at everything he was leaving
behind. At nothing. "Because this is the Hall of the Betrayed."
Richard
glanced up at the twin skrin, guardians that had left the bones of two wizards
here on this walkway, at their feet.
Richard
remembered well the message the sliph had passed on from Wizard Ricker: Ward
left in. Richard now knew what that meant.
He
lifted his left arm, fist out, toward the skrin perched on the stone wall at
the right. Ward left told him which arm to use and which skrin to ward. The
wrong arm would have denied him entry into this place in the world of the dead.
One of Ricker's traps for the enemy.
His
wristband heated. The leather pad protected his flesh from the power he focused
in that band. A green glow enveloped his fist. The skrin to the right, to which
he directed his birthright of authority, glowed in sympathy with his fist,
immobilized for now, to allow Richard to enter.
Richard
glanced up at the guardian of raven-black granite to his left. Richard called
out its name, a guttural sound to which it answered. Black stone cracked and
crumbled as the skrin turned to its master, awaiting instruction. Richard made
the sound of its name again. He lifted his hand to Cara. "This one does
not belong here. Ward her back to the world of life. Do not harm her. After,
return to your post." The skrin sprang from the stone wall, enveloping
Cara. "Lord Rahl! When will you be home?" Richard gazed into her blue
eyes. "I am home."
Light
flared and silent thunder shook the soundless world as the skrin vanished on
its journey with Cara, back to the world of life.
Richard
turned to the winds. The four winds and the seer watched from their place up on
the wall. Richard scanned the solid gold runes running up each side of the wall
beside the entrance to the hall, reading the messages and warnings placed there
by wizards past.
In a
world without wind, Richard's cloak billowed out behind, a telltale in a place
with eddies of power and currents of force, as he strode onward, into the Hall of
the Betrayed.
Kahlan
threw up an arm before her face as lightning suddenly cracked before her. The
road into the Temple of the Winds lit for an instant. In the distance, Kahlan
could see Richard's back as he strode resolutely into a passageway. Cara tumbled
lo the ground on the road at the edge of the cliff, at Kahlan's feet. With the
boom of thunder, the temple, and Richard, were gone. Cara rolled to her feet.
With wild fury, she seized Kahlan by the shoulders. "What have you
done!"
Kahlan
hurt too much to speak. She stared at the ground,������������������������������� "Mother Confessor, what have
you done! I fixed it for you. What did you do��������� to him?"
Kahlan's
head came up. "You what?"
"I
swore an oath. We are sisters of the Agiel. I swore an oath to you that if
anything ever happened, if anything went wrong. I would see to it that it was
you, and not Nadine, who was with Richard." Kahlan's mouth fell open.
"Cara, what did you do?"
"What
you wanted! I spoke the words of the winds as they came to me. but when I took
you and Nadine to the buildings, I switched you both. I took Nadine to Drefan,
and I took you to Lord Rahl.
"I
wanted you to be with the man you truly loved. I took you to Richard! Didn't
you trust in me? Didn't you have faith in me?"
Kahlan
fell into Cara's arms. "Oh. Cara, I'm sorry". I should have believed
in you. Dear spirits. I should have trusted you."
"Lord
Rahl said he was going into the Hall of the Betrayed. I asked when he would be
coming home. He said he was home. He isn't coming back! What have you
done!"
"The
Hall of the Betrayed . . ." Kahlan crumpled to the ground. "I have
fulfilled the prophecy. I have helped Richard get into the Temple of the Winds.
I have helped him stop the plague. "In so doing, I have destroyed him.
"In so doing, I have destroyed myself." "You have done more than
that," Cara whispered. "What do you mean?"
Cara
lifted her Agiel in her fist. "My Agiel. It has lost its power. The power
of a Mord-Sith works only in the presence of the bond to our Lord Rahl. It
exists to protect the Lord Rahl. Without a Lord Rahl, there is no bond. I have
lost my power." "I am Lord Rahl now," Drefan said as he strode
up behind Kahlan. Cara sneered at him. "You are no Lord Rahl. You do not
have the gift." Drefan met her glare. "I'm all the Lord Rahl you
have. now. Someone has to hold the D'Haran empire together."
Kahlan
clutched Richard's black shirt to her stomach. "I am the Mother Confessor.
I will hold the alliance together."
"You,
my dear, have lost your power, too. You are no longer a Confessor, much less
the Mother Confessor." He reached down and gripped Kahlan under her arm.
His powerful fingers tightened painfully as he lifted her. "You are my
wife, now, and you will do as I tell you to do. You have sworn an oath to obey
me."
Cara
reached out to force him to let go of Kahlan. Drefan backhanded her across the
mouth, knocking her to the ground.
"And
you, Cara, are a toothless snake now. If you wish to stick around, then you
will have to obey me. If not, I have no use for you. For now, only we know that
your Agiel doesn't work. Keep it that way. You will protect me as any Lord
Rahl."
Cara
gave him a venomous look as she wiped the blood from her mouth. "You are
not the Lord Rahl."
"No?"
He lifted the Sword of Truth, Richards sword, and let it drop back into its
scabbard. "Well. I am the Seeker, now." "You are not the Seeker,
either." Kahlan growled. "Richard is the Seeker."
"Richard?
There is no Richard anymore. I am now Lord Rahl, and the Seeker." Drefan pulled
Kahlan against him, his Darken Rahl eyes burning into her. "And you are my
wife. At least you will be, once we consummate the marriage. But this is
neither the time nor place. We have to get back. There is work to be
done." "Never. If you ever touch me, I'll cut your throat."
"You
have sworn an oath before the spirits. You will do as you have sworn."
Drefan smiled. "You're a whore. You'll enjoy it. I want you to enjoy it,
to be pleased, I really do."
"How
dare you call me that! I am no whore, especially yours!" His smile
widened. "Really? Then how did you betray Richard? Why would he walk away
without even looking back? My guess would be that you enjoyed it, when you
thought it was me. I'd say Richard saw you for the whore you are. When it
really is me, you will find pleasure in it, then, too. I'll like that."
CHAPTER������������� 60
Verna
gently shoved Warren. "Wake up. Someone is coming." Warren knuckled
his eyes. "I'm awake."
Verna
glanced back at the other windows, to make sure that the dead guards were still
propped up to make it appear they were on watch. A light from a lamp on the
table was just enough to show those outside the guards at the windows, but it
would provide enough light to see her and Warren, too, so they stayed away from
the windows. "How do you feel?" she asked. "Better. I think I'm
all right, now."
He had
been unconscious earlier. The headaches caused by the gift were coming closer
and closer together. Verna didn't know what to do for him. She didn't know how
long it would be before his gift killed him. The only thing she could think to
do was to stick to her plan. Warren had said that prophecy had told him that
his only chance was to be with her.
Out the
window, in the darkness, she could see two shadowed figures approaching up the
road. In the distance, on the hills, campfires by the thousands made the
countryside look like a lake's reflection of the starry sky.
Verna
shuddered to think of the hundreds of thousands of brutes in those tents. The
sooner they left this place, the better. She was thankful they weren't going up
into Jagang's stronghold again. They wouldn't be able to pull off that kind of
magic twice. The spells Warren had used would not trick the guards again.
Thankfully,
once was enough. This time, her friends. Janet and Amelia, were coming out to
meet her and Warren. If that was, in fact, Janet and Amelia she saw
approaching.
It had
to be. This was the fourth night after the full moon. This was where they were
to meet. Janet had said that Amelia would be back from the tents by now.
Verna
feared to think of what kind of shape Amelia would be in. She would probably
need to be healed. Verna hoped that it wouldn't take long: it was close to
dawn.
She and
Warren had taken turns at short naps. They had a lot of traveling to do, to get
back to General Reibisch and his army, and they needed to be rested for the
journey. Verna wanted to be as far away from this place as she could get in
case an alert rose from the stronghold.
Verna
hoped that Janet had already told Amelia about the bond to Richard so that she
wouldn't have to waste time with that, too. As soon as Amelia was sworn to
Richard, the bond would protect her, too, from the dream walker. Then they
could escape.
Verna
dearly wanted to rescue the rest of the Sisters, but she knew that presumption
was a road to ruin. On her twenty-year journey away from the cloistered life
of the
Palace of the Prophets, Verna had learned that out in the world, a Sister had
to do her work with care if there was to be any hope of success. Rescuing the
rest of the Sisters would be worse than tricky, and it would do them no good if
Verna got herself caught while trying to rescue them all at once. Best be aware
of your limitations and take it one step at a time. She would get the rest of
the Sisters safely away from the dream walker, in due time.
Right
now, it was most important to get her two friends out, get information from
them that would help her to rescue the rest, and get Warren some help. Without
Warren, their cause would be jeopardized; Warren was a prophet, just beginning
to come into his talent-if that talent didn't kill him before they could get
him the help he needed.
One
step at a time, she reminded herself. Use care, use your head, and you have the
best chance of success.
A knock
came at the door. Verna cracked it open and peeked out as Warren called out
like a guard for them to announce themselves. "Two of His Excellency's
slaves, Sister Janet and Sister Amelia." Verna pulled open the door,
reached out, snatching the cloak of one, yanked her in, and then the other.
Verna flattened them both against the wall so they couldn't be seen from the
windows.
"Thank
the Creator," Verna said with a sigh. "I thought you two would never
get here."
Both
women stood with wide eyes, trembling like frightened rabbits. Sister Amelia's
face was bruised, cut, and swollen.
Warren
moved close to Verna. She took his hand as she looked from one white face to
the other. Her heart ached for Amelia's obvious pain. But there was something more
in her eyes: terror. "What's wrong?" she whispered. "You lied to
us," Janet said in a pained whisper. "What are you talking
about?"
"The
bond. The bond to protect us from His Excellency. I told Amelia about it. She
swore the oath to Richard, as you told it to me."
Verna
frowned and leaned closer. "What in Creation are you saying? I told you,
it will keep Jagang from entering your mind."
Janet
slowly shook her head. "No, Verna, it won't. Not from my mind, not from
Amelia's . . . not from Warren's . . . not from yours."
Verna
laid a comforting hand on Janet's arm, trying to calm the frightened woman.
"Yes, it will. Janet. You must only believe, and you will be
protected."
Janet
slowly shook her head again. "Before I swore the oath to Richard, Jagang was
in my mind. He knew my thoughts. He knew what you told me. He knew it
all."
Verna
covered her mouth in horror. She hadn't considered that possibility. "But
you swore the oath. That protects you, now."
Again,
Janet slowly shook her head. "It did, for the first day, but four days
ago, on the night of the full moon. His Excellency returned to my mind. I
didn't know it. I told Amelia about the oath. She swore, us had I. We thought
we were safe. We thought that when you came back, we would escape with you."
"You will," Verna assured her. "We all will escape right
now." "None of us is going to escape, Verna. Jagang has you. He has
Warren. He told us that he slipped into the cracks of your minds while you
slept, the first night after
the
full moon." Tears filled Janet's eyes. "I'm sorry. Verna. You should
never have come here to rescue me. It is to cost you both your freedom."
Verna
smiled through her rising panic. "Janet, that just isn't possible. The
bond protects us."
"It
would." Janet said in a suddenly gruff, suddenly sinister voice,
"were Richard Rahl still alive. But Richard Rahl departed the world of the
living four nights ago. on the night of the full moon."
Janet
laughed a hearty belly laugh, even as tears ran down her face. Verna couldn't
draw a breath. "Richard . . -is . . . dead?" Warren slapped his hands
to the sides of his head as he let out a cry of anguish. "No! No!"
Verna
clutched at him as he sank toward the floor. "Warren! What is it?"
"His Excellency . . . His Excellency has tasks for me." "Tasks?
Warren, what's wrong? What's happening?"
"His
Excellency has a new prophet!" Warren cried out. "Please, stop the
pain! I will serve! I will serve as I am commanded!" Verna crouched over
him. "Warren!"
It felt
as if a white-hot steel rod slammed through her skull. Verna cried out as she
clamped her hands to her head. Nothing in her entire life of one hundred
fifty-six years had prepared her for the fount of pain erupting in her mind.
The room went black. She felt the floor smack her face. Her arms and legs
twitched with the agony.
Baleful
laughter danced through the hot torture, like flames through a ruin. Verna
prayed to the Creator that she would black out. Her prayer went unanswered.
Above
her. she heard a voice. Janet's voice.
"I'm
so sorry Verna. You should never have come here to try to rescue us. You will
serve His Excellency, now, as his slaves."
The
blond one. Cara. followed him into the reception room. She stayed three paces
behind, as he had ordered. She always wore her red leather, now, as he had
ordered. He liked the way the red leather made them look like they were
sheathed in blood. One of them was always there, with him, a bloodred reminder
of the slick, sticky debauchery to come.
Her
blue eyes turned away when he glanced back over his shoulder. He knew that she
stayed only to be near Kahlan. That was fine by him. That she stayed was all
that mattered. She was harmless, now, but it looked better if the Lord Rahl had
an escort of guards like her-a proper accoutrement of his rank.
And he
was the Lord Rahl, now, as the whispers from the ethers had promised him. Only
he had the intellect to perceive the voices, the wisdom to hear them, the
acumen to heed them. It had brought him triumph. Attention to detail had
brought him his rewards. His extraordinary insight had brought him to the place
of power he had always deserved. His gift was his genius, and it would serve
him better than mere magic.
He was
a man above others, and for good reason. He was superior to others- a man of
rare understanding, instinct, and rare ethics, unadulterated by the twisted
excuses women put to their vulgar pleasures. His own virtue intoxicated him.
Kahlan
glanced up when she saw him striding into the room. Her face showed a
blankness, an expression she wore almost constantly. She only thought it showed
nothing. To him, it revealed a panoply of emotion. Immersed in the details of
her bewitching face, he could discern the rich flux of emotions she tried to
hide.
He saw
the way she looked at him. He had caught her glances at his body in the past.
He knew: she wanted him. She hungered for him. She wanted pleasure from him.
That
she tried to deny it only excited him all the more. That she covered her hunger
for him with harsh words only proved it to him. That she pretended revulsion
only showed him the extraordinary depths of her need.
When
she finally gave in to her lust, it would be all the more glorious for the
wait, for the abstinence, for the yearning, for the delayed fulfillment. Then,
at long last, he would give her what she wanted. Then he would hear her
screams. The general with Kahlan bowed. "Good morning-Lord Rahl."
"What's this?" he asked. He didn't like it when the soldiers brought
things to Kahlan without seeing to informing the Lord Rahl first. "It's
just the morning reports, Drefan," Kahlan said in that flat tone of hers.
"Then why wasn't I informed? Reports should come to the Lord Rahl
first." General Kerson stole a glance at Kahlan. He bowed again. "As
you wish, Lord Rahl. I just thought-" "I do the thinking. You do the
soldiering." The general cleared his throat. "Of course. Lord
Rahl." "So, what do the morning reports have to say?"
The
general glanced to Kahlan again. Drefan saw the slight nod. As if the general
needed permission from the Lord Rahl's wife to report. Drefan let it pass, as
he always did. He enjoyed her games, the way she thought he missed things. It
amused him.
"Well,
Lord Rahl. the plague is nearly over."
"Describe
'nearly over,' if you would, please. As a healer, vagueness hardly does me any
good."
' In
the last week, the deaths from the plague have dropped to only three confirmed
cases lust night. Nearly everyone who was sick when Lord"-he caught
himself- "when Richard left has recovered. Whatever Richard did-"
"My
brother died, that's what he did. I am the healer. I am the one responsible for
the plague ending."
Kahlan
lost the calm look. Her expression twisted to tightly controlled rage. He
wondered how her face would twist were it pain, were it terror. He would know,
in the end.
"Richard
went to the Temple of the Winds. He sacrificed himself to save everyone.
Richard! Not you, Drefan, Richard!"
Drefan
dismissed her tirade with a casual flip of his hand. "Nonsense. What did
Richard know of healing? I am the healer. It is Lord Rahl who has saved his
people from the plague." Drefan raised a finger to the general. "And
you had better see to it that that everyone knows it." Kahlan gave her
slight nod to the general again.
"Yes,
Lord Rahl," the general said. "I will personally see to it that
everyone knows that it was Lord Rahl himself who stopped the plague."
Kahlan's face showed the slightest hint of a smile at the general's ambiguous
response.
Drefan let it go. He had more important business than her disrespect for her
husband.
"And
what else have you to report, general?" "Well. Lord Rahl, it seems
that some of our units are . . . missing." "Missing? How can troops
be missing? I want them found. We must have the army together to defend against
the Imperial Order. I won't have the D'Haran empire fall to the Imperial Order
because my officers fail to maintain discipline!"
"Yes.
Lord Rahl. I have already sent scouts to find the troops who have ... wandered
off from their stations."
"It's
the bond, Drefan," Kahlan said. "The D'Harans aren't bonded to you.
The army is breaking up, wandering off aimlessly because they have lost the
bond, lost their leader. They don't know what to do. They are without a Lord
Rahl-"
He
struck her. The sharp sound reverberated through the room. "Stand
up!" He waited until she regained her feet. "I'll not have insolence
from my wife! Do you understand?"
Kahlan
pressed her fingers to her nose, trying to halt the flow of blood. The crimson
tide flooded over her fingers and lips and down her chin. The sight of it
nearly drove a gasp from him. The sight of the Mother Confessor with blood on
her made his hands shake. He longed for the slicing, for the sight of blood
everywhere on her. for her screams, for her terror.
But he
could wait until she begged for it. As had Nadine. He had enjoyed Nadine's
perverted hunger. He had relished her surprise, her terror, her agony, before
he cast her over the side of the mountain, still alive, so she could think
about her vile nature all the way down. It had sated him-for now.
He
could wait until the Mother Confessor's true corruption finally surfaced once
again, as it had the first night. Richard must have been horrified to discover
how much she really wanted his brother, that the woman he had loved was as impure
as any whore. Poor, innocent, stupid Richard. He never even looked back over
his shoulder as he walked away.
Drefan
could wait. She would need time to recover from the shock of causing Richard's
death. Drefan could wait. It wouldn't take her long, as badly as she wanted
him.
He
swept Kahlan up in his arms. "Forgive me. my wife. I didn't mean to hurt
you. Forgive me, please. I was only worried for our safety from the Order-
distraught that these worthless soldiers won't follow orders and in so doing endanger
us all."
Kahlan
wrenched herself out of his arms. "I understand." She lied so poorly.
From the corner of his eye, he could see the coiled form in red leather. If she
moved to strike, he would slice her down. If she didn't, he still had use for
her.
Kahlan
twitched a finger in caution to Cara. Cara reluctantly relaxed. Kahlan thought
she was so clever, thought he didn't see the way she gave orders to people. For
now, it didn't matter.
"General
Kerson," Drefan said, "I want those derelict troops found. We must
have discipline in the army, or we are lost to the Order. When they are found.
I want the officers executed."
"What?
You want me to execute my own men because they have lost the bond-"
"I want you to execute them for treason. When the rest of the men learn
that
we
won't tolerate such negligence to duty, they will think twice about joining
with our enemy." "Our enemy. Lord Rahl?"
"Of
course. If they don't do their duty as D'Harans, to serve and protect the
D'Haran empire, to say nothing of their Lord Rahl, then they are aiding the
enemy. That makes them traitors! It endangers the life of my wife! Of
everyone!"
He
glided his fingers over the raised gold letters on the hilt of the Sword of
Truth-his sword. He wielded it by right. "Now, do you have anything else
to report?' '
The
general and Kahlan surreptitiously shared a look. "No, Lord Rahl."
"Good.
That will be all, then. Dismissed." He turned to Kahlan and held out his
arm. "Come, my dear. We will have breakfast together."
CHAPTER��� ����������6
In a
daze, Richard stepped down off the wizard's throne at the head of the Hall of
the Winds. His footsteps echoed into the distance. It was his rightful place,
the wizard's throne: he was the only war wizard, the only wizard with both
Additive and Subtractive Magic.
The
inside of the Temple of the Winds was beyond colossal. It was almost beyond
comprehension. There was no sound in this soundless place, unless he put one
there, or willed it into being.
The
arched ceiling enclosing the lofty heights overhead could have contained
eagles, and they hardly would have been aware that they were captive inside a
structure. Mountain hawks, were there any, could soar and dive under that
aerial arch, and feel at home.
To the
sides, massive columns supported walls that ascended into the remote curve of
the ribbed ceiling. In those side walls, enormous windows let in more of the
omnipresent diffused light.
At
least he could see the side walls. The far distant end of the hall simply faded
out of sight, into a haze.
Nearly
everything was the color of a pale afternoon mist: the floors, the columns, the
walls, the ceiling. They almost seemed made of the filmy light.
Richard
was a flea in a vast canyon. Even so, the place was not limitless, as it was
outside the walls.
Before,
he would have been stunned and awed by this place. Now, he was neither. He was
simply numb.
Here,
time had no meaning, other than that which he brought with him. Time had no
place to anchor in eternity. He could have been here a century, rather than a
mere couple of weeks, and only he would note the difference, and then. only if
he so chose. Life had little meaning here, a concept as distant as the other
end of eternity; he brought that, too, to this place. Yet the Temple of the
Winds had perception, and sheltered him in its wizard-crafted, stone embrace.
To the
sides, as he strode the hall, there were alcoves under each arch. beyond each
pair of columns. In each alcove resided the things of magic stored here for
safekeeping-sent here from the world of life, for the safekeeping of the world
of life.
Richard
understood them and could use them. He understood how dangerous these things
were, and why some had wanted them locked away for all time. The knowledge of
the winds was his, now.
With
that knowledge, he had halted the plague. He didn't have the book that was used
to start the plague, but it wasn't necessary to have the book to render it
impotent. The book was stolen from this place, and so was still yoked to the
winds.
It was
a simple matter of switching the fluxes of power emanating from the winds which
enabled the magic of the book to function in the world of life.
In
fact, it was so simple that he was ashamed that he hadn't realized the way to
do it before. Thousands of people had died because he had been so ignorant. Had
he known then what he knew now, he could have merely cast a web spun with both
sides of his power and the book would have been useless to Jagang. All those
people dead-and it had been so simple.
At
least he was able to use his healing powers to halt the sickness among most who
were afflicted before he had interrupted the currents of magic. At least the
plague was ended.
It had
only cost him everything. What price, for all those lives. What price the
spirits had set. What price, indeed.
It had
cost Nadine her life. He felt profound sorrow for her. He would have eliminated
Jagang, and the threat from the Old World, too, but he couldn't do so from this
place. That was the world of life, and he could only affect those things taken
from this place to the world of life, and the damage they caused.
He had
touched the core of power in this place, though; there would be no more entry
through Betrayer's Hall. Jagang would not twice accomplish the same feat.
Richard
paused. He drew his sword, Drefan's sword. He held it out in his palms, staring
at it, watching the light catch it. This wasn't his sword-the Sword of Truth.
He let
his will flow from the core of his soul, carrying his birthright of power with
it. His gift came as easily as a sigh, where before he had struggled to bring
forth the most insignificant shred of his power. Force flowed outward, through
his arms, and into the object he held.
His
mind guided its elements, balancing each to the desired sequence and result,
until the sword in his hands transmuted into the twin of the one he knew so
well. He held the twin to the Sword of Truth, although without its attendant
impressions of those past souls who had used his real sword. In every other
way, though, it was the same. It held the same power, the same magic.
Wizards
had died in the attempt to make the Sword of Truth, until some were finally
successful. Once they had succeeded, that knowledge was borne to this place,
and it was therefore Richard's for the taking, as was all the knowledge here.
He
seized the hilt and held the blade aloft. Richard let the power, the magic, the
rage of the sword inundate him, storm through him, just to feel something. Even
wrath was something.
He had
no need of a sword, though. The wrath winked out, to be replaced again by the
emptiness.
He
tossed the sword high into the air and held it there, where it rotated slowly
on a bed of force. With a pulse of power, he shattered the sword he had made
into a cloud of metal lie dust, and with another thought, evacuated the dust
out of existence. He stood empty again. Empty and alone.
A
presence caused him to turn. It was another spirit. They came, from time to
time, to see him, to speak with him, to urge him to return to his world before it
was too late, before he lost the thread back to the world of life. This form,
this spirit, rooted him to the floor in rigid shock. It looked like Kahlan.
The
soft, glowing apparition hovered before him, radiating with a glow the same
color as everything else in this place, only with more intensity, more
definition.
It
looked like Kahlan. For the first time in weeks, his heart pounded.
"Kahlan? Have you died? Are you a spirit, now?" "No." the
spirit said, "I am Kahlan'? mother."
Richard's
muscles went slack again. He turned away and continued on through
the
hall. "What do you want?"
The
spirit followed, as they sometimes did, interested in him. a curiosity,
perhaps, in their world.
"I
have brought you something," the spirit said. Richard turned. "What?"
She
held out a rose. The green of the stem and the red of the petals were stunning
in this colorless world, a ripple of pleasure to his eyes. The fragrance filled
his lungs with its pleasant aroma. He had almost forgotten the pleasure of such
a thing. '�� "What am I to do with
this?"
The
spirit held it out, urging him to take it. He had no fear of the spirits who
came to see him. Even those who hated him could not harm him. He knew how to
protect himself.
Richard
took the rose. "Thank you." He slid the stem behind his belt. He
turned and continued on. The spirit of Kahlan's mother followed. He didn't like
looking into her face. Though she was a spirit, and her features were
indistinct in that glow they had, she still looked too much like Kahlan. "Richard,
may I talk with you?"
His
footsteps echoed through the vast hall. "If you wish." "I wish
to tell you about my daughter. Kahlan." Richard stopped and turned back to
the spirit. "Why?" "Because she is part of me. She was of my
flesh, just as you are of your mother's flesh. Kahlan is my connection to the
world of life, the place I once was. Where you must return."
Richard
started out once more. "I am home. I have no intention of returning to
that bitter world. If you wish me to carry a message to your daughter. I'm
sorry, I can't. Leave me."
He
lifted his hand to banish her from the hall, but she raised her hands, pleading
for him to stay his power.
"I
do not wish you to carry a message. Kahlan knows I love her. I wish to talk to
you." "Why?"
"Because
of what I did to Kahlan." "Did to her? What did you do to her?"
"I
instilled in her a sense of duty. 'Confessors don't have love, Kahlan. They
have duty. ' That was what I told her. To my shame, I never explained what I
meant by that. I fear I left her no room for life.
"More
than any Confessor I knew, Kahlan wanted to live life. to relish it. Duty
denied her much of that. That is what makes her such a good protector of her
people. She wants them to have a chance at their joy, because she sees so clearly
what she was denied. She is left to take small pleasures as she can."
"Is there a point to this?" "Don't you enjoy life,
Richard?"
Richard
walked on. "I understand about duty. I have been born to duty. I am now
done with it. I am done with everything." "You, too, misunderstand
what I meant about duty. To the right person, the
person
who is truly born to it, duty is a form of love, through which all is possible.
Duty is not always a denial of things, but an expansion of them to others. Duty
is not always a chore, but is best carried out with love. "Will you not
return to her, Richard? She needs you." "Kahlan has a husband, now. I
have no place in her life." "You have a place in her heart."
"Kahlan said she would never forgive me."
"Richard,
have you never said something you didn't mean, in desperation? Have you never
wished you could take back the words?"
"I
can't return to her. She is married to another. She has given an oath, and she
has . . . I won't go back."
"Even
if she is married to another, even if you cannot be with her, even if it breaks
your heart to know you can't have her, don't you love her enough to mend her
heart? To put her heart at peace? Is it all you, and none of it her, in this
love you have?"
Richard
glared at the spirit. "She has found happiness in my absence. She doesn't
need anything from me." "Do you find enjoyment in the rose,
Richard?" Richard walked on. "Yes, it's very nice, thank you."
"Will you consider going back, then?"
Richard
wheeled to the spirit of Kahlan's mother. "Thank you for the rose. Here
are a thousand in repayment, so you may not say I owe you anything in
return!"
Richard
cast out his hand and the air filled with roses. Rose petals flew and swirled
in a red blizzard.
"I'm
sorry I could not make you understand, Richard. I can see that I only bring you
pain. I will leave you."
When
she vanished, the floor was bespattered with red petals, looking like nothing
so much as a pool of blood.
Richard
sank to the floor, feeling too sick to stand. Soon, he would be one of them, a
spirit, and he would not have to endure this limbo where he twisted between
worlds. He had food, when he wanted it, he had sleep, when he wanted it, but he
couldn't maintain life here indefinitely. This was not the world of life.
Soon
enough, he would be one of them, and finished with this emptiness that was his
life.
Kahlan
had once filled that emptiness. She had once been everything to him. He had
trusted her. He had thought his heart had been safe in her care. He had
imagined more than was true. How could he have been such a fool? Was it all
such illusion?
Richard's
head came up. He peered across the hall. He went through a mental, inventory of
the items stored here. The gazing font. It was there, across the hall. He knew
how to use it.
He rose
and crossed the hall, going between two of the columns, to find the stone
gazing font. It had two basins, in two tiers, the lower one waist-high, and the
upper just above his head. Each basin was a long rectangle. Carved into the
glittering charcoal-gray stone were ornate symbols of instruction and power.
The lower basin was brimful of a silver liquid, appearing similar to the sliph,
but very different, he knew.
Richard
lifted the silver ewer from the shelf below and dipped it in the lower������ �' basin. He emptied the ewer into the upper basin. He continued,
until the upper basin was loaded with its charge of the gazing liquid.
Richard
leaned across the lower basin to place his hands on the proper symbols, spread
wide to each side. He read the ancient words before him as he leaned in, hands
pressed to the gazing keyways. When the words were said. he focused his� mind on the person he wished to gaze upon.
As he did this, he let slip a small cord
of
power to release the liquid in the upper font.
Across
the entire knife-edge front of the upper basin, the silver liquid spilled out
in a thin. silvery sheet before his face. In that waterfall of gazing liquid,
Richard saw the person he called in his mind: Kahlan.
His
chest tightened at seeing her. He almost gasped, almost called out her name in
anguish.
She was
in her white Confessor's dress. The familiar contours of her face made him ache
with longing. She was near her rooms, her bedroom, in the Confessors' ' Palace.
It was night, there. Richard could feel his heart hammering against his ribs as
he watched her glide to a halt at the door.
Drefan
slipped up behind her. He put his hands on her shoulders, giving them a squeeze
as he leaned close, putting his mouth by her ear.
"Kahlan,
my wife, my love. Are you ready to go into bed? I've had a hard day. I so look
forward to a night of your lustful passion."
Richard
released the font. He lifted his fists as he staggered back. The gazing font
exploded apart, heavy pieces of rock driven ahead of huge gouts of flame and
smoke. Shards of stone whistled through the hall, disappearing into the
distance. Massive chunks of stone wailed as they rose up into the air, lifted
on a raging inferno, until they lost their upward momentum and dropped back
down, to shatter into fragments and dust. The gazing liquid flooded the floor.
In each droplet and pool, Richard could see Kahlan's face. He turned his back
and stalked away. A furnace of flame blasted the floor, evaporating each
droplet, yet he could still perceive her face in the tiniest mist of it filling
the air. He cast up his fists. Every droplet, every infinitesimal bit of mist,
winked into nothingness behind him.
In the
center of the hall, in a daze, Richard slumped to the floor, staring out at
nothing.
A malicious
chuckle drifted through the winds. Richard knew who it was. His father was back
to torment him again.
"What's
the matter, my son?" Darken Rahl said in his derisive hiss. "Aren't
you happy with my choice of a husband for your true love? My own son, my own
flesh and blood, Drefan, wed to the Mother Confessor. I think it a good choice
myself. He's a good boy. She seemed pleased. But then, you already know that,
don't you? You should be pleased that she is pleased. So very pleased."
Darken Rahl's laughter cavorted through the hall.
Richard
didn't bother to banish the luminous form standing over him. What did it
matter?
"So,
what do you say, my wife? Shall we have a night of wild passion? Like you
showed my brother when you thought it me?"
Kahlan
used all her strength to ram her elbow into Drefan's sternum. She had caught
him off guard. He hadn't expected that. He doubled over in pain, unable to get
his breath. "I told you, Drefan, if you touch me, I'll cut your
throat."
Before
he could recover to laugh at her anger, or to taunt her with his threats of
force, she slipped into her room, slammed the door, and threw the bolt.
She
stood trembling in the near darkness. She had felt something. For a moment, it
had felt as if Richard was there with her. She had almost called out his name-
screamed she loved him.
She
clutched her abdomen in agony. When would she ever stop thinking about him?
Richard
was never coming back.
Kahlan
crossed the thick carpets in her sitting room and went back into the bedroom. She
dropped into a defensive crouch when someone stepped out in front of her.
"Sorry,"
Berdine whispered. "I didn't mean to frighten you." Kahlan sighed as
she unclenched her fists and rose to her feet. "Berdine." She threw
her arms around the woman. "Oh, Berdine, I'm glad to see you. How are you
doing?"
Berdine
hugged Kahlan with a desperate need for comfort. "It's been a few weeks,
but it seems as if Raina died only yesterday. I'm so angry with her for leaving
me. And then when I get angry at her, I cry because I miss her so. If she would
only have held on for a few more days, she would be alive now. Just a couple of
days."
"I
know, I know," Kahlan whispered. She parted from Berdine, keeping her
voice low. "What are you doing here? I thought you went up to the Keep to
relieve Cara."
"I
did, but I had to come down to talk to you."
"You
mean the sliph is unguarded?" Berdine nodded. "Berdine, we can't
leave her alone. We would never know if someone slipped into Aydindril-someone
with dangerous magic. That was what-"
Berdine
shushed her. "I know. This is important, too. Besides, what difference
does it really make? Cara and I have lost our power. We couldn't stop someone
with magic, now, if they did come through the sliph.
"I
have to talk to you, Mother Confessor, and I can never do it in the day because
Drefan is always showing up."
"Don't
let him catch you calling him anything other than Lord Rahl, or he-"
"He isn't Lord Rahl. He isn't. Mother Confessor." "I know. But
he's all the Lord Rahl we have."
Berdine
looked Kahlan in the eye. "Cara and I have been talking. We decided we
should kill him. We need you to help us."
"We
can't do that." Kahlan gripped Berdine's shoulder. "We
can't."������� , "Sure we can.
We'll hide out on the balcony, you get him out of his clothes so that he's away
from those knives of his, and while you . . . distract his attention, we'll
burst in and end it." "Berdine, we can't."
"Well,
all right, if you're skittish about that plan, we can easily think of another.
The point is, we have to kill him." "No, the point is, we can't kill
him."
Berdine
scowled. "Do you want to be married to that pig? Sooner or later, he's
going to insist on his rights as your husband."
"Berdine,
listen to me. Even if he does that, I will have to endure it. I can endure rape
if it means saving lives. We can't kill Drefan. He's the only Lord Rahl we
have.
Until we can figure out what to do, he is the only thing holding the army
together.�������������������������������
"Right
now. they're confused by his aggressive command. D'Harans are used���� to being told what to do by Lord Rahl.
Drefan is acting as if he is the Lord Rahl and, for the moment, the army is
scratching their heads, wondering if they're sure he isn't."
"But
he isn't," Berdine insisted.
"But
at the moment, that's all that is holding the whole thing together. If it falls
apart, then the Imperial Order will be able to roll right over the Midlands.
Drefan is right about that much of it."
''But
you are the Mother Confessor. General Kerson is loyal to you. Even without the
bond. he sticks around because of you. Most of the officers do the same.
Because of you, not Drefan. You could hold things together as well as Drefan.
Maybe it would work."
"And
maybe not. I may not like Drefan, but he has done nothing to earn
assassination. As much as I don't like his ways, he's doing his best to keep us
all together. With him, and me, we may be able to keep everyone together in
this." Berdine tilled her head closer. "It won't last, and you know
it." Kahlan wiped a hand across her face. "Berdine, Drefan is my
husband. I have sworn an oath to him."
"An
oath, is it? Then why haven't you let him in your bed?" Kahlan opened her
mouth, but couldn't find the words.
"It's
because of Lord Rahl, isn't it? You still think he's coming back, don't you?
You want him to come back."
Kahlan
put her fingertips to her lips. She turned away. "If Richard was going to
come back. he'd have done so by now."
"Maybe
it's the plague, maybe he isn't finished ridding the magic of the plague. Maybe
when he's finished, he will return." Kahlan hugged her arms to herself.
She knew that wasn't it. "Mother Confessor, you do want him to return,
don't you?" "I'm married to Drefan. I have a husband."
"That
isn't what I asked you. You do want him to return. You must want him to come
back."
Kahlan
shook her head. "He said he would always love me. He said his heart would
always be mine. He promised." Kahlan swallowed the anguish. "He
walked away. I may have-hurt him, but if he really loved me, he wouldn't do
this to me. He'd have given me a chance . . ." "But you still want
him back."
"No.
I don't want ever to go through this kind of pain again. I don't want ever to
leave myself open to this much hurt. I was wrong ever to let myself fall in love
with him in the first place." Kahlan shook her head again. "I don't
want him to come back."
"I
don't believe you. You're just upset, as I get because Raina died. But if she
came back. I'd forgive her for dying and take her back in a heartbeat."
"Not
Richard. I'll not trust my heart to him again. Regardless of what I did, that
doesn't make it right for him to hurt me as he did. He just walked away from
me, and after he'd made promises of always loving me no matter what. He failed
me in that test.
"I
never thought he would hurt me like that. I thought my heart was safe with him,
no matter what, but it wasn't." Berdine turned her around and gripped her
shoulders.
"Mother
Confessor, you don't mean that. You don't. Trust works both ways. If you really
loved him, then you must trust in him, no matter what, just as you expected him
to always trust in you."
Tears
trickled down Kahlan's cheeks. "I can't, Berdine. It hurts too much. I'll
not put myself through it again.
"It
doesn't matter anyway. It's been weeks. The plague is long over. Richard is
never coming back."
"Look,
I don't know exactly what happened up on the mountain, but you just ask
yourself this: If the situation were reversed, if you were in his place, how
would you feel?"
"Don't
you think I do that every moment of every day? I know how I'd feel. I'd feel
betrayed. I'd never forgive me, if I were him. I'd hate me, just as I know he
does."
"No,"
Berdine soothed, "that isn't true. He doesn't hate you. Lord Rahl may be
confused, or hurt, but he could never hate you."
"He
does. He hates me for what I did. That's the other reason I can never take him
back-1 hurt him too much. How could I ever look him in the eye again? I
couldn't. I could never ask him to trust me again."
Berdine
circled an arm around Kahlan's neck and drew her to a shoulder. "Don't
close your heart, Kahlan. Please don't do that. You are a sister of the Agiel.
As your sister, I beg you not to do that."
"It
makes no difference," Kahlan whispered. "I can't be with him anyway,
no matter what I might think or wish or hope. I must forget him. The spirits
have forced me into marrying Drefan. I have given my oath to Drefan and to the
spirits in trade to save lives. I must respect the oath I've given. Richard,
too, must respect my oath."
CHAPTER������������� 62
Wake
him! the voice in her head commanded.
Verna
cried out. It felt as though she was covered with wasps, and they were all
stinging her at once. She frantically swiped at her arms, her shoulders, her
legs, her face. She screamed in panic, swatting, swatting. Wake him! came the
voice in her head again. His Excellency's voice.
Verna
snatched the cloth from the bucket. She turned Warren's head. He was sprawled
forward on the table, unconscious. She dabbed the wet cloth on his cheeks, his
forehead. With trembling fingers, she smoothed back his hair. He hadn't been
out long, so she had a better chance to bring him around. "Warren. Warren,
please wake up. Warren!"
He
moaned in delirium. She pressed the wet cloth to his lips. She rubbed his back
with her other hand as she kissed his cheek. It broke her heart to see him so
afflicted with the pain, not only of the dream walker but of the gift out of
control. She pressed her fingers to the back of his neck and let a warm flow of
Han seep into him, hoping it would give him strength, hoping it would bring him
around.
"Warren,"
she cried, "please wake up. Please, for me, wake up, or His Excellency
will be angry. Please, Warren."
Tears
streamed down her face. She didn't care. She needed only to wake Warren, or His
Excellency would make them both suffer. She had never known that resistance
could be so futile. She had never known that she could so easily be made to
betray everything in which she believed.
She
couldn't even protect those she loved by killing herself. She had tried. Oh,
how she had tried. He wouldn't allow it; he wanted them alive so that they
could serve him. He wished to use their talents.
She now
knew that it had to be true: Richard had to be dead. The bond to him was broken,
and they were defenseless against the dream walker. He intruded into her mind
at will. With frightening ease, Jagang bent her to his wishes. It was as if she
were no longer in control of the simplest of actions. If Jagang willed it, her
arm lifted, and she could do nothing but watch. He controlled her use of her
Han, too. Without the bond, she was powerless.
Warren
let out another groggy groan. He moved of his own accord, at last. Only Verna
seemed able to wake him when he passed out from the gift. That was the only
reason Jagang hadn't sent her to the tents.
Only
his heart's connection to her was enough to stir Warren. She knew that it was
harmful to wake him when the gift wanted him unconscious-it did that as a way
to stretch his endurance until he could get proper help-but she had no choice.
She was using their love to wake him, and in so doing, was bringing him closer
to death; but Jagang didn't care, as long as Warren did as ordered.
"Sorry,"
Warren mumbled. "I . . . I couldn't . . ."
"I
know," Verna comforted, "I know. Wake up, now. Warren. His Excellency
wants us to keep working. We have to keep working." "I . . . can't. I
can't, Verna. My head-"
"Please,
Warren." Verna couldn't control the tears. The pain of a thousand wasps
stinging her everywhere at once made it impossible to hold still. She flinched
constantly. "Warren, you know what he'll do to us. Please, Warren, you
must go back to the books. I'll carry them down. Just tell me which ones you
need. I'll get them for you."
He
nodded as he pushed himself up. He was becoming more alert. Verna slid the lamp
near him and turned up the wick. She pushed close the volume he had been
reading when he had passed out, and tapped the page.
"Here,
Warren. Here. This is where you were. His Excellency wants to know what this
means."
Warren
pressed his fists to the sides of his head. "I don't know! Please,
Excellency, I don't know. I can't make the visions of prophecy come at will.
I'm not a prophet yet. I am only beginning." Warren cried out, squirming in
his chair. "I'll try! I'll try! Please, let me try!"
Warren
panted as his agony subsided. He bent over the book, licking his lips. Fingers
shook as he set them to the book, following along the line of words, the line
of prophecy.
"
'Patronizing past,' " he muttered as he read to himself. "
'Patronizing past carries forward the same disfavor twisted to new use, for a
new master. ...' Dear Creator, I don't know what it means. Please, let the
vision come."
Clarissa
peered out into the darkness as the coach rocked to a stop. Dust hung in the
air, their ghostlike escort. A stone fortress rose up just outside the coach's
window. It was dark, and she couldn't see the whole thing, but what she could
see made her heart pound out of control.
She
waited, twisting her fingers together, until the soldier opened the door.
"Clarissa," he whispered. "This is the place."
Clarissa
took his hand as she stepped out into the inky night. "Thank you,
Walsh."
The
other one of Nathan's soldier friends, a man named Bollesdun, waited up in the
driver's seat, keeping tight the reins.
"Hurry,
now," Walsh told her. "Nathan said he doesn't want you in there for
more than a few minutes. If anything happens, the two of us aren't going to be
able to fight much of a battle to get you out."
She
knew the truth of that. They had ridden past so many tents that it left her
stunned by their numbers. The hoard who had overrun Renwold had been nothing
compared to the numbers of men here.
Clarissa
pulled up the hood on her cloak. "Don't you worry, I know better than to
dally. Nathan told me what to do."
She
clutched her cloak together in her fist. She had promised Nathan. He had done
so much for her. He had saved her life. She would do this for him. She would do
this so others wouldn't die.
As
terrified as she was, she would do anything for Nathan. There was no better man
in the whole world. No kinder man. no more compassionate, no braver.
Walsh
walked beside her as they passed under an iron portcullis, and then into an
entryway under a barreled roof. Two brutish guards, wearing hide mantles and
hung with grisly-looking weapons, stood beside a hissing torch.
Clarissa
kept her cloak tightly drawn and her hood pulled forward. She hung her head so
that the guards couldn't see her face in the shadow. She let Walsh do the
talking, as she had been instructed.
Walsh
flicked his hand toward her. "The representative of His Excellency's
plenipotentiary. Lord Rahl," he said in a gruff voice, as if unhappy that
this assignment had fallen to him.
The bearded
guard grunted. "So I've been told." He lifted a thumb toward the
door. "Go on in. Someone is supposed to be waiting for you."
Walsh
adjusted his weapons belt. "Good. I have to drive this one back tonight.
Can you believe it? Won't even let us wait until morning. That Lord Rahl is as
demanding as they come."
The
guard grunted, as if he well understood the annoyance of night duty.
"Oh." Walsh added, as if in afterthought, "Lord Rahl also wanted
to know if his representative could pay the Lord Rahl's respects to His
Excellency."
The
guard shrugged. "Sorry. Jagang took out of here this morning. He took most
everyone with him. Just left a few behind to mind things."
Clarissa's
heart sank with disappointment. Nathan had been hoping that Jagang would be
here, but he had said that even though he hoped it, Jagang would likely be
smarter than that. Jagang wasn't one to trust his life to the unknown abilities
of a wizard as powerful as Nathan.
Walsh
took Clarissa's arm and pushed her on ahead as he gave the guard a good-natured
slap on the shoulder. "Thanks."
"Yea,
just go on in down the hall. There's one of the women waiting there for you.
Last I saw her, she was pacing by the second set of torches."
Walsh
and Bollesdun were Imperial Order soldiers, and they had had no trouble with
any of the other soldiers, either. Clarissa dreaded to think what would have
happened to her without those two the times their coach had been stopped by
troops to query its mission. Walsh and Bollesdun also had little trouble ushering
her through checkpoints.
Clarissa
remembered all too well what happened to the women in Renwold. She still had
nightmares about what she had seen happening to Manda Perlin when the Order's
troops captured Renwold. And right there, on the floor beside her murdered
husband. Rupert.
Their
footsteps echoed as they hurried down the stone corridor. It was a dark, dank,
and depressing place. It looked to Clarissa to have no comforts other than a
few wooden benches. This was a place for soldiers, not a place for families to
live. As the guard had said, the woman was waiting near the second set of
torches. "Yes," the woman asked, "what is it?"
As
Clarissa came to a stop before the woman, she could see in the torchlight that
her face was badly battered. She had horrid-looking cuts and bruises. One side
of her lower lip was swollen to twice normal size. Even Walsh moved back a
little when he got a good look at her. "I am to meet Sister Amelia. His
Excellency's plenipotentiary sent me."
The
woman slumped with relief. "Good. I am Sister Amelia. I have the book. I
hope never to see it again."
"His
Excellency's plenipotentiary also told me that I am to pay his respects to an
acquaintance of his, Sister Verna. Is she here?" "Well, I don't know
if I should-"
"If
I'm not allowed to see her. His Excellency will be most unhappy when his
plenipotentiary reports how his request was so rudely treated by a slave. As a
slave myself, serving His Excellency, I can tell you that I will not be the one
to take the blame."
Clarissa
felt foolish saying such words, but as Nathan had told her, they seemed to work
magic.
Sister
Amelia's eyes fixed on the gold ring through Clarissa's lip. Her hesitation
vanished. "Of course. Please follow me. That is where the book is kept,
anyway."
With
Walsh close at her side, and his hand near the hilt of his short sword,
Clarissa followed Sister Amelia deeper into the gloomy fortress. They went down
a long hall, and then took a turn. Clarissa was paying careful attention as
they went, so that if they had to get out fast, she wouldn't take a wrong route
and be caught in here.
Sister
Amelia stopped before a door, glancing to Clarissa for just an instant before
she lifted the lever and led them in. A woman and a man were in the room, he
sitting at a simple plank table, reading a book laid open on the table, and she
looking over his shoulder.
The
woman glanced up. She was a little older than Clarissa, and attractive, with
curly brown hair. She looked to Clarissa to be a woman of authority crushed by
humiliation. She looked in agony. Whether it was physical, or emotional,
Clarissa didn't know.
Sister
Amelia held out a hand. "This is Verna."
Verna
straightened. She had a gold ring in her lip, the same as Sister Amelia, the
same as Clarissa. The man, his curly blond hair in disarray, didn't look up. He
seemed frantically absorbed in his book. "Pleased to meet you,"
Clarissa said. Verna turned back to the man and the book he was studying.
Clarissa pushed back her hood as she turned to Sister Amelia. "The
book?" Sister Amelia bowed. "Of course. It's right here."
She
scurried to a shelf. The room wasn't large. One of the stone block walls had a
crudely built shelf holding books. There were perhaps no more than a hundred.
Nathan had been hoping there would be a great many more. As Nathan had
expected, though, Jagang wouldn't keep many of his prizes together in one
place.
Sister
Amelia pulled a volume from a shelf and placed it on the table. She looked to
be uncomfortable even touching it. "This is it."
The
cover was as Nathan had described it to her, a strange black that seemed to
absorb the light from the room. Clarissa flipped open the cover. "What are
you doing?" Sister Amelia cried out as she stepped closer. Clarissa looked
up. "I was instructed how to make sure it is the right book. Please leave
it to me."
Sister
Amelia stepped back, wringing her hands together. "Of course. But I can
tell you only too well that it's the right book. It's the one His Excellency
agreed to."
461
Clarissa
carefully turned over the first page as Sister Amelia nervously licked her
lips. Verna watched from the corner of her eye.
Clarissa
reached inside her cloak and pulled out the little leather pouch of powder
Nathan had given her. She sprinkled it over the open page. Words began to
appear.
Assigned
to the Winds by Wizard Picker.
It was
the book she had come for. Nathan hadn't known the name of the wizard, but he
had told her it would say "Assigned to the Winds" and then a name.
She flipped the cover closed.
"Sister
Amelia, would you leave us for a moment, please?" The woman bowed and
quickly scurried out of the room. Verna frowned as she straightened again.
"What's this about?" "May I see your ring, please?"
"My ring?"
Verna
finally sighed and held out her hand, showing Clarissa the ring on her third
finger. It had the sunburst pattern as Nathan had described.
"Why
do you want to see-" For the first time, Verna noticed Clarissa's guard.
Her eyes went wide. She jostled Warren's shoulder while she spoke.
"Walsh?" Warren's head came up.
Walsh
smiled. "How you doing, Prelate? Warren?" "Not very well."
Clarissa
stepped closer. The man, Warren, was looking very puzzled. "I was sent by
Lord Rahl to get this book." Clarissa gave Verna and Warren both a
meaningful look. "I am bonded to Lord Rahl." "Richard is
dead," Verna said in a flat whisper.
"I
know. But I was sent by Lord Rahl. Nathan Rahl, the master of D'Hara. He wanted
me to pass along his regards."
Verna's
mouth fell open. Warren's chair skidded across the floor as he rushed to his
feet.
"Do
you understand?" Clarissa carefully asked. "If you do, then you had
better be quick about it." "But, Nathan, we couldn't . . ."
"Well,"
Clarissa said, "I must be getting back to Lord Rahl. He's waiting for me.
I have a coach, and I must be leaving at once." Verna's eyes turned up to
Walsh. He gave her a nod.
Verna
fell to her knees. She snatched Warren's violet robes and yanked him down
beside her.
"Do
it. Warren!" She folded her hands together as she bowed her head. Her words
spilled out. "Master Rahl guide us. Master Rahl teach us. Master Rahl
protect us. In your light we thrive. In your mercy we are sheltered. In your
wisdom we are humbled. We live only to serve. Our lives are yours." Warren
spoke the words, too, just a little in her wake.
Verna
knelt frozen for a moment, her hands still folded together prayerfully. She
suddenly let out a cry of joy. She laughed like a madwoman.
"Thank
the Creator! My prayers have been answered! I'm free! He's gone! I can feel
that he's gone from my mind!"
Clarissa
sighed in relief. Nathan had warned her that if Verna failed to do as they had
hoped, she would have to die here.
Verna
and Warren hugged as they wept with joy. Clarissa seized them both and urged
them up.
"We
have to get out of here, but Lord Rahl wants me to do something else, first. I
need to look for some books." "Books?" Warren asked. "What
books?"
"Mountain's
Twin, Selleron's Seventh Task, The Book of Inversion and Duplex, and Twelve
Words Left for Reason. "
Warren
turned to the book on the table. "Twelve Words, that's this one, here. I
think I saw a couple of the others."
Clarissa
went to the shelves. "Help me look. Nathan wants to know if they are here.
He needs to know."
They
all scanned the titles on the spines, and had to pull out several that weren't
marked so as to check their titles. They found all but The Book of Inversion
and Duplex.
Clarissa
brushed the dust from her hands. "That will have to do. Nathan said that
they might not all be here. With only one missing, that's better than we could
have hoped."
"What
does Nathan want with these books?" Warren asked. "He doesn't want
Jagang to have them. He says that they're dangerous for Jagang to have."
"They
all could be dangerous," Verna said.
"Let
me worry about that," Clarissa said, as she slipped the book from the
table back into an empty slot. "Nathan just needed to know which were
here. Now, we can leave."
Verna
clutched Clarissa's sleeve. "I have two friends here. We have to get them
out with us. You said you have a coach. We can all go." "Who?"
Walsh asked. "Janet and Amelia."
Walsh
let out a knowing grunt as Clarissa glanced to the door. "But Nathan
said-"
"Look,
if they give their oath to . . . to Lord Rahl, also, they can escape."
Verna touched the ring in Clarissa's lip. "You don't know what they do to
the women here. Did you see Amelia's face?"
"I
know what they do," Clarissa whispered, remembering the scenes in Renwold.
"Will they take the oath?"
"Of
course. Wouldn't you, if it would get you away from here?" Clarissa
swallowed. "I'd do anything."
"Hurry,
then," Walsh said. "There's room in the coach, but we have to
hurry." Verna nodded and then slipped out the door.
While
Verna went to get the other two, Clarissa unhooked the clasp on the fine gold
chain around her neck. Warren watched with a frown as Clarissa pulled a book
from a lower shelf and then set it on the table.
Clarissa
placed the locket on the shelf, in the empty slot. Carefully, she laid open the
locket. With a finger, she gently pushed it all the way back against the wall.
She wiggled her fingers at Warren. He handed back the book she had removed.
Clarissa slid it back into its place. "What did you do?" Warren
asked.
"What
Nathan wanted me to do."������������������������������� �������Verna burst back into the room, holding the hands of two
beaming women. One was the one with the battered face, Sister Amelia.
"They've
given the oath," Verna said in a breathless voice. "They are bonded
to Lord Rahl. Let's get out of here."
"About
time," Walsh said. He had a little smile on his face for Verna. It was
obvious to Clarissa that they knew each other.
Walsh
took a hold of Clarissa's arm and the two of them led out the rest, to retrace
their route back through the fortress. The dark, dripping stone smelled of rot.
They saw only a few guards inside the stronghold, most people having left along
with Jagang, gone to his huge tents.
Nathan
said that Jagang traveled with a large contingent of people and that he had
big, round tents with all the comforts of a palace. Of the people left behind,
there seemed to be a scattering of officers and guards, and a few of the women
who were slaves to Jagang and his army.
As they
came around a corner, one of those slaves was coming the other way, carrying
two steaming kettles of what smelled like lamb stew. She was dressed the same
as the other women Clarissa had seen, except Verna. The clothes they wore, like
Janet and Amelia, were not clothes as far as Clarissa was concerned. The women
might as well have been naked, for all the good those transparent garments did.
When
the woman looked up and saw them coming, especially Walsh, she immediately
stepped to the side of the hall, out of their way.
Clarissa
jerked to a halt, staring at the woman, whose gaze fixed on the floor.
"Manda?" Clarissa whispered. "Manda Perlin, is that you?"
Manda looked up. "Yes, mistress?" "Manda. it's me, Clarissa.
From Renwold. I'm Clarissa." The young woman looked up the length of Clarissa,
at her expensive gown, at her jewelry, at her hair all done in ringlets.
Manda's gaze met Clarissa's, and her eyes widened. "Clarissa, is it really
you?" "Yes."
"I
don't hardly . . . recognize you. You look so . . . different. You look so . .
." The spark went out of her expression. "Were you captured back
home, too, then? I see the ring." "No. I wasn't captured."
Manda's
eyes filled with tears. "Oh, good. I'm so glad they didn't get you, there.
It was-"
Clarissa
hugged the young woman. Manda had never spoken this many words to her in all
the years Clarissa had known her, and the words she had spoken hadn't been
decent. Clarissa had always hated Manda for the cruel words, the cruel smirks,
the condescending glances. Now, Clarissa felt sorrow for her. "Manda, we
have to go. Would you like to come away with us?" Verna snatched
Clarissa's arm. "We can't do that."
Clarissa
glared at Verna. ''I came here to rescue you. I let you take your friends with
us. I want to take my friend out of here, too." Verna sighed and let go of
Clarissa's arm. "Of course." "Friend?" Manda whined as her
face twisted with untold sorrow. "Yes," Clarissa said. "I could
get you out of here, too." "You would do that for me? After all the
times I ..." Sobbing, Manda threw her arms around Clarissa. "Oh, yes.
Oh, Clarissa, please! Oh, Clarissa, please let me go with you!"
Clarissa
gripped the woman's wrists and pushed her away. ''Then listen carefully. I give
you only one chance. My master has magic to protect your mind from the dream
walker. You must swear an oath to him. You must be loyal to him." Manda
fell to her knees, clutching at Clarissa's dress. "Yes, I swear."
"Then say these words, and you must mean them with all your heart."
Clarissa spoke the devotion, pausing to let Manda repeat the words. When she
finished, Verna and Clarissa helped the sobbing woman to her feet.
Clarissa
had always been so intimidated by Manda, always so afraid of her scorn. How
many times had Clarissa crossed the street, her head bowed low, as she tried to
avoid Manda's attention?
"Hurry,
now," Walsh said. "Nathan told us to get out of here fast." At
the entrance, Walsh had to make up a story about His Excellency's
plenipotentiary wanting some women. The guard eyed the nearly naked women,
smiled knowingly, and slapped Walsh on the back.
They
all piled into the coach as Walsh climbed up into the driver's seat with
Bollesdun. As the coach lurched and then started out, Clarissa pushed Janet and
Manda to the floor, in the center, so she could lift the leather-covered seat.
She pulled out a long cloak. She only had one extra; they had expected to
rescue Verna and Warren. Since Verna had a cloak, Clarissa gave the extra cloak
to Manda, and retrieved blankets for Janet and Amelia. All three women were
immensely grateful to be able to cover themselves, at last.
Clarissa
sat at the end of the seat, holding the strange black book Nathan had sent her
for, with Amelia at the other end, and Manda in the center, clutching at
Clarissa for comfort.
Manda
kept weeping on Clarissa's shoulder, and thanking her profusely. Clarissa put
an arm around Manda and told her that she had expressed her gratitude enough
times. It did feel good, though, to have the beautiful Manda Perlin looking up
to Clarissa for a change, rather than looking down on her. All because of
Nathan. How he had changed her life-changed everything.
They
had to stop three times, while soldiers checked the coach. Once, the soldiers
made them all get out and line up for a look. The blankets and cloak had to
remain in the coach as Janet, Amelia, and Manda climbed out for inspection.
Walsh
explained, in very crude terms, what he was doing with these slaves- how he was
taking them for the pleasure of His Excellency's plenipotentiary. The soldiers
were satisfied by Walsh's explanation, and allowed them to continue on their
way.
They
turned north at the harbor, and headed up the coast road. Clarissa sighed in
relief as she saw the last of the fires and tents finally fade into the
distance behind them. It wasn't until they crested a hill, nearly an hour's
ride out after leaving the last of the soldiers, that the flash lit the sky
behind.
Clarissa
heard a cheer from up on the driver's seat. Walsh leaned down, gripping a rail
with one arm, and stuck his face, nearly upside down, partly into the window.
"Good job, Clarissa! You did it!"
Clarissa
grinned. He swung back up, and he and Bollesdun booted into the night air. It
was then that the sudden boom reached them, making Manda jump with fright.
Verna,
sitting in the center, opposite, produced a flame above her upturned palm and
leaned toward Clarissa. "Job? What is it that you have done?"
Clarissa patted the inky black book in her lap. "Nathan sent me for this
book,
and he
wanted the ones left behind destroyed. He said that they were dangerous, what with
you, and especially Warren, telling Jagang the meaning of the prophecies in
them. Nathan didn't want Jagang to be able to use the information."
"I
see," Verna said. "Lucky for us that we agreed to swear loyalty to .
. . Lord Rahl, and go with you."
Clarissa
nodded. "Nathan said I was to offer you the chance, but in either case, I
was to open that locket and leave it hidden there. He said that Jagang having
both Warren and the prophecies together could ruin everything, if you told
Jagang anything important."
Verna
pressed her lips together as she let out a breath. She shared a look with
Warren.
"I
can't believe that after all this time. I'm finally going to get to meet the
prophet himself," Warren said. "Not long ago I had given up hope, and
now . . . I will be meeting Nathan."
Verna
harrumphed. "Out of the rain and into the lake. I can't believe I've sworn
loyalty to that crazy old man."
Clarissa
leaned forward. "Nathan is dashing. He isn't old." Verna barked a
laugh. "You have no idea, child."
"And
he isn't crazy, either. Nathan is the kindest, most wonderful, most generous
man I've ever met!"
Verna
glanced down at Clarissa's cleavage, and back up to her eyes. She had that look
that Clarissa was used to seeing. "Yes," Verna murmured. "I'm
sure he is, my dear."
"You
could have no better man to swear loyalty to," Clarissa said.
"Besides being thoughtful and kind, Nathan is a powerful wizard. I saw him
turn another wizard to a pile of dust." Verna's brow creased.
"Another wizard?"
Clarissa
nodded. "Named Vincent. Vincent and another wizard and two Sisters,
Jodelle and Willamina, came to see Nathan. They tried to hurt him. Nathan
turned Vincent into a pile of ash." Verna's eyebrows rose.
"After
that," Clarissa said, "they were very polite to Nathan, and Jagang
agreed to give the book"-she tapped the book in her lap-"to Nathan.
Jagang said Nathan could have either the book, or Sister Amelia. Now, Nathan
will have both. Nathan has great plans. Nathan will rule the world, one
day." Verna and Warren shared a sidelong glance. She looked at Amelia.
"What is this book, Amelia?"
"I
stole it from the Temple of the Winds," Amelia said in a hoarse voice.
"I'm the only one who can use it. I started a plague. Thousands have
already died because of what I did. It was how Jagang eliminated Richard Rahl.
"Thank
the Creator that we still have Nathan Rahl to protect us with the bond to
him."
"Dear
Creator," Verna whispered, "what have we agreed to with our oath to
the likes of Nathan?"
CHAPTER������������� 63
Richard
rose from the wizard's chair when he recognized the spirit gliding toward him.
He couldn't call a specific spirit, and he didn't always know the ones who
came, but he knew this one. With this one, he had a deep connection.
The
person this spirit once was, he had loathed, he had feared. Only once he
understood her, and only after he had forgiven her for what she had done to
him, was he able to gain his release. This one he had killed, and in so doing,
he freed her from her torment.
This
spirit was the one who had later brought Kahlan and Richard together in that
place between worlds. "Richard," the spirit said as she seemed to
smile. "Denna."
"I
see you wear an Agiel. It is not mine."
Richard
slowly shook his head. "It is that of yet another Mord-Sith who died
because of me."
"Raina.
I knew her in the world of life, and I know her here. Since she passed into the
spirit world after the violation of the winds, she may not come to you, here.
She is not one of those who holds sway over the forces involved as they pertain
to you and the winds. Know that her spirit is at peace. You gave her peace, in
life, and so she asked me to come to you."
Richard
rolled the red Agiel in his fingers. "I gave your Agiel to Kahlan. As I
promised you, one time, only she is able to give me more pain than you."
"Only you, Richard, are able to give yourself more pain than I could give
you." "Have it your way. I care not to argue. It is good to see you,
Denna." "You may disagree, after I am finished with you."
Richard
smiled at her nature showing through, even in her spirit form. "You cannot
harm me here, Denna."
"You
think not? I may not be able to harm your body, but I can still hurt you."
She nodded to herself. "Oh, yes, Richard, I can hurt you." "And
how is that?"
Denna
lifted an arm. "I can make you remember-remember and make it real again.
You and I have a past." Richard spread his hands. "And to what
purpose?" Denna spread her luminous arms. "That is for you to decide,
Richard." With a flash of light in his mind, the Temple of the Winds was
gone, fading from his consciousness, and he was in a place he remembered: the
castle in Tamarang. He was there again.
He
could taste the terror. Denna had captured him. She had tortured him for days.
He was delirious and weak. Every step was painful as he followed Denna through
the grand dining hall. His
wrists
were cut and swollen from the manacles she used to shackle him up to a beam.
When Denna stopped and spoke to people, Richard kept his eyes to her braid as
he silently waited behind her.
Denna
controlled his life. his destiny. He was allowed only that which she granted.
He hadn't eaten since she had captured him. He longed to eat something.
Anything.
All
around, the jumble of talking and laughter from the queen's guests droned in
his head. Denna, too, was a guest of the queen. Richard, at the end of a chain
running from his mistress to a collar around his neck, was Denna's prisoner.
She
hadn't let him eat during those days of torture, and he needed food. As she sat
at the dining table, Denna snapped her fingers, pointing at the floor behind
her chair. Richard sank to the floor, relieved to be allowed that small
comfort. He could rest. He wasn't hanging from the shackles; he wasn't being
made to stand all night; he wasn't being tortured.
All of
the guests were eating. The varied aromas tormented him. He ached with hunger.
Everyone else was eating, but he had to sit on the floor behind Denna. watching
what others enjoyed-what he was denied.
Richard
thought about the times he had been with Kahlan, at camp, eating rabbit cooked
over the fire or porridge sweetened with berries. He licked his lips thinking
about the succulent, hot, tender meat, brown and crunchy on the outside from
the fire. He had so enjoyed those meals with her. The food and the company were
the best.
Now, he
was denied that life, and was yoked to another. After everyone else had been
eating for a while, a server brought a bowl of gruel. Denna had him hand it
down to Richard. He held it in trembling hands. Almost any time before, he
would have cast it aside in disgust, but now. it was all he had.
He was
made to put it on the floor and to eat it like a dog. while laughter from the
guests filled his ears. He didn't care. He was being allowed to eat at last.
Gruel was
all he was allowed, but at that moment, in his state of tormented need, it was
wonderful-it was freedom from the ache of hunger, freedom from the misery of
seeing others eat while he starved, fulfillment of a simple but long denied
need.
He
slurped at it, relishing it, gulping it down. He could not escape his
imprisonment in his new life, over which he had no say, and so he decided that
if gruel was all he would be allowed, then he would have to accept that fact,
and sate his hunger with what he was given. The light flashed in his head.
Color
bled from his sight, vanishing almost painfully, and he saw again the muted
mists of the Temple of the Winds around him.
Richard
was on his hands and knees on the floor, panting in terror. The glowing white
spirit of Denna lowered over him.
Denna
was right. She could hurt him, still. This pain, though, she had given him out
of love.
Richard
staggered to his feet. How could he have thought he was ignorant before, and
that the knowledge of the Temple of the Winds had brought him new sight? He had
had sight all along, but had failed to see. Knowledge without heart was empty.
Wizard
Ricker had left, with the sliph, a message for him, but he had ignored it.
Ward
left in. Ward right out. Guard your heart from stone. He had failed to guard
his heart from stone, and it had almost cost him everything.
"Thank
you, Denna, for that gift of pain." "It has taught you something,
Richard?" "That I have to go home, back to my world."
"Thank you, Richard, for living up to what I expect of you." Richard
smiled. "Were you not a spirit. I'd kiss you." Denna smiled a sad
smile. "The thought is the gift, Richard." Richard shared a gaze with
her for a moment, a gaze between worlds. "Denna, please tell Raina that we
all love her." "Raina knows this. Feelings of the heart cross the
boundary." Richard nodded. "Then you know how much we love you,
too." "That is why I came to vouch for you in your quest to the
winds." Richard held his arm out. "Would you escort me to the
passageway? I would find peace in your company before I leave this empty place.
The worst is yet ahead of me."
Denna
glided along at his side as he headed for the passageway out, striding the Hall
of the Winds for the last time. They didn't speak; words were too paltry to touch
what was in his heart.
Near
the great doors, the spirit of Darken Rahl waited.
"Going
somewhere, my son?" The sound of his words echoed painfully through the
hall.
Richard
glared at the spirit of his father. "Back to my world." "There
is nothing for you there. Kahlan, your true love, is married to another man.
She has sworn an oath to him before the spirits." "You could never
understand why I'm going back." "Kahlan is married to my son, Drefan.
You cannot have her now." "That is not why I'm going back."
"Then
why leave this place? The world of life will be empty for you now."
Richard stalked past the spirit of his father. He didn't have to explain his
reasons to the one who had caused so much grief. Denna glided along beside
Richard. At the doors. Darken Rahl appeared again, blocking the way. "You
may not leave." "You can't stop me." "Oh, yes, my son, I
can." "You must let him pass," Denna said. "Only if he
agrees to the terms." Richard turned to Denna. "What's he talking
about?"
"The
spirits set the requirements for your path into our world. Because it was your
unique path here. Darken Rahl was called upon and given commensurate sway over
your price for coming here, your sacrifice to come here. Darken Rahl set the
more onerous of the sacrifices, such as Drefan marrying Kahlan. If one who
participated in your coming so chooses, this spirit also has the right to set
requirements if you are to leave."
"I
will simply banish him," Richard said. "I know how to do that, now. I
can banish him from the winds, and then leave."
"It
is not that simple," Denna said. "You traveled from the world of
life, through the underworld, to this place within the world of souls. You must
return through the underworld. The spirits can set a price. It must, however,
be one that is fair, in view of the forces and worlds involved, and it must be
a price within your ability to satisfy."
Richard
ran his fingers back through his hair. "And I must pay?"
"If
he names a price within the edicts, then you must. if you are to return to������������ ,. your world."'
Smiling
that vile smile of his. Darken Rahl glided closer. "I only have two small,
insignificant requirements. Meet them, and you may return to your brother,
Drefan, and his wife."
Richard
glared. "Name them, but if you set the price too high, and I choose not to
pay it and remain here instead, then I swear I will devote my eternity to
making your soul twist in torment. And you know I can do it-the winds have
taught me how."
"Then
I guess you will have to decide just how important this is to you, my son. I
think you will pay it."
Richard
didn't want to tell him how important it was, or the price would climb.
"Name the price, and I will decide if I will pay it. I was willing to stay
here, I may yet decide to do so."
Darken
Rahl came closer, close enough that the pain of his spirit coruscation was
almost enough to make Richard back away. He willed himself to hold his ground,
without a shield of magic.
"Oh,
the price is going to be high, indeed, but I think you will pay it. I know you,
Richard. I know your foolish heart. Even this price, you will pay for
her."
Darken
Rahl did indeed know Richard's heart. Darken Rahl, after all, was the one who
had almost destroyed it. "Name the price or be gone."
"First,
the knowledge of the Temple of the Winds was not yours before you came to this
place. You will return as you came-without the knowledge you acquired here.
Back in your world, you will be as you were before you left it." Richard
had expected as much. "Agreed."
"Oh,
very good, my son. How eager, how earnest, you are. Will you agree to the
second requirement so readily?" His smile seemed as if it would strip
flesh from bone. "I wonder." His voice went on in a lethal hiss.
When
Darken Rahl named the second requirement, Richard's knees nearly buckled.
"Can
he do that?" Richard could manage no more than a whisper. "Can he
demand that?"
Denna
stared back with somber, spirit eyes. "Yes."
Richard
turned away from the two spirits. Head bent, he pressed his hand over his eyes.
"It is that important to me," he whispered. "I agree to the
price."
"I
knew you would." Darken Rahl's malevolent laugh echoed the length of the
Temple of the Winds. "I knew that even this, you would pay for her."
Richard
gathered his senses. He slowly turned, lifting his hand toward the evil spirit.
"And
with this price, you have shown me your barren spirit. In that, dear father,
you have made a mistake, for I can now use that emptiness against you."
The
laughter died out. "You have agreed to the price I have set within my
right and power. You can do nothing but banish me from the winds, and that will
not negate the price; the world of souls will enforce it, now that it is named
and accepted."
"So
they will," Richard said. "But you will taste my revenge for all you
have����� done, including the price you
have demanded, when you could have stopped with����� the first as fair."
Richard
freed a pristine flow of Subtractive Magic, uncontaminated by so much as a
scintilla of the Additive. It was the force of the void unleashed. Total
oblivion of Light engulfed the spirit of Darken Rahl. A wail came from that
deep forever as Darken Rahl was plunged into the unmitigated shadow of the
Keeper of the Underworld, where not the slightest trace of Light from the Creator
shone.
It was
the pain of denial of that Light that was the true torture of the Keeper's dark
eternity.
When he
was gone, Richard turned once more to the passageway back to the world of life.
"I
am sorry, Richard," came Denna's tender voice. "None but he would
have demanded this of you."
"I
know," Richard whispered as he called the lightning to take him back.
"Dear spirit, I know."
CHAPTER������������� 64
Drefan
hooked his hand under her arm and pulled her shoulder against him. At the white
ruffles of his shirt hung two red Agiel.
"Isn't
it about time you ended this pretense, my wife? Isn't it about time you gave in
to your desires, and admitted your hunger for me?"
Kahlan
glared into his blue. Darken Rahl eyes. "Are you really mad, Drefan, or do
you just pretend it? I agreed to wed you to save lives, not because I wanted
it. When will you ever admit it to yourself? I do not love you, nor will I
ever." "Love? When have I ever mentioned love? I speak of
passion." "You are delusional if you think I will ever-"
"You already have. You want it again."
It cut
her to the heart that he had so easily deduced what had happened with Richard.
He pointed it out constantly. He taunted her for it. It was her eternal
punishment for what she had done, a stain she couldn't annul.
Distant
thunder rumbled through the mountains as the spring storm that had come so
suddenly moved on, away from the city. The wild lightning had reminded Kahlan
of Richard. She had stood at the window, watching the violent flashes, remembering.
"Never."
"You
are my wife. You have sworn an oath."
"Yes,
Drefan, I have sworn an oath, and I am your wife. I will live by my words, but
the spirits are satisfied with what I have given. They demand no more, or the
plague would not be gone." She pulled her arm away. "If you want me,
then you will have to rape me, for that is what it will be. I will not go to
your bed willingly, nor easily."
His
smile was maddening. "I can wait until you finally give in to your lust. I
want you to enjoy it. I long for you finally to admit it, to ask for it."
He stalked away, but turned back when she called his name. "What are you
doing with Cara and Berdine's Agiel?"
Touching
an Agiel was painful only if it was one that had been used against you in the
past-if you had been the prisoner of a Mord-Sith. Agiel were weapons only in
the hands of the Mord-Sith to whom they belonged, but without the bond to a
true Lord Rahl they no longer functioned. For Drefan, they were nothing more
than obscene decoration.
He
lifted the red rods away from his chest to have a look at them. "Well, I
thought that since I am the Lord Rahl now, I should wear these, as a symbol of
my authority. After all, Richard wore one. You wear one."
"The
Agiel we wear are not symbols of authority. They are symbols of our respect for
the women to whom they belonged." He shrugged as he let them drop back
down. "The army seems quite intimidated
to see
me wearing them. That will do. Good night, my dear. Sleep well." His sly
smile returned. "Call out if you have need of anything."
Muttering
a curse under her breath, Kahlan shouldered open the door to her rooms. She was
exhausted, and wanted only to fall into bed. but she knew that her racing mind
would deny her sleep. Berdine was waiting for her.
"Is
he gone to bed?" she asked, referring to Drefan. "Yes," Kahlan
said, "as I am about to do." "No. you can't. You have to come
with me."
Kahlan
frowned at the serious look on Berdine's face. "Where do you want me to
go?"
"We
have to go up to the Keep."
"What's
wrong? Is it the sliph? Has someone tried to come through the sliph?"
Berdine waved dismissively as she stepped closer. "No, no, it's not the
sliph." "Then what is it?"
"I
just want you to come up there with me, that's all. I want some company."
Kahlan stroked her hand down the woman's shoulder. "Berdine, I know how
lonely you are, but it's late, I have a headache, and I'm tired. All afternoon
and evening I've been in meetings with Drefan, General Kerson, and a number of
officers. Drefan wants to move the troops back to D'Hara-for us all to go to
D'Hara. He wants to abandon the Midlands to the Order and concentrate on
defending D'Hara. I've been arguing myself blue.
"I
need to go to bed and get some rest so I can get up in the morning and try
again to convince them of the folly of Drefan's plan. The general isn't so sure
that Drefan isn't right. I am."
"Sleep
later. You are coming up to the Keep with me."
Kahlan
gazed into the Mord-Sith's eyes. And that was what they were: Mord-Sith eyes.
This was not Berdine speaking, it was mistress Berdine, as cold and demanding
as any Mord-Sith came. "Not until you tell me why," Kahlan said in a
level tone. Berdine seized Kahlan's arm. "You are going up to the Keep
with me. You can either go sitting in the saddle, or lying over it-your
choice-but you are going, and you are going now."
Kahlan
had never seen such a look of determination in Berdine's eyes. It was
frightening. That was the only word for it: frightening. "All right, if
it's that important to you, let's go. I just want to know why." Instead of
answering, Berdine tightened her grip on Kahlan's arm and forced her to the
door. Berdine cracked the door, checking, then opened it enough to stick her
head out for a look. "It's clear," she whispered. "Come
on." "Berdine, you're scaring me. What's going on?"
Without
answering, Berdine shoved her through the door. They took the service stairs
and avoided the passageways that were heavily patrolled. Berdine must have
spoken with the guards they did encounter, because when the two of them
approached, the guards turned the other way, looking off as if they had seen no
one.
Two
horses waited, both army horses, big bay geldings.
Berdine
tossed a soldier's cloak at Kahlan. "Here, put this on to cover that white
dress of yours so people won't recognize you, or Drefan will hear about
it."
"Why
don't you want Drefan to know where we're going?" Berdine seized Kahlan's
ankle and stuffed her foot into the stirrup. The stirrup was big and loose,
made for a man's boot. Berdine smacked Kahlan's bottom. "Get it up
there."
Kahlan
abandoned her resistance. Berdine obviously wasn't going to tell her what the
urgency was about. The ride to the Wizard's Keep was silent, as was the march
through the empty halls, passageway, and rooms.
Before
they turned down the last stone corridor to the sliph, they encountered Cara
standing guard outside a door. Cara, like Berdine, was unreadable in her stern
demeanor as she watched Berdine and Kahlan hurry toward her.
At the
door, Berdine seized the lever with one hand and Kahlan's arm with the other.
The
look in Berdine's eye was unequivocal sobriety. "Don't you dare disappoint
me. Mother Confessor, or you will find out exactly why Mord-Sith are so feared.
Cara and I will be with the sliph."
Without
looking back, Cara started out toward the sliph while Berdine, without further
word, opened the door and roughly shoved Kahlan into the room. Kahlan stumbled,
catching her balance as she glanced back to see Berdine pull shut the door.
Kahlan
turned, and found herself looking into Richard's eyes. Her heart seemed to stop
along with her breathing.
A half
dozen candles in an iron stand reflected little points of light in his gray
eyes. He seemed bigger than life. Every detail was as she remembered. Only his
sword was missing from that of her mental image of him. Ambivalence kept her
breath locked in her lungs. Finally, she found words. "The plague is
ended." "I know."
The
room felt so small. The stone so dark. The air so heavy. She labored to
breathe, to slow her suddenly racing heart.
His
forehead was beaded with sweat, even though it was cool in the depths of the
Keep. A drop rolled down over his cheekbone, leaving a wet trail.
"Then
what are you doing here? There can be no point to it. I have a husband. We have
nothing to say to each other . . . not after . . . not here, like this,
alone." His gaze left hers at hearing the cool tone of her voice. She had
hoped it would force him to say it. Dear spirits, let him say he forgives me.
He said
instead, "I asked Cara and Berdine to bring you here so I could talk to
you. I came back because I must speak with you. Will you grant me that
much?" Kahlan didn't know what to do with her hands. ''Of course,
Richard."
He
nodded his thanks. He looked in pain. He looked in anguish. His eyes had the
dull gloss of distress.
She
wanted nothing so much as for him to say that he forgave her. Only that would
mend her broken heart. Those were the only words that would mean anything to
her. She wanted him to say it, but he just stood there, while his gaze focused
beyond the cold stone of the walls.
She
decided that if he was going to say it, to forgive her, then the only way was
to force him into it. "So, have you come to forgive me, Richard?"
His
words came softly, but with great resolve.��������������������������������������� " "No, I did not
come to forgive you. I can't forgive you, Kahlan."��������������������� -She turned away. She
finally found something to do with her hands; she pressed her fists against her
stomach. "I see."
"Kahlan,"
he said from behind her, "I can't forgive you because it would be wrong of
me to come here to forgive you.
"Would
you have me forgive your humanity? Shall I forgive you slaking your thirst?
Shall I forgive your eating when you hunger? Shall I forgive you for the feel
of warm sunlight on your face?"
Kahlan
wiped at her cheeks and then turned to him. "What are you talking
about?"
The
stem of a rose was stuck behind his belt. Richard lifted the rose and held it
out to her. "Your mother gave this to me." "My mother?"
Richard
nodded. "She asked if I found enjoyment in it, and when I told her that I
did, she asked if I would then return to you. It took a long time for me to
understand what she meant." "And what did she mean?"
"What
she meant is that we have the capacity to enjoy such things. Is it wrong for
you to find pleasure at the sight of a rose, in its fragrance, if I am not the
one who gave it to you? How can I forgive you that?' '
"Richard,
this is far different from finding pleasure in the fragrance of a rose."
He sank to one knee. He put a fist to his abdomen. "Kahlan. I was once
connected to a woman by my flesh, as you were connected to your mother. That is
the only connection of flesh we have in this life."
His
fist moved to his chest. ' It is here that we connect ever after that. We can
be connected only in our hearts. You did not give him your heart. That was mine
and mine alone.
"The
winds, the spirits, took their price from you. They left you with little, and
you chose to take what was left and to live. You chose to be human. You chose
to live life as best you could with what you had left of yourself. You fought
for life. You simply took pleasure to which you were entitled.
"I
do not own you. You are not my slave. There is nothing for me to forgive. You
did not betray me in your heart. It would be presumption of the worst order if
I came with an offer of forgiveness when you never betrayed me with your
heart." Kahlan could feel herself trembling as she drew a breath. "You
hurt me. Richard. I thought my heart was safe with you, always, no matter what,
and you walked away from me. You promised it was. You wouldn't even let me try
to explain." "I know," he whispered.
His
other knee touched the floor as he bent at her feet. His head bowed. "That
is why I have returned. I have come to beg your forgiveness. I am the one who
was wrong. I am the one who caused the true pain. I am the one who betrayed our
hearts, not you. It is the worst sin I could commit, and I alone am guilty of
it.
"I
am without defense. There can be no excuse. "I'm so sorry for what I've
done to you, Kahlan. I cannot undo the wrong I
have
done. I have wounded your heart, and for that, I throw myself before you, and
beg your forgiveness. I do not deserve it, and so cannot ask it; I can only beg
it."
The way
he knelt at her feet, she lowered over him. "Will you forgive me,
Richard?"
''There
is no room in my heart to hold anything for you but love, even though we cannot
be together. Though I am free of my oath, you are sworn to another, and I must
respect that, but I cannot help that I can love no other but you. If your heart
wishes it, then I forgive you.
"Please,
Kahlan, all I can have in this life, if you will grant it, is your
forgiveness." Mere moments before she had had doubts, been uncertain as to
her true feelings about him. Now, absolute conviction avalanched through her.
Kahlan
sank down to the floor before him. She put her hands to his shoulders and urged
him to look up at her.
"I
forgive you, Richard. With all my heart, I love you and I forgive you." He
smiled a sad smile. "Thank you."
She
could feel the miracle other heart mending, of joy flooding into the emptiness,
like life itself returning.
"At
the ceremony, when I was being married to Drefan, I said the words aloud that
they demanded, but in my mind, in my heart, I was saying the oath of marriage
to you."
Richard
wiped a tear from her chin. "I did the same." She squeezed his arms.
"Richard, what are we going to do now?" "There is nothing to do
now. You are sworn to Drefan." She touched her fingers to his face.
"But what about you? What about you and me?"
His
smile left. He shook his head. "It doesn't matter. I have what I needed-
what I came for. You have returned my heart."
"But,
how can we go on like this? Not only that, but we have to do something, and
fast. Drefan wants to withdraw the troops back to D'Hara and make a stand
against the Order there."
Anger
flashed in Richard's eyes. "No. You can't let him do that, Kahlan. If you
let Jagang divide the New World, he will take it one piece at a time, with
D'Hara the last to fall. You can't let Drefan do that. Promise me you
won't."
"I
don't need to promise. You are Lord Rahl. You can stop it, now. I am the Mother
Confessor. We'll do it together." "You must do it, Kahlan. I can't
help you."
"But
why not? You've returned. Everything will work out. We'll think of
something-find a way. You are the Seeker, you always find a way."
"I'm dying."
Ice
flashed through her. "What? What . . . do you mean, you're dying? Richard,
you can't die, not now. Not after . . . No, Richard, no, it's all right now.
You're back. Everything is going to be all right."
She saw
it then, the pain in his eyes, and realized, when he slumped to a hip, that he
was unable to stand.
"In
order for me to return, the spirits demanded a price." He coughed, wincing
in pain. She clutched at him. "What are you talking about? What
price?" "When I was there, at the Temple of the Winds, I gained all
the knowledge
there.
I understood my power. I could use it. I used it to stop the plague. I
somehow����� interrupted the flow of
power from the winds that made the book of magic work������� in this world."
"You
mean that you no longer know how to do it? You mean the plague will come back?"
He
lifted a hand to allay her fear. "No, the plague will not return. But as
the price of returning to this world, I was not allowed to keep the knowledge
of the winds. I had to come back as I was before." "But . . . you
mean that you are simply mortal, like before?" "No. They demanded
more. They demanded that if I was to return, I had to take the magic of the
stolen book into myself to keep it from the rest of the world of life."
"What?"
Kahlan breathed, wide-eyed. "You don't mean-" "I have the
plague."
She
gripped his shoulder with one hand, and felt his forehead with the other. He
was burning with fever. "Richard, why didn't you tell me before?"
He
smiled through the pain. "Forgiveness was all I needed, all I wanted, but
I had to know it was true, and not granted out of pity." "Richard,
you can't die. Not now. Dear spirits, you can't die!" "The dear
spirits had nothing to do with this. It was Darken Rahl who chose Drefan to be
your husband, as the price of the path into the winds, and Darken Rahl who demanded
this as the price of my return."
"Your
return. Don't tell me that you only came back to die? Oh, Richard, why would
you do such a foolish thing?"
"If
I had stayed at the Temple of the Winds, I would eventually have died, but
without your forgiveness. I chose, instead, to return and hope that a part of
you still loved me enough to forgive me, so I could die with that much at
least. With your love back. I couldn't go on, knowing what I had done to you,
knowing how I had hurt your heart."
"And
you don't think this hurts my heart! Richard, there has to be something we can
do. What can we do? Please, you must have known!"
Richard
fell onto his side, holding his stomach. "I'm sorry, Kahlan. There is
nothing. I am absorbing the magic from the book that was stolen. When I die,
the magic will die with me."
Kahlan
crouched over him, clutching at him, as the tears overwhelmed her.
"Richard, please don't do this. Please don't die."
"I'm
sorry, Kahlan. I can't stop it. I gladly paid the price. My heart is at peace,
now." He reached up and touched the Agiel hanging from the chain at her
throat. "There was never a moment's hesitation, once I understood. Denna
helped me to understand."
Kahlan
hugged him as he rolled onto his back. ' 'Richard, there must be something. You
would have known what to do, before they took the knowledge from you. Try to
remember. Please, Richard, try to remember."
His
eyelids drooped. "I need ... to rest. I'm sorry. I used all my strength. I
need to rest a bit. ''
Kahlan
gripped his hand in both others as she wept. It was all too overwhelming to
endure. To have him back, only to lose him was too crushing to endure. She
opened his limp hand, to press it to her cheek, and saw something in his
palm.
She pulled back his fingers, and through the tears, she saw writing in the palm
of his hand. It said, Find book, destroy it to live.
Kahlan
sprawled over his unconscious form and grabbed his other hand. It, too, had
writing in it. Pinch of white sorcerer's sand on third page. One grain of black
sorcerer's sand tossed on.
There
were three other words, but in her mind's state of chaotic disorder, she
couldn't think of how pronounce them.
He knew
he was going to forget, and before he did, he wrote a message to himself. He
had even forgotten that he had written it. The book. She had to have the book.
And then she was running, screaming as she went. "Cara, Berdine! Help me!
Cara! Berdine!"
Both
women dashed out of the sliph's room, out onto the walkway beside the inky
pool, when they heard Kahlan screaming their names as she raced into the tower
room.
Kahlan
grasped at their leather as she tried to explain. They each seized one of
Kahlan's arms and pressed her up against the wall. "Slow down,"
Berdine said.
"We
can't understand you," Cara said. "Get your breath. Stop crying and
get your breath."
"Richard-"
She tried to point but they held her arms. "Richard has the plague . . . I
need the book."
Berdine
leaned in close. "Lord Rahl . . . has the plague?" Kahlan nodded
frantically. "I have to get the book. The book that was stolen from the
Temple of the Winds. I have to get it or he will die." Kahlan tore her
arms away from them. "Please help me. Richard has the plague."
"What do you need us to do?" Cara asked. "I'm going to the Old
World. Protect him."
"The
Old World!" Berdine gasped. "Do you know where the book is? Did he
tell you where to find it? Did he give you any hint?" Kahlan shook her
head. There wasn't time. She had to hurry. She had to go. "I don't know
where it is! But it's the only chance he has. He took on the magic of the
plague in order to return to this world. In order to beg my forgiveness. He
wanted to tell me he was sorry for hurting me. If we don't destroy the book,
he'll die-just so he could say he was sorry. He'll die! I have to go!"
"But,
Mother Confessor," Berdine said, "the Old World is a big place. If
Richard has the plague . . . how can you hope to find the book?"
In
time. That was what she meant. How could she hope to find the book in time?
Before Richard died.
Kahlan
gripped a fistful of red leather. "I have to try! Protect Richard. Don't
let Drefan know that Richard is back. I don't know what Drefan would do. Don't
tell him!"
Cara
was shaking her head. "Don't worry about that. We won't tell Drefan. We'll
take care of Richard while you're gone. We'll hide him here in the Keep. But
hurry. If you can't find it, please come back before-"
Kahlan
rushed into the room with the sliph. She raced to the sliph's well. The sliph
smiled at seeing her. "Do you wish-"
"Travel!
I need to travel! Now!"���������������������������������������������� "To where do
you wish to travel?"���������������������������������������� "The Old World!"
"Where
in the Old World? There are a number of places I know there. We can go to any
you wish. I will take you. You will be pleased."
Kahlan
pressed her hands to her head, growling in frustration as the sliph started
naming places Kahlan had never heard of.
"The
place you came to with Richard, with your Master, when he went to get me! The
first time I traveled with you!" "I know the place of which you
speak."
Kahlan
hiked up her white dress and clambered up onto the wall of the well. "That
place! Take me there! Hurry! Your master's life is at stake!"
"Protect Richard," Kahlan called out to Cara and Berdine. "What
should we tell Drefan when he wants to know where you are?" Berdine asked.
"I
don't know. You'll have to think of something!"
"We
will care for Richard until you return," Cara said. "May the good
spirits be with you."
"Tell
him I love him. If . . . tell him I love him!" she called out as the
sliph's silver arm swept Kahlan from the top of the wall.
Her
voice was still echoing off the stone walls when Kahlan was plunged into the
quicksilver froth. She gasped in the sliph, praying to the good spirits that
they would help her find the book. With frantic effort, she swam into what in
the past had been the silver rapture. Now, there was only dark terror.
CHAPTER������������� 65
Ann
leaned toward him. "This is your fault, you know."
Zedd,
sitting on the floor in the center of the room with her, glanced over.
"You broke her prized mirror."
"That
was an accident," Ann insisted. "You are the one who ruined their
shrine."
"I
was simply trying to get it clean. How was I to know that it would catch fire?
They shouldn't have put all those dried flowers around it. You were the one who
spilled that berry wine on her best dress."
Ann
turned her nose up. "The pitcher was too full. You're the one who filled
it. Besides, you broke his prized knife handle. He won't ever be able to find a
buried wassen root like that one again. He was understandably upset."
Zedd
harrumphed. "What do I know about sharpening knives? I'm a wizard, not a
blacksmith."
"That
would explain the incident with the elder's horse." "They can't blame
that on me. I didn't leave the gate open. At least, I'm pretty sure I didn't
leave it open. Anyway, there is bound to be another horse that fast he can buy.
He can afford it. What I want to know is how you managed to turn his number
three wife's hair that color green."
Ann
folded her arms. "Well, it was an accident. I thought those herbs would
make her hair smell good. I wanted to surprise her. But the elder's prized
rabbit skin headdress-that was no accident; that was plain laziness. You should
have checked it sooner, instead of leaving it to dry unattended over the fire.
That headdress was a work of art, what with those thousands of beads. He won't
easily replace such a nice headdress."
Zedd
shrugged. "Well, we never told them that we were any good at domestic
tasks. We never told them that at all."
"Quite
right. We didn't. It's not our fault if we didn't work out. We could have told
them, if they'd asked." "We certainly could have."
Ann
cleared her throat into the silence. "What do you think they are going to
do with us?"
Both of
them were sitting back to back, bound together with a coarse rope, while the
meeting across the room dragged on. They still wore the wristbands that kept
them from using their magic.
Zedd
glanced across the room, where a heated discussion was being conducted. The
bareheaded elder, his number one wife, several influential members of the Si
Doak community who had claimed rights to use the services of the captives, and
the Si Doak shaman, were all complaining to one another about troubles they had
had.
Zedd couldn't understand all of the words, but he could understand enough to
follow the deliberations.
"They've
decided they want to cut their losses and rid themselves of their domestic
slaves," Zedd whispered to Ann.
"What's
happening?" Ann asked, when the chattering finally came to an end.
"What have they decided? Are they going to set us free?"
The
eyes across the room all turned to the captives. Zedd made a warning sound to
Ann.
"I
think maybe we should have been a little more attentive to our chores,"
Zedd whispered over his shoulder. "I think we're in a great deal of
trouble."
"Why,
what are they going to do," Ann mocked, "return us to the Nangtong
and demand their blankets back?' '
Zedd
shook his head as the Si Doak rose up. The shaman's necklaces jangled together.
The elder thumped his staff.
' 1
wish they would. They want to get back all their costs and something toward the
damages. They are going to take us on a journey.
"They
have just decided that they can get the best price for us by selling us to
cannibals."
Ann's
head swung around. "Cannibals?" "That's what they said.
Cannibals."
"Zedd,
you were able to take the collar off your neck. Can't you get these confounded
bracelets off our wrists? I think that now would be the time." "I'm
afraid we may end up in a cook pot with them still on us." Zedd watched an
angry elder and a seething shaman stalking toward them. "Well, it's been
fun, Ann. But I'm afraid the fun is over."
Verna
put an arm around Warren's waist, trying to help him as he stumbled along. as
she followed behind Clarissa, who was following behind Walsh and Bollesdun.
Janet hurried to the other side of Warren and lifted his arm, draping it over
her shoulder.
"Are
you sure?" Verna whispered to Walsh. "Here? Nathan wanted us to meet
him in the Hagen Woods?" "Yes," Walsh said over his shoulder.
"That was the name he told me, too," Clarissa added.
Verna
let out an annoyed breath. It was just like Nathan to make them go into the Hagen
Woods. Even if Richard had cleared the mriswith from this place, she still
didn't like it. Verna always suspected Nathan of being dangerously unbalanced,
and that he would want her to meet him here only confirmed it.
Trailers
of moss hung down, like gauzy rags of the dead. Roots tripped their feet as
they moved through the darkness. Unpleasant odors wafted in on the warm, humid
air. Verna had never been this deep into the Hagen Woods before-and for good
reason.
"How
are you doing, Warren?" she whispered. "Fine," he mumbled in a
groggy voice.
"It
won't be long. Warren. It won't be long, now. Just a little farther, and then
it will be over. Nathan will help you."
"Nathan,"
he mumbled under his breath. "Must warn him." They came upon a
massive stone block that was obviously worked by man; it
was
square. It was nearly covered with snaking tendrils and gnarled roots. More
stones, like white bones in the moonlight, jutted up from the thick vegetation.
She saw the low, jagged remains of a wall, and columns, looking like the ribs
of a monster.
Light
shone through the undergrowth. The way it flickered it appeared to be the light
of a campfire. Walsh and Bollesdun held aside the branches for the rest of
them. The fire was set in a circle of rocks placed on the stone floor of old
ruins. Beyond the fire Verna could see the round wall of a large well, or
something like a well. She had never known that this place was hidden in the
Hagen Woods, but as infrequently as anyone went into the Hagen Woods, that
wasn't surprising.
Nathan,
dressed like a rich nobleman, rose to greet them. He was tall, and
intimidating, especially without a Rada'Han around his neck. When he saw them
all, he grinned that confident Rahl grin. Walsh and Bollesdun laughed aloud,
and received good-natured slaps on the back.
Clarissa
ducked under an arm, throwing hers around Nathan's midsection. He grunted when
she squeezed with all her might and ardor. When she proudly held out the book,
he took it from her. He gave her a private smile, laden with meaning.
Clarissa's eyes sparkled. Verna's eyes rolled.
"Verna!"
Nathan called out when he saw her. "Glad you could make it."
"How good to see you. Lord Rahl."
"You
shouldn't scowl like that, Verna. You'll get wrinkles." He scanned the
others. "Janet, so you have joined us, too." His brow tightened a
bit. "And Amelia." He looked to the other woman, standing off to the
side. "And who have we here?"
Clarissa
held out an arm, wiggling her fingers, urging Manda forward. From underneath,
Manda's fists tightened the cloak at her throat. She timidly stepped forward.
"Nathan,
this is a friend of mine, Manda. From Renwold." Manda put a knee to the
ground as she bowed deeply. "Lord Rahl. My life is yours."
"Renwold."
Nathan's brow twitched again as he glanced briefly at Clarissa. "Yes,
well, glad you escaped from Jagang, Manda."
"I
owe it all to Clarissa," Manda said as she came to her feet. "She is
the bravest woman I've ever seen."
Clarissa
giggled as she pressed herself to Nathan. "Nonsense. I'm so thankful that
the good spirits put you where they did, or I'd never have even known you were
there."
Nathan
turned his attention back toward Verna. ' 'Who have we here? The young Warren,
I presume?"
Verna
did her best to smooth her own brow. "Nathan-" "Lord Rahl."
His grin cracked through the scowl. "But we are old friends, Verna. I am
still Nathan to you, and all my old friends." Verna dipped her head as she
bit the inside of her cheek. "Nathan," she began again, "you're
right; this is Warren. Can you help him? He's just coming into prophecy, just
starting to have them. I took his collar off a while back and there is nothing
to protect him from the gift. He's having the headaches. Nathan, he's in a bad
way. I'll follow you anywhere if you will help him." "Help him?"
"Please, Nathan. I'm begging you."
"Nothing
to it. Verna. I'd be delighted to help the boy." Nathan gestured.
"Bring him over here by the fire."
Warren
mumbled, trying to introduce himself, but he was nearly unconscious. Verna and
Janet helped him down where Nathan pointed, and balanced him upright.
Nathan
hiked up his trousers at his knees and lowered himself to the stone floor of
the missing building, sitting cross-legged. He set the book beside him. His
brow drew down in that Rahl frown as he studied Warren's face. He waved his
hand at Verna and Janet, ordering them away. With a web, Nathan held Warren
upright. He inched forward, until their knees touched.
"Warren,"
Nathan called in that deep, commanding voice of his. Warren's eyes opened.
"Hold up your hands."
Fingers
extended, both Warren and Nathan held up their hands. They pressed their
fingers together. Their eyes fixed on each other.
"Let
your Han flow into my fingertips," Nathan said in gentle prompting.
"Open the seventh gateway. Close the others. You know of what I
speak?" "Yes."
"That's
a good lad. Do it then. It will make it easier if I have your help." A
warm, mellow glow enveloped both men. The night air hummed with the power from
that light. It was neither flame nor heat. Verna didn't know what Nathan was
doing. She was somewhat astounded that Nathan did.
Nathan
had always been something of a enigma at the Palace of the Prophets. He had
seemed an old man to her even when Verna was a young girl. He had always been
regarded as, at the least, unbalanced, even by the most magnanimous of the
Sisters.
There
were those at the palace who didn't believe that Nathan had more than the
slightest hint of the gift in anything but prophecy. Others suspected, but were
never sure, that he was capable of much more than he ever showed them. There
were others who were so terrified of him that they feared going to the rooms
where he was confined, even though he had a Rada'Han around his neck. Verna had
always considered Nathan trouble on two feet.
Now,
she watched as this troublesome old lecher of a wizard did his best to save the
life of the man Verna loved. At times, the light glowed more strongly in one
man than the other, before passing away, and then coming back, as if it had
forgotten something and then returned for it.
Walsh
and Bollesdun loafed near the round stone wall behind Nathan, but the rest of
the party watched transfixed. Verna had no more idea what Nathan was doing than
did Manda.
What
unnerved Verna the most was when both men, their knees touching, their fingers
pressed together, floated a few inches off the ground. She was relieved when
they at last settled back down.
Nathan
clapped his hands together once. "There"' he announced. "That
should do it."
Verna
couldn't see how that could have possibly been enough to set the gift right in
Warren.
Warren,
though, wore a wide grin. "Nathan, that was-marvelous. The headache is
completely gone. I feel so clearheaded-so alive."
Nathan
picked up the inky book and stood. "I enjoyed it, too, my boy. Took that
gaggle of Sisters near to three hundred years to do for me what I have just
done
for you. But then they were a misguided lot." He glanced Verna's way.
''Sorry, Prelate. No slight intended."
"None
taken." Verna rushed to Warren's side. "Thank you, Nathan. I was so
worried for him. You have no idea what a relief this is."
Warren's
face was losing the joyous look. "Nathan, now that you have done this for
me, I can see more clearly that ... we have inadvertently given Jagang insight
into prophecy that-"
Nathan
cried out. Clarissa cried out. Verna froze. She could feel something sharp
pressed to her back.
Amelia
had a dacra stabbed in the back of Nathan's thigh. Manda had a knife at
Clarissa's throat. Janet was holding a weapon at Verna's back. Warren stiffened
when Janet held a warning finger to him and then to the two soldiers.
"Don't
you move a muscle, Nathan," Amelia said, "or I let flow my Han, and
you are instantly dead."
"Warren
is right," Janet said. "He did, in fact, give His Excellency some
very valuable information."
"Amelia,
Janet!" Verna cried out. "What are you doing?" Amelia turned a
wicked smile on Verna. "His Excellency's bidding, of course."
"But you swore the oath."
"We
swore the oath in word only, not in our hearts." "But you can be free
of him! You don't need to serve Jagang!" "Had you told us true the
first time, maybe, but once we tried, and failed to hold the bond when Richard
died. His Excellency punished us. We'll not take the chance again."
"Don't
do this," Verna pleaded. "We're friends. I came to save you. Don't do
this, please. Swear the bond, and you will be free!"
"Oh,
darlin. I'm afraid she can't do that." It was not Amelia's voice alone,
but more. It was the voice Verna had heard in her own head: Jagang. She felt
herself suddenly trembling, just at hearing his tone and inflection in Amelia's
voice.
"Now,
my loyal and faithful plenipotentiary, hand over the book. Sister Amelia and I
have more use of it."
Nathan
held it out to the side. With her other hand, the one not on the dacra in his
leg, Amelia snatched back the book. "Well," Nathan said, "are
you going to kill me, or not?" "Oh, yes, I intend to kill you,"
Amelia said in Jagang's voice. "You betrayed our bargain. Lord Rahl.
Besides, I don't like having subordinates who won't allow me into their minds.
"Before
you die, I thought I'd let you watch how a real slave obeys orders. I thought
you'd like to watch me cut your little darlin Clarissa's throat."
Breathe.
Kahlan
expelled the sliph from her lungs, and with frantic need, sucked in the alien
air. Night crashed in around her. She refused to spare the time to fear the
sudden vision, the sudden sound, to give it time to settle into place in her
mind, and instead seized the stone wall to hoist herself out.
A
frightening sight-to match the words she had already heard-greeted her. With
her vision enhanced by the sliph, she took in the whole scene at once, in one
slamming jolt.
The
instant she saw him. Kahlan knew this was Nathan. He looked like a Rahl,����� and Richard had told her about
Nathan-tall. older, with long white hair to his����� shoulders. A woman had stabbed a dacra into his leg, and was
holding it there.������� Kahlan had
heard her name: Amelia-the one who had started the plague. Kahlan saw Verna,
with a woman at her back. A young man stood frozen. Kahlan saw a beautiful
young woman holding another woman by a fistful of hair done in ringlets- it
could only be Clarissa. The woman's other fist held a knife at the terrified
Clarissa's throat.
As
Kahlan had emerged from the sliph, she was conscious of the last part of the
conversation that had just taken place, and knew well the voice coming from the
woman holding the dacra in Nathan's leg. Kahlan knew well the word
"darlin." She remembered hearing that voice from the wizard, Marlin,
who had come to assassinate Richard. It was Jagang's voice.
The
image of the amulet Richard wore came unbidden into Kahlan's mind. It means
only one thing, and everything: cut. Once committed to fight, cut. Everything
else is secondary'. Cut.
Her
training at the hands of her warrior father had been much the same. Kill or be
killed. Never yield. Never wait. Attack.
Richard
was near death-near his last breath. She had no time to spare, no time to
consider. She was committed. Cut.
In one
fluid movement, she erupted from the sliph, dived out of the well, yanked a
short sword free of the scabbard on the soldier standing right there, ducked
her head, tumbled forward, and came up with the sword already whipping down.
In the
span of a heartbeat, before anyone had time to flinch, Kahlan was there. She
had to stop Amelia before she released her magic into the dacra in Nathan's
leg, or he would be dead. Like lightning, her sword descended, severing Sister
Amelia's arm at the crook of her elbow.
And
then, everything moved in a painfully slow dance. Kahlan could see the
expression on every face. The woman Kahlan had just cut. Sister Amelia, was
falling back with a cry. Already, Kahlan's sword was whirling, to reverse her
handhold, as she followed her quarry down. Verna was spinning, a dacra in her
own hand, toward a surprised woman behind her. The young man was diving toward
the woman with the knife. Nathan's hands were coming up toward Clarissa. His
scream cut through the night.
Clarissa
was reaching toward Nathan. The young woman holding her by the hair snarled
with a vicious sneer, and savagely cut through Clarissa's throat.
Kahlan
saw the spray of blood for only an instant before the night exploded with
lightning from both Nathan and the young man.
Her
left hand now joined with her right, Kahlan slammed her sword down through
Sister Amelia's heart, pinning her to the ground before the second soldier had
his sword clear of his scabbard.
Verna's
dacra expeditiously dispatched the woman behind her at the same time as the
young woman with the knife took two bolts of lightning, shattering her in a red
horror as Clarissa's body still collapsed toward the ground. The violence was
over before comprehension could catch up with it. In a daze, Nathan staggered
toward Clarissa's body. Kahlan rushed past him and knelt beside Clarissa. The
sight that greeted her brought a gasp.
Kahlan
sprang up and put her hands against Nathan, stopping him. "It's too late,
Nathan. She's with the spirits, now. Don't look. Please don't look. I saw in
her
eyes
the love she had for you. Please don't look at her like this. Remember her the
way she was."
Nathan
nodded. "She had a good heart. She saved so many people. She had a good
heart."
Nathan
lifted his arms. He held his palms out toward Clarissa's body. Intense light
flared forth, flooding the dead woman with a brilliant blaze so radiant that
the body couldn't be seen at its center.
"From
the light of this fire, and into the Light. Safe journey to the spirit
world," Nathan whispered. When the light was gone, only ash remained.
Nathan slumped. "The vultures can have the rest of them." Verna
tucked her dacra back up her sleeve. One soldier retrieved his sword from
Amelia's body as the other sheathed his.
The
young man looked in shock. "Nathan, I'm so sorry. I gave Jagang the
meaning of prophecy that helped him. I didn't want to, but he made me. I'm so
sorry."
Nathan's
doleful, azure eyes turned toward the young man. "I understand. Warren.
You didn't do it out of malice; the dream walker was in your mind and you had
no choice. You are free of him now." Nathan yanked the dacra from his leg.
He turned to Verna. "You brought traitors to me, Verna. You brought
assassins to me. But I realize you had not intended it. Sometimes prophecy
overwhelms our attempts to outwit it, and catches us unaware. Sometimes we
think we are more clever than we are, and that we can stay the hand of fate, if
we wish it hard enough."
Verna
straightened her cloak on her shoulders. "I thought I was saving them from
Jagang. I never had any idea that they would give the oath to you without
committing their hearts." "I understand," Nathan whispered.
"I
don't know what goes through that head of yours, Nathan. Lord Rahl
indeed." Verna glanced to where Clarissa's body had been, and where now
there was only white ash. "And I see that you haven't changed your ways,
Nathan. Once again, you've gotten another of your little whores killed."
The
impact of Nathan's fist lifted Verna clear off the ground. Her jawbone
shattered with a loud crack. Strings of blood sailed out into the night air.
Warren cried out as Verna landed flat on her back. She didn't move.
Warren,
crouched at Verna's side, looked up with frantic eyes. "Nathan' Dear
Creator, why would you do this? You've broken her jaw. Why would you try to
kill her?"
Nathan
flexed his fist. "If I was trying to kill her, she would be dead. If you
want her to live, then I would suggest you heal her. I've heard that you are
talented at healing, and with what I have done for you tonight, you should be
able to accomplish it in short order. Put some sense in her head, while you're
at it."
Warren
bent over Verna, pressing his hands to the unconscious woman's face. Kahlan
said nothing. She had seen love in Nathan's eyes when he had looked at
Clarissa. She had just seen rage, too.
Nathan
bent and retrieved the inky black book lying on the ground beside Sister
Amelia's body. He straightened and turned those Rahl eyes on Kahlan. He held
out the book.
"You
could be none other than Kahlan. I have been expecting you. Prophecy,
you
know. I'm glad I was not late. You don't have much time. Give this to Lord
Rahl. I hope he knows how to destroy it."
"He
knew when he was at the Temple of the Winds, but he said he had to give up his
knowledge to leave. But he wrote a message in the palms of his hands. It says,
'Pinch of white sorcerer's sand on third page. One grain of black sorcerer's
sand tossed on.' And then there were three words, but I don't know what they
mean."
Nathan
laid a big hand on her shoulder. "The words are the three chimes:
Reechani, Sentrosi, Vasi. I don't have time to teach you about the three
chimes, but know that they must be spoken after the white and before the black.
That's what is important."
"Reechani,
Sentrosi, Vasi," Kahlan repeated, trying to commit the words to memory.
She said them over again in her head.
"Richard
does have both white and black sorcerer's sand, does he not?" Kahlan
nodded. "Yes. He told me about it. He has both." Nathan shook his
head, as if considering some private thought. "Both," he muttered.
Nathan squeezed her shoulder. "I know from prophecy some of what he has
been through. Stand by him. Love is too precious a gift to lose."
Kahlan
smiled. "I understand. May the good spirits bring it to your heart,
Nathan. I can't thank you enough for helping Richard, for helping me." Her
voice broke. '1 didn't know what I was going to do. I only knew I had to come
here."
Nathan
hugged her, she thought more for his own need than hers. "You did the
right thing. Maybe the good spirits guided you. Get back to him, now, or we
will lose our Lord Rahl." Kahlan nodded. "The killing is over."
"The killing is just about to begin."
Nathan
turned and held both fists skyward. An awesome flare of light ignited at his
fists and shot into the night sky. Kahlan watched as it streaked northwest, so
bright that the stars vanished in the glare.
Kahlan
saw Verna sitting up, with Warren's help. He was wiping the blood away from her
newly healed jaw. "What have you done?" Kahlan asked Nathan.
He
looked down at her a long moment, and then a sly smile spread on his lips.
"I have just given Jagang a nasty surprise. I have just given General
Reibisch the signal to attack." "Attack? Attack who?"
"Jagang's
expeditionary force. They destroyed Renwold. They are up to other trouble in
the New World, too, but are unaware of who shadows them. It will be a short
battle. The prophecy says that the D'Harans will fight as fiercely as they have
ever fought, and will, before this night is over, destroy the enemy in the
traditional D'Haran fashion: without mercy."
Verna
was coming to her feet. Kahlan had never seen Verna looking so meek.
"Nathan, I beg your forgiveness." "I'm not interested-"
Kahlan
laid a hand on Nathan's arm and whispered up at him. "Nathan, please, for
your own sake, listen to her."
Nathan
gazed into Kahlan's eyes a moment before he turned his glare on Verna.
"I'm listening." "Nathan, I've known you a long time. My whole
life. I've seen things before
that .
. . perhaps I didn't understand. I thought you were doing this to seize
power����� for yourself. Please forgive
me for lashing out at you for my own guilt at my friends��� turning against me-against us. I sometimes
. . . jump to judgment. I can see that���������
I have mistaken what was truly going on with you and Clarissa. She
adored you, and I thought-I beg you to forgive me, Nathan."
Nathan
let out a grunt. "Knowing you, Verna, that must have been the hardest
thing you have ever had to say. Forgiveness granted." "Thank you,
Nathan," she sighed.
Nathan
bent and kissed Kahlan's cheek. "May the good spirits be with you, Mother
Confessor. Tell Richard I give him back his title. Maybe I will see him again
someday."
With
his hands on her waist, he boosted Kahlan up onto the sliph's wall. "Thank
you, Nathan. I can see why Richard liked you. Clarissa, too. I think she saw
the real Nathan."
Nathan
smiled, but then turned serious. "When you get back, you must offer
Richard's brother what he truly wants, if you are to save Richard."
"You wish to travel?" the sliph asked. Kahlan's stomach roiled.
"Yes, back to Aydindril." "Is Richard truly alive?" Verna
asked.
"Yes,"
Kahlan said with revived panic. "He's sick, but he will be fine once I get
this book back to him and it's destroyed."
"Walsh,
Bollesdun." Nathan gestured as he started away. "My coach awaits.
Let's be off."
"But,
Nathan," Warren said, "I want to learn about prophecy. I would like
to study with you."
"A
true prophet is born. Warren, not made."
"Where
are you going?" Verna called after him. "You can't leave. You're a
prophet. You can't be left to run . . . I mean, we must know where you will be-
in case we need you."
Without
looking back, Nathan pointed. "Your Sisters are that way. Prelate. To the
northwest. Go to them, and save yourself the trouble of trying to follow me.
You won't succeed. Your Sisters are safe from the dream walker; I had them
transfer their bond to me while Richard went to the world of the dead. If
Richard lives, you all can transfer it back to him. Good-bye, Verna.
Warren."
Kahlan
pressed a fist to her stomach. If he lives? If? "Hurry," she said to
the sliph. "Hurry!" A silver arm swept her from the wall and down
into the quicksilver froth.
CHAPTER�������� ����66
He
smiled at the way she struggled. He liked the way she had fought him. He
enjoyed teaching her how useless it was to fight a person of his superior
strength, superior intellect. He watched in fascination as blood ran from her
mouth and nose. The gash on her jaw oozed.
"You
are only succeeding at making your wrists bleed," he taunted. "You
can't break the ropes, but keep at it, if you wish."
She
spat at him. He smacked her again. He dug his thumb across the cut on her jaw,
spellbound by the pattern of blood flooding down the side of her neck.
He knew
her auras. He'd felt them before. He knew just which ones to touch to cripple
her. It hadn't taken long to overpower her. Not long at all.
Her
teeth gritted as she growled with effort, straining against the ropes. She was
strong, but she was not strong enough. Without her power and her weapon, she
was a mere woman. No mere woman was a match for him. Not in any way.
When
his fingers began unbuttoning the row of buttons along the side of her ribs,
she tugged violently at the ropes holding her wrists and ankles. He liked that.
He like to watch her struggle. To watch her bleed. He punched her face again.
He was
intrigued that she didn't cry out, that she didn't beg for mercy. That she
didn't scream. She would. Oh, how she would scream.
His
punch had stunned her for the moment. Her eyes rolled as she fought to remain
conscious. He threw back the front of her outfit, exposing her breasts and the
upper half of her torso.
He
hooked his fingers under the tight waist of her red leather pants and, with a
quick pull, yanked them down enough for what he was going to do to her.
Her
entire belly was exposed. He felt it. Tight. Hard. There were scars on her.
They riveted him. He tried to imagine what had caused such scars. As jagged and
white as they were, it would have been bloody.
"I've
been raped before," she sneered. "More times than I can remember. I
can tell you from experience that you're not very good at it. You haven't even
gotten my pants down enough, you stupid pig. Get on with it, if you even can.
I'm waiting."
"Oh,
Cara, I'm not going to rape you. That would be wrong. I have never raped a
woman. I only have women who want it." She laughed at him. Laughed.
"You are one twisted bastard." He resisted his urge to smash her
face. He wanted her awake for this. Alive for this. But he shook with rage.
"Bastard?"
His fist tightened. "Because of women like you!" He hammered a fist
down on her breast. Her eyes squeezed shut and her teeth clenched as she winced
in pain, trying to curl up in a ball, but unable to, stretched out in the ropes
as she was.
He took
a settling breath, regaining his control. He wouldn't let her divert him����� with her filthy mouth,�����������������������������������������������������
������������
"Now.
I'm going to give you one last chance. Where is Richard? The soldiers����� are going wild with talk of Richard
being back, of the bond being back. Where are you whores hiding him?"
The
voices from the ether had told him, too. that Richard was back. The voices had
told him that if he wished to assume his rightful place, he must eliminate
Richard.
"And
where is my loving wife? Where has she gone to?" The voices told him that
she was in the sliph, but the sliph wouldn't tell him where she had gone.
Cara
spat at him again. "I am Mord-Sith. You are too stupid to even imagine
what has been done to me before. You couldn't fill the boots of the meekest
trainer of Mord-Sith. Your puny torture will pry nothing from me."
"Oh. Cara, you have never encountered one of my talents." "Do
what you want with me, Drefan, but Lord Rahl-the real Lord Rahl-is going to cut
you up into little pieces."
"And
just how would he be able to do that?" He lifted the hilt of the Sword of
Truth clear of its scabbard, so she could see the gold lettering that spelled
out the word TRUTH. "I'm the one who is going to be doing the cutting into
little pieces. Little tiny Richard pieces. Where is he!"
When
she spat at him again, he couldn't resist fisting her across her cut and
swollen lip. The blood gushed anew.
He
turned and retrieved one of the items he had brought: an iron pot. He put it on
her belly, upside down.
"I'm
too big to cook in that pot, you stupid pig. You will have to cut me up. Do I
have to explain everything to you?"
He
liked the way she tried to antagonize him, to make him lose his temper. She
wanted him to kill her. He would, but she would talk, first.
"Cook
you? Oh, no, Cara. You have the wrong idea. The wrong idea entirely. You think
me some maniacal murderer. No murderer, 1. I am the hand of justice. I am the
hand of mercy. Come to bring eternal virtue to those who have none. "This
pot isn't to cook you. "It's to cook the rats."
He was
watching. He saw the way her blue eyes flicked toward him. He had been waiting
for just that reaction.
"Rats.
I hope you aren't stupid enough to think that I am afraid of rats just because
I'm a woman. I'm no woman like you have ever seen before. I used to keep rats
as pets."
"Really?
You lie so poorly. My dear, loving, passionate wife explained to me how afraid
you are of rats."
She
didn't answer. She was afraid of showing her fear. But he could see it in her
eyes.
"I
have a sack of rats, here. Nice, fat rats." "Just get on with this
rape. I'm growing bored."
"I
told you, I don't rape women. They want it from me. They ask for it. They beg
for it." He tugged down his ruffled cuffs. "No, Cara. I have
something else in mind for you. I want you to tell me where I can find my
loving brother."
She
turned her face away. "Never. Get on with the torture before I fall asleep
and miss it."
"You
see? As I told you, women always ask me for it." He pressed the iron pot
to her belly and wound a chain around her middle, to hold down the pot. He
forced a finger under the rim, checking, to make sure that it was tight enough.
He then
loosened the rough knot in the chain, so he could get the rats under the pot.
Cara showed no reaction when he shoved the first under the pot.
Holding
the second by the scruff of its neck, he held it before her face, letting her
see it squirm and squeak. "See, Cara? As I promised you. Rats. Big
rats."
Sweat
beaded on her forehead. "I kind of like it. It feels fuzzy against my
stomach. I may fall asleep."
He
stuffed the second, and then a third under the pot. There was room for no more.
He took the slack from the chain, and tightened the knot of links.
"Fuzzy,"
he mocked. "I think they will keep you wide awake, Cara. Wide awake, and
eager to talk, eager to betray Richard. Whores have no honor. You will betray
him."
"Berdine
is going to be here soon. She will skin you alive." He lifted an eyebrow.
"You relieved Berdine. I saw you. After she left, I took you down. She
won't be back for quite a while, but when she does come back, she will get the
same as you."
With
tongs, he retrieved a big, glowing coal from the pan over the mass of candles.
He plunked the red-hot coal down inside the rim of the footed bottom of the
iron pot.
"You
see, Cara, the coals are going to heat this iron pot-get it very hot." He
looked at her eyes. "The rats aren't going to like that. They are going to
want out."
Her
breathing quickened. Sweat rolled down her face. Where were her brave words
now? She was silent, now.
''And
how do you suppose the rats are going to get out, Cara? Once they start to get
hot? Once the iron pot starts burning them? Singeing their tender noses?"
"Just cut my throat and kill me, you bastard."
"When
the rats get hot enough under there, they'll panic. They'll be frantic to get
out. Guess how they'll get out, Cara." She had no haughty answer to fill
the silence.
He
pulled his knife and with the handle, tapped the iron pot. "How are you
doing in there, my little rat friends?"
Cara
flinched. He smiled when her eyes turned to him, watching him. He could see fear
in those eyes. Real fear. He plunked down a half dozen more glowing coals on
the iron pot. "Where is Richard?"
She had
nothing to say. He piled on more coals, into a nice, round hump. That was all
the pot's bottom would hold.
He bent
over and looked into her eyes. Her skin was as white as chalk. Sweat glistened
on her face, on her breasts. "Where are you whores hiding Richard?"
"You
are crazy, Drefan. I don't like this, but if this is how I am to die, then I
will die. But I will never betray Lord Rahl."
"I
am Lord Rahl! When I get rid of my brother, there will be no one to challenge
my rule! I am the son of Darken Rahl, and the rightful master of D'Hara."
She
turned her face away. He saw her swallow. Her feet were trembling. Her����
smooth
breathing was interrupted now and again, caught up short.����������������������� He chuckled.
"I'll ask again, when the rats start gnawing their way through you,���������
to get
away from their hot, iron prison. When their sharp little claws start digging
into
your belly. When the rats start tunneling into your guts, trying to get
out." Cara's whole body jerked. It jerked again. Her eyes widened as she
stared up at
the
ceiling, trying to keep the moan from escaping her throat. He glanced back and
saw a
drop of blood run from under the rim of the bowl, down her side. "Well,
looks like they already want out. Ready to talk, yet?" She spat at him,
and then gasped sharply. Her wide blue eyes fixed on the ceiling.
She was
trembling all over now. Her whole body stiffed. Every muscle strained. She
started to pant. Tears filled
the
corners of her eyes, to run down the side of her face. She was feeling every
little thing the rats did-every frantic bite, every desperate�������
digging,
ripping of their claws.
Cara
let out a short little cry. Sharp, shrill, clipped. It was rapture. He knew it
was only the beginning. Even if she talked, he had
no
intention of stopping this. He longed to hear screams. Real, from the gut
screams. Cara obliged him, and let out her first.
Because
of his singular perception, another detail caught his attention. His vigilance
had again rewarded him. Smiling, he turned to the sliph's well.
Breathe.
Kahlan
expelled the sliph, but she knew something was wrong even before she sucked a
breath of air.
A
piercing scream echoed around the stone room. Kahlan thought the shriek would
make her ears bleed.
As she
erupted from the sliph, before she could brace herself to react, big, strong
hands reached down and seized her. She struggled to get her bearings, to make
sense of what was happening as the sudden light and sound whirled in around
her.
The
hands tore the book from her grasp. An arm clamped around her neck, its big
fist gripping her arm. She felt rope being wound around her wrist.
A nightmare
came to life in her vision as she was dragged from the well, kicking and
twisting and trying to get away. She went limp when a fist in her gut drove the
wind from her lungs. Her knees smacked the stone floor. Her arms felt as if
they were being wrenched from her shoulder sockets as they were twisted behind
her back.
She
fought to reach her Confessor's power-only to remember when she couldn't touch
it that the spirits had walled it from her so she could be married to Drefan.
She was defenseless. It was Drefan attacking her.
Cara
was there, on the floor, her wrists bound above her head, the rope fastened to
a pin in the wall. Her ankles, likewise secured with rope. were stretched
toward the opposite wall. She had an iron pot chained over her middle. The
smell of hot coals and burning flesh assailed Kahlan's nostrils, gagging her.
Drefan
pressed his knee to her arm as he knotted rope around her wrists. Kahlan tried
to bite his leg. He backhanded her across the face so hard that her vision
narrowed to a tiny spot. She fought to keep that vision, to stay conscious. She
knew that she was lost if she passed out.
Her
arms bound behind her, unable to break her fall, she smacked into the stone
floor face-first. Drefan pounced on her back, sitting on her, holding her down,
as he bound her legs together. Kahlan struggled to pull a breath against the
weight of him. Blood gushed from her nose. The rope around her wrists was so
tight that already her fingers were tingling.
Cara
screamed. It was the loudest scream Kahlan had ever heard. It sent icy needles
stabbing into her head. It made her face hurt.
Blood
was running from under the rim of the iron pot. Cara shook and thrashed. She
stiffened and screamed again.
Drefan
lifted Kahlan's head by her hair. "Where's Richard?" "Richard?
Richard is dead."
Kahlan
grunted at a punch in her kidney. She couldn't get her breath. Drefan turned
his attention to Cara.
"Ready
to talk yet? Where did you hide Richard?"
Cara's
only answer was another shuddering scream. When it ended, she panted in pain.
"Why
did you tell him?" Cara wept. "Why did you tell him about . . . the
rats? Dear spirits, why did you tell him about the rats?" Terror locked
Kahlan's breath in her lungs.
Blood,
vivid red against white skin, ran in rivulets from under the pot's rim, and
down Cara's side. Smoke curled up from the hot coals atop it. And then Kahlan
saw the bloody claw wriggling from under the rim of the pot on Cara's stomach.
Kahlan suddenly understood. It took all her force of will to keep from
vomiting. Cara cried hysterically, thrashing at the bloody ropes holding her.
Kahlan furiously squirmed forward, going for the chain, to try to undo it with
her teeth-to try to get the iron pot off Cara. Drefan lifted Kahlan by her
hair. "Your turn will come, wife."
He
heaved her back. Kahlan smacked into the wall and slid down onto something hard
and sharp. The pain brought stinging tears to her eyes. It was Nadine's bag,
full of all those horn containers. She lurched and wrenched herself until she
was able to slip to the side, off the bag, and get her breath back.
Drefan
turned his Darken Rahl eyes on her. "If you tell me where Richard is, I'll
let Cara go."
"Don't
tell him!" Cara screamed. "Don't tell him!"
"I
couldn't if I wanted to," Kahlan called out to Cara. "I don't know
where you hid him."
Drefan
picked up the book Kahlan had brought. "What's this?" Kahlan's gaze
locked on the sinister black book. She had to have that book, or Richard would
die.
"Well,
no matter, you won't be needing it anymore."
"No!"
Kahlan screamed when she saw what Drefan was going to do with the book.
"Please!"
He
looked back at her as he held the book out over the sliph's well. "Tell me
where Richard is." He smiled, lifting an eyebrow. "No?"
He
dropped the book down the well. Kahlan's heart sank with the book. The sliph,
who liked to watch the people in the room, was nowhere to be seen now. She
probably had been frightened away by the screams.
"Drefan,
let Cara go. Please. You have me. Do what you want to with me, but please let
her go."
Drefan
smiled as wicked a smile as Kahlan had ever seen. It was a twin to Darken
Rahl's smile. "Oh, don't you worry, I intend to do what I want with you.
When it is time."
He
turned back to Cara. "How are the rats doing. Cara? Ready to talk
yet?" Cara cursed him through clenched teeth.
Drefan
reached into a sack and brought out a rat, holding it by the scruff of its
neck. He shook it in her face as she tried to turn away. He lowered it against
her. Squeaking and twisting, its claws scratched and dug as it tried to get
away from Drefan's grip, leaving red streaks along Cara's cheeks, chin, and
lips. "Please," Cara wailed. "Please, get them away!"
"Where's Richard?"
"Dear
spirits, help me. Please help me. Please help me," she mumbled over and
over. "Where's Richard?"
Cara's
body jerked violently. "Mama!" She shrieked. "Help me! Mama! Get
them off! Mamaaaaa!'"
Cara
was alone in a cage with rats, in the grip of terror and pain. She was a
helpless child again, begging for the comfort and protection of her mother,
wailing for her mother.
Kahlan
gasped in tears. This was her fault. She had told Drefan that Cara was afraid
of rats. "Cara, forgive me! I didn't know!"
Cara
thrashed at her ropes, a little girl, frantically begging for her mother to get
the rats away.
Kahlan
strained to pull a hand free. If she could only get a hand free of the ropes.
But they were so tight. She tugged and pulled. Her fingers tingled. The coarse
rope cut into her wrists.
Kahlan
pressed her wrists against Nadine's bag, searching for something sharp to cut
the ropes. The bag was cloth, the handle smooth wood.
The
bag. Kahlan bent to the side, her fingers feeling for the button that held the
bag closed. She found it. She struggled to undo the button, but her fingers
were numb and at the angle that her arms were twisted, she couldn't make her
fingers work properly. She dug at the button with her thumbnail, trying to hook
it to the side, trying to rip it off. It was sewn on with heavy thread to stand
up to the rigors of use and weight. At last, the button popped through its
hole.
Kahlan
scooped at the contents in the bag, trying to sling them out where she could
see them. Every shrill wail from Cara made Kahlan flinch. Every time Cara cried
for her mother to save her from the rats, Kahlan had to hold back a sob of her
own.
When
she glanced up, she saw Drefan wiping a rat across Cara's face. He had broken
the back of another and draped it across her throat. Kahlan gritted her teeth
and fingered the horn containers out of the bag.
Cara
was her sister of the Agiel. Kahlan had to do something. Cara's only hope was
Kahlan. She twisted her neck, trying to see the markings on the horns. She
couldn't find the one she wanted.
She
used her fingers, groping at the symbols scratched into the horn. She felt one
that she thought was the right one, and her hopes soared, only to be dashed
when she felt that there were three circles. She flicked each horn out of the
way when she determined that it was not the one she needed.
She
rooted in the bag and found another. Her fingers blindly felt the scratches.
They went in a circle. She slipped her fingers along the horn and found another
circle. She felt a heavily scratched straight line between them.
Kahlan
held the horn in her fingertips and twisted, trying to see if she was right.
Cara screamed and Kahlan dropped the horn. She scooted to the side so she could
see it on the floor.
It had
two circles scratched into the patina of the horn. A horizontal line ran
through both circles. It was the right one: canin pepper.
Nadine
had warned her about taking off the wooden stopper, warned her about getting it
in your face, your eyes. It would immobilize a person for a time, Nadine had
said. Make them helpless, for a time.
Kahlan
worked the horn back into her fingers. She wiggled the wooden stopper, trying
to loosen it. It was cut to fit tightly, to keep the dangerous substance from
leaking out.
Kahlan's
fingers were so numb they had no strength. She gritted her teeth as she tried
to work the stopper loose. She didn't want it off, yet, but she had to know she
could get it off.
With
her hands behind her back, she couldn't throw it. She frantically tried to
think of what she was going to do. She had to do something. If she didn't, Cara
would soon be dead. And then Drefan would start in on his loving wife. Cara
wailed in agony.
"Please,
mama, get the rats away from Cari. Please, mama, please. Help me, please help
me."
The
pleading cries of hopeless terror ripped at Kahlan's heart. She could wait no
longer. She would just have to figure out what to do when the time came. She
had to act. "Drefan!"
His
head twisted around. "Are you ready to tell me where Richard is?"
Kahlan remembered something Nathan had told her. You must offer Richard's brother
what he truly wants, if you are to save Richard. Maybe it would save Cara.
"Richard? What would I want with Richard? You know that it's you I
want." He smiled a knowing, satisfied smile. "Soon, my dear. In a
little while. You can wait." He turned back to Cara.
"No,
Drefan! I can't wait. I need you now. I want you now. I can't resist any
longer. I can't pretend any longer. I need you." "I said-"
"Just
like your mother." He froze at her words. "I need you like your whore
of a mother needed your father."
His
expression darkened. Like a provoked bull, he turned toward her, his piercing
eyes riveted on her. "What do you mean?"
"You
know exactly what I mean. I need to be taken, like your father took your
mother. I want you to take me like that. Only you can satisfy me. Do it. Do it
now. Please."
He rose
up, huge and imposing. His muscles rippled and knotted. His brow drew down in
that grim Rahl glare.
"I
knew it," he breathed. "I knew it. I knew you would finally give in
to your filthy perversion." He hesitated, looking back at Cara.
"Yes.
You're right. You're always right, Drefan. You're smarter than me. You were
right all along. I can't fool you any longer. Give me what I want. Give me what
I need. Please, Drefan, I'm begging you. I need you." The look on his face
was frightening. It was madness. If she could have shrunk
back
into the stone, she would have.
Drefan
slipped free the knife at his belt as his tongue wet his lips. He started
toward her.
She had
had no idea just how effective her words had been. In sudden panic, Kahlan
wiggled the wooden stopper. Drefan's whole face, the whole way he carried his
body, changed. He was a seething monster coming at her. His eyes narrowed with
bestial loathing, savage hatred. Hatred for her.
Kahlan
swallowed back the sudden terror welling up in her throat. Dear spirits, what
had she just done? She scuffed her feet against the stone floor, trying to back
away. She was already against the wall. How was she going to get the powder in
his face? Dear spirits, what do I do?
Kahlan
wiggled the stopper with all her might. It popped off. Drefan went to a knee
beside her.
"Tell
me how much you want me to please you." "Yes! I want you. Now. Give
me the pleasure only you can give me." He brought the knife up as he leaned
toward her.
Kahlan
heaved herself toward him, twisting, rolling to the side as hard as she could,
flinging the horn full of powder at his face as she rolled onto hers.
She
couldn't see, facedown on the stone. She didn't know if she had missed, if the oily
powder had come out, if she had the horn turned the right way, if he was close
enough. She held her breath, bracing for the thrust of his knife, imagining it
coming, knowing it was coming. She could almost feel the sharp edge slicing
her. She struggled against the panic of not knowing just where he was going to
cut her.
Drefan
staggered back. She turned her face and saw him fall on his back, writhing,
gasping for breath.
Kahlan
flipped herself over and started scooting toward Cara. She tried to move around
Drefan, but she didn't have much room to maneuver. His groping hand caught her
ankles. She kicked, trying to pull away from his grip.
His
fingers tightened around her ankles. His powerful arm dragged her toward him.
He gasped for air, his other hand flailing about, trying to feel what was
around him. He was blind.
Kahlan
saw yellow powder on his cheek and neck. She hadn't gotten it in his eyes as
she had hoped. She hadn't gotten it directly in his mouth, or nose. Just the
side of his face. Most had missed. She didn't know how long that would stop
him, but she didn't think for long. Dear spirits, let it be enough.
The
horn was on the other side of him. She couldn't get to it. With all her
strength, when he tugged on her leg, she used his pull to add momentum and
kicked as hard as she could at his face. She caught his ear, tearing it partly
away from his head. He bellowed and released her ankle.
Desperately,
Kahlan pushed with her feet, to get away from his grasping fingers. She made it
out of his reach. She bumped into Cara. Kahlan sat up and scooted back toward
the woman.
"Hold
on, Cara. Please hold on. I'm here. I'm going to get them off you. I swear I'll
get them off you."
"Please,
mama," Cara wailed, "It hurts so much . . . It hurts. It hurts."
Kahlan pulled her feet under herself so she could raise up enough. She craned
her neck, looking over her shoulder, trying to see what she was doing. She
seized the chain. It burned her fingers, making her recoil. She made herself
grab the chain again. She tugged on the iron knot, shaking, twisting, pulling.
Through
burning fingers, she felt a link slip and the chain loosen. She stole a quick
glance. Drefan was still struggling to breathe, but he had straightened his
legs. He put his arms at his sides. What was he doing?
Kahlan
felt a link pull past resistance. She wiggled the chain to loosen the knot, to
give it more room to come undone. Another link slipped free. The chain loosened
further. She tugged at it, refusing to let go, even though the hot iron was
burning her fingers.
Drefan's
breathing was evening out. He was laying perfectly still. What was he doing?
Kahlan
cried out with joy when the chain rattled off the side of the pot. With her
back to Cara, Kahlan hooked her fingers under the rim of the scalding pot and
heaved it up and back, flipping it off Cara.
Bloody
rats tumbled to the floor, squirming and wriggling, trying to get their feet as
they scurried away.
Kahlan
was near tears with joy. "I got them off, Cara. I got them off you."
Cara's head lolled from side to side. Her eyes rolled. She mumbled
incoherently. When she looked over her shoulder and saw Cara's stomach, Kahlan
had to look away, or be sick.
She
scooted up toward Cara's hands. With frenzied effort, Kahlan dug at the knot of
rope, but the knots were pulled impossibly tight from Cara's thrashing. Kahlan
couldn't budge them. She wasn't going to be able to untie them. She would have
to cut them.
Drefan's
knife lay on the floor, near him. He was lying there, perfectly still. She had
to hurry. She had to get the knife and cut Cara's ropes. She had to cut her
own. Before he recovered.
Kahlan
dug in her heels and scooted toward the knife. She turned around, feeling for
it with her fingers.
Drefan
rose up and seized her. Holding her around the middle, he lifted her as if she
weighed nothing. He brought the knife around in front of her face.
"Nasty
stuff, powdered canin pepper. Lucky for me I know how to use my auras to
overcome it. Now, my whore of a wife, it's time you paid the price for your
perversion."
CHAPTER
67
Richard
staggered toward the sliph's room. From a room not far away, where Cara and
Berdine had put him, he had heard the screams. He had no idea how long he had
been insensate, no idea how long it had been since they had taken him there,
but the screams had brought him awake. Someone needed help. And the last
scream, he knew-Kahlan. His head pounded in violent pain. He hurt everywhere.
He hadn't thought he would be able to stand, but he did. He hadn't thought he would
be able walk, but he did. He had to.
He was
barefooted, and without a shirt. He had on only his pants. He knew that the
lower Keep was cool, but he was covered in a sheen of sweat, hardly able to
breathe through the heat he felt. He used all his willpower to force himself to
move.
He
straightened, put a hand to the side of the door into the sliph's room, and
walked in.
Drefan
looked up. He had his arm around Kahlan's middle. He had a knife in his other
hand. To the side, Cara was lying on the floor, tied in ropes. Her middle was
ripped open. She was still alive, but shivering in agony. Richard couldn't make
sense of it.
"What
in the name of all that's good is going on, Drefan?" "Richard,"
he sneered. "Just the man I'm looking for." "Well, now I'm here.
Let Kahlan go." "Oh, I will, dear brother. Soon. It is you I
need." "Why?"
Drefan's
eyebrows lifted. "So that I can be reinstated as Lord Rahl. It's my
rightful place. The voices told me. My father told me. I am to be Lord Rahl. I
was born to it."
The
plague was a far distant drone in Richard's mind and body, yet this all seemed
a dream, too. "Drop the knife, Drefan, and give up. It's over. Let Kahlan
go"
Drefan
laughed. He threw his head back and roared with laughter. When it died out,
Drefan's eyes narrowed with frightening resolve.
"She
wants me. She begs for it. You know the truth of that, my dear brother. You saw
what she is. She is a whore. She is just like all the others. Just like Nadine.
Just like my mother. She must die, like all the rest."
Richard
looked into Kahlan's eyes. What was going on? Dear spirits, how was he going to
get her away from Drefan?
"You're
wrong, Drefan. Your mother loved you: she took you to a place where you would
be safe from Darken Rahl. She loved you. Please, let Kahlan go. I'm begging
you."
"She
is mine! My wife! I will do with her what I will!" Drefan slammed the
knife into Kahlan's lower back. Richard flinched at hearing it hit bone. Kahlan
grunted with the impact, her eyes going wide in shock. Drefan released her. She
dropped to her knees and crumpled to her side.
Richard
tried with all his might to make sense of this. He couldn't decide if this was
real, or a dream. He had been having so many dreams, so many nightmares. This
seemed like all the rest, but different. He didn't even know if he was alive
anymore. The whole room swam before him.
Drefan
drew the Sword of Truth. The ring of steel that Richard knew so well echoed
around the stone room, a chime that seemed to awaken him into a nightmare.
Richard could see the rage from the sword, the magic, take Drefan's eyes.
"I'm
all right, Richard," Kahlan panted as she stared up at him. "You
don't have a weapon. Get out of here. Get away. I love you. Please, for me.
Run."
The
rage in Drefan's eyes was nothing to match the rage thundering into Richard's
heart.
"Drop
the sword, Drefan, now. Or I will kill you." Drefan swept the sword
around. "How? With your bare hands?" Richard vividly remembered what
Zedd had told him when first giving him the Sword of Truth: the sword was only
a tool; the Seeker was the weapon. A true Seeker didn't need the sword.
Richard
started forward. "And with hate in my heart."
"I
will enjoy killing you, at last, Richard. Even if you don't have a
weapon." "I am the weapon."
Richard
was running. The distance between them shrank at an alarming rate. Kahlan
screamed for him to get away. He hardly heard her. Richard was committed.
Drefan lifted the sword overhead, pulling a breath in preparation to cleave
Richard. That was the opening. Richard knew that a thrust was faster than a
cut. He was in the iron grip of deadly determination. Richard was lost in the
dance with death. Drefan bellowed in rage as the sword started down.
Richard
dropped to his left knee, through the opening, using his forward momentum and a
twist of his torso to add force to his strike. Fingers straight and stiff, he
drove his arm ahead with all his might.
Before
the sword could touch him, Richard struck like lightning, driving his hand
through Drefan's soft middle. In the blink of an eye, he had seized Drefan's
spinal column and yanked it back out, ripping it apart.
Drefan
pitched backward, crashing against the sliph's well, slumping down in a
spreading, crimson flood.
Richard
bent to Kahlan, cupping her face with his left hand. He didn't want to touch
her with Drefan's blood. She was panting in pain. From the corner of his eye,
Richard could see Drefan's arm move.
"I
can't feel my legs. Richard, I can't feel my legs. Dear spirits, what did he do
to me?" Her voice quivered with panic. "I can't make them move."
Richard
was already lost in need. He had forgotten how to use his power as the price of
returning from the Temple of the Winds, but he had used it before. He had
healed before. He was a wizard.
He
ignored his dizzy head, his sick stomach; he couldn't allow that to stop him.
From Nathan, Richard had learned that his power was called through need, if
the
need was great enough, or through anger, if the anger was great enough. He������� had never had more need than he had at
that moment, nor more anger.������������������
"Richard. Oh, Richard, I love you. I want you to know. if we. if
we..."��������������
"Hush," he said in a gentle voice. Her face was cut and
bloody. It made him��������
ache to
see her pain, her panic. "I will heal you. Lie still, and I will make you
whole again."
"Oh,
Richard, I had the book. I lost it. Oh. Richard, I'm so sorry. I had it. I had
it, but it's gone."
With a
sinking feeling, he grasped what she was saying: lie was going to die. There
was nothing to be done. now. He was lost. "Richard, please, heal
Cara."
"No.
I don't think I have enough strength to heal both of you." To heal, he had
to take the pain from the one injured. Killing Drefan had taken nearly all the
strength he had. "I must heal you."
Kahlan
shook her head. "Please. Richard, if you love me, do as I ask. Heal Cara.
It's my fault-what he did to her. My fault." A tear ran down her cheek.
"I lost the book. I can't save you. Heal Cara." She stifled a cry.
"We will be together soon, for all time, then."
He
understood. They were both to die. They would be together in the spirit world.
She didn't want to live without him.
Richard
kissed her brow. "Hold on. Don't give up. Please. Kahlan, I love you.
Don't give up."
Richard
turned to Cara. He already felt so sick that the sight didn't affect him the
way it normally would have. Her suffering, though, bent him with pain for her.
He laid his hands across Cara's bloody, torn middle. "Cara, I'm here. Hold
on. For me, hold on, so I can help you." She didn't seem to hear his words
as she mumbled, her head lolling from side to side.
Richard
closed his eyes and opened his heart, his need, his soul. He released himself
into the current of empathy. He wanted nothing but to make Cara whole again.
She had given her all for them. He didn't know if he had strength enough, but
he gave all of himself over to it.
He
descended into the swirl of her agony. He felt everything she felt, suffered
with her. He gritted his teeth, held his breath, and pulled her pain into
himself. onward, ever onward, without sparing anything to protect himself.
He
shook with the suffering, and his mind wailed with it. He absorbed it into
himself, and then asked for more. He asked for all of it. He demanded it.
The
world was liquid, twisting, coursing pain. He was swept away in a molten river
of it. Its fiery heat consumed his being. Time lost all meaning. There was only
the pain.
When he
felt it all gathered into himself, he let flow his empathy, his power: healing
strength: healing heart.
He
didn't know how to direct it, he just let it flow into her. It felt as if his
whole self drained away into her need. She was baked, barren earth, soaking in
life-giving rain.
When at
last he opened his eyes and lifted his head. his arms were lying across the
smooth skin of her midriff. She was whole again. Though she seemed still
unaware of it, she was whole.
Richard
turned. Kahlan was lying on her side, her breath coming in short, sharp pants.
Her face was ashen and covered with sweat and blood, her eyes half closed.
"Richard,"
she whispered when he bent to her, "free my hands. I want to be hugging
you, when . . ."
When
she died. That was what she was going to say.
Richard
snatched up a knife lying nearby, and sliced through the ropes. The anger was
back, but only as a distant glow now. He could hardly see the room anymore.
Hardly hear her. Hardly see her.
Her
wrists finally free, she threw an arm over his neck and drew him to her.
Richard struggled to keep from falling on her. "Richard, Richard,
Richard," she whispered. "I love you." Richard went to embrace
her, and saw the pool of blood spreading under her. His rage ignited anew. His
need ignited anew. He took her up in his arms, begging the spirits to spare
her. "Please give me the strength to heal this loved one," he
whispered in choking tears. "I have done everything required of me. I have
sacrificed everything. Please, losing this loved one should not be part of it.
I'm dying. Give me the time. Help me."
It was
all he wanted, all he needed, as he held her to him. He wanted her to live, to
be well, to be whole.
Holding
her in his arms, he once again released himself into the torrent. He pulled the
pain onward, heedless of it, welcoming it, drawing it with all his might. At
the same time, he let flow his love, his warmth, his compassion. Kahlan gasped.
Richard
could see that his arms were glowing, as if a spirit were sharing his body with
him. Perhaps, he was already a spirit, but he didn't care. He cared only that
he would heal her, and cared not at what cost. He would pay any price.
Kahlan
gasped with the feel of it, the feel of the power surging into her. Her legs
began to tingle. It was the first time she had felt anything in them since
Drefan had stabbed her.
Richard
seemed to glow around her as he hugged her in his arms, held her in his warm,
loving embrace.
The
rapture of the sliph, by comparison, was torture. This was beyond anything she
had ever felt in her life. She could feel his warm, healing magic coursing through
every fiber of her.
It was
like being born anew. Life and vitality welled up in her. Tears of bliss
flooded from her eyes as she hung in Richard's arms, his magic completely
overwhelming her.
When at
last he parted from her, she moved without pain. Her legs moved. She felt
whole. She was healed.
Richard
wiped the blood from her lips as he gazed into her eyes. Kneeling on the floor
together, Kahlan kissed him, tasting their salty tears. She parted, gripping
his arms, looking into his eyes, seeing him as if in a new light. She had just
shared something with him that was beyond words, beyond comprehension.
Kahlan
stood, holding out her hand to help him up. Richard lifted his hand toward
hers.
And
then he toppled over onto his face.�������������� ���������������������������������) "Richard!" She dropped
down, rolling him over onto his back. He was hardly����������� * breathing. "'Richard. Please, Richard, don't
leave me. Please don't leave me!"�������������� .'
She
clutched at his shoulders. He was burning with fever. His eyes were closed. He
struggled for each shallow breath.
"Oh,
Richard, I'm so sorry. I lost the book. Please, Richard, I love you. Don't die
and leave me alone."
"Here,"
came a voice that echoed around the room.
Kahlan's
head came up. The voice seemed unreal. She couldn't understand it. Then
realization hit her.
Kahlan
spun around and saw the quicksilver face of the sliph looking down at her. A
liquid silver arm held out the black book. "Master needs this," the
sliph said. "Take it." Kahlan snatched the book. "Thank you!
Thank you, sliph!" Kahlan dropped down to get the sorcerer's sand that
Richard carried in the leather packs, but he wasn't wearing his big over-belt.
She
rushed to Cara, still tied in the ropes. Cara's head rolled from side to side
as she mumbled, as if she didn't know that Richard had healed her. She was
still lost in a prison of her own private terror.
Zedd
had told Kahlan that the gift couldn't heal maladies of the mind. "Cara!
Cara, where were you keeping Richard? Where are his things?" Cara didn't
respond. Kahlan snatched the knife off the floor and sliced through the ropes.
Cara just lay there.
Kahlan
pressed her hands to Cara's face, making the woman look at her. "Cara,
it's all right, now. The rats are gone. They're gone. You're safe. Richard
healed you. You're all right."
"Rats,"
Cara mumbled. "Get them off me. Please. Please . . ." Kahlan hugged
her. "Cara, they're gone. I'm your sister of the Agiel. I need you.
Please, Cara, come back to me. Please." Cara only mumbled.
"Cara,"
Kahlan wept, "Richard will die if you don't help me. There are thousands
of rooms in the Keep. I need to know where you kept him. Please, Cara, Richard
helped you. Now he needs your help-or he will die. There's no time. Richard needs
you."
Cara's
eyes focused, as if she were coming awake. "Richard?" Kahlan wiped
the tears from her face. "Yes, Richard. Hurry, Cara. I need the belt
Richard wears. I need it or he will die."
Cara
brought her hands down, rubbing her wrists, now smooth where they had been cut
before. She felt her stomach. Even the old scars were gone. "I am
healed," she whispered. "Lord Rahl healed me." "Yes! Cara,
please, Richard is dying. I have the book, but I need the things he keeps in his
belt."
Cara
abruptly sat up, pulling the red leather across her chest. She buttoned two of
the buttons to hold it closed.
"His
belt. Yes. You stay with Lord Rahl. I will get it." "Hurry!"
Cara
stood, swaying for a moment as she steadied herself, and then she dashed from
the room. Kahlan hugged the inky black book to herself. She bent over Richard.
He was
hardly breathing. She knew that any one of those breaths could be his last. He
had given them, Cara and Kahlan, the rest of his strength.
"Dear
spirits, help him. Give him just a little more time. Please. He has suffered so
much. Please just give him a little time, until I can destroy this vile
book."
Kahlan
bent over him and kissed his lips. "Hold on, Richard. Hold on for me,
please. If you can hear me, we have the book. I know how to destroy it. Please,
just hold on."
Kahlan
knelt down on a clear spot closer to the door and laid open the book to the
third page so she would be ready when Cara returned.
She
gazed into a vision of a wasteland. There was sand, blown into dunes,
stretching into the distance of the phantasm emanating from the book. Kahlan
stared into that barren place, and saw runes on the sand-lines drawn in
geometric patterns.
Her
sight was drawn into the pattern of lines that swirled and twisted around. There,
in the runes, was light. It flared forth, every color, shining out toward her,
calling to her.
"Mother
Confessor!" Cara yelled, shaking Kahlan's shoulders. "Didn't you hear
me? I have Lord Rahl's belt."
Kahlan
blinked, shaking her head, trying to clear her mind. She snatched the belt and
undid the bone holder on the flap of the pack where Richard kept the sorcerer's
sand. Inside, she found the leather pouch of white sand.
With
Cara standing behind her, touching her shoulder, Kahlan cast a pinch of the
white sand into the book.
The
color boiled and twisted, tumbled and turned. Kahlan pulled her eyes away and
stabbed her hand back into the pack, pulling out the other leather pouch, the
one with the black sorcerer's sand. With two fingers, she carefully pulled the
top open. Inside, she could see the inky black sand.
Troubled,
Kahlan paused. There was something else, something tickling at the back of her
mind.
The
words. Nathan said to say the words, the three chimes, before using the black
sand. Three words. What were they?
She
couldn't remember them. Her mind raced after them, but they kept going around
dark corners, and when she turned, they were gone again. Her thoughts mired in
staggering fright. She ached in desperate thought, but the words wouldn't come
to her.
Richard
had them written in the palm of his hand. Kahlan turned, to go to read them
from his palm, and froze.
Drefan,
leaning up against the well of the sliph where he had fallen, somehow still
hanging to a thread of life, was holding up the sword. Richard was lying right
there, on the floor, within reach. Drefan was going to kill him.
"No!" Kahlan screamed.
But the
sword was already sweeping down. Faint, maniacal laughter drifted on the air.
Kahlan
threw her fist up, calling the blue lightning to protect Richard. It didn't
come. She was blocked from her power.
Cara
was already diving toward Drefan, but she was too far away. She wasn't going to
make it. The sword was halfway there.
A
silver arm swept down and seized Drefan's arm, holding it tight. Kahlan held
her breath. Another liquid silver arm enveloped Drefan's head.
"Breathe," the sliph cooed,
a voice
promising the sating of bestial lust, a voice promising rapture. "/ wish
you��� to please me. Breathe. ''����������������������� �����������������������������������������Drefan's chest rose as he
inhaled the sliph.�������������������������������������������� He went still, holding
the sliph in his lungs. The sliph freed him, and he slumped to the side. His
breath left him, releasing the sliph he had inhaled. It drained from his mouth
and nose, not silver, but red.
Kahlan
felt something inside her part, a profound unraveling, and all at once, she
joined with her power, a sweet reclaiming that brought a gasp of euphoric,
inner union.
Drefan
was dead. As long as they both live. Those were the words. Her oath was ended.
The winds had returned her power. Kahlan was brought out of her daze when she
heard Richard gasp for a breath. With renewed panic, she scrambled across the
floor and scooped up his right hand, where Richard had written the message. She
pried open his fingers.
The
words were gone. The act of stopping Drefan, and his blood, had scoured away
the writing.
Kahlan
screamed in frustrated rage. She scrambled back to the open book. She couldn't
remember the words. Her mind ached with frustration; she couldn't make the
words come. What was she going to do?
Maybe
if she just threw in the grain of black sand anyway. No, she knew better than
to disregard what a wizard like Nathan said to do. She squeezed her head
between the heels of her hands, as if trying to press the words out. Cara knelt
down, grasping her by her shoulders.
"Mother
Confessor, what's wrong? You must hurry. Lord Rahl is hardly breathing.
Hurry!"
Tears
ran down her face. ' I can't remember the words. Oh, Cara, I can't remember
them. Nathan told me, but I can't remember them."
Kahlan
clambered back across the floor to Richard. She smoothed a hand down his face.
"Richard,
please, wake up. I need to know the words. Please, Richard, what are the words?
The three words?"
He
struggled to draw a breath, gasping with the effort. He wasn't going to wake.
He wasn't going to live.
Kahlan
rushed back to the book. She snatched up the leather pouch of black sand. She
would have to do it without the words. Maybe it would work. It would work. It
had to work.
She
couldn't make her hands move. She knew better. It wouldn't work unless she said
the words. She knew it wouldn't. She had grown up around wizards and magic; she
knew better than to disregard what Nathan had told her. Without the words, it
wouldn't work.
She
fell forward with a wail, beating her fists against the stone floor. "I
can't remember the words! I can't!"
Cara
put an arm around Kahlan, making her sit up, holding her in a gentle embrace.
"Calm down. Take a breath. Good. Let it go. Take another. Now, picture in
your mind this man Nathan. Picture him telling you the words, and how happy you
were that you could save Richard's life." Kahlan tried. She tried so hard
she wanted to scream.
"I
can't remember them," she wept. "Richard's going to die because I
can't remember three stupid words. I can't remember the three chimes."
'The
three chimes?" Cara asked. "You mean, Reechani, Sentrosi, Vasi? Those
three chimes?"
Kahlan
stared in disbelief. "That's them. The three chimes. Reechani, Sentrosi,
Vasi.
"Reechani?
Sentrosi! Vasi! I remember! Thank you, Cara, I remember!" Kahlan pulled
out a grain of black sorcerer's sand between her thumb and finger.
"Reechani, Sentrosi, Vasi." she said again, for good measure. She
tossed the grain of black sand into the book. She and Cara both held their
breath.
A hum
slowly built in the room. The air seemed to dance and vibrate. Light of every
color flared forth, twisting and tumbling, pulsing and throbbing. It grew with
the hum, until Kahlan had to turn her eyes away.
Rays of
light swept across the stone walls. Cara put a hand up before her face. Kahlan
did the same, so bright was the light that just turning away was not enough.
And then
darkness began gathering, like the inky black of a night stone, or of the
book's cover itself, pulling the light and color back into the book. It drew
all the light from the room, until all fell into darkness.
In that
depth of sightless obscurity, there came such terrible moans that Kahlan was
thankful she couldn't see their source. The wails of souls filled the room,
scattering about in a blind, mad frenzy, swirling through the air, lost,
frantic, wild.
The
sound of distant laughter that Kahlan knew all too well died into a wail that
stretched into eternity.
When
the light of the candles returned, the book was gone, only a stain of ash to
show where it had been.
Kahlan
and Cara rushed to Richard. He opened his eyes. He still didn't look well, but
he looked more alert. His breathing was stronger, and even. "What
happened?" He asked. "I can breathe. My head isn't pounding."
"The Mother Confessor saved you," Cara announced. "As I have
told you so often, women are stronger than men."
"Cara,"
Kahlan whispered, "how did you know the three chimes?" Cara shrugged.
"The Legate Rishi knew the words, with the message from the winds. When
you said 'the three chimes,' they just came to me, through his magic, as the
other messages from the winds came to me."
Kahlan
pressed her forehead to Cara's shoulder in relief, in wordless gratitude. With
equally silent empathy, Cara stroked Kahlan's back.
Richard
blinked and scrunched his eyes, as if clearing his head. When he sat up, Kahlan
leaned to hug him, but Cara held her back.
"Please,
Mother Confessor, may I be first? I fear that once you start, I may never again
get a chance."
Kahlan
grinned. "You're right about that. Take all you want." As Cara threw
her arms around Richard and squeezed for all she was worth, whispering private,
heartfelt words in his ear, Kahlan stood and faced the sliph.
"I
can't thank you enough, sliph. You saved Richard. You are a friend, and I will
honor you as long as I live."
The
silver face warped into a satisfied smile. She looked down at Drefan's body.
"He had no magic, but he was using his talent to stop the flow of blood so
that he might live long enough to kill master. It is death to breathe me if you
have no
magic.
I am pleased I could take him on a journey, a journey to the world of the��������� dead."����������������������������������������������������������������������������
Richard
stood on wobbly legs and slipped an arm around Kahlan's waist. "Sliph, you
have my gratitude, too. I don't know what it is I could ever do for you, but if
it is within my power, it's yours for the asking."
The
sliph smiled. "Thank you, master. I would be pleased to have you travel
with me. You will be pleased."
Even
though he was unsteady on his feet, Richard's eyes had the sparkle back.
"Yes, we would like to travel. I need to rest for a time first, to finish
recovering and get my strength back, and then we will travel, I promise
you."
Kahlan
took up Cara's hand. "Are you all right? I mean, are you really all right
... everything?"
Cara
nodded with a haunted look in her eyes. "I still have the ghosts of the
past with me, but I am all right. Thank you, sister, for helping me. It is not
often that a Mord-Sith can depend on anyone else for help, but with Richard as
Lord Rahl, and you as Mother Confessor, all things seem possible."
Cara
glanced to Richard. "When you healed the Mother Confessor, you seemed to
glow, as if a spirit was with you." "I believe the good spirits
helped me. I do indeed." "I recognized the spirit. It was
Raina."
Richard
nodded. "It felt like Raina. When I was in the spirit world, Denna told me
that Raina was at peace, and knows that we love her." "I think we
should tell this to Berdine," Cara said.
Richard
slipped his other arm around Cara's waist, and started them all toward the
door. "I think we should, too."
CHAPTER������������� 68
Several
days later, when Richard was almost fully recovered, Tristan Bashkar's uncle,
King Jorin Bashkar, the king of Jara, rode into Aydindril at the head of his
company of king's lancers. On the point of each of the hundred lances was a
head.
Kahlan
watched from a window as the lances, under the watchful eye of D'Haran
soldiers, were deployed in an arrow-straight double row along the entrance to
the Confessors' Palace. Flags of state flew from poles held by the first
opposing pair of Jarian soldiers. Jorin Bashkar, with his star guide Javas
Kedar behind him, waited until the lancers were lined up perfectly, their armor
gleaming in the sun, before he strode regally, between the row of heads, toward
the entrance.
As she
peered out the window, Kahlan touched Cara's arm. "Go get Richard. Have
him meet me in the council chambers."
Cara
was out the door and on her way before Kahlan could turn to be on her way, too.
Kahlan
Amnell, Mother Confessor, sitting in the first chair under the figures of Magda
Searus, the first Mother Confessor, and her wizard, Merritt, painted across the
expanse of the dome above the council chambers, waited for her wizard.
Her
heart lifted when she saw him sweep into the room, golden cloak billowing out
behind, dressed in the gold-trimmed black outfit of a war wizard, the gold and
ruby amulet on his chest gleaming in the streamers of sunlight through which he
strode, his silver wristbands burnished and bright. The Sword of Truth at his
hip caught the light, sending out a starburst of sunlight to glitter across the
polished marble.
"Good
morning, my queen!" he called out, his voice echoing around the huge room.
"How do you fare this, your last day of freedom?"
Kahlan
rarely laughed in the council chambers. It had always seemed improper. She
laughed, now, the lilting sound echoing around the cavernous room, bringing a
smile to the guards.
"I
fare well. Lord Rahl," she said as he ascended the dais. Cara and Berdine
followed in his shadow, along with Ulic and Egan, taking up places to either
side.
"What's
going on?" he asked, more seriously. "I heard that some king just
rode in with a hundred heads on pikes."
"The
king of Jara. Remember? You sent him Tristan's head, demanding his
surrender?"
"Oh,
that king." Richard slid down into a chair beside her. "Whose heads
arc they?"
"I
guess we're about to find out."
The
guards pulled open the double doors. Light stabbed in through the doorway,
silhouetting the two figures as they approached.
Once
before the dais, the king spread his violet cape, trimmed in spotted white�������� fox, and went to one knee in a deep
bow. Behind him, the star guide went to both��������� knees, in his bow.����������������������������������������� ����������������������������"Rise, my
children," Kahlan said in formal response to the bow. "Mother
Confessor," King Jorin said, "how good to see you again." His
trim figure, his graying hair meticulously cut so that it swept back as if he
were facing the wind. his elegant scabbard and sword, his ribbons, his sash,
his red and blue and gold-embroidered coat, and his jeweled pins, made him look
one of the most grand of kings. Kahlan had always thought.
"And
you. King Jorin." Kahlan lifted an introductory hand. "This is Lord
Rahl, Master of the D'Haran empire, and my husband to be." The king lifted
an eyebrow. "As I have heard it told. My congratulations." Richard
leaned forward. "I sent you a message. What is your reply?" Kahlan
thought that she had a lot of work to do, teaching Richard proper diplomatic
decorum.
The
king let out a belly laugh. "It will be a pleasure being part of an empire
led by a man who doesn't gibber jabber me to death." He lifted a thumb,
indicating the star guide behind him. "Like some people." "And
does that mean that you surrender?" Richard pressed. "It does indeed.
Lord Rahl, Mother Confessor.
"A
large delegation from the Imperial Order came to Sandilar and invited us to
join the Imperial Order. We had been waiting for a sign, as requested by Javas
Kedar, here. Tristan thought to take matters into his own hands, and try to
strike a favorable deal with the Order.
"When
the plague came, we thought it showed the power of the Order, and we feared
that, I must admit, but when you swept the plague from the land, that was sign
enough for me. Javas, here, will no doubt soon find the appropriate sign in the
sky to confirm my decision. If not, there are other star guides."
A
red-faced Javas Kedar bowed. "As I told you. Your Highness, as your star
guide, I will be able to confirm your decision without difficulty." The
king scowled over his shoulder. "Good!" "And the heads?"
Richard asked.
' 'The
delegation from the Imperial Order. I brought you their heads to show you my
sincerity. I wanted you to see that this is a choice I make with conviction. I
thought it a fitting answer to the likes of people who would cast a plague into
the land, to kill indiscriminately. It shows their true nature, putting the lie
to all the things they say."
Richard
bowed his head to the king. "Thank you, King Jorin." "Who
ordered the beheading of my nephew, Tristan?"
"I
did," Richard said. "As I stood on a balcony watching, with the
Mother Confessor at my side, Tristan entered the Mother Confessor's bedroom and
stabbed a nightdress stuffed with tow that we had placed there. He thought he
was killing her."
The
king shrugged. "Justice befits all, no matter his station. I bear no
grudge. Tristan did not serve our people well, either. I look forward to the
day we can be rid of the threat from the Order."
"As
do we," Richard said. "With your help, we are that much closer to
that day." As the king went to see to the signing of papers, and to
discuss logistics with
the
D'Haran command, Richard and Kahlan rose to leave, but were interrupted by a
guard. "What is it?" Kahlan asked. ''There are three men asking to
see Lord Rahl." 'Three men? Who are they?"
"They
did not give their names. Mother Confessor, but they said they were
Raug'Moss."
Richard
sat back down. "Send them in."
Under
the desk, Kahlan reached over and curled her fingers around his hand, giving
him a reassuring squeeze as three figures in flaxen cloaks, with broad hoods
pulled up onto their heads, and with their hands folded before them, glided up
to the dais.
"I
am Lord Rahl," Richard said.
"Yes,"
the one in front said, "we feel the bond." He lifted a hand out to
his side. "This is Brother Kerloff, and this is Brother Houck." He
pushed his hood back to reveal a heavily creased face and a head of thinning gray
hair. "I am Marsden Taboor."
Richard
warily eyed the three men. "Welcome to Aydindril. I hear you wanted to see
me. What is it I can do for you?" "We are searching for Drefan
Rahl," Marsden Taboor said. Richard rubbed his thumb along the edge of the
desk as he watched the three men. "I'm sorry, but your High Priest is
dead." The two in back shared a look.
Marsden
Taboor's expression darkened. "High Priest? I am the High Priest of the
Raug'Moss, and have been since before Drefan was born." Richard frowned.
"Drefan told us he was the High Priest." Marsden Taboor stroked his
temple as he searched for words. "Lord Rahl, I'm afraid that your brother
was . . . given to delusion. If he told you that he was the High Priest of the
Raug'Moss, then he was deceiving you for reasons I fear to imagine.
"He
was left with us by his mother, when he was a young boy. We raised him, knowing
what his father would do should he come to discover a son without the gift.
Drefan could be-dangerous. Once we realized this, we kept him confined, within
our community, to prevent him from hurting anyone.
"He
was talented at healing, and we always hoped that he would come to be at peace
with himself. We hoped that through healing he could find a way to prove his
worth, in his own right.
"A
while back, he vanished. Several of our healers were found dead. They had been
killed in a most unpleasant fashion: torture. We have been searching for Drefan
since. We have been lo several places where he had been, and found women who
had been murdered in a similar way.
"Drefan
had an unsavory attitude toward women. His father, too, was not inclined to be
kind toward women. Though he escaped his father in body, I think he failed to
escape him in spirit.
"I
pray he has not caused harm to anyone here." Richard was silent for a time
before he spoke.
"We
had a plague. A terrible plague. Thousands died. Without regard for himself.
Drefan, upholding the noble ideals of the Raug'Moss, worked to help those
stricken. He shared his knowledge, and in that way may have prevented yet more
from dying.
"My
brother, in his own way, helped stop the plague, and in so doing, he
died."���� Marsden Taboor folded
his hands before him again as he studied Richard's eyes.����� "Is this the way you wish it
remembered?" �����������������������������������������"He was my brother.
Partly because of his being here, I learned the power of
forgiveness."
Kahlan
squeezed Richard's hand under the table.
"Thank
you for seeing me. Lord Rahl." Marsden Taboor bowed. "In your light
we thrive." "Thank you," Richard whispered.
The
three healers started away. but Marsden Taboor turned back. "I knew your
father. You do not take after him. Drefan did. Not many will mourn the passing
of your father, or your brother.
"I
can see in your eyes. Lord Rahl, a healer, a true healer, besides a warrior. A
wizard, as a healer, must be in balance, or he is lost. D'Hara is well served,
at long���������� last. Call on us if
you have need."
Ulic
let out a sigh when the doors closed. "Lord Rahl, there are other
representatives also wishing to see you." "If you are well
enough," Cara added.
"Someone
always wants to see us." Richard stood and held out his hand to Kahlan.
"General Kerson can see them. Don't we have something more important to
do?"
"Are
you sure you are well enough?" Kahlan asked. "I've never felt better.
You haven't had a change of mind, have you?" Kahlan smiled as she took his
hand and stood. "Never. If Lord Rahl is fully recovered, what are we
waiting for? My things are ready." "About time," Berdine
muttered.
As they
waited for Richard to return, Kahlan put a reassuring hand on Cara's back.
"She wouldn't lie to us, Cara. If the sliph says you can travel, you can
travel."
The
sliph had tested Cara, Berdine, Ulic, and Egan, all of them thinking that, as
guards, they should go along to protect Richard and Kahlan.
Only
Cara had passed the sliph's test. Richard guessed that it was because Cara had
linked with the Andolian leader, Legate Rishi, and he must have an element of
both sides of the magic. Cara didn't like anything to do with magic, and the
sliph was definitely magic enough to give her pause.
Kahlan
leaned close, and whispered in Cara's ear. "You have passed bigger tests
than this, in this room. I am a sister of the Agiel; I will hold your hand the
whole way."
Cara
eyed Kahlan, and then the sliph.
"You
have to do it, Cara," Berdine pleaded. "You will be the only
Mord-Sith at the wedding of our Lord Rahl and Mother Confessor."
Cara's
brow twitched as she leaned toward Berdine. "Lord Rahl healed you one
time." Berdine nodded. "Since then, have you felt a . . . special
bond with him?"
Berdine
smiled. "Yes. That is why I want you to go. I'll be all right. I know
Raina would want you to go. too." She gave Ulic a backhanded slap on his
stomach. "Besides, someone has to stay here and keep Ulic and Egan in
line." Ulic and Egan, together, rolled their eyes.
Cara
put a hand on Kahlan's arm as she leaned close and whispered, "Since Lord
Rahl healed you, have you felt . . . have you felt it, too?"
Kahlan
smiled. "I felt it before he healed me. It is called love, Cara. Truly
caring about someone else, not only because you are bonded to them, but because
you share something in your heart. When he healed you, you felt his love for
you." "But I knew before that."
Kahlan
shrugged. "Maybe it was just a more vivid way of feeling it." Cara
lifted her Agiel, rolling it in her fingers. "Maybe, he is a brother of
the Agiel."
Kahlan
smiled. "With all we've been through together, I guess we are all as close
as family."
Richard
strode into the room. "I'm ready. Shall we travel?" Richard couldn't
take the Sword of Truth into the sliph; its magic was incompatible with life
being sustained while traveling. He had gone up to leave his sword in the First
Wizard's enclave, where it would be safe, where no one but he could get to it.
Except Zedd, of course. But Zedd was no longer living. At least, Kahlan didn't
think he was alive. Richard refused to doubt that he was.
Richard
rubbed his hands together. "So, Cara, are you going, or not? I would
really like you to be there. It would mean a lot to us."
Cara
smiled. "I must go. You are incapable of protecting yourself. Without a
Mord-Sith, you would be helpless."
Richard
turned to the silver face watching them. "Sliph, I know that I put you to
sleep before, but you didn't stay asleep. Why?"
"You
did not put me into the deep sleep from which only one such as yourself can
call me. You put me-at rest. Others can call me if I am only at rest."
"But
we can't allow those others to use you. Can't you refuse? Can't you just not go
to them if they call? We can't have you taking Jagang's wizards and such all
over Creation to cause trouble."
The
sliph regarded him with a thoughtful expression. "Those who made me the
sliph made me this way. I must travel with those who ask, if they have the
price of power required." She moved to the edge of her well, closer to
him. '"But if I was asleep, only you have the power to call me, master,
and then the others could not use me."
"But
I tried to put you to sleep before, and it didn't work." The sliph's smile
returned. "You did not have the silver required, before."
"Silver?"
The
sliph reached out and touched his wristbands. "Silver."������������
"You
mean, when I crossed my wrists to put you to sleep before, it didn't work
because I didn't have these? And now, if I put you to sleep, it will
work?" "Yes, master."
Richard
thought a moment. "Does it-hurt, or anything, when you are put into this
sleep?"
"No.
It is rapture, for me, when I sleep, because I am with the rest of my
soul." Richard's eyes widened. "When you sleep, you go to the world
of souls?" "Yes, master. I am not to tell anyone how it is that they
can put me into the��������� , sleep,
but you are the only master, and since you wished to know, you will not be
angry that I tell you." Richard sighed with relief. "Thank you,
sliph. You have given us a way to
prevent
the wrong people from using you. I'm glad to know that you will be pleased�� to go into your sleep."������ �����������������������������������������������������������Richard
hugged Berdine. "Take care of everything until we get back."����� "I am to be in charge, then?"
Berdine asked. Richard frowned suspiciously. "All three of you are in
charge." "Are you sure you heard that. mistress Berdine?" Ulic
asked. "I don't want you to later say that you heard no such orders."
Berdine
made a face at him as Richard helped Kahlan up onto the well. "I heard.
All three of us are to take care of things."
Kahlan
adjusted the bone knife on her arm, and the pack on her back. She took Cara's
hand as she climbed up. "Sliph," Richard said with a big grin,
"we wish to travel."
CHAPTER������������� 69
Breathe.
Kahlan
let go the silken rapture and drew in a breath, and the world. As they sat up
on the edge of the sliph's stone wall, Kahlan smacked Cara on the back.
"Breathe,
Cara. Come on, let it go. Let out the sliph, and breathe." Cara finally
bent forward and released the sliph from her lungs, reluctantly pulling a
breath. Kahlan remembered how hard it was the first time, not only to breathe
the sliph, but to then breathe the air again. Cara had held on tightly to
Richard and Kahlan's hands the whole time they traveled. Cara looked up with a
silly grin. "That was-wonderful." Richard gave them both a hand down.
Kahlan adjusted the bone knife on her arm, and the small pack on her back. It
felt good to be in her traveling clothes again. Cara thought that Kahlan looked
odd in pants.
"This
is where you wished to travel," the sliph said. "The Jocopo
Treasure." Richard looked around the cave, having to duck down because the
ceiling was so low. "I don't see any treasure."
"It's
in the next room," Kahlan told him. "Someone must be expecting us.
They left a torch burning."
"Are
you ready to sleep?" Richard asked the sliph. "Yes, master. I look
forward to being with my soul."
The
thought of what the sliph was, what the wizards had made her into, gave Kahlan
shivers.
"Will
it make you-unhappy, when I need to wake you again?" "No, master. I
am always ready to please."
Richard
nodded. 'Thank you for your help. We all are in your debt. Have a good . . .
sleep."
The
sliph smiled at him as Richard crossed his wrists, closing his eyes, calling
the magic.�������������������������������������
�������������������������������'
The
shiny silver face, reflecting the dancing torchlight, softened, melting back
into the pool of quicksilver. Richard's fists began to glow. The silver
wristbands he wore brightened to such intensity that Kahlan could see the other
side of them through his flesh and bone, and the way they touched, they formed
into endless twin loops: the symbol for infinity.
The
pool of sparkling silver took on the glow as the sliph sank down into her well,
slowly at first, and then with gathering speed, until she vanished into the far
darkness below.
Richard
took the reed torch and the three of them moved out through a wide, low
passageway, following the twisting, turning route through dark brown rock,
until they came at last to an expansive room.
Kahlan
gestured around the room. "The Jocopo Treasure." Richard held the
torch up. Torchlight reflected back in thousands of golden sparkles from the
room filled with gold in nearly every form, from nuggets and crude ingots to
golden statues.
"Well,
it isn't hard to see why it's called the Jocopo Treasure," Richard said.
He pointed toward the shelves. "Looks like something is missing."
Kahlan
saw what he meant. "When I was here before, those shelves were packed full
of rolled vellum scrolls." She sniffed the air. "Something else is
missing, too. This room was filled with foul air before. It's gone now."
She
remembered how it made her gag and cough, and her head spin, having to breathe
the stench. On the floor of the cave was a smoldering heap of ash.
Kahlan
swiped the toe of her boot across the ash. "I wonder what happened here.
''
The
flame of the torch whipped and fluttered as they followed the twisting tunnel
up and out into a golden dawn. Thin bands of violet clouds drifted across the sunrise.
Luminous gold, more stunning than the Jocopo Treasure, edged the clouds.
Verdant grasslands spread out before them, smelling clean and fresh. "It
looks like the Azrith Plains in spring," Cara said, "before the high
heat of summer bakes it barren."
Broad
swaths of wildflowers at their feet led in the general direction of the Mud
People. Kahlan took Richard's hand. It was a beautiful morning for a walk
through the spring grasslands of the wilds. It was a beautiful day to be
married.
Long
before they reached the Mud People's village, they could hear the sound of
drums drifting out onto the plains. Laughter and song filled the morning air.
"Sounds
like the Mud People are having a banquet," Richard said. "What do you
think that's about?"
His
voice sounded uneasy. She felt the same; banquets were usually held to call the
spirit ancestors, in preparation for a gathering.
Chandalen
met them not far from the village. He was wearing the coyote hide of an elder.
His hair was slicked down with sticky mud. He was bare-chested and had on his
ceremonial dress of buckskin pants and his finest knife, and he carried his
best spear.
Grim-faced,
Chandalen strode forward and slapped Kahlan. "Strength to Confessor
Kahlan."
Richard
caught Cara by the wrist. "Easy," he whispered. "We told you
about this. It's the way they greet people."
Kahlan
returned the slap, a show of respect for a person's strength. "Strength to
Chandalen and the Mud People. It is good to be home." She fingered the
coyote hide. "You are an elder, now?"
He
nodded. "Elder Breginderin died of the fever. I was named elder."
Kahlan smiled. "A wise choice, them picking you."
Chandalen
stood before Richard, appraising him a moment. The two men had once been foes.
Chandalen finally slapped Richard, harder than he had Kahlan.
"Strength
to Richard with the Temper. It is good to see you again, too. I am happy that
you are to marry the Mother Confessor, so that she will not pick
Chandalen." Richard returned the slap in kind. "Strength to
Chandalen. You have my gratitude,
for
protecting Kahlan on your journey together." He lifted a hand. "This
is our friend and protector, Cara."
Chandalen
was a protector of his people, and the term had special meaning to him. He
lifted his chin as he looked into her eyes. He slapped her harder than he had
slapped either Richard or Kahlan. "Strength to protector Cara."
It was
fortunate that Cara wasn't wearing her armored gloves. As hard as she punched
him, she would have broken his jaw. Chandalen grinned when he straightened his
neck.
"Strength
to Chandalen," she said to him, and then to Richard, "I like this
custom."
Cara
reached out and ran a finger over a few of Chandalen's scars. "Very nice.
This one here is excellent. The pain must have been exquisite."
Chandalen
frowned at Kahlan and spoke in his language. "What does that last word
mean ? ''
'' It
means that it must have been intense pain, '' Kahlan told him. She had taught
Chandalen her language, and he did very well, but he still had some to learn.
Chandalen grinned with pride. "Yes, it was very painful. I wept for my
mother." Cara lifted an eyebrow to Kahlan. "I like him."
Chandalen
looked Cara up and down, taking in the red leather, and the shape of her.
"You
have fine breasts." Her Agiel flicked up into her fist.
Kahlan
put a restraining hand on Cara's arm. "The Mud People have different
customs," she whispered. "To them, it means that you look like a
healthy, strong woman, able to bear children and raise them to be healthy. To
them, this is a strictly proper compliment." She leaned closer, lowering
her voice so that Chandalen couldn't hear. "Just don't tell him that you
would like to see him with the mud washed out of his hair, or you will be
inviting him to give you those children."
Cara
took in all this, considering Kahlan's words with care. Finally, she turned
and, bending over a little, lifted her red leather to expose a nasty scar.
"This
one was very painful, like the one you have." Chandalen grunted with
knowing appreciation. ' I had more, on my front, but Lord Rahl made them
disappear. It is a shame; some were quite remarkable."
Richard
and Kahlan followed behind Chandalen and Cara as he showed her his weapons, and
they discussed the worst place to be wounded. She was impressed with his
knowledge.
"Chandalen,"
Kahlan asked, "what's going on? Why has a banquet been called?' '
He
looked over his shoulder as if she were deranged. "It is a wedding
banquet. For your wedding."
Kahlan
and Richard shared a look. "But, how did you know we were coming to be married?"
Chandalen shrugged. 'The Bird Man told me."
As they
entered the village, they were surrounded by a Hood of people. Children swept
in around them, touching the wandering Mud People, as they called Richard and
Kahlan. People they knew came to give them gentle slaps in greeting.
Savidlin
was there, clapping Richard on the back, and his wife, Weselan, was hugging and
kissing them both. Their son, Siddin, threw his arms around Kahlan's���������� leg, jabbering up at them in his
language. It felt so good to ruffle his hair again,�������� Richard and Cara didn't understand any of it; only
Chandalen spoke their language.
"We
have come to he married, " Kahlan told Weselan. "I brought the
beautiful dress you made for me. I hope you remember that I asked you to stand
with me. ' ' Weselan beamed. "I remember."
Kahlan
saw a man with long silver hair, dressed in buckskin pants and tunic,
approaching. She leaned toward Cara. "This is their leader." The Bird
Man greeted them with the gentle slaps customary in the village proper. He
embraced Kahlan in a fatherly hug. "The fever is over. Our ancestor's
spirit must have been a help to you. " Kahlan nodded. "I am glad you
are home. It will he good to wed you and Richard with the Temper. Everything is
prepared. '' "What did he say?" Richard asked.��������������������������������������������������
' "Everything is prepared for our wedding."
Richard
scowled. ' It makes me nervous when people know things that we haven't told
them."
"Richard
with the Temper is upset? He is not happy with our preparations?"
"No, it's not that," Kahlan said. "Everything is wonderful. It's
just that we don't understand how you could know we would be here to he
married. We're purled. We didn't know ourselves until just a couple of days ago.
''
The
Bird Man pointed to one of the open pole structures shaded under a grass roof.
"That man over there told us. "
"Really,"
Richard said, after Kahlan translated, his scowl growing. "Well, I think
it's about time we go see this man who seems to know more about us than we
do."
As they
turned away, Kahlan caught the Bird Man scratching a cheek to screen a smile.
They
had to work at making their way through the throng. The entire village was out
in the open area, celebrating. Musicians and dancers entranced children and
adults alike. People paused to talk to Richard and Kahlan as they passed. Young
people, especially young girls, who were always painfully shy in the past, now
boldly offered congratulations. It was as festive an event as Kahlan had ever
seen.
At
various open pole structures where food was being prepared, people, beguiled by
the different aromas, crowded around to sample the fare. A contingent of young
women carried bowls and platters, and passed around food.
Kahlan
saw special women at one of the cook fires preparing a singular offering served
only at gatherings. No one congregated to sample it. This dish was presented
only by those women, according to strict protocol, and by invitation only.
Cara
didn't like how close people crowded in around her charges, but she did her
best to remain tolerant while at the same time watchful and prepared to react.
She wasn't gripping her Agiel, but Kahlan knew that it was never more than a
flick away.
Young
women were carrying platters of the more traditional food to and from the pole
building where the Bird Man had pointed them. Richard, holding Kahlan by the
hand, pushed his way through the crowd around the platform.
They
finally made it to the head of the crowd, at the platform. Richard and Kahlan
froze in shock. "Zedd-" Richard whispered.
Reposing
in his splendid violet and black robes, the regal effect somewhat diminished by
the way his wavy white hair stuck out in its typical disarray, was Richard's
grandfather. The rawboned old wizard glanced up from the platform as young
women offered him platters of food to sample. A squat woman in a dark dress and
cloak sat cross-legged beside him. "Zedd!" Richard bounded onto the
platform. Zedd smiled and waved. "Oh, there you are, my boy."
"You're alive! I knew you were alive!" "Well, of course
I'm-"
That
was all he got out before Richard scooped him up, squeezing so hard that Zedd
lost his wind with a whoosh.
Zedd's
fists beat on Richard's shoulders. "Richard!" he squeaked.
"Bags, Richard! You're going to crush me! Leave go!"
Richard
set him down, only to have Kahlan rush to embrace him. "Richard kept
saying you were alive, but I didn't believe him." The woman rose up.
"Good to see you, Richard." "Ann? You're alive too!"
She
smiled. "No thanks to your fool grandfather." Her knowing eyes turned
to Kahlan. "And this could be none other than the Mother Confessor
herself."
Richard
hugged her before the introductions. Zedd took a bite of a rice cake while he
watched.
Richard
brought Cara forward. She spoke before he had a chance. "I am Lord Rahl's
bodyguard."
Richard
looked to her eyes. ' 'This is Cara, and she is more than a guard. She is our
friend. Cara, this is my grandfather, Zedd, and Annalina Aldurren, Prelate of
the Sisters of the Light."
"Retired
Prelate," Ann said. "Pleased to meet a friend of Richard."
Richard turned back to Zedd. "I can't believe you're here. This is the
best surprise we could possibly have. But what's this about you knowing we were
coming to get married?"
Zedd
spoke with his mouth full. "Read it. Read all about it." "Read
it? Where?" "In the Jocopo Treasure."
Kahlan
leaned in. "There's writing on all that gold?"
Zedd
waved the rice cake. "No, no, not the gold-the Jocopo Treasure. The
prophecies. All those scrolls. They were the Jocopo Treasure. We burned them to
keep them out of the hands of the Imperial Order. I read a few, before I
destroyed them. That's where I read the prophecy about you two being married.
Ann figured out the day. She's quite knowledgeable about prophecy."
"Well,
it wasn't a difficult prophecy," Ann said. "None of them were. That
was why they were so dangerous, if Jagang had captured them. He nearly
did." "So, you two came to destroy the prophecies?" Richard
asked. "Yes." Zedd threw up his hands with a huff, "Oh, but a
terrible time of it we've had, though." "Yes, just terrible,"
Ann confirmed.
Zedd
shook a sticklike finger at Richard. "While you've been larking about in
Aydindril, we've had real trouble." "Trouble? What sort of
trouble?" "Awful trouble," Ann said.
"Yes,"
Zedd agreed. "We were captured, and held in the most horrid of condi-����������� tions. It was awful. Simply awful.
We barely got away with our lives."�������������������
"Who
captured you?"��������������������������������������� ����������������������"The Nangtong." Kahlan cleared her
throat. "The Nangtong? Why would the Nangtong capture
you?"
Zedd
tugged his robes straight. "They were going to sacrifice us. Human
sacrifices, we almost were. We were in mortal danger the entire time."
Kahlan
squinted skeptically. "The Nangtong are daring to engage in their
forbidden rites?"
"Something
about red moons," Zedd offered. "They feared the worst, and were only
trying to protect themselves."
Kahlan
cocked her head. "Nonetheless, I will have to pay them a visit and see to
this."
"You
could have been killed," Richard said.
'
'Piffle. A wizard and a sorceress are smarter than a wandering band of
Nangtong. Aren't we, Ann?" Ann blinked. "Well-"
"Well,
yes, as Ann says, it was more complicated than that." Zedd turned away
from her. "But it was just awful, I can assure you. And then we were sold
into slavery."
Richard's
brow lifted. "Slavery!"
"Indeed.
To the Si Doak. We were forced to labor as slaves. But the Si Doak didn't like
us, for some reason, something about Ann being unsatisfactory, and they decided
to sell us to cannibals." Richard's jaw dropped. "Cannibals?"
Zedd
grinned. "Fortunately, the cannibals turned out to be the Mud People.
Chandalen was the one they approached. He knew me, of course, from when we were
together before, so he played along, and bought us to get us away from our
bondage to the Si Doak."
"And
why couldn't you get away from the Si Doak?" Kahlan asked. "You're a
wizard. Ann is a sorceress."
Zedd
pointed at his bare wrists. "They put magic wristbands on us. We were
helpless." He looked up. "Quite helpless. It was terrible. We were
helpless slaves under the lash."
"That
sounds dreadful," Richard said. "Then how did you get the bands
off?" Zedd threw his arms up. "We couldn't."
Richard
pressed one hand to his forehead and held the other up. ' 'Well, they're off
now."
Zedd
scratched his chin. "Well, now they are. The bands are held on with magic.
I-we-were smart enough to know better than to try to use magic. That would have
bound them on even harder. We just had to wait, without using magic, until they
lost their power. Once we were away from the Si Doak, and were burning the
scrolls, they came undone, and fell off." "So, that was your plan all
along?" "Of course it was!"
Ann
nodded. "Trust in the Creator to reveal His plan." Zedd shook a
finger up at Richard. "Magic is dangerous, Richard. As you will
learn,
someday, the hardest part of being a wizard is knowing when not to use magic.
This was one of those times.
"We
had to find the Jocopo Treasure. With all the currents of trouble about, I knew
our best chance would be to do it without magic." He folded his arms.
"And it worked, too, thus proving my point."
Chandalen
stepped forward. "Many soldiers came toward us." He pointed off
toward the southeast. "A large scouting party of men came to get these
things that Zedd burned. While he and Ann were burning them, my men and I
fought off the enemy.
"A
great battle was fought to the west, against the main force of the enemy. This
army of the Order was destroyed.
"I
went and spoke with a man called Reibisch, and he said that one named Nathan
had sent him to destroy our enemy." Richard shook his head. "This is
all very confusing."
Zedd
flicked a hand. "Ah, well, you'll learn, someday, Richard. This wizard
business is very complicated. Someday, when you decide to do something with
your gift, other than sit around with your intended while I'm out risking my
neck, then you will see. By the way, what have you been up to, while all the
important work has been going on?"
"What
have I been up to?" Kahlan smiled as she put a hand on his shoulder while
Richard tried to think how to begin. "Ah, well, I'm the Lord Rahl, now,
and all."
Zedd
grunted and flopped down on the wooden platform. "Lord Rahl, indeed."
He scooped up a roasted pepper. "The paperwork must be grueling."
Richard
scratched his head while Ann sat down. "Zedd, can you answer something for
me? Why are the books in the First Wizard's private enclave stacked up in
wobbly columns?"
"It's
a telltale, of sorts. I remember how they're stacked, so that if anyone has
touched them, I'll know it." Zedd's hazel eyes opened wide. "What?
Bags, Richard, what were you doing in there? That's a dangerous place! And how
did you get in there?" Zedd pointed at Richard's chest. "That amulet!
It's from in there. How did you get in there? Bags, Richard! Where's the Sword
of Truth? I entrusted the sword to you! You weren't foolish enough to give it
to someone?"
"Uh,
well ...I couldn't travel in the sliph with it, so I had to leave it in the
First Wizard's enclave, so no one could get at it."
"Sliph?
What's a sliph? Richard, you're the Seeker. You have to have your sword-it's
your weapon. You can't just leave it lying about places."
"When
you gave it to me, you told me that the sword was just a tool, and that '�� ' it is the Seeker that is the true
weapon."
"So
I did. But I didn't think you were listening." Zedd peered up at him.
"You didn't mess with the books, I hope. You don't know enough to be
allowed to read any of them."
"Just
one. Tagenricht ost fuer Mosst Verlaschendreck nich Greschlechten."
"That's High D'Haran." Zedd dismissed the matter with a wave.
"No one knows High D'Haran anymore. At least you can't get into trouble with
a book you can't read." Zedd shook his finger. "And you still haven't
said how you got in��������� there! ''
"It
wasn't all that hard to get in." The mirth melted from Richard's face.
"It was a lot easier than it was getting into the Temple of the Winds."
Both
Zedd and Ann shot to their feet.������������������������������������������������ "The Temple
of the Winds!" they said as one.��������������������������������������� "Temple of the Winds
Inquisition and Trial-that's what the book was. I've����� ���������kind of had
to learn High D'Haran." Richard put his arm around Kahlan's shoulders.
"Jagang sent Sister Amelia there. She entered through something called
Betrayer's Hall. She betrayed the Keeper to get in.
"She
came back with magic and started a plague. It killed thousands of people. She
started it among children-at Jagang's instruction. We watched, helpless, while
children and friends died.
"There
was no other way. I had to go there to stop the plague, or it would have been a
firestorm that would have consumed nearly everyone."
One of
the women who prepared the special meat approached, carrying a tray of neatly
arranged dried strips. She offered the tray to Chandalen first: he was an
elder, now. Chandalen tore off a bite as he looked up at Richard.�������������������������� ' Richard knew what
the meat was. He took a big piece.
Kahlan
had always refused to eat this dish in the past. This time, when offered, she
took a piece. Chandalen watched her pull off a bite.
Zedd
took a piece, and then the tray was offered to Ann. Kahlan was going to say
something, but Zedd shot her a silencing glance. They ate in silence a moment
before Richard asked, "Who is it?" ' 'The commander of the men of the
Order who came here and attacked us to get the Jocopo Treasure that Zedd
burned." Ann's eyes came up. "You mean . . . ?"
"We
fight a battle for our existence," Richard said. "If we lose. we all
die. and the man who started a plague among children will rule those still
alive. All magic will be eliminated. Those left will be his slaves. The Mud
People do this so that they might know the hearts of their enemy, and save
their families." Richard glared at her. "Eat it, so that you, too,
may know the enemy better." It was not Richard but Lord Rahl who had
spoken.
Ann watched
his eyes for a moment, and then started chewing. They all ate the strip of
their enemy's flesh to know him better.
"Sister
Amelia," Ann finally whispered. "If she has been to the Temple of the
Winds . . . she will be beyond dangerous."
"She's
dead," Kahlan said, haunted by the memory of it all. When Ann's
questioning eyes looked at her, Kahlan added, "Yes, I am sure. I put a
sword through her heart. She had a dacra in Nathan's leg. She was going to kill
him."
"Nathan!"
Ann said. "We must soon be off to find him. Where was this? Where is
he?"
Zedd
scowled over at Ann. "We?"
"It
was in Tanimura, in the Old World, just after Richard came back from the Temple
of the Winds. Nathan helped me save Richard's life by telling me the three
chimes."
Zedd and
Ann's eyes widened. They looked as if they had stopped breathing. They finally
glanced to each other.
"The
three chimes," Ann said in a cautious voice. "You mean, he just
mentioned 'the three chimes.' He didn't actually tell them to you? He didn't
speak them to you?"
Kahlan
nodded. "Reechan-" Zedd and Ann threw their hands up. "No!"
they yelled together.
"Didn't
Nathan tell you that no one without the gift may speak the three chimes
aloud?" Ann's face had gone red. "Didn't that crazy old man tell you
that!"
Kahlan
scowled back. "Nathan is not a crazy old man. He helped me save Richard's
life. Without the three chimes, Richard would have died when he came back from
the Temple of the Winds. I owe Nathan a great debt. We all do."
"I
owe him a collar around his neck," Ann muttered. "Before he causes
who knows what catastrophe. Zedd, we must find him. And soon." She lowered
her voice to a private whisper. "And we must do something about . . . this
business."
Zedd's
eyes turned to Kahlan. "You said them silently, when you did this. You
said the three chimes silently. You didn't actually say them aloud. Tell me
that you didn't say them aloud."
"I
had to. Cara remembered them, and said them. Then I said them aloud a couple of
times." Zedd winced. "More than once?"
"Zedd,"
Ann murmured, "what are we going to do about this?" "Why?"
Richard asked. "What's the problem?"
"Nothing
you need be concerned about. Just don't say them aloud again. Any of you."
"Zedd,"
Ann whispered under her breath, "if she has freed-" Zedd lifted a
hand out to the side, touching her, silencing her. ' 'What was I supposed to
do?' ' Kahlan asked defensively. ' 'Richard had absorbed the magic from the
book Sister Amelia brought back from the winds. He had the plague. He was a breath
or two away from death. He would have died within minutes, at the most. Would
you have had me let him die instead?"
"Of
course not, dear one. You did the right thing." Zedd lifted an eyebrow to
Ann as he leaned close. "We will discuss this later."
Ann
folded her hands. "Of course. You did the only thing you could. We are all
grateful, Kahlan. You did well."
Zedd
was looking more serious by the moment. "Bags, Richard, the Temple of the
Winds is in the underworld. How did you get in?"
Richard
looked out over the celebration. "We need to tell you both the story. Some
of it, anyway. But this is the day Kahlan and I are to be married."
Richard smiled. Kahlan thought it looked forced. "It's a hard story to
tell. I'd rather tell you about it on another day. I can't, just now . .
."
Zedd
stroked a thumb down his smooth jaw. "Of course, Richard, I understand.
And you are quite right. Another day. But, the Temple of the Winds . . ."
He lifted a finger, unable to resist asking a question. "Richard, what did
you have to leave at the Temple of the Winds in order to return?" Richard
shared a long look with his grandfather. "Knowledge." "And what
did you take away with you?" "Understanding."
Zedd
encircled a protective arm around both Richard and Kahlan. "Good for you,
Richard. Good for you. Good for both of you. You two have earned this day.
Let's put this other business aside for now, and let us celebrate the joy of
your marriage."
CHAPTER������������� 70
They
enjoyed the company of friends and loved ones the whole day. talking and
laughing, celebrating together with the Mud People. Kahlan did her best to try
to ignore the way her low-cut blue wedding dress displayed her breasts. It was
hard, with the way people kept coming up to her and telling her that she had fine
breasts. Richard wanted to know what they were saying all the time. She thought
it best to lie; she told him that they were saying that her dress was
beautiful. As the sun turned the sky golden, it was at last time.
Kahlan
gripped Richard's hand as if it were the only thing holding her on the ground.
Richard had trouble keeping his eyes off her in her blue wedding dress. Every
time he looked at her, a helpless smile took him.
Kahlan's
heart swelled with joy, seeing how much he liked the dress Weselan had made for
her. She had for so long dreamed of wearing it, dreamed of this moment. She had
hoped so often, with all her heart, that this day would come. She had feared so
often that it never would. So many times, something had happened, delaying this
moment. Now, it was happening.
Richard
mimicked the Mud People's words, not realizing that he was saying how fine he
thought her breasts looked; he thought he was telling her how beautiful her
dress looked. Everyone grinned with satisfaction when he spoke the words in
their language, happy that he agreed with them. Kahlan could feel her face
turning red.
Richard
looked magnificent in his black and gold war wizard's uniform. Every time
Kahlan looked at him, a smile took her. She was marrying Richard. At last. Her
knees trembled under the blue dress.
Cara,
standing behind, gave her a reassuring touch. Weselan, at Kahlan's side, beamed
with pride. Savidlin stood to the far side of Richard, beaming just as much.
Zedd and Ann stood behind. Zedd was eating something.
Kahlan
silently prayed to the good spirits that, this time, nothing would go wrong,
and that it would at last happen. She couldn't help worrying that it would be
taken from her, yet again.
The
Bird Man straightened before them, clasping his hands. Behind him, the entire
Mud People village spread out before the wedding party to hear the vows.
When
all had fallen silent, the Bird Man began, and Kahlan's fear began to melt
away. to be replaced with joyous anticipation. As the Bird Man spoke,
Chandalen, at his side, said the words in the language Richard and some of the
others could understand.
"These
two people have not been born Mud People, hut they have proven themselves to he
one of us. in their strength, and in their hearts. They have bound themselves to
us, and us to them. They have been our friends, and our protectors. That they
would wish lo be wedded as Mud People proves their hearts.
"As
members of our people, these two have chosen not only to be wedded before those
of this world, but before the next, and in so doing, have called the spirits of
our ancestors to be with us on this day to smile on this joining. We welcome
our ancestors into our hearts to share our joy. "
Richard's
hand tightened around hers, and she realized that he was sharing her thoughts:
it was real, at last, and it was as they both had always dreamed-except it was
better than she could ever have imagined.
' 'Both
of you are Mud People, and are bound not only by your words before your people,
but by your own hearts. These are simple words, but in simple things, there is
great power. '' He met Richard's eyes.
'
'Richard, will you have this woman as your wife, and will you love and honor
her in all ways for all time?"
"I
will," he said in a clear voice that rang out over the gathering. The Bird
Man looked into Kahlan's eyes, and she had the most profound sense that he was
speaking not only as a representative of his people, but for the spirits, too.
She could almost hear their voices echoing in his.
'
'Kahlan, will you have this man as your husband, and will you love and honor
him in all ways for all time?" "I will," she said, a clear chime
matching Richard's.
''Then
before your people, and before the spirits, you are now wedded for all time. ''
All the
gathered people were dead silent, until Richard took her in his arms and kissed
her, and then they went wild. Kahlan hardly heard them.
It
seemed a dream. A dream she had dreamed so often that it had finally come to
life.
To be
in Richard's arms. To have him. To be his wife, and he her husband. For all
time.
And
then everyone was bugging them. Zedd and Ann. The Bird Man and the elders.
Weselan and the other wives.
Cara,
with tears in her eyes, hugged Kahlan. "Thank you both for wearing an
Agiel at your wedding. Hally, Raina, and Denna are all watching because of
that. Thank you for honoring the sacrifice of Mord-Sith."
With a
thumb, Kahlan wiped the tear from Cara's cheek. "Thank you for braving the
magic of the sliph to be with us, my sister."
Everyone
in the village crowded in to greet the new couple. Kahlan thought they might be
crushed. People brought food and flowers, and sincere, simple offerings of
every sort.
The
celebration resumed around the wedding platform. Kahlan tried to talk to
everyone, and to thank everyone, as did Richard, until, as Richard was asking
some of Chandalen's hunters about the battle that they had witnessed, his
golden cloak billowed out. There was no wind.
Richard
straightened. His raptor gaze swept out over the heads of the people���������� , gathered before the wedding
platform. He instinctively reached for his sword. It wasn't there. The crowd,
in the back, fell silent. Zedd and Ann both stepped up beside Richard
and
Kahlan. Cara had her Agiel in her fist as she pushed between them to get in���� front. Richard gently pushed her
behind.������������������������������������������������� The entire
village fell silent, the people parting for two approaching figures.������������� Some people grabbed their
children and moved farther back as worried whispers
rippled
through the crowd.
As the
two solitary figures, one tall and one short, came closer. Kahlan saw that it
was Shota, and her companion, Samuel.
The
witch woman, looking as stunning as ever, strode up onto the platform, her
ageless almond eyes staying on Kahlan the whole time. Shota took up Kahlan's
hand. She kissed Kahlan's cheek. "I have come to congratulate you. Mother
Confessor, on your accomplishment, and on your marriage."
Throwing
caution to the winds, Kahlan hugged the witch woman. "Thank you for
coming, Shota."
Shota
smiled, staring into Richard's eyes as she ran a lacquered nail along his jaw.
"Hard fought, Richard. Hard fought. And well earned."
Kahlan
turned to the silent gathering. She knew that the Mud People feared the witch
woman so much that they wouldn't even speak her name. Kahlan could understand;
she had felt nearly the same way herself.
"Shota
has come to offer her best wishes to us on our wedding day. She has helped us
in our struggle. She is a friend, and I hope you will welcome her to this
celebration, for she deserves to be here, and I wish her lo be here. '' Kahlan
turned to Shota. "I told them that-"
Smiling,
Shota held up a hand. "I know what you told them. Mother Confessor."
The Bird Man stepped forward. "Welcome to our home, Shota."
"Thank you, Bird Man. You have my word that we will bring no harm this
day. " Shota glanced to Zedd. "A truce, for a day." Zedd smiled
a sly smile. "A truce."
Samuel's
long arm reached up, grabbing for the Bird Man's carved bone whistle he wore
around his neck. "Mine! Gimme!"
Shota
thunked him on the head. "Samuel, behave yourself." The Bird Man
smiled. He pulled the thong and whistle over his head and held it out to
Samuel.
' 'A
gift, for a friend to the Mud People. "
Samuel
gently took the whistle. A grin split his face, showing his wickedly sharp
teeth.
"Thank
you, Bird Man." Shota said.
Samuel
blew the silent whistle. He seemed able to hear the sound, and was pleased by
it. People began chuckling and talking again. Kahlan was relieved that vultures
didn't appear in response to the silent whistle. Fortunately, Samuel didn't
know how to call specific birds. Samuel grinned at his gift and hung it around
his neck. He took up Shota's hand again.
Shota's
arresting gaze took in Richard and Kahlan. In that moment, there was no one
else there. The three of them were as good as alone, in that gaze.
"Do
not think, either of you, that just because I congratulate you, I will forget
my promise to you." Kahlan swallowed. "Shota-" Shota's eyes were
both beautiful and frightening as she held up a silencing finger.
"You
both have earned this joyous wedding. I am happy for you both. I will honor
your vows, and protect you in any way I can, out of respect for all you have
done for me, as long as you remember what I have warned you about. I will not
allow a male child of this union to live. Do not doubt my word in this."
Richard's gaze was heating. "Shota, I'll not be threatened-" Again,
the finger rose, silencing Richard this time.
"I
do not make a threat. I deliver you a promise. I do not do it out of animosity
for either of you, but out of concern for everyone else in the world. There is
a long struggle ahead of us all. I will not allow any chance at victory to be
clouded by what you two would bring upon the world. Jagang is worry
enough."
For
some reason, Kahlan's voice wouldn't work. Richard didn't seem to have words,
either. Kahlan believed Shota; she wasn't doing this out of malice.
Shota
lifted Kahlan's hand and placed something in it. "This is my gift to you
both. I do this out of love for you both, and for everyone else." She
smiled a strange smile. "An odd thing for a witch woman to say?"
"No,
Shota," Kahlan said. "I don't know that I believe what you tell us
about a son, but I know that it is not said in hate."
"Good.
Wear the gift, always, and all will be well. Mark my words well-never take this
off when you are together, and you will always be happy. Disregard my request,
and suffer the consequences of my vow." She looked into Richard's eyes.
"Better you battle the Keeper himself, than me."
Kahlan
opened her hand and saw a delicate necklace. A small, dark stone hung from the
gold chain. "Why? What is this?"
Shota
put a finger under Kahlan's chin as she stared into her eyes. "As long as
you wear it, you will bear no children."
Richard's
voice, strangely, seemed gentle. "But what if we-" Again, Shota's
raised finger silenced him. "You love each other. Have joy in that love,
and in each other. You have struggled hard to be together. Celebrate your union
and your love. You have each other, now, as you always wanted. Don't throw it
away."
Richard
and Kahlan both nodded. Somehow, Kahlan didn't feel any anger. She felt nothing
other than relief that Shota wasn't going to do anything to harm their
marriage. It had a dreamlike quality, like a formal settlement over an obscure,
remote tract of ground claimed by two lands, like agreements in the council
chambers over which she had so often presided. There seemed no emotion to it. A
simple settlement.
Shota
turned to go.����������������������������������������������������� '
"Shota," Richard said. She turned back. "Won't you stay? You've
come a long way."
"Yes,"
Kahlan said. "We really would like it if you stayed." Shota smiled a
witch woman smile as she watched Kahlan fasten the chain around her neck.
' 'That
you would ask is pleasure enough, but it is a long journey, and we must be on
our way."
Kahlan
ran down the steps and scooped up a pile of tava bread. She wrapped it in a
square of cloth from the table. She met Shota at the bottom of the steps.
"Take this for your journey, as our thanks for coming, and for the
gift." Shota kissed Kahlan's cheek and then took the bundle. Samuel didn't
try to grab
it; he
seemed content. Richard was suddenly there, beside Kahlan. Shota smiled a
small
smile and kissed his cheek, too. She had a strange, wistful look. "Thank
you. Both of you."
And
then she was gone. Simply, gone.
Zedd
and Ann were still up on the platform, along with Cara and the rest of the
people. Zedd turned to Richard and Kahlan.
"What
happened to Shota? We make a truce, and then she just leaves without a
word?"
Kahlan's
brow tightened. "She spoke to us."
Zedd
glanced about. "When? She was gone before she had a chance to say
anything."
"I
had intended to speak with her, too," Ann said.
Kahlan
looked up at Richard. He looked back at Zedd. "She said some nice things
to us. Maybe she just didn't want you to hear her saying nice things."
Zedd grunted a laugh. "No doubt."
Kahlan
touched the dark stone on the necklace. She put an arm around Richard's waist
and pulled him close. "What do you think?" she whispered. Richard
stared out in the direction Shota had gone.
"For
now, she's right: we're together. That's what we wanted. I think that, for now,
we should be happy that our dream has at last come true and we can be together.
I'm so tired of trouble, and there is still Jagang to worry about. I'd just
like to be with you for now, and love you."
Kahlan
put her head against him. "I think you're right. For now, let's not
complicate matters."
"We
can worry about this another time." He grinned at her. "Right?"
Kahlan forgot all about Shota and the future and grinned back, thinking about
the now. "Right."
The
celebration went on until well after nightfall. Kahlan knew it would likely go
on all night. She whispered to Richard that she would be happy not to have to
remain for the whole thing. Richard kissed her cheek, and then asked the Bird
Man if they could be excused. They wanted to go to the spirit house. The spirit
house had special meaning to both of them.
The
Bird Man smiled. "It has been a long day. Sleep well." Richard and
Kahlan said their thanks to everyone, and then, in the quiet of the spirit
house, in the soft glow of the low fire that always burned there, they were at
long last alone. As they stared into each other's eyes, words were too small.
Berdine
stood tall and straight as she watched the double doors burst open. Like a gout
of flame they stormed into the Confessors' Palace-a dozen Mord-Sith in red
leather.
Soldiers
scrambled across the slick marble, falling back out of the way, while at the
same time trying not to look hurried. They quickly established new guard
positions at a safe distance. The twelve women paid them no attention. The
existence of D'Haran soldiers hardly registered on the mind of a
Mord-Sith-unless they gave her trouble. The group came to a halt. Silence once
again settled in the entrance hall.
"Berdine,
how good to see you."
Berdine
let a small smile touch her lips. "Welcome, Rikka. But what are you doing
here? Lord Rahl left you at the People's Palace, awaiting his return."
Rikkas
eyes swept the area before her steady gaze settled on Berdine. "We heard
that he is here. now. and we decided that we should be closer so that we could
protect him. We left the others at the palace, should he return unexpectedly.
We will return with him when he goes home." Berdine shrugged. "He
sort of considers this home. now." "Whatever he wishes. We are here,
now. Where is he, so that we may announce ourselves, and protect him?"
"He
has gone to be married. Some distance to the south." Rikka's brows drew
together. "Why are you not with him?" *� "He ordered me to stay here and see to things in his
absence. Cara is with him."
"Cara.
Good. Cara will not let anything happen to him." Rikka considered a
moment, her dark frown returning. "Lord Rahl is getting married?"
Berdine nodded. "He is in love."
The
other women glanced at one another as Rikka put her fists on her hips. "In
love. A Lord Rahl, in love. Somehow, I can't picture it." She huffed.
"He's up to something. Well, never mind; we will figure it out. What of
the others?" "Hally was killed awhile back. In battle, protecting
Lord Rahl." "A noble death. What of Raina?"
Berdine
swallowed, and forced her voice to stay level. "Raina died a short time
ago. Killed by the enemy."
Rikka
searched Berdine's eyes. "I'm sorry, Berdine." Berdine nodded.
"Lord Rahl wept for her, as he did for Hally." Silence echoed around
the entryway as all the other Mord-Sith stared at Berdine in disbelief.
"This
man is going to be trouble," Rikka muttered. Berdine smiled. "I think
he would say a similar thing of you."
Kahlan
growled at the insistent knock. It appeared that ignoring it would not make
it go
away. She kissed Richard and wrapped a blanket around herself. "Don't
move. Lord Rahl. I'll get rid of them." Barefoot, she crossed the dim,
windowless room. She squinted at the sudden
light
when she opened the door. "Zedd, what is it?" He was eating a piece
of tava bread. He had a platter of it in his other hand. He
offered
her the tray.
"I
thought you might be hungry." "Yes, thank you. Very thoughtful."
He took a bite of tava bread as his gaze roamed over her hair. He pointed at it
with
the rolled-up tava bread.
"You
will never get those tangles out, dear one." "Thank you for your
fashion advice." She started to close the door. He put his hand against
it. "The elders are becoming concerned. They would like to know when they
can
have
their spirit house back." "Tell them that when I'm done with it, I'll
let them know."
Cara,
scowling her best Mord-Sith scowl, stepped lip behind him. "I will see
that he
does not bother you again. Mother Confessor." "Thank you, Cara."
Kahlan
shut the door in his smiling face. She hurried across the floor, back to
Richard. She set the platter aside, laid down,
and
enfolded Richard in her blanket. "A pesky in-law," she explained.
"I heard. Tava bread and tangled hair." "Now, where were
we?" He kissed her, and she remembered; he was showing her some magic.