Traitor’s Knot: Fourth Book of The Alliance of Light. Janny Wurts
Читать онлайн книгу.His Grace won’t have sympathy. He detests subterfuge. Won’t stand one moment for subtlety, either. Never mind this pissing downpour, you stink, ripe as a damned slave-broker’s privy!’
The woman blinked, shamed. ‘You’re no friend of the Alliance?’
Feylind released her iron grasp and wiped her smeared palms on her breeches. ‘Damned well not! Canting bigots! I’m going belowdecks where it’s dry to have tea. If you don’t mind the fact I don’t pack skirts, at sea, you can borrow clean clothes, if you want them.’
‘Bless you, yes.’ The strange woman put aside wariness, near tears for the refuge just offered. She trailed Feylind’s stalking tread to the wharf, while the eagle who observed with living gold eyes watched unnoticed from a perch on the custom-house cornice. Head turned, fixed as the gargoyles who glared, chins on fists, right and left of its hunched silhouette, the raptor tracked the two women until they had boarded the brig. An eye-blink later, it vanished…
…to reappear farther north, soaring over a stream, where storm wrack had backed up the flood. The eagle alit on a dead-fallen limb, snagged in the rush of dammed water. There, he shook sodden wing feathers and preened. The thrusting shove as he hurled air-borne again dislodged the dead branch, and the rain-swollen current took charge. Balked water found opening, surged, then roared through as the impedance crumpled and gave way.
The eagle’s flight followed the foaming, brown crest racing in due course downstream. A small ford became temporarily impassable, and a travel-worn rider who sought passage was forced to make camp, before crossing. His curse at the delay carried on the worlds’ winds and glanced through the mind of Sethvir.
As the eagle veered east, the Warden of Althain flicked back a caustic reproof above range of audible hearing.
‘Meddler!’
The eagle fluffed its crest, eyes gold as hot sparks. The thought returned was not avian. ‘You would rather have that man ride to your tower door-step with no help at hand to receive him?’
Sethvir’s retort came, sarcastic. ‘You can hear through the rings of the Radmoore grimward?’
Had Davien been formed as human, he would have laughed. As eagle, he screamed as he rose on the frigid winds of high altitude. ‘I hear the mourning dreams of Haspastion’s living mate. Asandir will be returned to your side in five days.’
The subsequent silence was sudden and deep, engraved on the ethers with startlement.
Experience honed Arithon’s wary awareness, refining his listening senses. Yet no boundary ward he wrought, set in air, served him warning when Davien chose to steal up on him. The Sorcerer slipped past such defences at whim. No subtle shift fore-ran his uncanny arrival. Arithon leaned at last upon prescience: came to recognize the fleeting, ephemeral suspicion that something alive was listening over his shoulder.
Brushed by that whisper of premonition, Arithon closed a volume of Paravian ballads, transcribed during Cianor Sunlord’s reign. ‘You’ve been sightseeing, again. Is the news so unpleasant? The spin of the world will scarcely falter if I don’t share the plodding details.’
Davien appeared at ease by the hearth, cut in outline against the brass grilles that covered the shafts drilled for ventilation. His golden-rod cloak was adorned with black knotwork, gently ruffled by the whisper of draught. By contrast, his russet-and-grey hair seemed tumbled by an intransigent wind. ‘Your halfbrother’s in Taerlin, bound west by slow stages. A conspiracy in Avenor will keep him preoccupied. But not long enough, Teir’s’Ffalenn.’
Arithon traced the embossed spine of the book held in hand, his angular features hardened to adamancy ‘I won’t ask.’
‘You must.’ Unsmiling, Davien chose not to mock. ‘The impact might well invoke your sworn oath.’
Already tense, Arithon turned pale. ‘Which one?’
Davien advanced to the edge of the agate table, set next to the prince’s chair. ‘You shall see for yourself, Teir’s’Ffalenn.’ His citrine ring burned as flame through the air as he traced a circle on the polished slab. Seen by the extended perception of mage-sight, his touch ignited a line of white light.
Within the scribed round, stone spoke to stone: the mineral matrix of agate dissolved, revealing a view inside a seamless rock-chamber. Arithon glimpsed a closed well of granite, and a dark pool, encircled by ring upon ring of fine ciphers. Water rippled over the characters, releasing a charged mist of electromagnetic force. The play of raised energy twined in rainbow colours that shimmered like boreal lights against darkness. Then a falling droplet struck the still pool. Circlets of ring ripples fled, unleashing a pristine, clear vision, and more: the distinctive pungence of ship’s tar and varnish, sea-spray, and salt-dampened wool…
King Eldir of Havish arrived without fanfare, his solid frame an imposing presence that crowded the snug stern cabin aboard the merchant brig Evenstar. Past the cramped threshold, he peeled his wet gloves and swiped back his dripping hair. Eyes grey as the storm beyond the streaked glass fixed at once on the stranger installed on the cushioned seat by the chart table. All else seemed in order: bills of lading awaited, alongside a trimmed quill and ink flask. Not one to dismiss an uneasy detail, the High King held his ground and stayed standing. ‘What have you brought us, Captain? A foundling cast up by the sea?’
‘Evenstar ships cargoes, not hard luck passengers,’ Feylind demurred where she leaned, arms crossed by the gimballed lamp.
The blanket-wrapped presence of the woman defied that impression: the bare feet tucked under her loose trousers were raw, and her diffident voice faintly trembled. ‘I came by land, your Grace.’ Still damp, she pushed back masking wool and unveiled a crimped spill of brown hair, gently salted with grey. Care-worn eyes of a liquid, doe brown watched the royal stance, wary.
King Eldir decided her reserved poise did not match the menial callus that ingrained her small hands.
His held silence demanded.
The woman made haste to explain. ‘Captain Feylind has lent me the use of her cabin to spare the embarrassment of importuning your favour out in the public street.’
The king’s steel gaze flickered, a wordless query redirected back to the Evenstar’s master.
‘Your Grace, I have granted the privacy of my ship. Nothing else,’ Feylind clarified. ‘If you care to listen, the lady has come a long and perilous distance seeking a royal audience.’
King Eldir advanced to the chart table, then bent his head under the encroaching deck-beams. No servant attended him. Only his taciturn caithdein stood guard in the companionway, close behind. The court clerk would be detained outside, strategically snagged by the mate concerning the matter of a mislaid tally sheet. By now aware the delay was no accident, the king tossed off his soaked mantle. Beneath, he wore no regal tabard. A badge with Havish’s scarlet hawk blazon was discreetly sewn on to his sleeve. His plain leathers were cut for riding. The fillet that gleamed on his brow was thin wire, with the ruby seal upon his right hand the only royal jewel upon him.
He seated himself, his eyes on the woman who filled sailhand’s clothes with the grace of a birth-born courtier. ‘My lady, you have asked for my ear. Be assured, at this moment, you have it.’
This crowned sovereign’s demeanour did not overwhelm, or bate the breath like Lysaer’s blinding majesty. Buoyed by a bed-rock patience that appeared willing to wait, the petitioner wasted no words. ‘Your royal Grace, I have come here to beg Havish for sanctuary’
Eldir held her pinned with his level regard. ‘Under whose name?’
‘I prefer anonymity, your Grace. With good reason. My life has been threatened.’
The caught flame of reflection in the gold circlet stayed steady, unlike the bald caithdein behind, whose wary fingers closed on his knives. ‘Who has threatened your life, lady?’
She