Read C. J. Cherryh - Fortress 05 Online
Authors: Fortress of Ice
Who next? Lord Crissand? That will throw the south into confusion.
There’s no other lord who can rule as aetheling—except, of course, you, my prince.”
“I’m no prince, nor wish to be!”
“That is the very trouble, dear,” his mother said. “You blame me for the old grandmother. I assure you, I did nothing. It was you. I quite fear to be in your thoughts at all, until you know what you are, and understand what a power you do wield in the world.
Everyone has to fear you, especially when you most afflict whoever loves you—innocents, like Gran, like your brother.”
“You’ve never lied to me,” he said in disgust. “At least I thought not. But you did. Everything you did was a lie.”
“My dear, you know you were born by sorcery. Can you think you might be ordinary? You were born to overcome my sister’s enemy, and do you know who that is?”
“I don’t care to know.”
“
Tristen
. Tristen Sihhë. Now do you understand how very foolish you were, to be drawn to him? He looked you over. He saw a magic too potent to confront.”
He outright laughed. “A ridiculous boy who couldn’t light a candle, let alone a proper fire, to save himself from freezing. He saw someone too
stupid
to teach, with too many entanglements with sorcery. Forgive me, Mother, but I had all the ride home to think about that.”
“Then you quite missed the point. He entombed my sister alive, he warded
me
into the tower above so I couldn’t break free, and accepting that imprisonment was the only way I could stay alive and stay near you—”
“Oh, spare me!”
“The old woman had power he lent. Oh, he is powerful, he is powerful beyond easy understanding. I fear him, but
he
fears you.”
“Ridiculous, I say.”
“You are not yet grown, son of mine! You are not yet grown, and even so the world bends around you—a piece of your power has come to you, not that you know how to read it, yet. Tristen would if he laid hands on it, I’ve no doubt; but there will come a day it comes clear to you and shows you the way to bring him down.”
He didn’t want to talk about the book, which clearly they knew he had, as they knew other things. Lies, he said to himself, all lies.
Aloud, he said: “All I wish is to be out of here. And, see? It failed.
My wishes have no success at all. Fortunately, I put little hope in them.”
“So young, so bitter,” the young man said. “So impertinent toward your lady mother. She has endured years of prison for your sake, endured them teaching you to hate her, mistrust her, all these years. Endured blame, when your own rebellion killed those around you…”
“A lie. I will not forgive you
that
lie, sir wisp.”
“I hope you will, when you rule.”
“Then you’ll wait a long, long time, sir wisp!”
“You will rule,” his mother said. “You fear our taking the book from you, do you not? You could hardly be more wrong. The book is yours. It was always yours. It was the text old Mauryl used, and a wickeder wizard there never was than Mauryl: you saw him, at Ynefel—did Tristen point him out? The face above the door. He brought a dead soul back, in Tristen, one of the Sihhë-lords, by blackest work, and to counter
him
, Mauryl’s enemy brought
you
. So none of this nonsense about subservience to Tristen Sihhë: Aewyn will never forgive what you are—the very check on his power. Your dear brother, sweet child that he is, will learn what you are, and after a certain time, he will understand quite well that he faces a choice—between Tristen, who sustains his father on the throne—or you, whose destiny is to bring down his dynasty and put it under Sihhë rule, and one cannot readily think that he will continue to be your friend. He will remember his sojourn in the snow. He will take his path, as you take yours through the world, and, oh, my son, if you continue in friendship with him, it will be a
very
painful conclusion, with only one outcome. I advise you, shed him now, and be only a remote enemy, not an intimate one. His sister will be your queen—”
“My own sister, too!” He was truly, deeply offended. And yet the eyes, the wonderful violet eyes, stayed with him, heart-wrenchingly intent on his. “Mother, that’s an abomination!”
“And
you
have listened too obediently to the Quinalt and the Bryalt. Your queen, and your subject, your one love, or there will be no love at all for you in this world. And you will, like Tristen, live long, very long. Will petty rules matter so much to you, I wonder, when you rule?”
“Well, it’s no matter,” he said with a shrug, “since the sun will come up in the west before I rule anything. Even Gran’s goats. We gave them all away, so I suppose I have no subjects.”
“The pride of a king, certainly,” his mother said.
“The face of one,” the young man said. “The bearing and the manner, when he wills to use it. The Quinalt would have liked him better had he been humble. His speech, do you note, has the courtly lilt, but Amefin, not Guelen. Where did he learn that, I wonder?”
“Perhaps it was a spell,” his mother said. “It could walk out of my cell, with him. He could carry it wherever he wished, right past the wards. I gave him many such gifts.”
That chilled him to the bone. He refused to think he had carried his mother’s curse home with him. If that were so, he
was
to blame for the fire.
“Well, well,” the young man said. “You have reasoned with him as best you can. Let your sister set him at his lessons.”
“My sister,” his mother said, and spun full about, her skirts swirling. They came to rest, and she looked at him again, but with a she-wolf’s look, a terrible, burning stare, and a smile he had never seen on his mother’s face.
“Nephew,” those same lips said. “Listen to your mother.”
“Leave me alone.” Horror overwhelmed him. “You’re dead. You’ve been dead since I was born.”
“Tristen is ever so much older than that,” his aunt said, “and you had no fear of him. I assure you, you should have had. He did recognize you.”
“My dead aunt and a wisp,” he said, drawing himself up. “Small choice I have.”
“He only wishes to provoke us,” the man said with a tolerant smile. “Be patient. We have time. We have as much time as we wish to take.” Both winked out, with a little gust of wind that disturbed the fire, and left him with a curse in his mouth and nowhere to spit it.
He stood for a moment, in case they might come back and catch him collapsed onto a bench. He stood glaring at the fire, then settled himself with as much dignity as he could muster, given aching legs and frost-stung feet and hands and face. He felt the pain of his injuries now, a pain that grew and grew, and stung his eyes with indignation.
Anger was very, very close to the surface, anger enough to wreck the room, anger enough to fling himself at the shards of ice that barred the door, and die that way, if that was all that would spite them. He had no other hope.
Anger will be your particular struggle
. He recalled Emuin saying that. And of Aewyn:
He is your chance for redemption and your
inclination toward utter fall. Do you understand me
?
If I betray him
, he had said. And Emuin had said:
If you betray him, it will be fatal to us all.
He had not, had he, betrayed his brother? He had stayed steadfast. He meant to do so.
Emuin had said, too, regarding his mother:
As near as she can
come to love, she loves you
.
Love, was it? Wrong in one, perhaps wrong in both. Perhaps Emuin had not seen as much of his nature as he ought…
Vision. Was that not the word Tristen had given him?
Seeing. Seeing things for what they were. Seeing the truth, without coloring it, or making it other than it was. Was that the beginning of wizardry, to know what a thing really was before one started to wish it to be something else?
Be Mouse
, Tristen had said, Mouse, not Owl. Mouse looked out from the base of the walls, was low and quiet, and looked carefully before he committed himself. He more than looked, he listened, and measured his distances—was never caught too far from his hole.
He certainly had been.
And he had forgotten his other word. So much of a wizard he was.
Spider, Emuin had called him. Spider Prince. And he had said pridefully that he didn’t live in a nasty hole.
He was certainly in one now. He’d spun his little web, his wards, and Sir Wisp had smashed right through them without even noticing.
All he could do was do them again, and again, and again, and maybe, as long as he might be a prisoner here, he might do them well enough to be a nuisance, then a hindrance, then, maybe, a barrier… spinning his web, a bit at a time.
Patience.
Patience
was his other word. Now he remembered it. Patience, and waiting to talk to Paisi, and waiting to get advice, and approaching things slowly—would have saved him so much grief.
Patience instead of anger. Patience instead of rushing into things headlong. Patience, and Vision… would have mended so much that had gone wrong.
Lord Tristen had advised him of the truth. Would someone do that, for his enemy?
Lord Tristen might. He would have, because that was his nature to deal in truth, not lies.
And what did that say, for the advice he had just been given?
Maybe it was time not to be Otter, diving headlong from this to that, nor Mouse, watching from the peripheries of a situation, but patient Spider, simply building, over and over, and over again.
He sat, hands on his knees, and rebuilt his path, from the cottage, to the woods, to the battlefield, to the bridge, to here, in the unnatural ice that argued for somewhere not quite of the ordinary sort. The fogs that closed in had delivered them here, and here, and here, and at the last, Aewyn, Syrillas, had outright been unable to go with him, or had resisted going, and what pulled him here had been too strong…
Too strong for Aewyn.
Or too foreign to Aewyn, being sorcerous in nature.
Sorcery was a path that might be open to him. He might learn it and use it.
But it did not mend its nature simply because he used it; and he did not think it would improve his own.
So there was wizardry, which Tristen had refused to teach him.
Make me a wizard, he had asked. Or, had it been: Teach me wizardry?
And Lord Tristen had said:
You are not yet what you will be
, and added,
and I have been waiting for this question for longer than you
know
.
How did he hear that answer now, in light of what his captors had said he was?
Teach you wizardry
? He remembered Emuin saying that.
Useless. Teach you magic
?
I cannot. No more can I teach any Sihhë
what resides in his blood and bone
.
He had scorned the answer. He had disbelieved it.
And he named you
, Master Emuin had said of Lord Tristen.
Then
I suspect he did see what I see
.
And he had asked, disturbed:
What did he see
?
What do you
?
A conjuring
, Emuin had answered him.
A Summoning that opens
a door
.
What door
? he had asked, straight back at Emuin.
Make sense,
please, sir
!
And Emuin:
You
govern what door, if you have the will
. Do
you have the will,
Spider Prince
?
A chill ran through him, deep as bone, a chill that had him shaking in every limb. He looked down at his hand, where, forgotten, Lord Crissand’s ring shone in the firelight, dull silver, and festooned with cheap silverwork.
It had not tingled since all this last mad course began. It had not warned him against Emuin. It had lain inert during their precipitate rush from Marna to Lewen Field to the river. It had not warned him of Sir Wisp or his mother. Perhaps his captors had killed the virtue in it. He wished he had given the ring to his brother when they were at the beginning of all this. Perhaps then Lord Crissand would have been able to find Aewyn, at least, and saved his father pain.
He wished… like the spider. He chained one wish to the other, starting not with what was impossible, but what was possible. He sat down before the fire, and wished one spark to fly out, and to land on his hand.
It flew. It landed. Without hesitation he seized it, and patiently wished the next thing. He wished the chill away, wished himself warm. One thing after another, one thing after another.
He wished Aewyn safe.
The fog appeared again—not around him—but where the door had been. He saw just the least glimmer of light.
iv
SNOW STILL FELL IN THE DARK, AND THEY RODE
THROUGH THE REMNANT of walls… walls lit by ghostly blue lines, which Cefwyn himself could see tonight. He rode by Tristen’s side, Uwen just behind, and all around them, like a ghostly city, old Althalen rose, not just its foundations, but the outlines of its long-fallen towers, and the soaring height of domes greater than any in the realm. It was a glimpse of the Sihhë capital, as it had been, and a Marhanen king knew what his grandfather had brought low.
But things changed. There were bonds made. And the heart of that maze of blue light led to a simple place, a corner of what had been the palace, and a wall, where a tomb was set—they had not been near it a moment ago, but then they were, and Cefwyn had the heart-deep conviction Tristen had magicked them a bit, just a little, over a hill and down it.
He saw then a gathering of haunts, in a little low place, at that corner, ghosts that, at their coming, turned and stared at them with gray and troubled eyes, before they shredded away on the winds. Layer after layer of haunts fled their passage, wisps that left an uneasiness in the air.
But a young lad sat against that wall—no, he rested against the knees of a bearded old man, whose ghostly hand stroked his blond, curly head, and by that man stood, gowned in cobweb, Auld Syes, the gray lady—her, he knew for long dead; and on the other side, behind the old man he now recognized for the old Regent, his father-in-law, stood a woman in a shawl, who was his other son’s gran, likewise perished. These three had his son in their keeping, and his heart froze in him. He swung down before his horse stopped moving, and ran to his son, heedless of haunts or spirits or whatever magic might be here. He was an ordinary man. He brushed it all aside, and seized his son up in his arms, and hugged him as hard as he could.