It was Lord Moryn.
He and many of the duke's liegemen were rumbling over the drawbridge. The lean lord's mantle flapped after him. At the edge of the circle, Moryn stopped, surveying the spectacle. His man, Waer, was awake, if not on his feet. Some of the crowd glanced to Durand; Moryn gave him a hard look.
Then the Knight in Red stepped forward. "You have interrupted your feast?" Lamoric asked. "My man, Waer, had no business interfering." "I am surprised to hear
you
say it." Moryn closed his eyes for an instant. "Waer is rash. He left without a word. I came when I learned." "Not in time, however," Lamoric said. "What do you say?" said Moryn.
"You have chosen your moment well, my Lord. This fellow of yours had ample opportunity to reach me before you could arrive. If Sir Durand here had not been so quick, he would have done."
Durand wondered. Around him, the other retainers were fidgeting like pageboys.
Fire glittered in the slits of Moryn's eyes.
"Do you say you had no intention of loosing a thug to lame your enemy? Of hobbling your opponent before you must meet him in the field? Of finding an accident to preserve your reputation among your father's men?"
Moryn snapped his blade into the chill air. It glittered with his eyes. 'To face a creature such as you, a man needs no such tricks."
Lamoric left his own blade lie in its scabbard. "I commend your cleverness, Lord Moryn. Waer is a loyal man. He is rash. He would not need an order, just a well-chosen word. And you can sleep, an innocent"
Moryn's blade twitched. Lamoric's hand drifted toward his own. There was a sound at the High Ashes gate.
A second delegation of wellborn soldiers stepped into the autumn night. This time, Durand found himself looking at half the barons of Mornaway, with Duke Severin stalking at their head.
"Gentlemen!" the old duke said, showing some sign of the warrior he must once have been. "Peace. There is bad blood, but I will not see it spilt
.
You are guests. I am told that a time and place has been agreed, and I believe that time will come soon enough to satisfy anyone's honor."
Lord Moryn was nodding. He sheathed his sword.
"I have agreed that we wil
l fight before the Herald of Er
rest" Moryn said.
Lamoric hooked his thumbs in his belt.
"Good, good," Severin said. "Now. There is food prepared and waiting. Men have labored. Beasts have died to fill our stomachs. It is not fitting that we should ignore their sacrifice."
Moryn nodded, and, with his men gathering up the disoriented Waer, withdrew beyond the stockade.
Durand left.
It was all too much. Lamoric was half mad, but Durand was no better himself. Serving men stared up at him. He walked toward the walls. Unless he wanted to swim the new moat, there was nowhere to go but to the open ground above the castle ditch.
Yet again, he had survived a mistake. The fight with Waer had been stupid and dangerous, and it had done nothing to untie the knot of his frustration. He understood nothing. In the space of a heartbeat, he had lost Deorwen.
Everything had gone wrong so quickly.
"Durand!" A voice behind him.
Heremund bandied down the grassy ringwork. Durand remembered an ape once at a fair.
"I reckoned Waer was it," the skald gasped. "But there is something else."
Durand knotted his fists for a moment, then turned. Anger was stupid.
"What made you blunder in like that?" Heremund demanded. "What made you bolt?"
Heremund's avid brown eyes looked closely into Durand's face, then it seemed that realization dawned.
"Ah.
A mistake, yes? Nothing to do with Lamoric."
Durand exhaled through his nostrils, eyes shut.
"I see," Heremund said.
"Then let me be a while."
Heremund nodded deeply, but, as Durand turned to continue his walk, the skald trotted alongside. "First there's old Traveler," he said. 'Then you in the hills over that horse's neck. And that stag by the hut."
"Heremund,"
Durand said.
'The Traveler don't turn up for everyone, boy. Some hear a rapping. There's a staff-heel click as they choose to murder or not—a wife, a child—to cheat or not, to pick up or set aside.
There's only the tapping, and a prickling on the neck to say that someone's there."
Durand remembered the forest at Gravenholm and the rapping in the dark.
"You, though," said Heremund. "You meet the man himself."
Heremund looked round them both. "I see you crashing through a dance, hooking dancers with your arms, changing the spin of the whole thing."
Durand remembered the news after Traveler's Night that sent him careering down the road to Red Winding and Bower Mead and High Ashes and God knew where.
"Little good it's done me," said Durand.
"Don't know," Heremund muttered. "Maybe it ain't done. Maybe it's hardly got started." He was shaking his head.
"Your talk has the ring of doom about it. I—"
Just then, a tremor passed through the whole of Creation. A footfall. Durand steadied himself. Very faintly, bells moaned on the air. The throb spoke from some shrine in the castle and another somewhere beyond the valley rim. Durand stood facing the Glass and the strange island. Rings spread across the surface.
"Hells,"
Heremund breathed, casting about
In the midst of the river, something—a black pane of. shale—slid from the broad back of the isle. A cold win
d tossed Durand's cloak and rustl
ed in the skeleton branches of the trees above the valley. The weather was changing.
"Hells," said Heremund. He gaped at the dim sky. "Hells, hells."
Durand caught hold of the little man. He could hear shouts now. Animals screamed. "What does it mean?" he demanded. He felt as though Creation had changed. The world's horizon seemed like the prow of some vast ship on a vaster ocean.
He shook his head.
"Someone's being a fool," Heremund gasped.
As he turned under the black valley rim, waiting for God knew what, someone moved in the camp. Durand would have known the walk from seven leagues. Only twenty paces from him, Deorwen stood before Bertana's pavilion, looking into the vault of Heaven.
'This dance of yours," Durand said. "I'll tell you this for nothing: I'm not the one swinging partners round." With this, he freed the skald and darted for Deorwen's back, once again dodging the web of guy lines between the knights' pavilions. She stared up until he had come close enough to touch her.
"Deorwen," he said.
Her eyes were still wide from the sky.
"Oh, Durand. No."
He caught her elbow. For an instant, she looked at his hand as though it was some foreign creature, then she pulled free and darted back into Bertana's pavilion.
Durand pushed after her, ducking into a crowded space of red walls and strewn herbs. There were chests and trunks. Lady Bertana stood, and bearded Coelgrim crossed to meet him. After a bewildered instant, Durand spotted a bright slit of twilight where a second flap had just closed.
He found no sign of Deorwen back under the eerie Heavens. Shadowy people stared up among the tents, holding the Eye of Heaven between themselves and the whole of Creation.
The girl had vanished as completely as if she had never been.
Durand held his hands loose and eyes tight shut. Every dark thought shot through his skull. It was an effort to breathe. Tents and ropes webbed him round, walls and ditches and moats and rivers blocked and barred him. He turned his eyes to Heaven, where the Eye beyond the valley rim touched strange ripples in the clouds, as though someone had pitched a stone into the firmament.
He heard Coelgrim step into the space behind him, the cool weight of an axe now in his hands, but Durand did not even bother to turn.
"Your lady is safe," he breathed. "You needn't worry on my account."
Without waiting for the man's answer, Durand stalked away, tripping over stakes and ropes and tethers. Again, he went for open ground.
He had to get free.
Water brimmed in the ditches. Another push, and he would swim for it, spending the night in the freezing forest wastes. He teetered along the fathoms-deep castle ditch. He would get himself beyond the sight of men, alone for once beyond the curve of the castle's wall.
Finally, he stumbled round the far side where the split Glass poured back into its channel.
There, he found a silent figure, pale against the river dark.
For a death-cold instant, Durand thought of Cerlac and the Glass that brimmed with spirits. He thought of the washerwoman. He thought of the blue-shirted peasant and the Traveler himself.
The figure was turning, a long, pale face coming into view. But it was not Cerlac or any of these others; instead, the man was Agryn. A Holy Ghost, perhaps, but not the dead from Hesperand.
The knight's dark eyes narrowed.
"What was all that?" Durand asked.
"I don't know." The strange dial dangled from the knight's fingers.
"What did it mean?" With the river and the gloom and Agryn being so still and the s
hadows of his past with the Sep
tarim, such a man might know anything.
"I cannot say," answered Agryn. He stared at Durand for a moment "I was never one of the Septarim. Nearly, once. The Heavens are a looking glass, they say. Or a pool, more like."
Durand had heard stories of bare monasteries and long rows of knights waiting still as corpses upon their biers, cool as wax and old as foundation stones.
"You have been in an accident," the knight said.
Durand did not know where to begin, but Sir Agryn raised a knuckle toward Durand's face and fists. There were scrapes. Mud. "Waer came for Lamoric. I was lucky."
"Let us hope Lamoric has your luck tomorrow."
Durand stopped for a moment, then had to nod. Lamoric could lose. The whole surge of events that had carried Durand here could ebb away.
"If Lamoric fails, we will be turned out, penniless, scattered before the wind," said Agryn. "Winter will be hard when taxes have emptied every strongbox." He turned his eye on Durand. "It is a hard road for a knight without lord or land."
His long face studied the dimming horizon. Suddenly, Durand wondered how many winters this man had seen, alone on the road.
"Why did you leave them?" Durand wondered. "My Holy Ghosts?" He paused. "For my wife." Now, Durand was surprised. "I didn't know you were—" "Dead of fever, when Carondas was king." Old King Carondas had been buried in Ferangore sixty winters.
Again, there was the dry laugh. "She was among the wise women who came to cleanse me of this life. I lay down on the bier. She carried dead man's balsam. I left my brethren and God and the king. I left with her, so heartsore was I at the thought of letting her go."
"God,"
said Durand.
"I was meant to serve the kings of Errest. The Powers called. In turning from that calling," said Agryn, "I turned the Eye of Heaven from me. A man cannot slip the doom allotted him. We will see what becomes of Lamoric, and all of us whose fates are bound to his."
Durand nodded. They had not lost yet. Nothing was finished.
"If the Herald's fair, we've got a—"
The man fixed Durand with a dark eye. "The Herald of Errest stood with Einred's sons at Lost Princes; walked the Halls of Heaven; rode before the grieving king at the Plain of the Skull and the Waste of Fettered Bones; winded the Crusader Horn at the black gates of the Burning City. Servant to ten kings. He keeps the Roll of Errest and the fame of all peers living and dead. His ruling will be the mandate of Heaven."
Durand rubbed the back of his neck, eyes on the turf. "I am sorry," said Agryn. "No." The man was right.
Durand closed his eyes, his mind spinning. Deorwen returned to his thoughts.
"But the Powers, I feel them, nearly, in this," Agryn confessed. "As I did in those days long ago. Perhaps there is cause to
...
to hope in this."
Durand heard anxious ages in the man's voice: battles enough to make Coen's striving seem the trial of a moment.