Authors: James Moloney
I still didn't know why Tamlyn was so excited, but his enthusiasm and the story itself were starting to draw me in. âWho was this man? Could we find out more from him?' I asked.
âNo,' said Tamlyn. âHe's dead. That was part of the story, too.'
His swift reply and the sudden glum look on his face made me think there was more to this man than Tamlyn was telling us. But it was Master Dessar who responded most vigorously. He jumped out of his chair and, putting the book he'd already taken back on the shelf, he reached for a different one.
âYes, you're right, Tamlyn, the man's dead. But his story doesn't come from the ancient tales. It happened not so long ago. Before he died, one of my teachers took
down his story and if I'm not mistaken â¦' He selected a book and began to flip through its pages. âYes, here it is.'
Tamlyn rose to read the page over his shoulder. I joined the men, as curious as they were, but when the room fell silent I had to beg helplessly, âPlease, I've never been taught any letters.'
They broke off from their reading and we all returned to our chairs.
âThen I'll read it aloud,' he said. âIt starts here with a little explanation.' His voice took on the tone of someone telling another's story and he began:
Recently, when talk began of a Wyrdborn who claimed to have returned alive from far across the oceans, the College of Scholars became concerned. Each time the tale was told, the details were altered. It was impossible to separate truth from the embellishments added by others as the story was passed on. So it was decided, with the permission of the king, that I would travel to Ledaris and hear the man's story from his own lips.
This I have done and here I record his tale.
The man's name is Haylan Redwing. He had earned a living by guarding the warehouses of merchant traders for many years and had become intrigued by their tales of distant lands said to lie through the fog that no sailors willingly enter. With two Wyrdborn companions, he
travelled to the sea coast where he commandeered a ship and sailed northward. He would not say how long the journey took.
Upon reaching a land called Erebis Felan by its inhabitants, he and his companions easily fought their way inland against the commonfolk and loaded their stolen horses with whatever riches caught their eye. They cared nothing for what they stole. It was the power such wealth could buy them they were after. Then they fell to arguing over who was due the largest share, a common-enough practice among the Wyrdborn, it must be said. While distracted by such squabbles, they were attacked, not by commonfolk but wizards. Each of the three fought to save himself, but the sorcerers of Erebis Felan worked together, taking on one at a time. In this way, Redwing's two colleagues were soon overwhelmed.
Before the sorcerers could turn their attention to him, Redwing escaped out of sight behind some rocks. From there, he looked on in horror as the two Wyrdborn were hacked to pieces with their own swords.
He fled immediately, and kept on through the countryside until even his Wyrdborn strength waned. Then he slept, too exhausted to care that he wasn't well hidden.
Many hours later, he was awoken by a young woman who lived on a nearby farm. He wondered why she hadn't
simply raised the alarm without waking him, until he saw how taken she was with his good looks. She led him to a stone hut her family used to store vegetables through the winter and later brought him food and drink.
This interlude gave Redwing time to work his enchantments on her and the girl was soon infatuated with him. She couldn't bear the thought of him being killed, and on the third day she brought him a special gift that surprised him, but she would not explain why she was so keen for him to have it.
He would not tell me what this strange gift was and when I enquired further, asking whether it was a pendant or a ring for his finger, he only laughed and said I would never guess.
Redwing's story now became even more curious. To his great consternation, the young woman brought the wizards to his hiding place and, before he could conjure a spell or even swing his sword, he was overpowered. Redwing expected to die there and then, and when they seized him roughly and held him down, he thought every breath would be his last. But then, for no reason that he could see, they suddenly released their grip and let him up.
The girl came to his side and spoke into his ear. âTell them you want to live here with me as my husband and tend the land as a farmer,' she whispered.
Bewildered and afraid for his life, he did as she asked.
The wizards complained that Wyrdborn came from across the seas only to plunder and kill. They didn't trust him and would have to watch him every minute because his powers were too dangerous to be left unchecked.
The young woman had an answer for them. âThe circle has magic that can change him,' she said, and made a show of displaying the gift she had given him. He knew now what had saved him, though what special powers it held, he couldn't tell.
The wizards spoke formally to him. Was it truly his wish to marry the woman and live in peace? Of course Redwing agreed, since he would surely die if he said no. He was blindfolded and taken a long distance. When the blindfold was removed, he found himself in the courtyard of a grand building surrounded by more than a dozen wizards, with hundreds of commonfolk looking on from behind them. He feared he'd been tricked and they'd brought him here for a more public execution.
Everyone, wizards and commonfolk alike, stared at him, though not at his face. They were all searching out the gift that had saved his life once already.
Again, I pressed him to describe this special talisman, but he refused.
Returning to his story, he told how he made it easier for them to see this gift that held such significance for them. The move seemed to work against him, because
it prompted the wizards to turn their magic upon him until he began to weaken and finally collapsed to the floor unconscious.
When he awoke, he was lying on a bed in a small room. With time alone to reflect, he remembered asking to become a farmer. He wondered what such a life would be like, since all he'd ever known was slitting throats and chasing thieves away from traders' warehouses.
Late in the day, the woman who'd protected him entered the room accompanied by an ageing wizard.
âYou are free to join this woman's family on their farm,' the wizard told him.
As he spoke, the woman shifted uncomfortably beside the bed. Redwing sat up, still a little unsteady, and rather than help him, as a caring lover would, she took a step back. He saw that she no longer looked upon him with affectionate eyes, so he concentrated his mind to renew his enchantments.
âYou are wasting your time,' said the wizard. âYour powers have been stripped from you by the circle. That was the only way we could let you stay among us, as you asked.'
Then the young woman spoke. âI've changed my mind,' she said, her face filled with revulsion. âI don't want to marry this man. I don't want anything to do with him,' and she quickly fled the room.
The grey-haired wizard remained, staring down at Haylan Redwing, who was once again sure he would die. Strangely, despite his fear, he felt something he'd never known before. Holding the wizard's eyes, he said, âWill you tell the people I robbed that ⦠that I regret the suffering I brought them?' He said this not in the hope that they would spare him, but out of a need he didn't yet understand.
The wizard left him without a word and, for the rest of the day and the night that followed, every time Redwing heard footsteps approaching, he worried it was the executioner come to finish him. In the morning, when a blindfold was once again placed around his eyes, he resigned himself to death with an odd peace he had never expected to feel. But, to his utter surprise and relief, he was taken back to the shore where he had landed. His ship was waiting and he was placed aboard then magic was used to push him out to sea.
Without the unnatural strength of Wyrdborn magic, he couldn't sail the boat alone and suffered greatly from thirst and hunger and the cold sea winds before he was rescued by mariners blown from their usual trade route, who brought him back to Athlane.
Arnou Dessar stopped reading and looked up to see what we made of the story.
âI was right, then,' said Tamlyn. âMy father and his companions laughed at the fellow because he'd given up his powers.'
I could hardly contain myself and wondered why the others weren't jumping out of their skin, too. âIf this story is true, then there's a way to save Lucien. In this far-off land â what's it called? Ere â¦' It was such a strange name it hadn't stuck in my memory.
âErebis Felan,' said Master Dessar. âAs for the story itself, my old teacher was both honest and meticulous, so the only question is whether this Haylan Redwing was telling the truth.'
âCan we trust him?' I asked anxiously.
âIf he'd remained a Wyrdborn, I would doubt his word.' He stopped and glanced towards Tamlyn. âI'm sorry, that must sound like an insult.'
Tamlyn shook his head grimly. âFinish what you were going to say, Master Dessar.'
âIf he'd still been a Wyrdborn when he returned, I'd fear he was lying to gain some advantage or cover his crimes, but there's no doubt he was stripped of his powers as he claimed. He was an ordinary man when he spoke to my old teacher, with no reason to deceive. I think we can trust his story.'
âThen we must take Lucien to Erebis Felan,' I said. âThat's where we can fulfil our pledge.'
âIt's where Lucien will die, Silvermay. You heard the story. Without the talisman Redwing spoke about, Wyrdborn are killed without hesitation.'
âBut surely not a baby,' I gasped.
âThis baby especially,' said Arnou Dessar. âThe more I study this ancient city, the more I'm convinced the magic that built it matches what I've heard of Erebis Felan. That means their ancestors created that chamber of nightmares; and if the story has been retained in their own legends, then a Wyrdborn baby would be what they fear the most. It may well be why they abandoned this city and Athlane itself.'
âWe've got to have the talisman, then.'
Arnou shook his head. âYou heard me read from that book, Silvermay. Haylan Redwing wouldn't tell my old teacher what the talisman was, not a word of description. All we can guess is that it's something small enough to hold in the hand or hang on the body somehow.'
âAnd Redwing was killed before he revealed any more,' said Tamlyn.
âYes, long ago and by his own son.'
Tamlyn sighed. âThat's what I was told also.' The confirmation seemed to weigh him down.
I couldn't let this wonderful chance go, though. There simply wasn't any other way, after all, and it was
only luck that we had even this one. âThe talisman could still be with his family, couldn't it?'
Both men turned to face me and I wondered what I'd said that made them so solemn-faced.
âThey are sure to be Wyrdborn,' Arnou explained. âThey will have no interest in helping you.'
âMaster Dessar's right, I'm afraid,' said Tamlyn. âFor a Wyrdborn, to need something from another person is a weakness. Our way is to take what we want.'
What a miserable world the Wyrdborn inhabit
, I thought.
Poor Tamlyn. No wonder he's found it so hard to laugh at life's joys
. I would make him laugh again before too long, I hoped, but for now it would have to wait.
âThis is the only hope we have,' I said. âWe have to find Haylan Redwing's family. That book mentioned the town he lived in.'
âLedaris,' said Arnou Dessar and, as he said it, his eyes flicked nervously towards Tamlyn.
âWhy that look?' I asked.
Tamlyn let out a long, disheartening breath then replied for them both. âEven my father calls Ledaris a den of villains, the worst in Athlane.'
In Vonne
T
he same chamberlain who'd first shown Gabbet the way to Coyle Strongbow's room many weeks before stood aside to let him enter, then took up a silent stance by the door.
The room hadn't been made any more cheerful since Gabbet's last visit. He preferred small comforts himself: a cushion to soften the hard seat of a chair; curtains that shut out the worst of the summer's heat but pulled back in winter to let in the sun. This chamber had no rugs to soothe his aching feet, no flowers to bring a splash of colour, just the unadorned table of the man who brooded inside its chill grey walls.
Coyle was waiting impatiently for his report, which Gabbet delivered simply, in the words he'd rehearsed all the way from Nan Tocha.
âYou saw her with your own eyes?' said the Wyrdborn, glaring at him with an intensity that made him want to take a step back. That would be a mistake, he knew. Show weakness in front of this man, hint at the fear that the Wyrdborn fed upon so cruelly, and he would lose the prize he hoped to claim.
âYes, my lord. She is thinner than I remember and looks rather sickly, but there's no doubt it is her.'
âThe woman you saw here in my household last year? The one who looked so much like the picture you brought me from the diggings?'
âIt is Nerigold. I would not have come all this way if I wasn't sure.'
âAnd she had a baby with her, you say?'
Gabbet nodded. âAnother woman seemed to have the care of it, a peasant girl, although she was dressed differently from the women of the mountain tribes.'
He wished he'd taken notice of the girl so he could tell Coyle more, but it had been difficult to think of anything else once he saw Nerigold holding the child in her arms.
Gabbet told himself to relax. He'd brought Coyle news he was desperate to hear, and the man seemed pleased, as much as a Wyrdborn was ever pleased about
anything. It was best to keep his wits about him still, in the presence of one so powerful and with such a reputation. All the same, he couldn't help anticipating his reward. A bag of gold, at least, he calculated. Judging by Coyle's reaction, he wondered if it might be two. With that much, he could quit his post as a clerk and buy a farm with its own workers to do the ploughing and herd the sheep. He would still spend his days counting coins and writing letters, but the coins would be his own and the letters would order life's luxuries for himself from the merchants of Vonne.
âIf it was truly Nerigold you saw,' said Coyle, âthere would have been a man with her; one you'd surely recognise since you spent a year here in my household.'
âI saw no man, my lord.'
Coyle's face darkened, making Gabbet instantly afraid. Fear can cripple a man's mind, or it can spur him to quick-witted survival.
âThey did seem to be waiting for someone, my lord. Perhaps this man you speak of had gone hunting or â'
âThat's enough,' Coyle snapped. âI'm only interested in what you saw, not what you suppose. But Nerigold couldn't have travelled so far without the man I'm thinking of. Your story has been a great help to me ⦠er â¦'
âGabbet, my lord.'
âYes, of course. Do you know The Wayfarers Inn near the city gate?'
âI've passed it many times, my lord, but I've never stepped inside,' said Gabbet.
It was a rough drinking house for coach drivers and stable hands; not at all the place for an educated clerk in a smart jacket.
âGo there now and take a room,' Coyle told him. âTell the landlord that I sent you and he'll give you the best he has, at the back, away from the noisy street. As soon as I can arrange it, I'll send someone to reward you for your service.'
It was exactly what Gabbet had been hoping for. He bowed low and turned to leave, giving way to the greedy smile that refused to hold back any longer. That smile would have quickly left his lips, however, if he'd still been facing Coyle.
As Gabbet headed for the door, the Wyrdborn caught the eye of his chamberlain who'd stood guard during the interview. Nodding towards Gabbet's receding back, he lifted his chin and drew his thumb sharply across his throat.
âBe patient, Gabbet,' he called as his visitor passed out of the room. âYour reward will find you before the sun is down.'
Coyle stood at his desk for many long minutes, staring down at drawings made by the king's artist â hastily made copies of the originals that had once lain across this very desk, although Chatiny didn't know this. Disturbed by the discussion Arnou Dessar's sketches had prompted among his scholars, the king had sent these copies to Coyle Strongbow to ask what he made of them.
âYour face has betrayed you again, my pretty,' Coyle said to one of the drawings, âbut it's not you who stands between me and the prize, is it?'
As he spoke, his fingers touched the faceless child bundled tightly in the woman's arms. He pulled the drawing aside, focusing on the bare wood of the table top, his thoughts straying a long way from this stark room.
âTamlyn,' he whispered. âYou stand in my way, but you can show me the way, too.'
He looked up and again claimed the attention of his chamberlain. âBefore you go off to perform your other ⦠er, duty â¦' he dipped his head towards the doorway through which Gabbet had so recently departed, âfind my son Hallig and have him meet me behind the stables.'
Â
Hallig was slouched against a fence post when, half an hour later, his father strode across the courtyard and slipped through a narrow gap into a mostly forgotten
part of the household. Hallig pushed himself upright without unfolding his arms and followed.
âWhat's this about?' he said. âThere's nothing here but rotting thatch from the stable roof and the empty kennels where we used to keep the hunting dogs.'
The hunting dogs had disappeared five years before. Taken out one afternoon to track down a stag, they'd simply kept running. Their handler was behind the escape. Appalled at how the dogs were mistreated by their Wyrdborn masters, he'd urged them on into the forest where his friends were waiting to bundle them off to more caring owners. Coyle had killed the handler, of course. Defiance should always be met with the harshest punishment. But he hadn't really cared much for the dogs, and neither had Hallig, so they'd let the rest of the thieves go undetected.
âThey're not as empty as you think. Take a look,' Coyle said, inviting Hallig to go closer.
The kennels were surrounded by a wooden fence too high for a man to peer over. There were gaps between the palings, though, and it was to one of the wider of these gaps that Coyle directed his son. Hallig leaned forward, one eye closed, the open one only inches from the narrow opening. Suddenly he sprang backwards as a frenzy of barking erupted on the other side and the whole fence swayed violently.
Coyle let out a bark of his own; a throaty laugh at Hallig's fright and to show that he'd known what would happen.
His son was as furious as the creatures who'd startled him but he held his tongue. He forced out a laugh of his own, as if it was all great fun, and he looked again through the gap with a better idea of what he was seeing.
âTamlyn's dogs. I thought they were dead. They're no use for hunting, not after what was done to them.'
âQuite the opposite,' said Coyle, staring through the gap at a snout that sniffed feverishly for its tormentors. âThese have a job to do. That's why we're here.'
He moved towards the gate, a hand outstretched to slip the rope from the post that held it closed.
Behind him, Hallig stiffened. âIs that wise?'
âAfraid? You, a Wyrdborn! One kick will throw them both against the fence if they attack.'
Coyle unlatched the gate and stepped inside. Immediately the dogs rushed at him, snarling and baring their teeth. Then, just as quickly, they stopped short and cowered away into the far corner of the dingy kennel, growling still, but in fear rather than anger.
Once they'd retreated, Hallig followed his father through the gate. He saw the dogs were larger than he remembered, each the size of a timber wolf, though their
hair was shorter and their coats a creamy white beneath the filth.
âThey recognise your smell,' he said to Coyle.
âYes, and they'll surely remember Tamlyn's, too. Put collars on them and find some stout chain to use as a leash. Leave the collars loose, too.'
âWhy loose?' said Hallig as he found what he needed hanging from nails on the wall. âThey'll slip free. You can't let them get at commonfolk in the street. That sort of thing upsets the king.'
âIt's not commonfolk who need to worry,' Coyle told his son.
Before he could ask anything further, Hallig felt the air around them become suddenly chill. He knew what it meant and stepped back from his father. A discomforting yowl started across the kennel and the dogs began to snap at each other and writhe on their backs, caking themselves even more with thick mud. They threw their heads from side to side against the collars and the clinking, clanking leash.
Hallig's eyes widened. âWhat are you doing to them?' he gasped.
The dogs were growing before his eyes, their muscles filled out wherever there was a fold of skin; their snouts lengthened, their teeth became longer. By the time Coyle broke his enchantment and the dogs rose to their feet,
they stood face to face with Hallig. Only the chains, securely fastened to a sturdy post, kept them from reaching him. They reared up like horses, with claws instead of hooves. Their jaws snapped at him, eager to snatch an arm, a hand, a head.
Hallig was a Wyrdborn; he carried the strength of a hundred men in his muscles and the gift of magic in his blood. He had frightened the defiance out of commonfolk and beaten back other Wyrdborn in the name of his master, the king. But these two dogs that strained their chains to breaking point and growled their vicious intent into his face were the most fearful sight he had ever seen.
Â
Three days into our journey to Ledaris, I found myself in the stern of an open rowing boat with Lucien asleep in a wicker basket beside me. Rain had visited us once and clouds still hovered overhead, but, as I looked down at Lucien to be sure he wasn't cold, the sun opened its eye like a late sleeper peeking out from under the bedclothes.
Come on, Sun, show your whole face and let us dry out
, I thought. It was a good omen, anyway, just like the gift of this boat.
Well, it wasn't actually a gift, since Tamlyn hadn't given the owner a chance to show his generosity. He'd simply âacquired' it yesterday at a mooring downstream from a village called Quickwater and we'd set sail without
a single eye spotting us. The village was well named because the boat was shooting downriver on a gleeful current and, with Tamlyn at the oars as well, we were making better time than a horse on the trot.
Ryall sat restlessly with his back to us in the bow. I'd insisted he go back to my aunt's house, but he'd argued just as doggedly that he come with us.
Tamlyn had solved the matter. âLet him come, Silvermay. We'll need to stay off the road until we're down from these mountains and Ryall knows every goat track in Nan Tocha, don't you, Ryall?'
Ryall had grinned because he'd got his way over me. I wasn't going to let him make a habit of it though.
I looked at the final passenger in the boat, the nanny goat, which sat on its haunches looking at the passing water. It hadn't once tried to escape, thanks to the enchantments Tamlyn had placed over it; the same enchantments that made it lie on its side with its bulging udder exposed every time Lucien cried to be fed. The goat must have had enough milk to satisfy him because it stayed healthy.
It wouldn't be here if Nerigold was still alive to be a mother to Lucien ⦠and so the thoughts linked like a chain until I was standing at her graveside again, watching helplessly as Tamlyn tamped down the last of the earth that would lie over her forever.
After three days of this I was learning ways to distract myself when the memories threatened to engulf me again.
âDo you think Redwing's family will give us the talisman?' I asked Tamlyn as he rowed with steady, powerful strokes.
âI told you, Silvermay, the Wyrdborn give nothing away. That's what we're like. We never help anyone unless there is some reward for ourselves.'
âCould we buy it from them?'
âWhat with? All we have are the coins Arnou Dessar slipped into my pocket before we left the diggings.' He made a little music with them by jiggling his leg to make them dance inside his pocket. âThe important question is, do they still have the tailsman. They'd have no reason to value it, after all. They might have dropped it into the sea.'
I didn't want to consider such a calamity. âIf we do get hold of it, what then?'
âWe sail north to Erebis Felan.'
âBut only scholars like Arnou Dessar think it exists.'