“Really?” One of the nearest, a young man with sharp, foxlike features and a wild shock of carrot-colored hair, raised his eyebrows in surprise. Then he grinned, and said in careful Karsite, “I would be grateful, good sir, if you could tell me the direction of the Temple.”
“South, about four hundred
meiline
from here,” Karal replied shortly in his own tongue, then continued in Valdemaran. “Your accent is really quite good, but you need to form your gutturals farther back in your throat, and they’re like hoarse breathing, not like gargling.”
“Ah! Alberich never could explain that properly, thank you!” the young man said, and he hooked the nearest empty chair with his foot, dragging it over. “Have a seat, won’t you? Natoli, we need your help on the drawbridge project.”
Karal took the proffered chair as Natoli helped herself to another, and was immediately engulfed in a technical discussion of which Karal understood perhaps half. The center of attention for the group was a huge piece of paper, covered with scribbles surrounding a drawing of a bridge, that they had placed in the middle of the table so that everyone could look at it at the same time. Someone got him a tankard of light ale, and someone else shoved a plateful of cheese-topped bread rounds at him, and everyone else at the table acted as if he
belonged
there, so he simply sat and listened while they thrashed out whatever the problem was. When the topic turned to other subjects—the problem of the drawbridge having been satisfactorily dealt with—on the occasions when he could contribute a word or two, he did.
To his pleasure, these people ignored what he looked like and where he came from in favor of what he thought and said. Granted, at the moment, that wasn’t much—he was much more comfortable with simply listening to the others—but the few things he did say were treated with no more and no less respect than what anyone else said.
He drank his ale and kept his ears and his mind open, covering a great deal of astonishment by hiding his expression in his tankard. He had never before seen anyone with the kind of unbounded curiosity these young men and women shared. They talked and acted as if there was nothing that was impossible, from flying like birds to moving beneath the surface of the water without needing to breathe, like a fish. And they behaved as if there was nothing, no subject, that was “not meant for man to know.”
He knew what
most
of his teachers would have said by now. At one point or another, every single one of the people sitting at this table uttered something that could be taken as blasphemous, and at least before Solaris’ day, blasphemers met with the Fires.
By the time Natoli declared that they both needed to get some sleep and led him back out into the cold darkness, his head was swimming with so many conflicting ideas and emotions that it felt as if a hive of swarming bees had come to rest inside it. Excitement warred with nervous fear, and he was glad that the darkness hid his expression from Natoli as she led him back to the Palace. Her own excited monologue about some mathematical progression or other required only that he make vague noises in response from time to time and covered the fact that he
couldn’t
have answered even if he’d known what it was she was talking about.
The guard at the gate knew her very well, it seemed, and shook his head when the two of them approached. “I don’t know what I’m going to tell your father, young woman,” he said, as soon as they came within earshot. “Out until near midnight, and with a young man!”
“Who is someone Father
told
me to introduce around, so you can curb your lurid thoughts,” she replied smartly. “As for coming in late—if he doesn’t ask, you don’t have to tell him, do you?”
The guard continued to shake his head, but he opened the gate for them and locked it behind them without another word.
She left him on the path to the Palace, parting from him with a cheerful wave and a promise to meet him tomorrow. “I live in the dormitory with the Bardic students,” she told him. “Most of the people you met tonight actually live in town, rather than on the Palace grounds, but since Father’s a Herald, they let me live here. Will you be free right after lunch tomorrow?”
“Uh—yes,” he said, responding before he could think.
“Good, then I’ll meet you in the Palace library.” And without giving him a chance to say anything else, she trotted off into the darkness.
He made his way back to the Palace in something of a dazed condition. The guards he encountered must have recognized him, since only two of them stopped him to ask who he was and where he was going. He managed to find his way back to the suite with a minimum of stumbling around in the dark, as most of the halls were lit by a minimum of lamps at this time of night.
He waved a silent greeting at the corridor guard, who grinned as if he had his own ideas about where Karal had been. The door was unlocked, and he pushed it open slowly, hoping that it wouldn’t creak. The suite of rooms was dark but for a single candle burning in the night-lamp, and he made his way to his own room, stepping carefully to keep from waking Ulrich up.
He felt a certain amount of guilt at not leaving a note for his mentor.
I only hope Rubrik told him that Natoli carried me off
...
even if Rubrik didn’t know where we were going.
He had the feeling that there was going to be a lot of explaining to be done in the morning.
At least he was used to staying up this late. When Ulrich didn’t need his services, he generally read until just about midnight anyway. He didn’t seem to need as much sleep as some people did, which was very useful, given the number of times Ulrich had needed multiple copies of documents at short notice.
He pushed open the door of his own room and closed it carefully behind him, heaving a sigh of relief as it shut with a minimum of sound. Only then did he turn around—
And froze.
There was someone waiting for him on his bed, a long, pale form that lay curled up against the pillows. It
wasn’t
Ulrich, unless Ulrich had suddenly acquired a pair of green-gold eyes that glowed in the dark.
He gasped, and the lamp in the bracket beside the door lit itself with a little
puff
of sound.
As the lamplight steadied, a slender, cream-colored body uncurled itself gracefully from the place where it had been lying, near the head of the bed, cushioned by the pillows. The green-gold disks became the widened pupils of a pair of intensely blue eyes, surrounded by a brick-red mask. The otherwise pale-cream face was topped by a pair of brick-red ears, both of which were swiveled to face him. A red tail switched restlessly, curling up and curling down again, rather than
thudding
against the bed as a dog’s would have.
:Well, you certainly have been enjoying a night on the roof,:
the Firecat said in his mind. Its tone was amused, genial, and quite friendly.
It’s a Firecat. A Firecat
—
in my room, on my bed, talking to me.
“I—uh—” He stared at the Cat with his mouth dropping open, unable to make his mind or his body work properly. What was a Firecat doing here? And why was it in his room?
:Close your mouth, child, you look like a stranded fish,:
the Cat said, and purred with high good humor.
:I’m not here to drag you off to some kind of punishment. I’ve simply been sent here to give you some advice from time to time—advice your mentor wouldn’t be able to grant you. That was what you wanted, wasn’t it? Someone you could trust to advise you?:
He was irresistibly reminded at that moment of an ancient proverb. “Be careful what you wish for—”
:Indeed “—you might get it. ” Quite true, which is why it’s a proverb, but in the current situation it’s not entirely apt. I’d have come here even if you hadn’t wished for an advisor you could trust. This is an unstable situation. and you are in the middle of it. You are central to a number of complicated problems, the confidant to several key persons, and we simply couldn’t have you walking about and chancing blunders without a little guidance.:
“Oh,” he said, weakly, and could not help wondering if he had already blundered somewhere?
:Oh, Bright Flame, no! You’ve been doing just fine so far. And I’m not here to steer you into some kind of predestined future. Just at the moment, no one knows what may be coming, how this situation will resolve itself. No, not even the Sunlord Himself. The advice I am to give you will simply be based on a little more information than you have access to. If we are all very lucky, we will all work to bring this to a good conclusion.:
The Cat tilted its head to the side, waiting for his response.
“If that’s supposed to be comforting,” he replied with more bravado than he felt, “it isn’t.”
:Good. I’m not here to comfort you. I hope you’re nervous; given what I know, you should be. Now, just shed those clothes and get into bed, you’ll need the sleep.:
The Cat moved down to the foot of the bed and sat there, watching him, its bright blue eyes fixed on him in a way that suggested if he didn’t hurry up and do what he’d been told, the Cat would—help.
Probably by shredding the clothes right off my body.
He quickly stripped off his clothing, and slipped into bed. The Cat arranged itself comfortably near his feet, without weighing him down, and gave its paws a quick
wash. :By the way,: it said, as he put his head warily down on the
pillow.
:That Herald with the limp did come by and tell Ulrich that’ his daughter had kidnapped you, and not to wait up. And my name is Altra.:
Altra? But wasn’t that the name of the Son of the Sun who—
He didn’t even get a chance to finish the thought, for he fell asleep instantly.
Birdsong coming down his chimney woke him—which meant it must be a fair day, rather than a stormy one. Perhaps the Heralds had finally gotten their weather-magic working.
He stretched and yawned, without opening his eyes.
Odd. I dreamed that a Firecat was here last night. What a strange
—
He opened his eyes as his foot encountered a heavy weight at the foot of his bed. The Firecat raised his head and blinked at him.
:Good
morning.
As you see, I’m not a dream.:
Altra yawned, showing a formidable set of teeth. :
You do have a very comfortable bed, and I am pleased to report that you neither toss nor snore.:
“Uh, thank you.” He racked his brain for something to say.
What do you say to an Avatar of your God? “Hello, heard any good Sunlord jokes recently?” “Good morning,
how may I worship you?”
“Can I get you anything for breakfast? Uh—fish? Milk?”
:Nothing, thank you,:
Altra replied loftily. :
Firecats are above such mundane considerations as eating.:
Well that was something of a relief. If the Cat didn’t eat, it probably didn’t eliminate either, which meant he wasn’t going to have to find a box of sand somewhere—or would a Cat be able to use facilities made for humans?
Oh, this was too much to think about—but how was he going to explain the presence of a huge feline in his room, when he hadn’t arrived with any such thing? “It followed me back from the tavern”? And how was he going to explain the presence of a Firecat to Ulrich, who
knew
what they were?
:Don’t be surprised if you don’t see me very often,:
Altra continued, getting up and giving a full, nose-to-tail stretch. His claws were as formidable as his teeth.
:I have other business to worry about. Your master is as much in need of that bit of advice now and again as you are. I’ll just drop in discreetly whenever you require the extra information I’m privy to—and if you think you really want it, I’ll also give you—ah—“fatherly” advice, in the absence of your real father, if you feel too embarrassed to ask Ulrich.:
Altra actually winked slyly.
:Meanwhile, I shall be—invisible.:
The door to his room opened of itself. The Firecat stretched again and jumped down off Karal’s bed. There was a patch of bright sunlight just beyond the now-open door; Altra strolled casually out the door and into the sunlight.
And vanished.
Karal collapsed back against the pillows, not sure whether he should be elated or frightened out of his wits. He settled for a mixture of the two, with a healthy dose of panic.
Oh, Bright Flames, the last thing I need is the personal attentions of the Sunlord in my life! And a Firecat! The Cats get into everything and anything
—
what if Vkandis finds out about all the strange things I’ve been learning here? What if He finds out about what goes on at the Compass Rose?
Wait a moment. Vkandis was a god, all-knowing, all-powerful. How could He not know what Karal had been getting into?
Altra said I was doing the right things
—
so
—
A visitation from an avatar, warning that the situation was unstable and about to become perilous, a hundred strange and possibly blasphemous things to think about that he’d heard last night—
—a powerful mage who was frightened of his own memories, unsure of himself—and called him “friend”—
—and a young woman, bright, intelligent, and competent, and disturbingly attractive—
—my head hurts.
All this before breakfast.
If I go back to sleep, will all this go away? No, probably not.
He might as well get up and deal with it, then. It certainly wasn’t going to get any better.
I just hope,
he thought glumly, as he climbed out of his bed and started looking for a clean set of clothing,
that it doesn’t get worse.