The Barrow (32 page)

Read The Barrow Online

Authors: Mark Smylie

She stared at him for a long moment, her lips slightly parted.

“Save me, Black-Heart,” she finally whispered.

And then suddenly Annwyn collapsed into his surprised arms and began thrashing about as if in a seizure.

“My Lady!” shrieked several of her handmaidens, and they leapt forward to pull Annwyn out of Stjepan's gentle grasp, helping her to slump to the paved stone of the plaza at his feet. He didn't move as they clustered about her. She slowly writhed amongst them, her eyes rolling back into her head.

Malia looked askance at Stjepan, wondering who on earth he could be, but he was just staring at Annwyn with a frown, seemingly as perplexed as she was, and did not seem aware of her or anyone else at all. She turned swiftly and looked toward the bier. She could see Frallas leading Arduin toward them through the gathering crowd. “My Lord!” she cried loudly, waving her arm high in the air. “Please hurry!” Ilona let out a little cry and Malia looked down. Her eyes widened in shock as she saw that Annwyn was suddenly struggling to shed her clothes, tearing at her bodice and its laces. “My Lady! What are you doing?” she asked in alarm. Malia knelt, joining the other handmaidens in trying to stop Annwyn from disrobing, a dark fear and confusion creeping into her. The crowd was pressing in around them, trying to see what was happening, and she was starting to feel as though she was packed into a small box.

Arduin had trouble pushing his way through the throng, but finally arrived and almost jumped back with a start, alarm on his face as he saw his sister clawing at her own clothes. He began pushing and shoving away some of the men that surrounded them, even as they pressed in to take a look. He turned and looked over his shoulder, spotting Sir Helgi and Sir Colin pressing toward him.

“Knights, squires, to me!” he called out. His voice was battle-trained and it rang out like a clarion call. Immediately all of his knights and squires started toward him through the crowd with haste, but his cry also had the unintended side effect of alerting anyone as yet still unaware that something was amiss. He turned back to Malia and the other handmaidens. “Your mistress is unwell. Get her to her coach!” he said as the attention of the entire plaza settled upon the scene.

Stjepan stared at Annwyn intently, trying to figure out what she was doing. He caught a flash of neck and collarbone and then something else and his eyes went wide. “Let her be. Don't you see it?” he said, suddenly pushing past her handmaidens, kneeling down and reaching in to help Annwyn open her bodice.

Arduin's eyes flashed wide with anger and incredulity, livid upon seeing a strange man's hands upon his sister. “What the . . . you go too far, sir!” Arduin said with great offense. “Knights. Squires!” Arduin pushed swiftly through the onlookers crowding about his sister toward Stjepan, intent on pulling him off of Annwyn even as she struggled with her own handmaidens on the paved stones of the plaza.

Arduin managed to get a hand on Stjepan's shoulder and yanked him partially to his feet, but as he did so Coogan and Cynyr casually crowded in on both sides of him, leaning into the knight to hem in his movements while craning their necks to get a glimpse of his sister. Erim pressed in from behind him, her hand snaking unnoticed around his hip to surreptitiously grasp the hilt of his sword should he try to unsheathe it.

And so Arduin found himself effectively and casually surrounded and immobilized in the press about his sister, seemingly as if by accident. He struggled in confusion, uncertain about what was happening.

“She's trying to show us something!” Stjepan hissed angrily, struggling to free his long coat from Arduin's strong grip. A scrum was forming as curious, wide-eyed onlookers continued to press in to take a look and Arduin and his knights struggled with the men around them. Annwyn was struggling with her handmaidens, and winning despite their best efforts, and her torso flashed bare beneath them. Arduin caught a glimpse of pale skin exposed in the struggle at his feet, and looked away instinctively, trying to redouble his efforts to clear the crowd. He was about to go for his sword—where he would have discovered Erim's grip on his sword's hilt—when suddenly Malia screamed.

Her handmaidens let go of Annwyn and pulled back as she stretched and writhed on the pavement, displaying herself for all to see. Arduin looked down and blanched with horror as everyone pressing into the tight circle around his sister froze, looking down at her with a mixture of lust, horror, and surprise. At first all that registered was her pale alabaster skin, and her perfect breasts, and her nipples, and she almost took his breath away.

And then he saw the end of his line written in her skin.

“King of Heaven help me . . .” Arduin managed to gasp.

Sliding over Annwyn's naked torso, fading in and out and moving over her shapely form, were signs, images, words and symbols in a strange and cruel calligraphy.

Stjepan followed some of the text that slid over her skin. “
Tereska malles malifiri tir garas, umess de beyir Azharad . . .
” he whispered as he read the words. Awe and wonder dawned on his face.

“Goddess above and below . . . it's the map to the barrow,” he said under his breath.

A set of cryptic letters scrolled over her breasts as she writhed under their shocked gaze, speaking in tongues. Her handmaidens, her brother, his knights and squires, Stjepan, Erim, Gilgwyr, Jonas, Coogan, Cynyr, dozens of courtiers, Marked Men, independents, clerks, and gossip queens in the tightly packed circle pressed in around her stood frozen and just stared, open-mouthed, at what they saw. Hundreds of others would later claim that they'd seen the marks upon her skin, but in truth it was only a small fraction of the mourners present. The only movement in her immediate vicinity was Rodrick Urgoar, the High Priest of the Public Temple, pushing his way through the ring of slack-jawed onlookers until he was close enough to get a good look at Annwyn.

And he was shocked and frightened by what he saw.


Witchcraft. Witchcraft! Seize her! Seize the witch!” the High Priest called out in a high-pitched voice filled with hatred and terror, clearly audible across the whole of the plaza.

In an instant, the world seemed to slow to a crawl for Stjepan. He looked up slowly, seeing the shock and horror in the faces of the crowd. He could hear the gulls laughing in the air above them, the mocking roar of Heth in the surf. He could smell the stink and sweat of their fear, their hate, their lust and desire. His eyes narrowed and his lips skinned back from his teeth in a snarl.

Stjepan turned with sudden speed, twisting about despite Arduin's strong grip on his doublet, and struck Rodrick Urgoar right in the face, the top two knuckles of his fist flattening the High Priest's nose into the shape of a crushed bulb of cauliflower. Rodrick's head snapped back, blood spurting into the air in a high arc from his smashed and broken nose, and he fell backwards into the crowd, his body instantly going limp.

And the funerary plaza dissolved into bedlam and chaos.

Gilgwyr walked through the screaming, scattering, pell-mell crowd as though lost deep in thought, untouched by the riot around him. Most of the mourners were fleeing off the funerary plaza back toward the Public Temple of the Divine King and the docks and streets of the Public Quarter, even as Divine King priests and temple assistants tried to push through them to get to the bier and their fallen High Priest. Marked Men and independent crews lashed out to escort the two Princes of their Guild to safety, fighting with the escorts of high ladies from the Court, and Gilgwyr didn't even notice as a cassocked priest was lifted high into the air and tossed bodily off the plaza and into the urn-filled waters of the bay by Petterwin Grim's men. Arduin and his knights formed a protective cordon around his sister's handmaidens, as they bodily dragged her from the plaza and the clutches of Divine Kings priests who screamed for them to surrender her. Bottles and fists were flying in the general commotion, and something hard struck Stjepan in the back of the head, on purpose or by accident, and he went down, only to be hoisted up onto the shoulders of Erim and Jonas and Coogan and hustled into the crowds fighting to get off the plaza.

That is why my dreams are still so beautiful
, Gilgwyr thought.
The gods have smiled upon us. We are truly blessed. We still have the map.
He looked up and realized he was walking toward Harvald's body and bier, now lying abandoned and forgotten in the chaos. He took up a torch off the marble pavement and lit it at one of the smoking braziers. He stepped beside the bier, looking down at the gauze-wrapped body. He took a last swig from his small bottle and then emptied the rest of it onto the body, smiling warmly.

“Thank you, old friend. Today is a great day, a blessed day, and soon, very soon, will come the best day of all. A great change is coming!” he said in a fierce whisper. “Forgive me for doubting you!”

The veiled woman dressed in white was the only person seemingly unmoved by the chaotic scene of the plaza; she still stood nearby, singing her dirge. Gilgwyr wondered for a moment if she was in fact the actual White Lady, the harbinger of death from Aurian legend, and he shuddered. He lowered the torch and walked in a slow circle about the bier, setting light to the corded stacks of firewood and tinder until they burned bright and the body was aflame, and soon the ashes of Harvald Orwain, son of Leonas, Baron of Araswell, were gusting out over the waters of the bay, floating on a song of mourning.

Stjepan was walking up a leaf-strewn forest path, broad high trees of birch and purple-leaf oak, maple and elm, cherry and white ash, cedar and pine stretching out for leagues in all directions. The trunks of the trees and the debris of the forest floor were coated with old layers of lichens and moss, and a rust-red under-brush complemented the ancient patina of grays and dull greens. The leaves were turning burnt red and orange-yellow, into fire and gold, all the brilliant shades of autumn, and so he began to suspect it was a dream. He turned and looked to his right through a break in the trees, and caught a glimpse of a far sloping range of forested evergreen hills, backdropped by a horizon of desolate high mountains. Down to the east a great stone castle sat on a rise over a small riverside city, and he knew that across that river would be the Plain of Stones.
An-Athair. The great Erid Wold. The woods of my birth
. A dream, then, but still it was pleasant, and so he kept walking the ancient forest path, drinking in its beauty.

A handful of starlings swooped past him and settled on the lower branches of a great elm as he approached it.
You are too late, too late
, they called to him.

“Too late for what, little lords?” he asked.

You'll see, you'll see
, they called, and then they took to wing.

He followed the path and the flight of the disappearing starlings until they had passed beyond his sight. The woods fell silent. No animal scurried in the underbrush, no bird sang in the branches above. He could smell wet earth and leaf and needle, moss and sun-lit stone, and from nearby the smell of something burning.

He approached a high clearing in the woods. Massive, ancient trees surrounded the clearing, their lower branches filled with dangling amulets and chimes, small sculptures and offerings placed around their trunks. A pyre had been built in the center of the clearing, and a single post erected within it. A woman was tied to the post, her long silk dress slightly torn and soiled with dirt. She was beautiful, wild, her long wavy black hair framing a face of wisdom and power. His mother, Argante. A crowd of their neighbors watched with fear and excitement behind several circles of men dressed in black robes and brown hoods as some of those men stepped forward and lowered torches. The pyre began to catch.

A young boy stood stock still to the side, watching with wide eyes. Stjepan recognized his younger brother, Justin, and his heart broke. Two hooded men, with deer antlers attached to their masks, held a struggling young woman on her knees, forcing her to watch as the flames of the pyre grew stronger and higher. He couldn't see her face but her long curly hair was unmistakable, a deep, dark brown that was almost black, the color of burnt earth. His sister, Artesia.

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