Read The Bitterbynde Trilogy Online
Authors: Cecilia Dart-Thornton
A weight seemed to be pressing upon her eyelids. Soon she would have to look at him, but it would seem an impossible task.
She waited for him to speak.
Two hands lifted her gently to her feet. Their touch was lightning.
âI'll warrant thou wouldst be more comfortable sitting by me.' The voiceârich, tempered, and flawlessly enunciatedâa lion's growl. She breathed the cinnamon incense of his presence.
He conducted her to one of two chairs at the head of a table, and seated himself beside her. The table was furnished with a pile of parchments like desiccated leaves, paper-knives with ebony handles, seal containers, red candles, a horn-handled knife, a twist of thin cord, pheasant-quill pens in a silver tray, and inkwells of cold, translucent onyx.
A timid page took a small key and unreeled the taper of a wax-jack on a little silver stand. He trimmed the wick with a pair of pointed snuffers and tremulously lit it, fumbling with the tinderbox.
Thorn's existence was like a terrible furnace flaming at Rohain's side. She was dimly aware that others were present in the hallâgreat lords, Roxburgh among them, all standing, facing Thorn. Caitri folded her hands neatly to hide her nervousness at being in the presence of the King-Emperor, and arranged herself against the wall where several pages and wigged footmen made bas-reliefs of themselves in scarlet duretty and gold frogging. High on a pelmet, the goshawk Errantry sat dozing, sometimes nervously flicking his tail from side to side. A whitewash of his mutes streaked and splattered the curtains below, as well as any footmen who happened to be standing in the vicinity. One or two hawk-casts decorated the floor with indigestible bits of bone and feather. Errantry opened one fierce eye and closed it again.
âFear not,' Thorn whispered to Rohain. She found courage to return his smile. âGentlemen,' he said loudly, âhere is the Lady Rohain for whom we have all sought high and low.'
Still standing, the lords bowed their heads: Richard of Esgair Garthen, Lord High Sea Admiral; Octarus Ogier, Lord High Chieftain of Stormriders; Durand Rivenhall, Lord High Chancellor; Istoren Giltornyr, Lord High Sky Admiral; John Drumdunach, Lord High Commander of the Royal Guard. Thorn introduced the chiefest among them by name to the lady at his side, then dismissed them, along with his Private Secretary, his pages and stewards, the guards, and all the other lords and servants, excepting Caitri. He bade the little girl wait in the anteroom.
Rohain sat utterly still, except that a slight tremor ran through her.
âAnd now thou shalt want to ask some questions,' Thorn said. âDost thou wish to use handspeak? Hast thou lost thy tongue again? I confess, I was enjoying the novelty of hearing thy voice.'
She laughed then, joyously.
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âThorn,' she said, savoring the name. âThorn. Your Dainnan name. That is, Your Majesty's Dainnan name.'
âGold-Hair,' he said, âit is hardly necessary to address me like that. Or,' he added, âto collapse upon the floor when approaching me. Didst thou not pledge thyself to me last night?'
âI did, sir, and most readily.'
âNow thou must learn to be our betrothed, rather than a commoner who brazenly declares herself a lady. It is meet that thou shouldst become accustomed to bearing thyself like the future Queen.'
Her courage returned. âYou know all? But how? Did you know I was residing at Court? Why did I not see you? How may a Dainnan be King?'
âHere come the questions, all of a tumble,' he said, amused. âBut I shall start the tale at the beginning.'
âOh, but before you do,' she said quickly, basking in his proximity as if it were Summer sunshine, âI wish to ask you to spare the life of a man imprisoned in your dungeons, condemned to death. His nameâ'
âHe is pardoned, from this moment, whatever his name might be. Now hearken, while I tell the tale. Art thou paying heed?'
âNo. I am looking at thee â¦'
Boldly, as though parched and drinking, her eyes travelled over the wiredrawn, flowing lines of his silhouette, the honed planes of his face, stern and laughing at the same time, full of strength, the jawline faintly shadowed with a dark tint, the arch of his throat interrupted by the subtle shadow of the round tumescence midway, and the hollow at the confluence of the collarbone.
His every movement was as graceful and confident as a lion in its prime, his demeanor relaxed yet poised, with the assurance that at need he, as a skilled fighter, could react with speed and power, and there would be only conquest. This time she tried to memorize his flawless beauty. The moment would be ephemeral, as was the wont of moments, and he would vanish soon.
Rare beauty, by nature, must be ephemeral. Without that sting it is no longer rare. But I wish, oh I wish it were not so. I wish that he might endure forever
.
âAnd I am studying thee,' he replied, âand I hope to do so more often and more thoroughly at my leisure. But if thou regard'st men in that manner, thou shalt drive them mad.'
âWell, you deserve to be driven mad, sir, for you have already done so to me.'
âNow thou must needs hold conversation with me from the other side of the room,' he said, flame-eyed. âElse thou might provoke me to encompass and invade thee, here, at this instant.'
âIn that case,' she answered breathlessly, âI remain.'
He regarded her with a strange softness, almost sadness.
âHalf child, half woman as thou art. For thee, virtuous maiden,' he said, âthere would be no rightness in that. Not yet.'
She forced herself to look away, suddenly understanding; there were rules that
could not
be abrogated, at this place, at this time, in this century, in Erith.
âYou must turn your back on me,' Rohain commanded the King-Emperor of Erith, knowing him well enough to dare light banter, exulting in the play of words between them and the fragile power she wielded, while still unable to believe it was all true. âTurn your back, whilst you tell me the tale. But look not askance! Ever since I saw you for the first time I have longed to comb my fingers through your hair.'
He complied, laughing, sprawling back in the chair and stretching out his long legs. She let the dark veils of his locks flow over her fingertips and was amazed, that the very stuff of midnight could lie soft within her own hands, that what she touched was actually of him; he for whom she had ached throughout eternities.
He spoke.
âThrough the glades of Tiriendor I roved in Dainnan fashion, which is my wont when it pleases me, and when needs must. For, Gold-Hair, a good sovereign must gauge the state of his realm, and what better way than to explore it unmarked? Several, of my chief lords and advisors are persistently alarmed at this habit, and I must forever persuade them it is safer in the greenwood than in the wilderness of Court where poisonous vipers await the turning of every back.
âI had long studied thee and thy companion, Captain Bruadair, ere thou didst meet with me. I was drawn to thee,' he said. âIn thee there burned a passion, right from the first momentâa passion of such intensity as I have never encountered. Thou dost possess a capacity for joyousness and for deep sorrow that bedims the torpid ardencies of others. The crests and troughs of their fervour are but the fickle waves of the ocean, whereas thine are like an island mountain, whose head lifts among the clouds, whose foundations are buried, far below on the ocean floor. Thou wouldst try to withhold thy fire, but such duplicity was beyond thy means. When it came time for us to part, I was already lost. Thou wouldst not accompany me then, but I was eager to bring thee to my side if not sooner, then later.'
âDid it hurt you that I would not go with you?' Rohain asked, surprised. Her heart leapt like a deer.
âHurt? To a degree. Only as a sword piercing the heart. Thou art kissing my hair.'
âEven so.' The strands were silk, lying across her mouth.
âWhen thou didst hasten to the carlin's house,' he said, âI ordered guards to be stationed around it, to protect thee, to bring thee to me when your errand was completed. They were to be discreet.'
âThe watchersâthey were men of yours?'
âThey were. I ought to have used Dainnan, but I did not suppose that thou wouldst try to slip through my net.'
She said hesitantly, âI was a servant here, once.'
Will he now reject me
? He merely nodded, as if it did not matter. Her spirits immeasurably encouraged, she went on: âI escaped and found the wealth of Waterstair. For the sake of it, others wanted me to keep silence. They hounded me. And in Gilvaris Tarv I sought a cure for paradox ivy from the wizard Korguth. It failed and I thought he pursued me to take revenge for his own ill deed. I believed your men watching Maeve's cottage to be those who hunted me for evil purpose.'
âWhy didst thou not enlighten me concerning your pursuers before we went our separate ways?' he asked, his modulated, laughing tones threaded with a hint of gentle exasperation.
âWhy did you not declare your heart's truth?' she parried.
âI asked thee to come with meâis that not enough?'
âIt was not plain to me. But you tell me plainly now.'
âBecause thou hold'st back thine own truth no longer. Thou speakest with thine eyes at last. And thy tongue. And because I would not lose thee a second time.'
Her heart seemed to melt like glass in the fire of his intent. âNow I do not fear to have you look upon my face. You read now in my eyes that which has long been written in my heart.'
âThou with thy secret commission to Caermelorâhad you but confided to me this tale of treasure-troves, thou hadst saved thyself a deal of toil,' he mocked gently.
âI was to impart the tale only to the King-Emperor!'
âAnd thus 'tis proven that thou hast that rare qualityâthou canst guard a secret well. Wilt thou guard thine affairs so readily now that thou hast found thy tongue?'
He laughed. A sudden wave of concern swept through Rohain. There
was
another secret ⦠Should he become aware of her strange history as an amnesiac foundling would he recoil from her? Yet he asked nothing of the past. For him, the present seemed sufficient. Indeed, what could that history matter?
âBut tell me,' she said, âwhy did your guards not simply knock at Maeve's door and announce that the King-Emperor summoned me?'
âThou mightst well have refused, as thou didst once before!'
âI could hardly refuse my sovereign â¦'
âSo thou sayest, but how could I have known? Then thou didst disappear. Only once before in my life have I been thwarted so thoroughly. There arose a violent anger in my heart that this should have come to pass, that I should lose thee. All those around me suffered from my rage, which was caused by thee!'
âSay no more!' She tugged playfully at his hair.
âNo, thou canst not injure me now,' he lightly teased.
âIt was not my fault!'
âDost thou gainsay me?' he said, feigning to chide her. âWhen thou didst alter everything about thy appearance and demeanor, thy mode of communication, calling thyself by another name and coming right into my house, which is the last place I would look for thee, while the town criers were bellowing at every gate in the city, morning, noon, and night, to proclaim the King-Emperor's command that anyone who sees a yellow-haired wench called Imrhien should bring her to him instantly, on pain of imprisonment?'
âI heard them shouting, but I never heeded the words.'
âThey cannot be heard distinctly from the palace, unless the wind is in the right quarter. Which I had always counted pleasant, since their rantings are tiresome.'
âDid you have them looking for a yellow-haired wench of exquisite ugliness?'
âNo. Thou hadst told me that thou didst want to alter that condition, therefore thou wert bound for the carlin at White Down Rory.'
âYet in the beginning, how could you warm to someone so ill-made?'
He turned his beautiful head and gave her a measuring look.
âGold-Hair,' he said, âI have already told thee.'
âDid you
see
my ugliness?'
âI saw it. I saw thee.'
âHow did you recognise me last night?'
âI say again, I saw
thee
. Thine inner worth.'
It was said that the D'Armancourt line was set apart from ordinary mortalkind by some puissance of the blood. Likely, that included the Sight; the ability to perceive what lay beneath masks. Thorn looked away, and Rohain resumed her combing. A wonderful silence linked them, filled with unspoken words.
May the Powers of all realms grant that time shall now stand still
.
âI want for nothing now,' she said presently.
âThou shalt change thy mind, in time, as is the wont of women.'
âI shall not!' She smiled at his banter.
âDost thou not wish to hear the rest of the story?'
âI do!'
âBehold! Thou hast changed it already.'
The goshawk shifted on his perch, shook out his wings, and glided down in a lazy spiral to land upon the back of Rohain's chair. She reached up. Decorously, he nibbled at her hand. Thorn raised his arm and Errantry flew to alight on the leather bracer encircling his wrist. Absently, Thorn stroked the bird's barred plumage.
âWe could not find thee,' he said. âYour red cockerel of a friend at Isenhammer knew nothing. When there was no sign of thee by Imbroltide, we began in earnest to seek the carlin of White Down Rory.'
âI dined in the same hall as you at Imbrol!'
âAlas, that I was unaware of it! My eyes searched beyond the palace walls on that night, my sweet thief of quietude.'
âAnd my eyes did not search at all! What of Maeve?'
âHer cottage was discovered empty.'