Read The Bitterbynde Trilogy Online
Authors: Cecilia Dart-Thornton
âEmpty! Where had she gone?'
âCuriously, she was nowhere to be found, even though the Dainnan and the most proficient of trackers sought her, and messengers were sent to every land. Then we had to depart for the fields of battle. We had tarried too long because of my quest for thee, but the need grew pressing. During my absence the search continued.
âOne evening, afar off in northern Eldaraigne, I was riding out with Roxburgh under the early stars, not far from where our troops were bivouacked. In conversation we chanced to look skywards, which turned us to the topic of beauty. My Lord High Field-Marshal of the Dainnan let slip the fact that a certain beauteous young damsel who had brought tidings of treasure to Caermelor had arrived masked. She had been unaware of particular aristocratic protocols and furthermore had recounted a strange story of traveling in the wilderness with a wild Ert by the kenning of âThe Bear'. That sobriquet had once before come to my ears.'
Rohain recalled a conversation by a campfire, Diarmid saying to Thorn:
âWhen I was a lad, I used to trade words with myâwith my uncle.'
To augment his statement, she had signed,
<
âHe always won. Ertishmen are famous for their skill with words; Finvarna is the birthplace of most of the greatest bards. But the Bear could outspar even his own countrymen.'
High in Isse Tower, Thorn again turned the implicit barrage of his gaze upon her.
âI knew then that this “Rohain Tarrenys of the Sorrows” was theeâchanged, healed, as thou hadst desired. “Rohain” was a name recently brought to my attention at Court. Ercildoune had once or twice bothered me with it. They had described the lady as
dark-haired
. That thou didst go disguised was proof enough that thou didst fear some imminent peril.'
âSwee-swit,' said the goshawk, dulcet, picking up strands of Thorn's hair in his curved beak.
âWithin the hour we departed from the battlefields. The best of our troops rode the skies beside us in haste to Caermelor, with more speed than any Relayer. We were too lateâalready the Lady of the Sorrows had reached Isse Tower. Pausing only to take fresh eotaurs, we left Caermelor at noon two days since, and rode nonstop, by day and night, arriving here as the festivities of the Antlered One were in full swing.'
âOh, happy chance! Had you not done so, there must have been massacre on an appalling scale.'
âIn that battle, I went through every blood-splashed hall and stair in this worm-bitten pillar, and my sword Arcturus sang metal's song of death as I wielded him, smiting unseelie heads. Yet, thou hadst once again glided away like sand through my fingers, confounding me. Never to me has woman proved so elusive. No sense could be got out of the incoherent servitors and lords of Isse until at last one of them gathered his wits for long enough to inform me that thou wert away to Huntingtowers and might be lying slain upon the road. Roxburgh, who was already mounted, rode out forthwith. I, about to depart, was compelled to turn back. Someone said they had seen thee in the kitchens. A servant who was sent to bring thee returned, reporting that thou wert nowhere to be found, but that thou wert here, safe, somewhere, and many other folk confirmed his report. The Tower seethed with folk, but it was secure and I knew I should find thee again, sooner or later. I knew it at last.'
He was silent for a while. Then he said, âWho, at Court, guessed thee as Talith?'
âOnly the Lady Dianella.'
âSay further.'
âI told her I was looking for a Dainnan called Thorn. Is your Dainnan name commonly known among the courtiers?'
âAs well-known as Roxburgh's “Oak” and Ercildoune's “Ash”. That lady connives to be Queen, and brooks no rivals. Constantly she flaunts her charms, like the rest, but she is assisted by her plotting uncle who wishes to lever her on the throne and puppet her on his strings. I would hazard she heard the town criers' proclamations. Her kind hang on their every word in the hope of scandal. Hearing that thou didst search for me and I for thee, that jealous deceiver would have found it necessary to ask no further questions. I'll warrant she and the wizard swiftly planned your downfall, before I could discover thee.'
âDianella told me to leave Caermelor.'
âI suspect she did so in order that thy demise might occur at a less inconvenient location, and the blame would be looked for elsewhere!' His face darkened. âThose who cross me are punished.'
A cloud passed across the sun. Shadows rushed in and dammed the room like thin, dark waters.
Thorn seized a curl of paper and a quill-pen from the table, trimming its point with a porcelain-handled penknife. Dipping the point in ink, he dashed off a missive, blotted it dry, rolled the parchment and tied it with cord, dripped wax from a candle and impressed it with the seal-ring he had not been wearing in the wilderness. Calling to Caitri, he directed her to deliver it to one of the messengers waiting outside the door. When she had departed, he resumed his nonchalant position in the chair, reclining on one elbow.
âBut surely,' said Rohain earnestly, âDianella could not guess that the Tower was to be assailed by the Hunt!'
âOne would suppose not,' said Thorn thoughtfully. âShe and her uncle must have prepared some other method of ridding themselves of you, had not Huon intervened.'
Rohain thought:
What a curious coincidence, that the Hunt should choose to assail this fortress precisely at the time of my visit here
⦠And then a hand of ice was laid upon her vitals, bestowing a suspicion so terrible she hardly dared to speak it aloud.
Could the wizard Sargoth possibly wield enough power to summon the Wild Hunt? Worse: if he had not summoned it, then who had? And what had the Antlered One hunted for, besides destruction
?
Thorn said, âDidst thou tell the Lady Dianella aught of the carlin?'
âI did!' replied Rohain in consternation. âCry mercy! Have I endangered the old woman's life? Dianella and her uncle, guessing that Maeve was party to knowledge of Rohain Tarrenys's true identity, might have tried to silence her! Yet surely, mortal menâeven the, Lord High Wizard's menâcould never trace Maeve One-Eye unless she wished it.'
âIn truth, Gold-Hair. Yet they were not mortal men who went after her.'
âThen she must be rescued!'
âShe shall be, you may believe it.'
âYet I cannot credit that Sargoth has anything of gramarye at his fingertips, to force unseelie wights to obey him. All his vaunted tricks are only hocus-pocus.'
Thorn plucked a loop of light out of the air and waved it over his shoulder.
âIs that hocus-pocus?'
She laughed. âA trick, yesâI'll vouch that it was concealed in your sleeve! I am no country lass from Rosedale, to be gulled by sleight-of-hand!'
The shining thing was a small circle of golden leaves spangled with white gems that glittered, having somehow imprisoned the brilliance of stars within their depths. Thorn pulled down Rohain's narrow wrist, printed a kiss on it, and slid the leaf-ring upon her finger. Each axonal fiber along her arm turned to hot wire.
âThou distract'st me, ever, from the tale,' he said, without relinquishing her hand. âMy imagination strays. Thou couldst never understand how difficult it is to remain thus, seemingly unmoved.'
âWhither do thy thoughts wander?'
He leaned back and whispered in her ear. She murmured a reply. The goshawk, screaming, jumped into the air and flapped around the room, scattering a few loose, downy feathers.
âOut, scapegrace!' said his master, and the bird flew through the window. Thorn rose from the chair. Drawing Rohain to her feet, he followed the hawk to the embrasure. They stood close together, she intensely aware of the light pressure of his arm against her shoulder as they looked out through the archway across a wide land and the curve of a dazzling sea.
Thorn leaned his left hand upon the window-frame. It was long-fingered and strong. Around the ring-finger glinted a thin bandâthree golden hairs, twisted together.
He has kept the token he seized from me! Ah, what would it be like to wake in the night and see him lying against me, hair rayed out upon the pillow, dark lashes fanned upon his cheek, as soft as a sleeping child's
?
Below, high in the abyss, the hawk floated.
âLet us speak no more of the past,' murmured Thorn. âFew yellow leaves, or none, cling upon the boughs; stark, dismantled choirs where erst the birds of Summer sang,' he said, possibly quoting. âBut the dark days of Winter are not unremitting, and clouds have drawn apart on this day to let the sun shine on our contentment.'
âAs welcome as sunshine is, storm and wind and rain have their beauty also,' said Rohain, recalling the rain in the Forest of Tiriendor. âEach season has a virtue to recommend it; not least Winter.'
âI' faith, I concur! Fain would I be without these walls, and soon we shall be, for we ride this day to Caermelor.'
âBy land or sky?'
âBy sky. On the wing. Fear'st thou that?' The glance he bestowed on her seemed to fill her bones with water. Her legs would scarcely hold her up.
âOn the contrary,' she replied, âI look to it with eagerness! But stayâbefore I depart from this place, I must first render them aid. Destruction and death have been brought down on innocents. My own apartments were wrecked, although the raiders left this level untouched.'
âNot much was destroyed elsewhere, save flesh and bone. Thy lodgings were the worst ravaged. Other inorganic damage was incidental to their more vile pursuits. Among my men there are dyn-cynnils, an apothecary, and other flesh-tailors. As we speak they tend the wounded of Isse, regardless of rank or birth. I myself have recently walked among the injured and to me it seems there is none so badly hurt as will not recover fully. My physicians shall bide here until their work is done. To Caermelor we shall ride without further ado, I insist. There shall our betrothal be announced, and thou shalt meet Prince Edward.'
A pure, resonant strum went through and through Rohain. She managed to say, âI approach that meeting with delight.'
âA ball shall be held in thine honour, if that should please thee. Should it?'
âIf we should dance the gavotte, as before.'
âTo synchronize with thee is joyousness, no matter the choreography,
caileagh faoileag,'
he said lightly.
âOnce before you called me that name. What is its meaning?'
â“Beloved bird of the sea”. The white bird of freedom is an ocean wanderer. It touches no land for seven years in its voyages around the world, flying over vast tracts of open ocean without landmarks. This fairest, most elusive of winged navigators travels far before it finds its rest.'
At the back of her mind, a thread snapped, but only a thread. Rohain glanced at her left wrist. Moon-pearls and jet-like chips of black ice embraceleted it, in their setting of white metal; a borrowed trinket of Heligea's. They were not what she had looked for.
âNow I have been called a butterfly and a bird,' she said. âAnd Rohain.'
âWhich means “beautiful”. Each of us has many names. I have the privilege of possessing such a string of them as might arguably stretch from here to Namarre.'
âAnd one,' she said, âis James.'
He took her hand. The jolt shook her arm to the shoulder socket.
âOh!' she said, shivering. âYou take my breath away. Your touch has some alchemy in it.'
âThink'st thou, indeed? Dost thou tolerate it?'
âIt is like a shock, but sweeter than anything I have ever endured.'
âHow canst thou be certain it is
I
and not
thee
who generates it?'
A silver trumpet sang loudly, somewhere in the machicolations close above. A distant fleck in the southeast shaped itself into a Stormrider.
âA Relayer from Caermelor,' said Thorn. âAnd we must tarry no longer. The day matures. Art thou able to be ready to depart before noon, Distraction? The hour is not far away.'
âEasily.'
Rohain called for Caitri. A rattle as of small hard objects scattering upon the floor came from the outer room where she waitedâthe resourceful child had been playing at knucklebones and at the summons had dropped them.
âAt your service, my lady.'
Caitri, kneeling, had not yet overcome awe sufficiently to glance at her sovereign.
âTell Viviana to be ready to leave at noon.'
âAt once, my lady.'
âAnd send a messenger to Roxburgh. I would confer with the Attriod,' said Thorn.
âYour Majesty,' whispered the maid. Rising, she backed out of the chamber without lifting her eyes.
âI am fond of that child,' said Rohain. âMay I ask her if she would like to accompany us?'
âThere is
nothing
thou needs must ask for. All is thineâtake it.'
Still clasping her hand, he led her back to the table.
âIs there nought else thou wouldst take from this chimney stack that once housed thee, besides a half-fledged chick?'
His hair held the subtle fragrance of cedar or perhaps wild thyme. Submerged by the barely leashed potency of him, Rohain wrenched her attention away. She recalled a dressing-table in the suite where she had slept on the previous nightâone of the many apartments on the fortieth story that had escaped the depredations of the unseelie vandals. The fringed aulmoniere containing Maeve's swan's feather reposed there. Beside it lay the crimson vial of Dragon's BloodâThorn's gift, unchained from around her neck when she had bathed. It had been neglected in the amazement of the morning.
âYes, there is something. I shall fetch it myself, and return in a trice.'
He raised her hand to his lips. Over it, he studied her with speculative tenderness.
âYour kiss is fire,' she murmured, blushing.