"The child is what caught my attention."
"But it"s not due...."
"It"s coming. In two or three days. The divinations, though obscure, are clear on one point. This child, touched by the old evil in Fiana"s womb, can shake the roots of the earth-if it lives. It may not. There"re forces at work...."
"Forces. I"d rid the world of your kind if I could....""That would leave you a dull world, sir. But the matter at hand is your Queen.
And child."
"G.o.ds, I"m tired. Tired of everything. Ten years ago, when we had the land grant in Itaskia, I griped about life getting dull. I"d give anything to be back there now.
My wife would be alive. So would my kids...."
"You"re wrong. I know."
Ragnarson met his gaze. And yes, Varthlokkur knew. He had lived with the same despair for an age.
"Karak Strabger.... Baxendala. That"s almost fifty miles. Can we make it?"
"I don"t know. Fast horses...."
"We"ll rob the post riders." One of Ragnarson"s innovations, which Derel had proposed, was a fast postal system which permitted rapid warning in case of trouble. Its way stations were the major inns of the countryside. Each was given a subsidy to maintain post riders" horses.
The system was more expensive than the traditional, which amounted to giving mail to a traveler bound in the right direction, to pa.s.s hand to hand to others till it reached its destination. The new system was more reliable. Ragnarson hoped, someday, to convince the mercantile cla.s.s to rely on it exclusively, making his system a money-earner for the Crown.
"Jarl. Have some horses saddled and brought round front. Make it... three.
Myself, the wizard, and Ragnar. Haaken"s in charge till I get back. His word to be law.
Understand?"
Ahring nodded.
"Valther?"
"I"ve got it." He eyed Bragi, expression unreadable.
Bragi realized that his going to the Queen would support the rumors. But he didn"t comment. His a.s.sociates could decide for themselves if they should keep their mouths shut.
He studied faces. His gaze settled on Michael Trebilc.o.c.k. The pallid youth still held his aim on Varthlokkur. A machine, that man.
"Excuse me," Ragnarson told the wizard. "Michael, come with me a minute."
He took Michael downstairs, outside, round to the garden. Dawn had begun painting the horizon toward the Kapenrungs. Somewhere there Fiana lay in pain, this child of theirs struggling to rip itself from her womb before its time.
"Michael."
"Sir?"
"I don"t know you very well yet. You"re still a stranger, even after several years."
"Sir?"
"I"ve got a feeling about you. I like you. I trust you. But am I right?"The garden was peaceful. From the rear Ragnarson"s house looked as innocent of terror as were its neighbors.
"I"m not sure I follow you, sir."
"I don"t know who you are, Michael. I don"t know what. You stay locked up inside.
I only know what Gjerdrum says. You don"t give away a thing about yourself. You"re an enigma.
Which is your right. But you"ve become part of the gang. I hardly noticed you doing it. You"re un.o.btrusive.
"You hear things. You see things. You know everybody. I"ve got a feeling you"ve got the kind of mind that leaps to conclusions past missing data, and you"re usually right. Am I wrong?"
Trebilc.o.c.k shook his head. In the dawnlight he appeared spectral, like a mummy returned to life.
"The question, again. Can you be trusted?" Bragi waited half a minute. Trebilc.o.c.k didn"t respond. "Are you really with me? Or will I have to kill you someday?"
Trebilc.o.c.k didn"t react in the slightest. Again Ragnarson had the feeling that fear, to this young man, was meaningless.
"You won"t need to kill me," Michael finally replied. "I"ve been here since graduation. This"s my country now. You"re my people. I am what I am. I"m sorry you don"t see it. And you can"t help thinking whatever you do. But I"m home, sir."
Ragnarson peered into Trebilc.o.c.k"s pale, pale eyes and believed. "Good. Then I"ve got a job for you."
"Sir?" For the first time since he had met Michael, Bragi saw emotion. And thought he understood. Michael was a rich man"s son. What had he ever been able to do for himself or others?
"It"s simple. Do what you do. Eyes and ears. Hanging around. Only more of it.
Gjerdrum says you"re always prowling anyway." Ragnarson stared toward the sunrise.
"Michael, I can"t trust anybody anymore. I hate it...."
Ahring came out. "The horses are ready. I had some things thrown together for you."
"Thank you, Jarl. Michael?"
"Sir?"
"Good luck."
Ragnarson left the pale young man in deep thought. "Jarl, I"ve changed my mind.
You know what"s happening with me and the Queen?"
"I"ve heard enough."
"Yeah. Well. There"s not much point my hiding it now. But don"t quote me.
Understand?"
"Of course."
"Does it suggest any problems?"
"A thousand. What scares me is what might happen if she doesn"t make it. Your witch-man friend sounded.... They say she had trouble with the first one.""Yeah. Here"s what I want. All capital troops but the Vorgrebergers and Queen"s Own confined to barracks starting tomorrow, before what"s happening leaks. And right now have Colonel Oryon report to me ready to travel. I"ll keep one serpent in my pocket by taking him along. Oh. Put the provinces on alert. Militia on standby. Border guards to maximum readiness. Valther can drop hints about an intelligence coup. It"ll distract questions about the confinement to barracks. Got it?"
"It"s done."
It was well past dawn before three men and a boy rode eastward.
EIGHT: The Prisoner
The pain never ended.
The whispers, the gentle evils in his ears, went on and on and on.
He was stubborn. So d.a.m.ned stubborn that yielding in order to gain surcease never occurred to him.
He didn"t know where he was. He didn"t know who had captured him. He didn"t know why. Pain was the extent of his knowledge. The man in black, the man in the mask, was his only clue. They wouldn"t tell him a thing. They just asked. If they spoke at all.
At first they had questioned him about Bragi and Haroun. He had told them nothing.
He couldn"t have. He didn"t know anything. They had been separated too long.
He wakened. Sounds....
The Man in the Mask had returned.
"Woe!" Mocker muttered, slumping lower against floor and wall. It would be rough this time. They hadn"t visited for weeks.
But there were just four of them this round. He was thankful for little favors.
Each bore a torch. Mocker watched with hooded eyes as the a.s.sistants placed theirs in sconces beyond his reach, one on each wall. The Man in the Mask fixed his above the door.
Mask closed the door. Of course. Not because Mocker might escape. He didn"t order it locked from without. He simply closed it so his prisoner wouldn"t get the idea there was a world beyond that slab of iron.
Mocker"s world was twelve by twelve by twelve, black stone, without windows.
Furniture? Chains.
There were no sanitary facilities.
Having to endure his own wastes was good-for his captors" designs.
The most distressing thing was the Mask"s silence. Invariably he just stood before the door, statuelike, while his a.s.sistants demonstrated their pain-mastery.
This time they had given him too long to recover, and hadn"t brought enough muscle.
He exploded.
He tripped the nearest, drove stiffened fingers into the man"s throat. He screamed, "Hai!" in bloodthirsty exultation. Cartilage gave way. He made a claw, yanked with all his remaining strength.One was dead. But three were left.
He hoped they would get mad enough to kill him.
Death was all he had to live for.
He scrambled away, bounced up, threw a foot at the crotch of the Man in the Mask.
The others stopped him. They were no off-the-street amateurs. They put him down and took him apart.
There had been so much pain, so often, that he didn"t care. It had gone on so long that he no longer feared it. Only two things mattered anymore. Hurting back, and getting them to kill him.
They didn"t get mad. They never did, though this was the worst he had done them.
They remained pure business.
Once they had beaten him, they rolled him onto his belly and bound his wrists behind him. Then they pulled his elbows together. He groaned, writhed, sank his teeth into a bare ankle.
The blood taste was pure pleasure.
He tasted his own when a boot smashed into his mouth. He wouldn"t learn.
Resistance just meant more pain.
They attached a rope at his elbows and hoisted him.
It was an old torture, primitive and pa.s.sive. When first Mocker had arrived he had been fifty pounds overweight. His weight had yanked his shoulder bones from their sockets.
After he had screamed awhile, and had lost consciousness, someone would doctor him so they could hoist him up again.
Back then there had been no night whispers, just the pain, and the unending effort to break him.
Why?
For whose benefit?
What would the program be this time? Five or ten days on the hook? Or straight to the point for once?
One thing was certain. There would be nothing to eat for a while. Food was strictly for convalescents.
When he was fed at all he got pumpkin soup. Two bowls a day.