"As always, good cousin, your words are the mirror of my thoughts." Sithas straightened in his throne, a signal that the interview drew to a close. "But my decision is still to wait. Kith-Kanan is secure for now, and we may learn more as time goes on."
He hoped he was right. The fortress was strong, and the humans would undoubtedly require months to prepare a coordinated a.s.sault. But what then?
"Very well." Quimant cleared his throat awkwardly, then added, "What is the word of my cousin? I have not seen her for some weeks now."
"Her time is near," Sithas offered. "Her sisters have come from the estates to stay with her, and she has been confined to bed by the clerics of Quenesti Pah."
Quimant nodded. "Please give her my wishes when next you see her. May she give birth speedily, to a healthy child."
"Indeed."
Sithas watched the elegant n.o.ble walk from the hall. He was impressed by Quimant"s bearing. The lord knew his worth to the throne, proven in the half-year since he had come to Silvanost. He showed sensitivity to the desires of the Speaker and seemed to work well toward those ends.
He heard one of the side doors open and looked across the great hall as a silk-gowned female elf entered. Her eyes fell softly on the figure seated upon the brilliant throne with its mult.i.tude of green, gleaming facets.
"Mother," said Sithas with delight. He didn"t see much of Nirakina around the palace during these difficult days, and this visit was a pleasant surprise. He was struck, as she approached him, by how much older she looked.
"I see you do not have attendants now," she said quietly to Sithas, who rose and approached her. "So often you are busy with the affairs of state ... and war."
He sighed. "War has become the way of my lifethe way all Silvanost lives now."
He felt a twinge of sadness for his mother. So often Sithas looked upon the death of his father as an event that had placed the burden of rule on his own shoulders. He tended to forget that it had, at the same time, made his mother a widow.
"Take a moment to walk with me, won"t you?" asked Nirakina, taking her son by the arm.
He nodded, and they walked in silence across the great hall of the tower to the crystal doors reserved for the royal family alone. These opened soundlessly, and then they were
in the Gardens of Astarin. To their right were the dark wooden buildings of the royal stables, while before them beckoned the wondrous beauty of the royal gardens. Immediately Sithas felt a sense of lightness and ease.
"You need to do this more often," said his mother, gently chiding. "You grow old before your time." She held his arm loosely, letting him select the path they followed.
The gardens loomed around themgreat hedges and thick bushes heavy with dewy blossoms; ponds and pools and fountains; small clumps of aspen and oak and fir. It was a world of nature, shaped and formed by elven clericsdevotees of the Bard King, Astarininto a transcendent work of art.
"I thank you for bringing me through those doors," Sithas said with a chuckle.
"Sometimes I need to be reminded."
"Your father, too, needed a subtle reminder now and then. I tried to give him that when it became necessary."
For a moment, Sithas felt a wave of melancholy. "I miss him now more than ever. I feel so ... unready to sit on his throne."
"You are ready," said Nirakina firmly. "Your wisdom is seeing us through the most difficult time since the Dragon Wars. But since you are about to become a father, you must realize that your life cannot be totally given over to your nation. You have a family to think about, as well."
Sithas smiled. "The clerics of Quenesti Pah are with Hermathya at all times. They say it will be any day now."
"The clerics, and her sisters," Nirakina murmured.
"Yes," Sithas agreed. Hermathya"s sisters, Gelynna and Lyath, had moved into the palace as soon as his wife"s pregnancy had become known. They were pleasant enough,
but Sithas had come to feel that his apartments were somehow less than his own now. It was a feeling he didn"t like but that he had tried to overlook for Hermathya"s sake.
"She has changed, Mother, that much you must see. Hermathya had become a new woman even before she knew about the child. She has been a support and a comfort to me, as if for the first time."
"It is the war," said Nirakina. "I have noticed this change you speak of, and it began with the war. She, her clan of Oakleaf, they all thrive upon this intensity and activity."
The elven woman paused, then added, "I noticed Lord Quimant leaving before I entered.
You speak with him often. Is he proving himself useful?"
"Indeed, very. Does this cause you concern?"
Nirakina sighed, then shook her head. "Inono, it doesn"t. You are doing the right thing for Silvanesti, and if he can aid you, that is a good thing."
Sithas stopped at a stone bench. His mother sat while he paced idly below overhanging branches of silvery quaking aspen that shimmered in the light breeze.
"Have you had word from Tamanier Ambrodel?" Nirakina asked.
Sithas smiled confidentially. "He has arrived at Thorbardin safely and hopes to get in touch with the Hylar. With any luck, he will see the king himself. Then we shall find out if this Than-Kar is doing us true justice as amba.s.sador."
"And you have told no one of Lord Ambrodel"s mission?" his mother inquired carefully.
"No " Sithas informed her. "Indeed, Quimant and I discussed the dwarves today, but I said nothing even to him about our quiet diplomat. Still, I wish you would tell me why we must maintain such secrecy."
"Please, not yet," Nirakina demurred.
A thin haze had gradually spread across the sky, and now the wind carried a bit of early winter in its caress. Sithas saw his mother shiver in her light silken garment.
"Come, we"ll return to the hall," he said, offering his arm as she rose.
"And your brother?" Nirakina asked tentatively as they turned back toward the crystal doors. "Can you send him more troops?"
"I don"t know yet," Sithas replied, the agony of the decision audible in his voice.
"Can I risk arousing the city?"
"Perhaps you need more information."
"Who could inform me of that which I don"t already know?" Sithas asked skeptically.
"Kith-Kanan himself." His mother stopped to face him as the doors opened and the warmth of the tower beckoned. "Bring him home, Sithas," she said urgently, taking both of his arms in her hands. "Bring him home and talk to him!"
Sithas was surprised at his own instinctive reaction. The suggestion made surprisingly good sense. It offered him hopeand an idea for action that would unite, not divide, his people. Yet how could he call his brother home now, out of the midst of a monstrous encircling army?
The next day Quimant again was Sithas"s first and primary visitor.
"My lord," began the adviser, "have you made a decision about conscription of additional forces? I am reluctant to remind you, but time may be running short."
Sithas frowned. Unbidden, his mind recalled the scene at the riverbank when the first column departed for war. Now more than half those elves were dead. What would be the city"s reaction should another, larger force march west?
"Not yet. I wish to wait until . . . " His voice trailed off. He had been about to mention Ambrodel"s mission. "I will not make that decision yet," he concluded.
He was spared the necessity of further discussion when Stankathan, his palace majordomo, entered the great hall. That dignified elf, clad in a black waistcoat of wool, preceded a travel-stained messenger who wore the leather jerkin of a Wildrunner scout.
The latter bore a scroll of parchment sealed with a familiar stamp of red wax.
"A message from my brother?" Sithas rose to his feet, recognizing the form of the sheet.
"By courier, who came from across the river just this morning," replied Stankathan.
"I brought him over to the tower directly."
Sithas felt a surge of delight, as he did every fortnight or so when a courier arrived with the latest reports from Kith-Kanan. Yet that delight had lately been tempered by the grim news from his brother and the besieged garrison.
He looked at the courier as the elf approached and bowed deeply. Besides the dirt and mud of the trail, Sithas saw that the fellow had a sling supporting his right arm and a dark, stained bandage around the leggings of his left knee.
"My grat.i.tude for your efforts," said Sithas, appraising the rider. The elf stood taller after his words, as if the praise of the speaker was a balm to his wounds. "What was the nature of your obstacles?"
"The usual rings of guards, Your Highness," replied the elf. "But the humans lack sorcerers and so cannot screen the paths with magic. The first day of my journey I was concealed by invisibility, a spell that camouflaged myself and my horse. Afterward, the fleetness of my steed carried me, and I encountered only one minor fray."
The Speaker of the Stars took the scroll and broke the wax seal. Carefully he unrolled the sheet, ignoring Quimant for the time being. The lord stood quietly; if he was annoyed, he made no visible sign of the fact.
Sithas read the missive solemnly.
I look out, my brother, upon an endless sea of humanity. Indeed, they surround us like the ocean surrounds an island, completely blocking our pa.s.sage. It is only with great risk that my couriers can penetrate the linesthat, and the aid of spells cast by my enchanters, which allow them some brief time to escape the notice of the foe.
What is to be the fate now of our cause? Will the army of Ergoth attack and carry the fort? Their horses sweep in great circles about us, but the steeds cannot reach us here. The other two wings have joined General Giarna before Sithelbec, and their numbers truly stun the mind.
General Giarna, I have learned, is the name of the foe we faced in the spring, the one who drove us from the field. We have taken prisoners from his force, and to a man they speak of their devotion to him and their confidence that he will one day destroy us! I met him in the brief hours I was prisoner, and he is a terrifying man. There is something deep and cruel about him that transcended any foe I have ever encountered.
Will the dwarves of Thorbardin march from their stronghold and break the siege from the south? That, my brother, would be a truly magnificent feat of diplomacy on your part. Should you bring such an alliance into being, I could scarce convey my grat.i.tude across the miles!
Or will the hosts of Silvanost march forth, the elves united in their campaign against the threat to our race? That, I am afraid, is the least likely of my musingsat least, from the words you give me as to our peoples" apathy and lack of concern. How fares the diplomatic battle, Brother?
I hope to amuse you with one tale, an experience that gave us all many moments of distraction, not to mention fear. I have written to you of the gnomish lava cannon, the mountain vehicle pulled by a hundred oxen, its stony maw pointed skyward as it belches smoke and fire. Finally, shortly after my last letter, this device was hauled into place before Sithelbec. It stood some three miles away but loomed so high and spumed so furiously that we were indeed distraught!
For three days, the monstrous structure became the center of a whirlwind of gnomish activity. They scaled its sides, fed coal into its bowels, poured great quant.i.ties of muck and dust and streams of a red powder into its maw. All this time, the thing puffed and chugged. By the third day, the entire plain lay shrouded beneath a cloud from its wheezing exhalations.
Finally the gnomes clambered up the sides and stood atop the device, as if they had scaled a small mountain. We watched, admittedly with great trepidation, as one of the little creatures mixed a caldron at the very lip of the cannon"s interior. Eventually he cast the contents of the vessel into the weapon itself. All of the gnomes fled, and for the first time, we noticed that the humans had pulled back from the cannon, giving it a good half-mile berth to either side.
For a full day, the army of Ergoth huddled in fright, staring at their monstrous weapon. Finally it appeared that it had failed to discharge, but it was not until the following day that we watched the gnomes creep forward to investigate.
Suddenly the thing began to chug and wheeze and belch. The gnomes scurried for cover, and for another full day, we all watched and waited.
But it was not until the morning of the third day that we saw the weapon in action.
It exploded shortly after dawn and cast its formidable ordnance for many miles. Fortunately we, as the targets of the attack, were safe. It was the gathered human army that suffered the brunt of flaming rock and devastating force that ripped across the plains.
We saw thousands of the humans" horses (unfortunately a small fraction of their total number) stampede in panic across the plain. Whole regiments vanished beneath the deluge of death as a sludgelike wave spread through the army.
For a brief moment, I saw the opportunity to make a sharp attack, further disrupting the encircling host. Even as I ordered the attack, however, the ranks of General Giarna"s wing shouldered aside the other humans. His deadly riders ensured that our trap remained effectively closed.
Nevertheless, the accident wreaked havoc among the Army of Ergoth. We gave thanks to the G.o.ds that the device misfired; had its attack struck Sithelbec, you would have already received your last missive from me. The cannon has been reduced to a heap of rubble, and we pray daily that it cannot be rebuilt.
My best wishes and hopes for my new niece or nephew. Which is it to be? Perhaps you will have the answer by the time you read this. I can
only hope that somehow I will know. I hope Hermathya is comfortable and well.
I miss your counsel and presence as always, Brother. I treat myself to the thought that, could we but bring our minds together, we could work a way to break out of this stalemate. But, alas, the jaws of the trap close about me, and I know that you, in the capital, are ensnared in every bit as tight a position as I.
Until then, have a prayer for us! Give my love to Mother!
Kith Sithas paused, realizing that the guards and Quimant had been studying him intently as he read. A full range of emotions had played across his face, he knew, and suddenly the knowledge made him feel exceedingly vulnerable.
"Leave me, all of you!" Sithas barked the command, more harshly perhaps than he intended, but he was nevertheless gratified to see them all quickly depart from the hall.
He paced back and forth before the emerald throne. His brother"s letter had agitated him more than usual, for he knew that he had to do something. No longer could he force the standoff at Sithelbec into the back of his mind. His mother and his brother were right.
He needed to see Kith-Kanan, to talk with him. They would be able to work out a plana plan with some hope of success!
Remembering his walk with Nirakina, he turned toward the royal doors of crystal.
The gardens and the stables lay beyond.
Resolutely Sithas stalked to those doors, which opened silently before him. He emerged from the tower into the cool sunlight of the garden but took no note of his surroundings.
Instead, he crossed directly to the royal stable.