Viksa smiled. "In payment, I will take--you. Not your life, but your service. It has been many years since I had someone to hunt for me, cook for me, build my fire, and launder my clothes. It will amuse me to have a dragon as my servant."
"For how long would I owe you service?"
"As long as I wish it."
"That seems unfair."
The wizard shrugged.
"When would this service start?"
The wizard shrugged again. "It may be next month, or next year. Or it may be twenty years from now. Have we an agreement?"
Iyadur Atani considered. He did not like this wizard. But he could see no other way to get his wife back.
"We have," he said. "Teach me the spell."
So Viksa the sorcerer taught Iyadur Atani the spell which would enable him to hide within a shadow. It was not a difficult spell. Iyadur Atani rode his hired horse back to The Red Deer and paid the innkeeper what remained on his bill. Then he walked into the bare field beside the inn, and became the Silver Dragon. As the innkeeper and his wife watched open-mouthed, he circled the inn once, and then sped north.
"A dragon!" the innkeeper"s wife said, with intense satisfaction. "I wonder if he found the sorcerer. See, I told you his eyes were odd." The innkeeper agreed. Then he went up to the room Iyadur Atani had occupied, and searched carefully in every cranny, in case the dragon-lord had chanced to leave some gold behind.
Now it was in Iyadur Atani"s mind to fly immediately to Serrenhold Castle. But, remembering Martun Hal"s threats, he did not. He flew to a point just south of Serrenhold"s southern border. And there, in a nondescript village, he bought a horse, a s.h.a.ggy brown gelding. From there he proceeded to Serrenhold Castle. It was not so tedious a journey as he had thought it would be. The p.r.i.c.kly stunted pine trees that grew along the slopes of the wind-swept hills showed new green along their branches. Birds sang. Foxes loped across the hills, hunting mice and quail and the occasional stray chicken. The journey took six days. At dawn on the seventh day, Iyadur Atani fed the brown gelding and left him in a farmer"s yard. It was a fine spring morning. The sky was cloudless; the sun brilliant; the shadows sharp-edged as steel. Thorn-crowned hawthorn bushes lined the road to Serrenhold Castle. Their shadows webbed the ground. A wagon filled with lumber lumbered toward the castle. Its shadow rolled beneath it.
"Wizard," the dragon-lord said to the empty sky, "if you have played me false, I will find you, wherever you try to hide, and eat your heart."
In her prison in the tower, Joanna Torneo Atani walked from one side of her chamber to the other. Her hair had grown long again: it fell around her shoulders. Her belly was round and high under the soft thick drape of her gown. The coming of spring had made her restless. She had asked to be allowed to walk on the ramparts, but this Martun Hal had refused.
Below her window, the castle seethed like a cauldron. The place was never still; the smells and sounds of war continued day and night. The air was thick with soot. Soldiers drilled in the courtyard. Martun Hal was planning an attack on Ege diCorsini. He had told her all about it, including his intention to destroy Galva. I will burn it to the ground. I will kill your uncle and take your mother prisoner, he had said. Or perhaps not. Perhaps I will just have her killed.
She glanced toward the patch of sky that was her window. If Madelene would only come, she could get word to Galva, or to her uncle in Derrenhold... But Madelene would not come in daylight, it was too dangerous.
She heard a hinge creak. The door to the outer chamber opened. "My lady," Big Kate called. She bustled in, bearing a tray. It held soup, bread, and a dish of thin sour pickles. "I brought your lunch."
"I"m not hungry."
Kate said, troubled, "My lady, you have to eat. For the baby."
"Leave it," Joanna said. "I will eat." Kate set the tray on the table, and left.
Joanna nibbled at a pickle. She rubbed her back, which ached. The baby"s heel thudded against the inside of her womb. "My precious, my little one, be still," she said. For it was her greatest fear that her babe, Iyadur Atani"s child, might in its haste to be born arrive early, before her husband arrived to rescue them. That he would come, despite Martun Hal"s threats, she had no doubt. "Be still."
Silently, Iyadur Atani materialized from the shadows.
"Joanna," he said. He put his arms about her. She reached her hands up. Her fingertips brushed his face. She leaned against him, trembling.
She whispered into his shirt, "How did you...?"
"Magic." He touched the high mound of her belly. "Are you well? Have they mistreated you?"
"I am very well. The babe is well." She seized his hand and pressed his palm over the mound. The baby kicked strongly. "Do you feel?"
"Yes." Iyadur Atani stroked her hair. A scarlet cloak with an ornate gold border hung on a peg. He reached for it, and wrapped it about her. "Now, my love, we go. Shut your eyes, and keep them shut until I tell you to open them." He bent, and lifted her into his arms. Her heart thundered against his chest.
She breathed into his ear, "I am sorry. I am heavy."
"You weigh nothing," he said. His human shape dissolved. The walls of the tower shuddered and burst apart. Blocks of stone and splintered planks of wood toppled into the courtyard. Women screamed. Arching his great neck, the Silver Dragon spread his wings and rose into the sky. The soldiers on the ramparts threw their spears at him, and fled. Joanna heard the screaming and felt the hot wind. The scent of burning filled her nostrils. She knew what must have happened. But the arms about her were her husband"s, and human. She did not know how this could be, yet it was. Eyes tight shut, she buried her face against her husband"s shoulder.
Martun Hal stood with a courier in the castle hall. The crash of stone and the screaming interrupted him. A violent gust of heat swept through the room. The windows of the hall shattered. Racing from the hall, he looked up, and saw the dragon circling. His men crouched, sobbing in fear. Consumed with rage, he looked about for a bow, a spear, a rock... Finally he drew his sword.
"d.a.m.n you!" he shouted impotently at his adversary.
Then the walls of his castle melted beneath a white-hot rain.
In Derrenhold, Ege diCorsini was, wearily, reluctantly, preparing for war. He did not want to fight Martun Hal, but he would, of course, if troops from Serrenhold took one step across his border. That an attack would be mounted he had no doubt. His spies had told him to expect it. Jamis of the Hawks had sent her daughters to warn him.
Part of his weariness was a fatigue of the spirit. This is my fault. I should have killed him when I had the opportunity. Ferris was right. The other part of his weariness was physical. He was tired much of the time, and none of the tonics or herbal concoctions that the physicians prescribed seemed to help. His heart raced oddly. He could not sleep. Sometimes in the night he wondered if the Old One sleeping underground had dreamed of him. When the Old One dreams of you, you die. But he did not want to die and leave his domain and its people in danger, and so he planned a war, knowing all the while that he might die in the middle of it.
"My lord," a servant said, "you have visitors."
"Send them in," Ege diCorsini said. "No, wait." The physicians had said he needed to move about. Rising wearily, he went into the hall.
He found there his niece Joanna, big with child, and with her, her flame-haired, flame-eyed husband. A strong smell of burning hung about their clothes.
Ege diCorsini drew a long breath. He kissed Joanna on both cheeks. "I will let your mother know that you are safe."
"She needs to rest," Iyadur Atani said.
"I do not need to rest. I have been doing absolutely nothing for the last six months. I need to go home," Joanna said astringently. "Only I do not wish to ride. Uncle, would you lend us a litter, and some steady beasts to draw it?"
"You may have anything I have," Ege diCorsini said. And for a moment he was not tired at all.
Couriers galloped throughout Ippa, bearing the news: Martun Hal was dead; Serrenhold Castle was ash, or nearly so. The threat of war was--after twenty years--truly over. Martun Hal"s captains--most of them--had died with him. Those still alive hid, hoping to save their skins.
Two weeks after the rescue and the burning of Serrenhold, Ege diCorsini died.
In May, with her mother and sisters at her side, Joanna gave birth to a son. The baby had flame-colored hair and eyes like his father"s. He was named Avahir. A year and a half later, a second son was born to Joanna Torneo Atani. He had dark hair, and eyes like his mother"s. He was named Jon. Like the man whose name he bore, Jon Atani had a sweet disposition and a loving heart. He adored his brother, and Avahir loved his younger brother fiercely. Their loyalty to each other made their parents very happy.
Thirteen years almost to the day from the burning of Serrenhold, on a bright spring morning, a man dressed richly as a prince, carrying a white birch staff, appeared at the front gate of Atani Castle and requested audience with the dragon-lord. He refused to enter, or even to give his name, saying only, "Tell him the fisherman has come for his catch."
His servants found Iyadur Atani in the great hall of his castle.
"My lord," they said, "a stranger stands at the front gate, who will not give his name. He says, The fisherman has come for his catch."
"I know who it is," their lord replied. He walked to the gate of his castle. The sorcerer stood there, leaning on his serpent-headed staff, entirely at ease.
"Good day," he said cheerfully. "Are you ready to travel?"
And so Iyadur Atani left his children and his kingdom to serve Viksa the wizard. I do not know--no one ever asked her, not even their sons--what Iyadur Atani and his wife said to one another that day. Avahir Atani, who at twelve was already full-grown, as changeling children are wont to be, inherited the lordship of Atani Castle. Like his father, he gained the reputation of being fierce, but just.
Jon Atani married a granddaughter of Rudolf diMako, and went to live in that city.
Joanna Atani remained in Dragon Keep. As time pa.s.sed, and Iyadur Atani did not return, her sisters and her brother, even her sons, urged her to remarry. She told them all not to be fools; she was wife to the Silver Dragon. Her husband was alive, and might return at any time, and how would he feel to find another man warming her bed? She became her son"s chief minister, and in that capacity could often be found riding across Dragon"s country, and elsewhere in Ippa, to Derrenhold and Mirrinhold and Ragnar, and even to far Voiana, where the Red Hawk sisters, one in particular, always welcomed her. She would not go to Serrenhold.
But always she returned to Dragon Keep.
As for Iyadur Atani: he traveled with the wizard throughout Ryoka, carrying his bags, preparing his oatcakes and his bath water, sc.r.a.ping mud from his boots. Viksa"s boots were often muddy, for he was a great traveler, who walked, rather than rode, to his many destinations. In the morning, when Iyadur Atani brought the sorcerer his breakfast, Viksa would say, "Today we go to Rotsa"--or Ruggio, or Rowena. "They have need of magic." He never said how he knew this. And off they would go to Vipurri or Rotsa or Talvela, to Sorvino, Ruggio or Rowena.
Sometimes the need to which he was responding had to do directly with magic, as when a curse needed to be lifted. Often it had to do with common disasters. A river had swollen in its banks and needed to be restrained. A landslide had fallen on a house or barn. Sometimes the one who needed them was n.o.ble, or rich. Sometimes not. It did not matter to Viksa. He could enchant a cornerstone, so that the wall it anch.o.r.ed would rise straight and true; he could spell a field, so that its crop would thrust from the soil no matter what the rainfall.
His greatest skill was with water. Some sorcerers draw a portion of their power from an element: wind, water, fire or stone. Viksa could coax a spring out of earth that had known only drought for a hundred years. He could turn stagnant water sweet. He knew the names of every river, stream, brook and waterfall in Issho.
In the first years of his servitude Iyadur Atani thought often of his sons, and especially Avahir, and of Joanna, but after a while his anxiety for them faded. After a longer while, he found he did not think of them so often--rarely at all, in fact. He even forgot their names. He had already relinquished his own. Iyadur is too grand a name for a servant, the sorcerer had remarked. You need a different name.
And so the tall, fair-haired man became known as Shadow. He carried the sorcerer"s pack, and cooked his food. He rarely spoke.
"Why is he so silent?" women, bolder and more curious than their men, asked the sorcerer.
Sometimes the sorcerer answered, "No reason. It"s his nature." And sometimes he told a tale, a long, elaborate fantasy of spells and dragons and sorcerers, a gallant tale in which Shadow had been the hero, but from which he had emerged changed--broken. Shadow, listening, wondered if perhaps this tale was true. It might have been. It explained why his memory was so erratic, and so vague.
His dreams, by contrast, were vivid and intense. He dreamed often of a dark-walled castle flanked by white-capped mountains. Sometimes he dreamed that he was a bird, flying over the castle. The most adventurous of the women, attracted by Shadow"s looks, and, sometimes, by his silence, tried to talk with him. But their smiles and allusive glances only made him shy. He thought that he had had a wife, once. Maybe she had left him. He thought perhaps she had. But maybe not. Maybe she had died.
He had no interest in the women they met, though as far as he could tell, his body still worked as it should. He was a powerful man, well-formed. Shadow wondered sometimes what his life had been before he had come to serve the wizard. He had skills: he could hunt and shoot a bow, and use a sword. Perhaps he had served in some n.o.ble"s war band. He bore a knife now, a good one, with a bone hilt, but no sword. He did not need a sword. Viksa"s reputation, and his magic, shielded them both.
Every night, before they slept, wherever they were, in a language Shadow did not know, the sorcerer wove spells of protection about them and their dwelling. The spells were very powerful, and the chant made Shadow"s ears hurt. Once, early in their a.s.sociation, he asked the sorcerer what the spell was for.
"Protection," Viksa replied. Shadow had been surprised. He had not realized Viksa had enemies.
But now, having traveled with the sorcerer as long as he had, he knew that even the lightest magic can have consequences, and Viksa"s magic was not always light. He could make rain, but he could also make drought. He could lift curses or lay them. He was a man of power, and he had his vanity. He enjoyed being obeyed. Sometimes he enjoyed being feared.
Through spring, summer, and autumn, the wizard traveled wherever he was called to go. But in winter they returned to Lake Urai. He had a house beside the lake, a simple place, furnished with simple things: a pallet, a table, a chair, a shelf for books. But Viksa rarely looked at the books; it seemed he had no real love for study. Indeed, he seemed to have no pa.s.sion for anything, save sorcery itself--and fishing. All through the Issho winter, despite the bitter winds, he took his little coracle out upon the lake, and sat there with a pole. Sometimes he caught a fish, or two, or half a dozen. Sometimes he caught none.
"Enchant them," Shadow said to him one grey afternoon, when he returned to the house empty-handed. "Call them to your hook with magic."
The wizard shook his head. "I can"t."
"Why not?"
"I was one of them once." Shadow looked at him, uncertain. "Before I was a sorcerer, I was a fish."
It was impossible to tell if he was joking or serious. It might have been true. It explained, at least, his affinity for water.
While he fished, Shadow hunted. The country around the lake was rich with game; despite the winter, they did not lack for meat. Shadow hunted deer and badger and beaver. He saw wolves, but did not kill them. Nor would he kill birds, though birds there were; even in winter, geese came often to the lake. Their presence woke in him a wild, formless longing.
One day he saw a white bird, with wings as wide as he was tall, circling over the lake. It had a beak like a raptor. It called to him, an eerie sound. Something about it made his heart beat faster. When Viksa returned from his sojourn at the lake, Shadow described the stranger bird to him, and asked what it was.
"A condor," the wizard said.
"Where does it come from?"
"From the north," the wizard said, frowning.
"It called to me. It looked--n.o.ble."
"It is not. It is scavenger, not predator." He continued to frown. That night he spent a long time over his nightly spells.
In spring, the kingfishers and guillemots returned to the lake. And one April morning, when Shadow laid breakfast upon the table, Viksa said, "Today we go to Dale."
"Where is that?"
"In the White Mountains, in Kameni, far to the north." And so they went to Dale, where a petty lordling needed Viksa"s help in deciphering the terms and conditions of an ancient prophecy, for within it lay the future of his kingdom.
From Dale they traveled to Secca, where a youthful hedge-witch, hoping to shatter a boulder, had used a spell too complex for her powers, and had managed to summon a stone demon, which promptly ate her. It was an old, powerful demon. It took a day, a night, and another whole day until Viksa, using the strongest spells he knew, was able to send it back into the Void.
They rested that night at a roadside inn, south of Secca. Viksa, exhausted from his battle with the demon, went to bed right after his meal, so worn that he fell asleep without taking the time to make his customary incantations.
Shadow considered waking him to remind him of it, and decided not to. Instead, he, too, slept.
And there, in an inn south of Secca, Iyadur Atani woke.
He was not, he realized, in his bed, or even in his bedroom. He lay on the floor. The coverlet around his shoulders was rough wool, not the soft quilt he was used to. Also, he was wearing his boots.
He said, "Joanna?" No one answered. A candle sat on a plate at his elbow. He lit it without touching it.
Sitting up soundlessly, he gazed about the chamber, at the bed and its snoring occupant, at the packs he had packed himself, the birchwood staff athwart the doorway... Memory flooded through him. The staff was Viksa"s. The man sleeping in the bed was Viksa. And he--he was Iyadur Atani, lord of Dragon Keep.
His heart thundered. His skin coursed with heat. The ring on his hand glowed, but he could not feel the burning. Fire coursed beneath his skin. He rose.
How long had Viksa"s magic kept him in thrall--five years? Ten years? More?
He took a step toward the bed. The serpent in the wizard"s staff opened its eyes. Raising its carved head, it hissed at him.
The sound woke Viksa. Gazing up from his bed at the bright shimmering shape looming over him, he knew immediately what had happened. He had made a mistake. Fool, he thought, O you fool.
It was too late now.
The guards on the walls of Secca saw a pillar of fire rise into the night. Out of it--so they swore, with such fervor that even the most skeptical did not doubt them--flew a silver dragon. It circled the flames, bellowing with such power and ferocity that all who heard it trembled.
Then it beat the air with its great wings, and leaped north.
In Dragon Keep, a light powdery snow covered the garden. It did not deter the rhubarb shoots breaking through the soil, or the fireweed, or the buds on the birches. A sparrow swung in the birch branches, singing. The clouds that had brought the snow had dissipated; the day was bright and fair, the shadows sharp as the angle of the sparrow"s wing against the light.
Joanna Atani walked along the garden path. Her face was lined, and her hair, though still l.u.s.trous and thick, was streaked with silver. Her vision, once clear, was cloudy. But her step was vigorous, and her eyes as bright as they had been when first she came to Atani Castle, over thirty years before.
Bending close to the blossoms, she brushed a snowdrop free of snow. A clatter of pans arose in the kitchen. A voice, imperious and young, called from within. It was Hikaru, Avahir"s first-born and heir. He was only two, but had the height and grace of a lad twice that age. A woman answered him, her voice soft and firm. That was Geneva Tuolinnen, Hikaru"s mother. She was an excellent mother, calm and unexcitable. She was a good seamstress, too, and a superb manager; far better at running the castle than Joanna had ever been. She could scarcely handle a bow, though, and thought swordplay was entirely man"s work.
She and Joanna were as friendly as two strong-willed women can be.
Claws scrabbled on stone. A black, floppy-eared puppy bounded across Joanna"s feet, nearly knocking her down. Rup the dog-boy scampered after it. They tore through the garden and raced past the kitchen door into the yard. Hikaru called again. A man walked into the garden. Joanna squinted. For a moment she thought it was Avahir, but Avahir was miles away, in Kameni. He was tall. Gabbio the head gardener was short.