“That seems incredibly careless for a monarch.”
“I agree,” he said evenly, “and while I offer no excuses, consider this. When I met your mother, I had been king for nearly fifty years. Queen Fiordella had recently passed away. She was the fourth queen to share my throne. All were political marriages, of course, for how many people in Halruaa marry to please themselves?”
“Enough was enough,” Tzigone concluded.
Zalathorm smiled faintly. “My thoughts precisely. The Council of Elders did not agree. After Fiordella’s death, there was considerable discussion concerning whom I should wed next. Some of our more ‘modern’ wizards were even clamoring for a hereditary monarchy, such as those in the northern kingdoms. You can imagine the furor this notion inspired.”
Tzigone nodded sagely. “Every female wizard in Halruaa went strutting around with her wizardly bloodlines tattooed across her cleavage, hoping to catch your eye.”
Matteo put a hand over his eyes and groaned. The king, however, chuckled at this image. “Their methods were slightly more subtle but not by much.” He quickly sobered. “The issue of marriage was only one of many. I had reigned long and lived far longer. Too long, in fact
“Life is a priceless blessing,” continued the king, “but three hundred years weighs heavily upon a man. The years bring the same cycles, repeated with minor and predictable variations. Generation follows generation, each asking the same questions and making the same mistakes. After centuries devoted to Halruaa and her magic—especially to the art of divination—it seemed to me that nothing could ever surprise or delight me again.”
“Then you met my mother,” Tzigone concluded.
“Yes.” He met the girl’s eyes squarely. “She was worth a kingdom then. She is worth it still. Don’t fear any harm the truth might do to me or my reign. I suspect the truth will be kind to Beatrix—and to Keturah, as well.”
“It might not be so kind to you,” she said bluntly. “Beatrix was married before.”
“Dhamari Exchelsor—”
“I’m not talking about him,” Tzigone broke in. “She had a real marriage, to some young man who fell off a griffin. I can see into the past,” she explained, noting the king’s dumbfounded expression.
The king collected himself and glanced at a water clock, a tall glass cylinder filled with many-colored floating balls. He grimaced and rose.
“We will speak more of this at first opportunity. Lord Basel’s hearing will begin shortly.”
The two young people rose with the king. “But he was released!” protested Tzigone.
“Yes, in the matter of Sinestra Belajoon’s death. Another wizard is dead. Uriah Belajoon died just last night, in Basel’s garden. It appears that his heart gave out, but since this is the third death to occur in Basel’s tower this moon, the council wishes to inquire more closely. Tzigone, if you know anything that might help Basel, I want you to present it”
A look of uncertainty crossed Tzigone’s face. “You are said to be a talented performer,” the king said. “It might ease your mind to speak as if you were playing a part.”
“Not a bad idea,” she admitted, “but the pink palace is a far cry from my usual venue. Nothing I’ve played in street corners and taverns hits the right note.”
Zalathorm took her hand and raised it to his lips, a gesture reserved for great ladies. “Then create a new role. Face the crowd as one who knows in her heart she is daughter to a queen and a princess of Halruaa.”
For a long moment Tzigone stared at the king, dumbfounded. Then she began to laugh—rich, unrestrained, bawdy laughter that shook through her like a storm. Finally her mirth faded, and regal hauteur swept over her face. She beckoned to Matteo.
“Come, jordain,” she intoned. “We have much to prepare before I give audience.”
She swept out like a starship in full sail. The two men watched her theatrical progress from the room.
“It is said that a king need never apologize,” Zalathorm said, his eyes twinkling. “But judging from the look on your face, Matteo, I suspect I’ve just stretched that proverb to the breaking point.”
That afternoon the pink-marble audience hall was filled to capacity with Halarahh’s wizards. From his position behind the king’s seat, Matteo searched the small crowd waiting before the dais and found Tzigone among those who waited to give evidence. Their eyes caught, and he gave her a slight, encouraging nod.
When the crumhorns sounded the resumption of council, Zalathorm glanced at the parchment before him and called upon Tzigone as first to give testament.
She climbed the dais and executed the proper bows to the king and the assembled dignitaries. “Before I speak in Lord Basel’s behalf, I wish to advise this council of an emerging magical gift, one that has helped me find the evidence I will present I have recently discovered a talent for reverse divination. I can see into the past with greater detail than is yielded by a legend lore spell.”
A murmur of astonishment rippled through the crowd. In Halruaa, magical skills were slowly and assiduously acquired. Sorcery was frowned upon, and “recent discoveries” of inborn talents were rare in their ordered society.
Matteo stepped forward. “I will attest to this. I have seen her go deep into memory and in doing so accidentally produce a memory that belonged to someone long dead.”
A wizard of the Belajoon clan rose, a supercilious smile on his face. “Begging the jordain’s pardon, but wasn’t this girl a common street performer? How do you know this ‘ancient memory’ that so impressed you wasn’t just another tavern tale?”
“This memory was powerful enough to conjure a visible illusion,” Matteo said coolly.
“Lord Basel, her mentor, is a conjurer. No doubt she learned this trick during her apprenticeship.”
“This occurred before Tzigone’s training began,” Matteo countered, “before her magical feats in Akhlaur’s Swamp, before she had any notion of herself as a potential wizard. The image she conjured was a rare species of griffin, extinct for over three centuries. Few lore books contain any reference to such a beast. It is unlikely that a child of the streets would have access to such books. I was there at the time, and no one, no matter how skilled a performer, could have feigned Tzigone’s astonishment. Her talent for reverse divination is a natural gift, and it is very real.”
Tzigone faced down the wizard, who looked ready to argue with Matteo’s assessment. “Give me something to hold, and I’ll tell you its history.”
“Here!” A woman rose in the balcony and tossed down a shining bauble. Tzigone deftly caught it and held it up for general inspection. It appeared to be an exceptionally fine opal necklace, with large, glowing white stones set in silvery filigree.
Zalathorm looked to the donor. “Lady Queirri Venless,” he said, naming the wizard. “To the best of your knowledge, does this girl have reason to know the history of this necklace?”
“No. This I swear, by wizard-word oath,” Queirri replied.
Tzigone turned her face toward the wizard, and her eyes took on a distant, unfocused expression. “You were twelve years old, wandering the forest near your home. There were hunters—poachers—setting up traps and lures. Curious, you hid and watched as they ran a baby unicorn into their traps and slaughtered it for spell components. You fled home with the tale. Your mother, outraged, had the poachers hunted down and killed. Their deaths have always weighed heavily upon you, and you still dream of the unicorn. You kept the horn and had it fashioned into this necklace. You wear it as a reminder that sometimes the price of magic is too high.”
A long moment of silence filled the hall. “A fanciful tale from a two-copper performer,” the nay-saying wizard sneered.
“Nevertheless, it happens to be true,” Queirri said quietly. “No single living person knew the whole of this tale but me.”
Zalathorm nodded. “I am convinced. Lord Basel’s apprentice may speak for him, and her words will be afforded the same weight given to any diviner.”
&nbs
p; Procopio Septus rose abruptly from his place on the Elder’s dais, his hawklike face blazing with indignation. “Respectfully, I must protest. Giving this … apprentice the same regard as a master diviner diminishes us all!”
A subtle murmur of agreement, barely audible, blew through the hall, cooling Tzigone’s listeners as surely as an ocean breeze.
“One wizard’s magic enriches all of Halruaa,” Matteo said, repeating a common proverb. “No man is truly diminished by another’s skill.”
Procopio ignored this digression. “As lord mayor of Halarahh, I have a responsibility to uphold Halruaan law. By this law, no person who is under sentence of death can bear witness for or against another. It has come to my attention that Tzigone is the illegitimate daughter of the renegade wizard Keturah. By law, she was born under sentence of death.”
Tzigone’s chin came up. “I’m no bastard. My mother and father were wed.”
Procopio snapped his fingers, and a sheaf of parchment appeared in his hand. “Here are papers of divorcement between Keturah and her husband, Dhamari Exchelsor. This girl was begotten by an unknown father well after this divorce.”
“My mother married a second time.”
“Did she? Whom?”
“A young man she met in the forest He fell off a griffin, and she tended him.”
“Does this hapless rider have a name?”
Her gaze faltered for just a moment “I don’t know his name.”
The wizard’s white brows rose. “An honest answer,” he said with exaggerated surprised. “The fact is that there is no record of another marriage. A wizard’s bastard, a magic-wielder of uncertain parentage—and especially one who ‘discovers’ unusual and unpredictable gifts—is a threat to Halruaa. By law, this threat should have been eliminated over twenty years ago!”
Basel Indoulur rose abruptly. “Keturah and I were friends from childhood, and remained friends after she was falsely accused and fled the city.”
“Falsely accused?” Procopio broke in. “Not submitting to magical testing is as good as an admission of guilt!”
“Who was the Inquisitor of Halarahh at that time?” Matteo asked calmly. “Who would have examined Keturah?”
The lord mayor sent him a venomous glare. “How should I know? That was five and twenty years past.”
“Six and twenty,” Matteo corrected, “and the magehound in the city at that time was Kiva, an elf woman since convicted of treason. I can present documents from the Jordaini Council exonerating several jordaini whom Kiva had falsely condemned over the years.”
“You’re arguing that Keturah would have had reason to fear similar treatment? On what basis?”
“Kiva was an apprentice in Keturah’s tower,” the jordain said calmly. “Keturah dismissed her for reckless magic. Even if she knew or suspected nothing of Kiva’s larger designs at that time, she had reason to know the elf woman’s character and to believe her capable of taking vengeance.”
Basel turned to face Procopio, and in his round face was the lean, hard shadow of the warrior he had once been. “You called Tzigone a wizard’s bastard. In Halruaa, few words are as offensive or as dangerous as these.” He paused to give weight to his next words. “On behalf of my daughter, I demand you give formal apology or face me in mage duel.”
A furor broke out at Basel’s words. Procopio had to shout to be heard. “This is absurd! Basel Indoulur cannot speak for this girl, no more than she can speak for him! No man under sentence can bear witness in another’s defense!”
Matteo gestured for silence. “That is true, Lord Procopio, but no sentence has been passed against Lord Basel. This hearing is an inquiry, nothing more. Basel can legally speak for Tzigone.”
“Who then can speak for him!” the wizard snapped. “A most convenient circle!”
He turned to face the sea of intent faces. “This is jordaini sophistry at its most absurd! This counselor would have us spin around until we are too giddy to remember the reasoning behind our laws. Perhaps he hopes we did not notice that in claiming paternity, Basel Indoulur admits aiding a fugitive wizard and thus adds to the charges against himself. Perhaps he hopes we forget that a child cannot be either the first or the only witness to speak in behalf of her parents. Are we to ignore all our laws?”
“Are we to ignore lawful challenges?” added Basel with pointed mockery. “If you fear to face me in mage duel, Procopio, please say so plainly. I’m feeling a bit giddy from the effort of following your evasive remarks.”
Chuckles rose from various corners of the hall, ceasing abruptly as Zalathorm rose. “All will be done according to Halruaan law,” he said sternly. “This situation is unusual and requires careful contemplation. Permit me a few moments with my counselor.” He motioned for Matteo and disappeared into a side chamber.
The jordain followed and shut the door behind him. “You actually fell off a griffin?”
“It’s a long tale,” the king grumbled. “When did you realize that Tzigone was my daughter?”
“Vishna mentioned the power of three—three descendants of the three wizards who created the Cabal. At the time, I knew that Andris had descended from Akhlaur and I from Vishna. My sire sent me off to rescue Tzigone. In context, it would follow that he considered her the third.”
“I see,” mused Zalathorm.
“Of course, the expression on your face when Tzigone mentioned the griffin confirmed it. How did this happen?” he demanded, making no effort to hide his frustration.
Zalathorm threw himself into a chair and sent a baleful look at his counselor. “In the usual manner, I suppose, though I doubt that’s what you’re asking.”
Despite the seriousness of the situation, Matteo’s lips twitched. “There is the final bit of evidence. That is precisely what Tzigone might have said. With respect, sire, how could you not know that you had a daughter?”
“It’s simple enough. Shortly after we were wed, I left Beatrix—Keturah, if you will—for a few days, intending to go to Halarahh to renounce the throne. Urgent affairs of state detained me, and when I returned to explain I would need a bit of time to resolve matters in my past life, she was gone. I sought her, as did others. Beatrix was remarkably successful in eluding pursuit, as was her daughter after her.”
“No jordain can be traced by magic,” Matteo observed. “The potions given to Keturah protected them both.”
“Ifs more than that The crimson star watches over the Heart of Halruua—its creators and their descendants. That is how I learned of Tzigone’s relationship to Beatrix. In vision, I saw her pulled into the Unseelie realm,” Zalathorm explained. “Puzzled, I cast spells of lore-seeking, searching for any written information about Tzigone. Cassia’s last few entries into the king’s lorebook were most enlightening. As you know, my former counselor was not among the queen’s supporters.”
Matteo began to pace. “Let’s consider the current tangle. Basel has claimed Tzigone, who is, in fact, your daughter. In the service of truth, you should claim Tzigone as your own, but this would discredit Lord Basel and almost certainly depose you, at a time when both of you are sorely needed. No doubt you are constrained from doing this by various oaths and artifacts.”
“A bleak picture, but accurate,” the king agreed. “But there are many roads to one destination.”
He rose and returned to the chamber. All fell silent as he raised his scepter. “Sometimes laws shape the future, but more often they acknowledge changes that have already occurred. This debate has convinced me of need for a new ruling. Wizard-breeding has contributed to Halruaa’s strength, but it is time to do away with these laws. How can any righteous nation punish children for the actions of their parents?”
The king’s pronouncement fell into stunned silence. “Are we to breed like foxes and northern barbarians, with no more to guide us than impulse and proximity?” one of the Elders wondered.
Zalathorm smiled faintly. “I think more highly of Halruaa’s people than that”
“Yet the Halruaa
n people and Halruaan law are inseparable!” protested another. “We are what our customs and safeguards have made us.”
“Yet you cannot deny that we Halruaans are endlessly inventive. When law and tradition fall short, we devise new solutions.” Zalathorm gestured toward Tzigone, still standing defiantly by Basel Indoulur’s side. “Consider this young woman. Though untrained in magic, she charmed Akhlaur’s laraken. There is little in Halruaan law and lore to explain that, but we have all benefited from her gift. There may be others like her among us. It is folly to condemn them out of fear and ignorance.”
The king looked to Procopio Septus, and inclined his head slightly in the gesture one great wizard used to acknowledge another. “With all respect to both parties, it is my decree that Lord Basel’s challenge be as if it never was. I declare Tzigone blameless in the matter of her birth. She may speak on Lord Basel’s behalf.”
Procopio’s face went livid, but he had no choice but to return the bow and return to his seat. Profound silence filled the hall as the assembled wizards pondered the king’s unspoken words.
Matteo drew in a long breath, impressed by the king’s subtle solution. Zalathorm had quietly put aside more than a mage duel challenge—in allowing Tzigone to speak, he had repudiated Basel’s claim of paternity without actually accusing him of falsehood. His purpose in removing the sentence against the bastard-born would be more puzzling to the listeners. Perhaps he was underscoring the falseness of Basel’s claim, perhaps it was a way of saving the girl without naming her true father. The debate would absorb the wizards, and leech some of their ire away from the new law. Zalathorm knew his subjects well!
The Wizardwar Page 24