"It is. Names hold power. Your mother is now dead?"
"Yes. A long time ago."
Lanara nodded slightly. "You are not lying," she said. "And yet you are not telling me all."
"What more do you want?"
"Everything."
I shifted uncomfortably. "I am a bastard, born out of wedlock. Dworkin did not acknowledge me as his son—though in fact he stayed to help raise me—for many years. My mother lied to me her whole life. So did Dworkin… Dad. They claimed my father was a sailor who died at the hands of pirates from Saliir."
"Interesting," she said, with a mysterious half smile. "So your link to the throne is only through your father. A pity. Two blood lines are always stronger than one."
"I am as I am," I said. "I make no apologies."
"I did not ask for any. You have spirit. I like that… in moderation. I accept your answer."
I inclined my head. "And your second question?"
"How will you pay me for this service?"
I regarded her thoughtfully. "That is the harder question of the two," I said. "You have no need of gold or jewels, so I will not insult you by offering them. Nor do I believe you would put much store in promises of lifelong affection from a bastard grand-nephew whom you have never met before."
"True," she said. "Go on."
"Therefore," I said, "I offer you nothing."
"Nothing?" she asked, as though hardly able to believe it. She threw back her head and howled with laughter. "Nothing! The whelp offers me nothing!"
"Nothing," I continued, "except the excitement your actions will bring you." I leaned forward, staring into her eyes. "Think of it, Auntie! A house of ravenous guests, plots and intrigue spinning wildly before you, and the very real possibility of a murderer in your company! I have been marked for death, Aunt Lanara, and so has Aber. Rather than hiding in Shadow, we will seek out our enemies so we may destroy them! Help me, Lanara, and you will help us both!"
"Well spoken," she said, "and I believe you have told me the truth—at least as you see it, for truth is a flexible thing, with many meanings and many edges. Yes, I will help you, Oberon, but you may well come to regret it for the rest of your life. The price for my help will be quite high."
"Name it," I said.
"One of my many nieces, born of my sister Desponda and her husband, Yanar, is named Braxara. To be brutally honest, Braxara is ugly, dull, and stupid. Finding a suitable mate for her proved too difficult for her parents, so now the task has fallen to me."
I swallowed, not liking the direction this conversation had headed. Aunt Lanara smiled like a spider that had just discovered a plump fly in its web. Slowly, she linked her fingers under her chin and leaned forward. I thought it made her look more than a little sinister.
She continued, "If I help you in this matter, I will expect you to marry Braxara in one year's time. That will give you ample opportunity for courtship."
"Perhaps she would be happier with someone like Aber," I suggested meekly.
"I could never wish such a fate on my darling nephew," Lanara said, smiling pointedly. "And it is you, not Aber, who craves my assistance."
One year… it seemed forever. Much could change in that time. I could be dead. Braxara could be dead… or even promised elsewhere, if a better suitor came along. Better to promise now and reap the benefits immediately of such an alliance.
I bowed my head. "Assuming I live to see my wedding day," I said before she could change her mind, "I accept your terms."
"Good." She smiled again. "I will prepare everything for tonight. The time is short, but it can be done. Aber, dear boy?"
"Yes, Aunt Lan?" I heard him say from somewhere to the side.
"Go back and help Oberon prepare. Come fashionably late, but not too late. And Oberon…" She turned back to me. "I may be old, but my friends are numerous and their weapons are sharp. Your betrothal will be announced tonight, with vows that cannot be broken. Do not embarrass me, or you will not live to regret it."
She beckoned Aber to her side, and I stretched out my hand to him. When he grasped it, I pulled him back through to the library.
"Do not forget, Oberon!" Lanara said to me, voice distant now and fading. "One year!"
She made a curt gesture, and our contact was broken.
Aber flopped down in the chair next to me.
"That was too easy," he said. He put his feet up on the table and folded his hands over his belly. "Just the sort of plan I like."
"Easy!" I snapped. "You just got me betrothed to an ugly, halfwitted cousin!"
"She's not that bad!" He laughed. "At least, not since she got her tails bobbed!"
"Tails? Bobbed?"
"Hers were a little too skinny and ratlike for my taste." He shrugged. "But I'm sure you'll both be very happy together. Her family are always good breeders. Lots of kids will calm you down. Say, thirty or forty to start with. They do tend toward big litters…"
I groaned. Somehow, I didn't think he was joking this time.
"And," he went on brightly, "Every time you complain about her, you'll hear a little voice in your head saying, 'At least she's not a succubus!'"
"Thanks… I think!"
He shrugged. "Oh, you'll be happy enough. You'll get your introduction to society. And thanks to Aunt Lan, you've got your first allies."
"I do? Who?"
"Why, she and her husband. She liked you a lot."
"How can you tell?"
"She's doing everything you asked. If she didn't like you, she would have said, 'No!'—and not quite so politely. Think of it as a present from her. A wedding present."
"It's not a present if I'm paying for it!"
Aber sighed and shook his head. "You don't understand. She did you a bigger favor with that marriage than you realize. Lord Yanar is one of King Uthor's advisors. Marrying his daughter will confer immediate status on you within the court… not to mention a measure of protection. Yanar is powerful and influential."
"Braxara and I aren't married yet," I said with a grim little smile. "And a year is a long time to wait."
"Want me to see if Aunt Lan can move up the date a bit?"
"Not particularly!" I replied with a laugh.
He chuckled in return. "No, I guess you wouldn't!"
"I don't suppose you have a Trump showing Braxara, do you? I'd like to have at least some idea of what I'm getting into."
"Nope. She's not someone I'd ever want to know well enough to paint!"
"Wonderful," I muttered. How bad could my future bride be?
Port chose that moment to speak.
"Sir," he said, face appearing in the center of the door. "Anari wishes to enter."
"Let him in," I said.
Port swung open, and the elderly head of the household hurried inside, breathing hard. He must have run up the stairs, I realized with alarm.
"What's wrong?" I demanded.
"Lords—" he panted. "Lady Freda—has just arrived—and—"
Before he could say another word, I raced past him and into the hall. Freda, here? It could only mean the worst sort of news.
Our sister had been ordered to hide in Shadow until we found our enemy and straightened out this whole mess. Nothing short of disaster should have brought her home early.
TWENTY-ONE
Aber raced after me, and side by side we pounded down the broad stone staircase to the cavernous entry hall. There, surrounded by a flurry of movement, stood our sister.
Freda wore a long red silk dress, red shoes, and a matching broad-brimmed hat, now perched at a steep angle atop her head. Heavy gold rings set with large rubies covered her slender fingers and flashed in the flickering light of the lamps. She looked tanned and well, as though returning from a month's vacation at the seaside.
Around her, more than a dozen servants, dressed in what looked like cloth spun from pure silver, were shifting twenty-five or thirty large wooden trunks. Several guards and household servants helped. All the while, six women similarl
y dressed in silver milled about Freda, some fussing with her hair, others with her clothes… she seemed more a pampered princess than the mystic fatalist I had known in Juniper.
"Freda?" I said, reaching the floor. I made way for the first of her trunks, which two men carried up the stairs with grunts and groans.
"Oberon!" She turned toward me with a cool smile. "I trust you are well."
"Yes, despite several assassination attempts."
She showed no surprise at that statement.
"And an impending marriage," Aber added.
That got her attention. "Who is the bride-to-be?"
"Cousin Braxara," Aber said.
"No, no." She shook her head. "That will not do at all."
"I promised our Aunt Lanara," I said.
"I will see it undone later, after I have unpacked." She beckoned Anari over. He had followed us down the stairs at a more dignified pace. "Have my usual rooms prepared. I will be staying."
"Yes, Lady Freda." He bowed.
"Hold on," I said to Anari. Then I turned to Freda. "You're not staying. It's not safe. People are still trying to kill us."
"Bosh," Freda said. "A well-raised Lady of Chaos does not get into such troubles. Not in the Courts, and not in the Beyond. Do you think me a common duelist?"
"Ladies of Chaos don't duel, they poison," said Aber from behind me, his voice a loud stage whisper.
Freda pretended not to hear him.
"I have come to see Father," she said. "Where is he? I have important news. It cannot wait."
"He's… not available." I swallowed. "In fact, he doesn't want to be found. He made it clear when I tried to contact him by Trump. He said he'll be back in a few days."
"That," she said, "is not acceptable."
"If you have a better plan…"
"Of course. Luckily for you, I came back early. Clearly someone with sense needs to take charge of things. How did you ever get trapped into marrying that cow Braxara?"
She clapped her hands sharply and waved away the women who had been fussing over her. They joined the men dressed in silver, helping shift some of the smaller packs and bags.
Noticing my nonplussed expression, she said:
"Good help is hard to find. You sent me to a Shadow where I am worshipped as a goddess; it is easy to get used to being pampered. So I brought a few of the faithful with me. They think this is the afterlife."
"A few?" I eyed the throng critically. They didn't seem to be having any trouble acclimatizing to the Beyond, I noticed somewhat enviously. In fact, they all seemed to be happily taking it in stride… though I supposed, if you served a goddess, you must be prepared for such things.
"Barely two dozen," she said.
"Your right, I'm sure." I sighed and drew her to one side, where they couldn't over hear our conversation. "What are you really doing here?" I asked. "Your instructions were clear. You were to stay in Shadow until the danger is past. Nothing has changed. We are still under attack."
"And," said Aber, trailing us, "Dad's going to be furious when he finds out. He picked that Shadow especially for you and Pella."
"Do not prattle on," she said to him. "This is neither the time nor the place for such a—"
With an expression of annoyance she turned and hurried back to her luggage. A servant had been about lifting a large crate one-handed, and she took in from him and set it down.
"Careful with this one, Sahin!" she said. "It is filled with glass!"
Aber rolled his eyes. "Perfume, I bet!"
"She hasn't changed a bit," I said with a smile.
Sahin threw himself to the floor. "Yes, my goddess," he whimpered. "Forgive me! Forgive me!"
"Rise. Finish your work. Take more care. You have my blessing."
"Thank you!"
Rising, he lifted the trunk with greater care. Freda watched him for a moment, then wandered back to join us.
"There is much yet to be done, I see," she said to me. Her eyes swept across the remaining trunks, then fixed on Aber. "Make us all drinks in the library, please. Travel is thirsty work, and there is still much I must do today."
"Yes, Freda," he said meekly, and he hurried into the library. He always ended up doing as she asked, I'd noticed, though sometimes his cooperation seemed grudging.
She waited until he was out of sight, then pulled me into a secluded alcove. It seemed she wanted a private talk. She had never confided in me before, and it took me a bit by surprise now.
"Where is Father, really?" she asked in a soft voice. "I must know!"
"He went for an audience with King Uthor. He didn't come back."
"I cannot believe—" she began. Then she stopped herself. "He did not tell you, did he?"
"Tell me what?"
"Where he went afterward? He would be back here by now; it does not take so long to see the king. Who did he visit next? Where did he go?"
"I don't know—do you?"
"I… have a suspicion." She turned away, eyes distant. "There is a place he goes when he is unhappy or sad. A Shadow…"
"There's a woman involved?" I guessed. "His lover?"
"Yes."
"Who is she?"
"I do not know… only that she is a powerful sorceress. She has given him things… objects of power… and helped him to master the magics he now commands."
I frowned. "If she's so powerful, he should have gone to her as soon as war started in Juniper. Why didn't he?"
"I do not know. Perhaps she is not in a position to provide military assistance. Or perhaps he is guarding her safety."
So, a woman was involved… suddenly Dad's actions began to make sense. If he meant to protect her, then he certainly would make sure neither Aber nor I—nor anyone else—knew her location.
She continued: "What else has happened here? You mentioned several attacks?"
Quickly I filled her in, from Rèalla to the lightning in the garden to the serpent-creature scrying on my bedroom.
"I'm not sure what's happening outside," I added. "King Uthor's hell-creatures searched the house yesterday. They were looking for something specific, something small, but I don't think they found it. Any idea what it could be?"
"None. How about you?"
"No." I shook my head. "Now, what brought you back here, really?"
"That I must share with Aber, too. It concerns us all."
She turned and led the way to the library. After we entered, she closed and bolted the door behind us, then crossed to the far wall, pushed on a high-set sconce, and opened a small door that had been cunningly concealed as a wall panel. A hidden room or passage—I couldn't see which—lay beyond. She glanced in, then closed the panel; apparently it was empty. I heard a soft click as its latch caught.
I glanced at Aber.
"I didn't know it was there!" he said.
"There is a lot you do not know," Freda said.
"We have been spied on constantly since we arrived here," I told her. "Aber tried to put up spells to protect us, but we aren't sure they worked. What can you do to help?"
"Wait. I will check."
She gathered the folds of her dress and sat at the table. Then, taking a deep breath, she closed her eyes and seemed to go into a light trance. I saw her eyelashes flutter, and several times her hands jerked, but mostly she remained silent and still.
"Whiskey?" Aber asked me in hushed tones.
Nodding, I accepted a glass from him. He filled it, we clinked glasses in a silent toast, and then we both sat back, sipping, to wait for Freda. I had never seen her do anything like this before; how long would it take?
Finally, after what must have been ten or fifteen minutes, Freda suddenly opened her eyes.
"A nice job," she said to Aber. "I only found one hole, and I do not think it has been used."
He smiled with obvious relief. "Great!"
"Did you fix the hole?" I asked her.
"Yes. No one will spy on this house again without us finding out. That I can promise."
"I told you she was good!" Aber said smugly.
"Red wine, please," she told him.
Drawing a small deck of Trumps from the bag at her side, she shuffled them and began to deal them out in front of herself. I recognized my picture, Dad's, Aber's, and the rest of our family. She included her own, too. A circle began to form, with images looking in toward the center.
As she worked, Aber poured a goblet of red wine and set it to one side. Then he topped off my whiskey as well as his own.
"I hate to drink alone," he said.
I did not know how the Trumps worked for Freda, but they helped her see the future—or possible futures—and that was exactly the sort of information we needed. Leaning forward, I watched her flip the last Trump and set it in place in the exact center.
Drawn by Aber, it showed Locke in a quite unflattering portrait: a disagreeable-looking, puffed-up man in silvered chain mail, with a slight pot belly (he hadn't had one in real life) and a look of indigestion on his face.
"Well?" I said.
"It is… inconclusive. Let me cast the future again."
Frowning, Freda gathered up the cards. I got the impression she hadn't liked what she saw and shifted uneasily in my seat. She shuffled twice, had me cut the deck, and began to deal them out a second time.
Aber and I continued to watch in silence. This time, the cards played out slightly differently—though once more Locke ended up at the center.
"So?" I prompted, as I slid into the seat opposite hers. "What news? Any predictions?"
For a long moment she said nothing, studying the cards. I remained patient, though every fiber of my being demanded immediate answers.
"You do not know yet," she finally said, "do you?"
"Know what? Something you saw in your cards?"
"Locke. He is alive."
"Impossible!" Our brother died in Juniper, I knew. I had seen him in his tent after the battle, being tended by physicians. I had watched him die.
"Yes, I thought so too." She nodded slowly. "But the cards say you, Oberon, will meet him soon. Perhaps even tonight."
I shook my head. "I was with him when he died, Freda. You saw his body. Locke is dead. We burned his body, remember?"
"We all saw it," Aber agreed.
"I know," Freda whispered. "I remember."
New Amber Trilogy 2 - Chaos and Amber Page 15