Gerin had a hard time naming some of the other outlanders. Van claimed one black-haired, fair-skinned giant belonged to the Gradi, who lived north of the Trokmoi. The man was afoot, and sweating in his furs. He carried a stout mace and a short-handled throwing axe. Gerin knew almost nothing of the Gradi, but Van spoke of them with casual familiarity.
“Do you know their tongue?” Elise asked.
“Aye, a bit,” Van said.
“Just how many languages do you know?” Gerin asked.
“Well, if you mean to say hello in, and maybe swear a bit, gods, I’ve lost track long since. Tongues I know fairly well, though, perhaps ten or a dozen. Something like that.”
“Which is your own?” Elise asked.
“My lady,” Van said, with something as close to embarrassment as his deep voice could produce, “I’ve been on the road a lot of years now. After so long, where I started matters little.”
Gerin grinned wryly; he’d got much the same answer when he asked that question. Elise looked to want to pursue it further, but held her tongue.
One group of foreigners the Fox knew only too well: the Trokmoi. Three chieftains had come to consult the Sibyl. Their chariots stayed together in the disorder.
They were from deep in the northern woods: Gerin, who knew the clans on the far side of the border as well as he knew the barons warding it, recognized none of them, nor were the clan patterns of bright checks on their drivers’ tunics familiar to him. Chiefs and drivers alike were tall thin men; four had red hair and two were blond. All wore their hair long and had huge drooping mustachioes, though they shaved their cheeks and chins. Two clutched jugs of ale to themselves; another wore a necklace of human ears.
Priests circulated through the crowd. Gerin looked with scant liking at the one approaching the wagon. A robe of gold brocade was stretched across his over-ample belly, and his beardless cheeks shone pink. Everything about him was round and soft, from his limpid blue eyes to the toes peeking sausage-like from his sandals. He was a eunuch, for the god accepted no whole man as his servitor.
The tip of his tongue played redly across his lips as he asked, “What would your business be, gentles, with the Sibyl of my lord Biton?” His voice was soft and sticky, like the caress of a hand dripping with honey.
“I’d sooner not speak of it in public,” Gerin said.
“Quite, quite. Your servant Falfarun most definitely agrees. You have, though, a suitably appropriate offering for the god, I hope?”
“I think so.” Gerin swung a purse into Falfarun’s pudgy fist.
The priest’s face was blank. “Doubtless all will be well when your question is heard.”
“I do hope, my dear Falfarun, it will be heard soon,” Gerin said in his suavest voice. He handed the priest another, larger purse, which vanished into a fold of Falfarun’s robe.
“Indeed. Yes, indeed. Come this way, if you please.” Falfarun neared briskness as he elbowed aside less forethoughtful seekers of divine wisdom. Clucking to the horses, Van steered after him. Falfarun led the wagon into the sacred grove around the temple precinct. Seeing the Fox’s success, the Trokmoi pulled off rings, armlets, and a heavy golden pectoral and waved them in the face of another plump priest.
“You gauged the size of your second sack about right,” Van whispered.
“Praise Dyaus for that! The last time I was here, I spent three days cooling my heels before I got to go before the Sibyl. I was still too young to know the world runs on gold.”
“Was the wench worth looking at, once you finally saw her?”
“Scarcely. She was a wrinkled old crone. I wonder if she still lives.”
“Why have hags to give prophesies? It seems to me they’d hardly be fitting mates for whatever god runs the shrine here. Give me a young, juicy lass every time,” Van said, drawing a sniff from Elise.
“Biton has spoken through her since she was chosen for him when she was still a child,” Gerin explained. “Whenever a Sibyl dies, the priests search among families of the old race; this valley has always been their stronghold. When they find a girl-child with a certain mark—what it is they keep secret, but it’s been Biton’s sign for ages—she becomes the new Sibyl for as long as she remains a maiden: and her chastity is guarded, I assure you.”
The tumult behind them faded under the trees. Images of all-seeing Biton were everywhere in the grove, half of them turned to show the two eyes in the back of his head. Another priest led the Trokmoi along a different path. Far from being struck by the holiness of the wood, they argued loudly in their own language.
High walls of gleaming white marble warded the outer courtyard of Biton’s temple. The gates were flung wide, but spear-carrying temple guards stood ready to slam them shut should trouble threaten. Here and there the shining stone was chipped and discolored, a mute reminder of the great invasion of the Trokmoi two hundred sixty years before, when Biton himself, the priests maintained, made an appearance to drive the barbarians from his shrine.
Before they could go in, Falfarun summoned a green-robed underpriest. The fat priest said, “It is not permitted to enter the courtyard save on foot; Arcarola here will take your wagon to its proper place. Fear not, for there is no theft on the grounds of the temple. A loathsome plague unfailingly smites any miscreant daring to attempt such rapine.”
“How many are thus stricken?” Gerin asked skeptically.
“The body of the latest is one of the curiosities within the outer walls. Poor wretch; may he edify others.”
Sobered, Gerin descended from the wagon, followed by Elise and Van. When Arcarola climbed up, the horses rolled their eyes and tried to rear, feeling the unfamiliar touch at the reins. Van put a heavy hand on each one’s muzzle and growled, “Don’t you be stupid, now,” following that with an oath in the harsh tongue Gerin guessed was his own. The beasts subsided and let themselves be led away.
The Trokmoi came up about then. More green-robes took their chariots. The priest who was leading them drew Falfarun aside and spoke softly with him. The Trokmoi were talking too, and not softly: the argument they’d begun under the trees of the sacred grove was still in full swing. Gerin was about to greet them in their own tongue until he heard what they were quarreling about.
One of the northerners looked suspiciously at the Fox and his comrades. “Not so loud should you make it, Catuvolcus,” he said. He sounded worried, and his scarred hands made hushing motions.
Catuvolcus was not going to be hushed. Gerin guessed he was a bit drunk. His eyes were shot with red, his speech slurred. He toyed with his gruesome necklace. “Divico,” he said, “you can take a flying futter at fast Fomor.” He used the northern name for the quickest moon. “What’s the chance we would find someone this far south who speaks the real language?”
“There’s no need to take a chance for no purpose.”
“But I’m saying it’s no chance at all. And if you will remember, now, ’twas your scheme to come here. And what was the why of it? Just to have the privacy we could scarce be getting from our own oracles.”
“A proper notion it was, too. I’d liefer not have that Balamung omadhaun know it’s less than full faith I have in him. Who is the spalpeen, anyhow, and why should we fight for him? If I go hunting with a bear, why, I want to be sure he’ll not save me for the main course.”
Listening as hard as he could without seeming to, Gerin barely noticed Falfarun return. He was trailed by the other priest, who was even fatter than he. Falfarun coughed and said, “Good sir, my colleague Saspir”—he indicated his companion, whose smooth eunuch’s face belied the years shown by his graying hair and sagging jowls—“and I have decided that these northern gentlemen should precede you to the Sibyl, as their journey has been longer than yours and they have urgent business in their own land which requires them to make haste.”
“You are trying to tell me they paid you more,” Gerin said without much rancor.
Falfarun’s chins quivered. His voice was hurt as he answered, “
I would not put it so crassly—”
“—But it’s still true,” Gerin finished for him. “Be it so, then, if we can follow them directly.”
“But of course,” Falfarun said, relieved to find him so agreeable. Saspir gave the Trokmoi the good news and took them into the temple courtyard. Falfarun followed, his reedy voice loud in the ears of Gerin, who would much rather have listened to the barbarians. Another golden-robed hierarch conducted a toga-clad noble out from the holy precinct; the man’s thin, pale face bore a troubled expression. The nomads from the plains of Shanda came up just as Gerin entered the courtyard. He heard a priest override their loud objections to being separated from their chariot.
Even the Trokmoi had fallen silent in the temple forecourt. They were gawking, necks craning every which way, trying to see everything at once. Gerin thought they looked like so many hungry hounds licking their chops in front of a butcher’s shop. He did not much blame them, for the sight of so much treasure affected him the same way. The would-be thief’s corpse, covered with hideous raw-edged lesions and bloated and stinking after some days in the open, did little to dampen his enthusiasm. Beside him Van whistled, soft and low.
Only the choicest gauds were on display. Most of the riches Biton’s shrine had accumulated over the centuries were stored away in strong-walled vaults behind the temple or in caves below it. What was visible was plenty to rouse a plunderer’s lusts.
Chief among the marvels were twin ten-foot statues of gold and ivory, one of the Emperor Oren II, who had built the temple in the ancient grove, the other of his father, Ros the Fierce, who drove the Trokmoi north of the River Niffet and won the land between the Kirs and the Niffet for Elabon. Oren wore the toga and held in his upraised right hand the orb of empire; Ros, mailed, had a javelin ready to cast and leaned upon a narrow-waisted shield of antique design.
Ros’ stern craggy face, with its thrusting nose and lines carved deep on weathered cheeks, still brought awe after four hundred years. Gerin shivered when he looked up into those cold eyes of jet.
A huge golden mixing bowl celebrated Biton’s triumph over the Trokmoi. Wider even than Van’s outstretched arms, it was set upon a claw-footed tripod of bronze, and held the images of barbarians fleeing the god’s just wratch—and the prostrate bodies of those his arrows had struck down.
On a pedestal of purple marble next to it was a splendid statue of a dying Trokmê. The naked warrior was on his right side, propping himself up with his right arm. That hand still clung to swordhilt. The other clutched a gaping gash in his right side; the red-painted blood streamed down his flank to form a puddle at his hip. His face was turned up to stare at his unportrayed conqueror. Its grimace showed agony and defiance, but not a hint of fear. The statue’s features were blunter than those usual among the long-faced, thin-nosed Trokmoi. Probably the sculptor, himself a Sithonian, had used a countryman as model, adding only long hair and mustaches to make clear the statue’s race.
There was much else to see: the silver-and-gold longtooth, its leap onto an aurochs frozen by a master artisan of long ago; the chalices and urns of precious metals, alabaster, cinnabar, and multicolored jades; the stacks of ingots and bars of gold and silver, each with a plaque telling which accurate prophesy it commemorated … but Falfarun was leading Gerin up to the steps of the temple, and that was a sight in itself.
Oren’s architect had tried to harmonize the sparely elegant columned shrines the Sithonians loved with the native brickwork fanes of Elabon, and his effort was a noble one. The sides of Biton’s shrine were marble blocks; spacious glazed windows helped illuminate the interior. The front wall was pure Sithonian, with its triangular entablature supported by delicately fluted columns of whitest stone.
Between architrave and overhanging eaves the frieze, carved by a team of workmen from drawing by the creator of the dying Trokmê, showed Biton, hand outstretched, guiding an imperial column against a horde of Trokmoi. Ros, his harsh features easy to recognize, stood in the lead chariot. His men had a tough uniformity in striking contrast to the disorderly foe they battled—and to the barons who had come after them.
Up the seven marble steps they went, Falfarun chattering all the while. When Elise heard statue and frieze sprang from the same man’s mind, she asked his name. Falfarun looked shocked and shook his head. “I have no idea,” he said. “The work is far too holy to be polluted by such mundanities.”
Gerin’s eyes needed a moment to adjust to the inside of Biton’s shrine, accustomed as they were to bright sunshine. They went wide as he saw the splendor within, for it had faded in his memory.
Limiting himself to simple white stone for the outside of the building, its designer had let color run riot within. Twin rows of crimson granite columns, polished mirror-bright, led the eye to the altar. That was of sandalwood overlain with gold and encrusted with all kinds of precious stone. It threw back in coruscating sheets the light cast on it by dozens of fat candles in three arabesqued chandeliers overhead.
The temple’s inner walls were faced with rare green marbled shot with gold. That stone came from only one quarry, near Siphnos in Sithonia. The Fox could but marvel at the sweat and gold needed to haul it here, a journey of several hundred miles over the Greater Inner Sea and the royal roads of Elabon. Like the columns, it was buffed till it gleamed; it tinged niche-set gold and silver statues with its own color.
Chanting acolytes paced here and there, intent on Biton’s rituals. Their slippers swished over the floor mosaics, their swinging censers filled the air with the fragrances of aloes, myrrh, and other costly incenses. Folk who wanted Biton’s aid but needed no sight of the future knelt and prayed in pews flanking the granite columns. Some kept their heads lowered; others raised them to the ceiling frescoes, as if seeking inspiration from the scenes of the god’s begetting by Dyaus on a princess and of his subsequent adventures, most of them caused by the jealousy of the heavenly queen Darza.
Only in two respects was Biton’s shrine unlike many even more superb temples in the lands south of the mountains. One was the image of the god behind the altar. Here he was no graceful youth. A square column of rough black stone stood there, drinking in the light and giving back none. Immeasurably old, it could have been a natural pillar, save for the faint images of eyes round its top and a jutting phallus stabbing forward from its middle.
Biton’s priests had only smiled when Oren proclaimed their deity a son of Dyaus. In their hearts they knew whose god was the elder. Seeing that image, Gerin was not inclined to doubt them. Biton’s power was rooted in the earth, and in the square of bare earth to the left of the altar was a rift leading down below the roots of the sacred grove to the Sibyl’s cave, a rift whose like was unknown in the tamer south.
The Trokmoi made obeisance before Biton’s altar, the three chieftains on their knees and the drivers flat on their bellies. They rose, dusted themselves off, and followed their guide into the yawning mouth of the cave. One driver, a freckled youth with face tight-set against fear, flexed the fingers of one hand in a sign to avert evil. The other was tight on the hilt of his blade.
Falfarun brought up his charges to take the barbarians’ place. All bent the knee before Biton, Falfarun panting as he eased his bulk to the floor. Gerin looked up at the ancient idol. For an instant, he thought he saw eyes brown as his own looking back at him, but when he looked again they were only scratches on stone.
Rising, Falfarun asked, “Would it please you to take more comfortable seats while waiting to meet the Sibyl?”
Gerin sat in the foremost pew. He ignored the puffing Falfarun, who dabbed at his forehead with a square of blue silk. His thoughts were on the Trokmoi: if these barbarians, men from so deep in the forests he knew nothing of them, had allied their clans with Balamung, how many more had done the same? Fox Keep, it seemed, was in the way of an onsalught more terrible than the attack whose scars still showed on the temple forecourt’s walls.
He grew more and more jittery until the Trokmoi emerged from
the cavemouth. All were grim-faced: they had no liking for what they’d heard. The young driver who had made the wardsign was white as an exterior column, the freckles on his nose and cheeks standing out like spatters of dried blood.
The two chiefs who had been quarreling outside the temple forecourt were still at it. Divico, even more worried than before, waved a hand in front of Catuvolcus’ face. “Are you not glad now we came?” he said. “Plain as day the witch-woman told us there’d be naught but a fox gnawing our middles if we joined Balamung, plain as day.”
“Ox ordure,” Catuvolcus said. “The old gammer has no more wits than teeth, the count of which is none. On all the border there’s but one southron called the Fox, and were you not listening when himself told us the kern’d be ravens’ meat in no more than days? It must be done by now, so where’s your worry?”
Gerin stood and gave the Trokmoi his politest bow. “Begging your pardon,” he said, using their tongue with a borderer’s ease, “but a wizard’s word a coin I’d bite or ever I pocketed it. But if you’re after the Fox, I am he, and I tell you this: the raven who’ll pick my bones is not yet hatched, no, nor his grandsire either.”
He had hoped his sudden appearance would show the barbarians the folly of their way. Instead he saw the rashness of his, for Catuvolcus bellowed an oath, rasped sword from scabbard, and rushed. His five comrades followed.
Leaping to his feet, Van lifted Falfarun over his head as easily as if the fat eunuch had been stuffed with down. He pitched him into the Trokmoi, bowling over two of them and giving himself and Gerin time to free their blades. At the same instant Elise hurled a dagger, then skipped back to safety. The freckled driver fell, throat pumping a torrent of blood round the hilt suddenly flowering there and sword slipping from nerveless fingers.
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