A blue light drifted out of the forest, a shining nimbus round a figure … godlike was the only word for it, Gerin thought. “What have we here?” the figure asked, voice deep and sweet like the drink the desert nomads brewed to keep off sleep.
“Mavrix!” the women breathed, their faces slack with ecstasy. Gerin felt their hands quiver and slip. He braced himself for a surge, but even as he tensed the god waved and the grip on him tightened again.
“What have we here?” Mavrix repeated.
Van gave a grunt of surprise. “How is it you speak my language?”
To the Fox it had been Elabonian. “He didn’t—” The protest died half-spoken as his captors snarled.
The god made an airy, effeminate gesture. “We have our ways,” he said … and suddenly there were two of him, standing side by side. They—he—gestured again, and there was only one.
As well as he could, Gerin studied Mavrix. The god wore fawnskin, soft and supple, with a wreath of grape leaves round his brow. In his left hand he bore an ivy-tipped wand. At need, Gerin knew, it was a weapon more deadly than any mortal’s spear. Mavrix’s blond curls reached his shoulder; his cheeks and chin were shaven. That soft-featured, smiling face was a pederast’s dream, but for the eyes: two black pits reflecting nothing, giving back only the night. A faint odor of fermenting grapes and something else, a rank something Gerin could not name, clung to him.
“That must be a useful art.” The baron spoke in halting Sithonian, trying to pique the god’s interest and buy at least a few extra minutes of life.
Mavrix turned those fathomless eyes on the Fox, but his face was still a smiling mask. He answered in the same tongue: “How pleasant to hear the true speech once more, albeit in the mouth of a victim,” and Gerin knew his doom.
“Are you in league with Balamung, then?” he growled, knowing nothing he said now could hurt him further.
“I, friend to some fribbling barbarian charlatan? What care I for such things? But surely, friend mortal, you see this is your fate. The madness of the Mavriad cannot, must not be thwarted. Were it so, the festival would have no meaning, for what is it but the ultimate negation of all the petty nonfulfillments of humdrum, everyday life?”
“It’s not right!” Elise burst out. “Dying I can understand; everyone dies, soon or late. But after the baron Gerin”—the Fox thought it a poor time to rhyme, but kept quiet—“singlehanded slew the aurochs, to die at the hands of lunatics, god-driven or no—”
Mavrix broke in, deep voice cracking: “Gerin slew a great wild ox—” The god’s smile gave way to an expression of purest horror. “The oxgoad come again!” he screamed, “but now in the shape of a man! Metokhites, I thought you slain!” With a final despairing shriek, the god vanished into the depths of the woods. His followers fled after, afflicted by his terror—all but the lady of rank, who still sat contentedly, rocking her gruesome “baby.”
Still amazed at being alive, Gerin slowly sat up. So did Elise and Van, both waring bewildered expression. “What did I say?” Elise asked.
Gerin thumped his forehead, trying to jar loose a memory. He had paid scant attention to Mavrix in the past, as the god’s principal manifestations, wine and the grape, were rare north of the Kirs. “I have it!” he said at last, snapping his fingers. “This Metokhites was a Sithonian prince long ago. Once he chased the god into the Lesser Inner Sea, beating him about the head with a metal-tipped oxgoad: Mavrix always was a coward. I suppose he thought I was a new—what would the word be?—incarnation of his tormentor.”
“What happened to this Metokhites fellow?” Van asked. “It’s not the smartest thing, tangling with gods.”
“As I remember, he chopped his son into bloody bits, being under the impression the lad was a grapevine.”
“A grapevine, you say? Well, captain, if I ever seem to you to go all green and leafy-like, be so good as to warn me before you try to trim me.”
At that, the last of the maenads lifted her eyes from the ruined little body she dandled. There was a beginning of knowledge in her face, though she was not yet fully aware of herself or her surroundings. Her voice had some of the authority of the Sibyl at Ikos when she spoke: “Mock not Mavrix, lord of the sweet grape. Rest assured, you are not forgotten!” Gathering her rags about her, she swept imperiously into the woods. Silence fell on the camp.
VII
Taking advantage of the quiet of the ghosts, Gerin decided to leave at once, though he knew mere distance was even less guarantee of safety from Mavrix than from Balamung. No thunderbolt smote him. Before too much time had passed, the rising sun turned Tiwaz and Math to a pair of pale gleams hanging close together in the southern sky.
So full of events had the previous day been that the Fox took till mid-afternoon to remember his dream, if such it was. By that time they were on the main road again, three more corpuscles among the thousands flowing toward the Empire’s heart. “So that’s why you woke with such a thrash!” Van said. Then the full import of the baron’s words sank in. “You’re saying the scrawny son of nobody knows where we are and what we’re up to?”
Gerin rubbed his chin. “Where we are, anyway.”
“I’m not sure I like that.”
“I know damned well I don’t, but what can I do about it?”
The Fox spent a gloomy, watchful night, fearing a return visit from Mavrix. The oracular tones of the god’s half-crazed worshiper had left him jittery. The watch was lonely, too. Van fell asleep at once, and Elise quickly followed him.
That day on the road, she had hardly spoken to the baron. She spent most of her time listening to Van’s yarns; he would cheerfully spin them for hours on end. She gave Gerin nothing more than cool courtesy when he tried to join the conversation. At length he subsided, feeling isolated and vaguely betrayed. The left side of his mouth quirked up in a sour smile; he knew only too well that his ill-timed ardor was what made her wary.
The new morning began much as the day before had ended: Gerin and Elise cautious and elaborately polite while Van, who seemed oblivious to the tension around him, bawled out a bawdy tune he had learned from the Trokmoi. So it went till they reached the Pranther River, another of the streams that rose in the foothills of the Kirs and ended by swelling the waters of the Greater Inner Sea.
The road did not falter at the Pranther, but sprang over it on a bridge supported by eight pillars of stone. The span itself was of stout timbers, which could be removed at need to slow invaders. This bridge was no flimsy magician’s trick—it looked ready to stand for a thousand years.
Van gazed at it with admiration. “What a fine thing! It beats getting your backside wet, any day.”
“It’s probably the most famous bridge in the Empire,” Gerin told him, grinning; the bridge over the Pranther was one of his favorite places in the south. “It’s called Dalassenos’ Revenge.”
“Why’s that, captain?”
“Dalassenos was Oren the Builder’s chief architect. He was the fellow who designed this bridge, but Oren wanted only his own name on it. Being a Sithonian, Dalassenos didn’t have much use for the Emperor in the first place, and that was too much to bear. So he carved his own message into the rock, then put a coat of plaster over it and chiseled Oren’s name in that. After a few years, the plaster peeled away and—well, see for yourself.” He jerked a thumb at the pylon.
“It’s only so many scratches to me. I don’t read Sithonian, or much else, for that matter.”
Gerin thought for a moment. “As near as I can put it into Elabonian, it says:
‘The plaster above? ’Twas nought but a farce,
And as for King Oren, he can kiss my arse.’”
Van bellowed laughter. “Ho, ho! That calls for a snort.” A blind reach into the back of the wagon brought him his quarry—a wineskin. He swigged noisily.
Dalassenos’ flip insolence also earned the Fox a smile from Elise; her appreciation was worth more to him than Van’s chuckles. “What happened to Dalassenos when the plaster
wore off?” she asked. The friendly interest in her voice told Gerin he had been forgiven.
“Not a thing,” he answered. “It lasted through Oren’s life, and he died childless (he liked boys). His successor hated him for almost bankrupting the Empire with all his building, and likely laughed his head off when he learned what Dalassenos had done. I know he sent Dalassenos a pound of gold, tight though he was.”
As they passed over the bridge, Gerin looked down into the Pranther’s clear water. A green manlike shape caught his eye. It was so close to the surface that he could easily see the four scarlet gill-slits on either side of its neck.
The Pranther held the only colony of rivermen west of the Greater Inner Sea. Dalassenos had brought the reptiles here from their native Sithonian streams. The canny artificer knew stones and sand propelled by the Pranther’s current would eventually scour away the riverbottom from under his bridge’s pilings and bring it tumbling down. Hence the rivermen: they repaired such damage as fast as it occurred.
In exchange, the Empire banned humans from fishing in the Pranther, and gave the rivermen leave to enforce the prohibition with their poisoned darts. It was also said that Dalassenos had hired a wizard to put a spell of permanent plenty on the fish. The baron did not know about that, but the rivermen had flourished in the Pranther for more than three hundred years.
Gerin heard the screech of an eagle overhead. Shielding his eyes from the sun, he looked up into morning haze until he found it. It wheeled in the sky, sun strking sparks from its ruddy plumage. Its feathers, he mused, were red as a Trokmê’s mustache.
Sudden suspicion flared in him as he realized what he’d thought. “Van, do you think you can bring me down that overgrown pigeon?” he asked, knowing his friend’s mighty arms could propel a shaft farther than most men dreamed possible.
The outlander squinted upward, shook his head. “No more than I could flap my arms and fly to Fomor.”
“Fomor, is it?”
“Tiwaz, I mean. Whatever fool name you give the quick moon.”
“Two years with me, and you still talk like a Trokmê.” Gerin sadly shook his head.
“Go howl, captain. What’s in your mind?”
The Fox did not answer. He pulled the wagon off the road. The eagle gave no sign of flying away, nor had he expected any. He had never seen a red eagle, and was convinced it was some creature of Balamung’s, a flying spy. He climbed down from the wagon and began to root among the bushes by the roadside.
“What are you looking for, Gerin?” Elise asked.
“Sneezeweed,” he answered, not finding any. He muttered a curse. The plant was a rank pest near Fox Keep; it grew everywhere in the northlands, even invading wheatfields. When it flowered, those sensitive to its pollen went into a season-long agony of wheezing, sneezing, runny eyes, and puffy faces. The dried pollen was also a first-rate itching powder, as small boys soon learned. The Fox remembered a thrashing his brother Dagref had given him over a pair of sneezeweed-impregnated breeches.
At last he found a ragged sneezeweed plant huddling under two bigger bushes, its shiny, dark green leaves sadly bug-eaten. He murmured a prayer of thanks to Dyaus when he saw a spike of pink flowers still clinging to it. It would serve for the small magic he had in mind.
He ran the spell over and over in his head, hoping he still had it memorized. It was simple enough, and one all ‘prentices learned—a fine joke on the unwary. At the Sorcerers’ Collegium, one quickly learned not to be unwary.
He held the spray of sneezeweed flowers in his left hand and began to chant. His right hand moved through the few simple passes the spell required. It took less than a minute. When it was done, he looked up and awaited developments.
For a moment, nothing happened. He wondered if he had botched the incantation or if it simply was not strong enough to reach the high-flying eagle. Then the bird seemed to stagger in mid-flight. Its head darted under its wing to peck furiously. No longer could it maintain its effortless rhythm through the air, but fought without success to maintain altitude. It descended in an ungainly spiral, screaming its rage all the while, and flopped into the bushes about twenty paces from the wagon. Van put an arrow through it. It died still snapping at the shaft.
Much pleased with himself, the Fox trotted over to collect the carcass. He had just brought it to the wagon when Elise cried out in warning. Two more red eagles were diving out of the morning sky, stooping like falcons. Van had time for one hasty shot. He missed. Cursing foully, he snatched up the whip and swung it in a terrible arc. It smashed into one bird with a sound like a thunderclap. Feathers flew in a metallic cloud. The eagle gave a despairing screech and tumbled to the roadway.
The other one flew into Gerin’s surprised arms.
It fastened its claw on the leather sleeve of his corselet, seeming to think the garment part of its owner. The Fox plunged his free hand at its shining breast, trying to keep its bill from his eyes. It screamed and bucked, buffeting him with vile-smelling wings.
There was a crunch. Van drove the butt end of the whip into the eagle’s head, again and again. The mad gleam in its golden eyes faded. Gerin slowly realized he was holding a dead weight. Blood trickled down his arm; that leather sleeve had not altogether protected him.
A gleam of silver caught his eye. The bird wore a tiny button at its throat, held on by a fine chain. The button bore only one mark: a fylfot. “Balamung, sure enough,” Gerin muttered.
Van peered at it over his shoulder. “Let me have a closer look at that, will you?” he said. Gerin slipped the chain from the dead eagle’s neck and passed it to him. He hefted it thoughtfully. “Lighter than it should be.” He squeezed it between thumb and finger, grunting at the effort. “Gives a little, but not enough.” He brought down a booted foot club-fashion. There was a thin, hissing wail. Gerin gagged. He thought of latrines, of new-dug graves fresh uncovered, of scummed moats, of long slow evils fermenting deep in the bowels of swamps and oozing upwards to burst as slimy bubbles.
The body in his arms writhed, though he knew it was, knew it had to be, dead. He looked down, and dropped his burden with an exclamation of horror. No longer was the corpse that of an eagle, but of a Trokmê, his head battered to a pulp, fiery locks soaked in blood. But … the broken body was no bigger than the bird had been. Grim-faced, he and Van repeated the grisly experiment twice more, each time with the same result.
As he buried the three tiny bodies in a common grave, the pride he had felt in his sorcerous talent drained away like wine from a broken cup. What good were his little skills against such power as Balamung possessed, power that could rob men of their very shapes and send them winging over hundreds of miles to slay at his bidding?
Elise said, “It will take a mighty southern mage indeed to overcome such strength.” Her voice was somber, but somehow her words, instead of depressing the baron, lifted his spirits. They reminded him he would not, after all, have to face Balamung alone. More and more, their conflict was assuming in his mind the nature of a duel between himself and the northern wizard, a duel in which the Trokmê owned most of the weapons. But why was he here in the southlands, if not for allies?
“You have a gift for saying the right thing,” he told her gratefully. She shook her head in pretty confusion. He did not explain. As the day wore on, he felt better and better. True, Balamung had tried to slay him from afar, but twice now his efforts had come to nothing, and every hour put more miles between him and his quarry.
Late in the afternoon, Van pointed to a hand-sized roadside shrub not much different from its neighbors and said, “You know some plant-lore, Gerin—there’s another useful plant for you.”
“That?” the Fox said. “It looks like any other weed to me.”
“Then you Elabonians don’t know what to do with it. It grows out on the plains of Shanda, too. The shamans there call it ‘aoratos,’ which means it lets you see a bit of the unseen when you chew the leaves. Not only that, they help keep you awake on watch. Like I said, a useful
plant.”
“What do you mean, ‘it lets you see a bit of the unseen’?”
“That’s the only way I can explain it, captain. Hold up a moment, and I’ll let you see for yourself.” Van uprooted the little bush and returned to the wagon. Gerin studied the plant curiously, but it was so nondescript he could not say whether he had seen its like before.
He got to test its properties soon enough, for he drew first watch that night. The leaves were gritty and bitter. Their juice burned as he swallowed. Little by little, he felt his tiredness slip away. As he sat sentinel, the night came alive around him.
The sky seemed to darken; Elleb, just past first quarter, shone with spectral clarity. So, when she rose, did Math, a day past full. The stars also seemed very bright and clear.
But that was the least effect of the aoratos plant. The Fox found he could tell with certainty where every live thing lurked within a hundred yards of the fire. No matter how well concealed it was, its life force impinged on him like a spot of light seen in the back of his mind.
He understood why Van had had trouble talking about the experience—it seemed to use a sense his body did not normally employ. He was even able to detect strange patterns of radiance within the ghosts, though their flickering shapes remained indistinct as ever.
The extra perception gradually faded, and was gone well before midnight. On the whole, he decided, he approved of the aoratos plant. If nothing else, it made ambushes nearly impossible. “Aye, it does that,” Van nodded when Gerin told him of his feelings, “but you have to use near half the plant at every dose. The gods know when we’ll see another here. I never did find one in the northlands, you know.”
Nor did they find another aoratos bush the following day, or the next, or the next. The last of its leaves stripped, the little plant was tossed away and all but forgotten. As the road swung east, down into the great plain whose heart was Elabon’s capital, Gerin found he had more important things to think about. The dry warmth of the south, the quality of the sunlight pouring down from the sky, and the bustling people of the ever more numerous towns were calling forth a side of his nature he had had to hide on the frontier, a gentler side his vassals would only have construed as weakness.
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