Sing the Four Quarters

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Sing the Four Quarters Page 8

by Tanya Huff


  Final Quarter vigil had begun. Throughout Shkoder—in Centers, in their homes, out under the stars—people kept the light alive, waiting on this the longest night of the year for the return of the sun.

  Four

  “Elica?” Annice brushed a dangling bit of vine out of her way and stepped down into the warm, moist air of the small, glass-enclosed room that jutted off the back of the Healers’ Hall. “Are you in here?”

  What had appeared to be a bundle of cloth on the far side of a tiny, central hearth straightened out and became the healer. Her hands full of dried plants, she stared at Annice in disbelief. “Oh, no. Is it that late already?”

  “Later. I’ve been waiting in your chambers. When one of the apprentices told me that you were in the growing room, I came searching.” Stepping over a pile of earth, Annice walked slowly down the narrow aisle, staring around her in amazement. On either side, five graded shelves covered in plants rose in staggered ranks from the floor to about hip high. Above the shelves, walls and ceiling were constructed of glass—more clear glass than Annice had ever seen in one place in her life. Outside, although the sun shone, the temperature had dipped below freezing, and a cold wind danced swirls of yesterday’s snow against the glass. Inside, summer reigned. And the closer she got to the hearth, the more summerlike it grew. “What is this place?”

  “In simple terms, a Fourth Quarter herb garden.” Gathering up her apron, Elica dropped what she carried into the fold and secured the bundle at her waist, leaving her hands free to sketch theories in the air. “The glass concentrates the sunlight for the plants and also heats the room.”

  “But the hearth …”

  “The hearth keeps the temperature constant after dark.”

  Dressed for the cold, Annice could feel sweat trickling down her sides. “Okay, so that’s what it is. But what’s it for?”

  “We’re trying to grow some of the healing plants we import from the south. Most of them are so expensive. But …” She spread her hands triumphantly and smiled. “… if we can grow them ourselves, we can lower the cost and use them for more people. Like the teas you were taking to prevent pregnancy.”

  Annice decided to ignore the implied sarcasm. “What an absolutely brilliant idea.” She added just enough Voice so that the healer would know how much she meant it and realized it must have been Elica’s idea when the other woman flushed with pleasure. “Really, truly brilliant. But how did you afford all this glass?” Some of the small panes were quite green and a number showed bubbling or other obvious flaws, but, considering what glass of a similar quality had cost her and Stasya for the two windows in their sitting room, the sheer quantity present represented a considerable expenditure by the Healers’ Hall. Not even the palace could afford glass windows in every room.

  “The Matriarch of the Glassmakers’ Guild donated most of it and bullied some of the other members into donating the rest. She’s very interested in developing a local source for those teas. Her daughter died in childbirth, you see, and—” Suddenly remembering Annice’s condition, Elica winced. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean….”

  “Don’t worry about it.” Annice shrugged and one hand came around to rest on the slight curve of her belly. “I’ve heard more horror stories about being pregnant and having babies in the four weeks since the vigil than I had in the entire twenty-four years before that. Every bard in the Hall seems to know someone who had a terrible time and they’re sure I should hear their recall about it.”

  Elica smiled at her tone but continued to look worried. “Are these stories bothering you?”

  “Not really.” Sometimes they crawled into her dreams and filled the darkness when she lay awake at night. During the last two nights, since Stasya had left on a Walk and she no longer had the rhythm of the other woman’s breathing in the bed beside her, they’d bothered her more. But, as far as Annice was concerned, what went on in her head wasn’t the healer’s business. Physically, she was fine. “Stories are my trade, remember. I can spot exaggeration when I hear it.” She waved a hand about as though to clear the subject from the air. “So, how’s it working?”

  “What? Growing the teas? Not very well, I’m afraid.” The healer shot a disappointed glance down at the contents of her apron. “I just don’t know what we’re doing wrong.”

  Annice took another look around the room and frowned. Now that she took the time to study them, leaves were curling, or missing, and many plants appeared as much yellow as green. “Have you asked someone to Sing earth?”

  “Inside?”

  “Why not? We do it in the Centers.”

  “They’re specially constructed,” Elica pointed out, shaking her head. “This isn’t.”

  “The altar’s just a big hole in the floor,” Annice corrected, snatching up a metal poker from beside the hearth and dropping to her knees. “What’s under here?”

  The healer looked down and shrugged. “Dirt.”

  “Great.” She dug the point of the poker into a crack and leaned back on it. “Let’s get one of these boards up.” A moment later, the smell of damp earth rose up through a hole about a handbreadth square. “Sorry about that.” Annice sheepishly pushed the splintered piece of wood under a shelf and rushed on with an explanation before the scowling healer could speak. “Most of the earth kigh are asleep right now, waiting for First Quarter, but with all the heat in here and nothing under the floor.…” Taking a deep breath, she Sang.

  Nothing happened. Wishing she had her flute, Annice Sang louder.

  All at once, the floor rippled; shelves, plants, walls, rose and fell behind the crest. Elica cried out as the wave surged by beneath her and grabbed wildly for support. Shattering glass laid a descant on the Song.

  Annice toppled back as the squat brown shape of a kigh bulged through the opening she’d made, ripping the rest of the broken plank aside as it came. Ignoring both bard and healer, it glanced around, exploded into a dozen smaller versions of itself, and disappeared into the mass of upended plant pots.

  Training got Annice through the gratitude, but only just.

  “I don’t usually Sing earth,” she said, getting slowly to her feet and looking around at the chaos. “I wasn’t expecting that.”

  “Good.” Elica’s tone was dry enough to ignite. “And just what did we get in return for our six broken panes and one out of the Circle mess?”

  “A kigh in every pot.” Annice offered the information as an apology. “If you leave the hole so it … they can come and go, I think you’ll have a lot better luck with your plants.”

  “You think?”

  “I’m pretty sure. You might ask the captain if Jazep can come by occasionally. He Sings earth, so he’s assigned to the Hall until spring.”

  “I’m not sure we could afford more Singing.”

  Annice felt her face grow hot. The healer was acting as if she’d intended to break the windows.

  “Never mind, Annice.” Elica raised a calming hand. “All things being enclosed, if the kigh make the difference, the rest doesn’t matter. How are you feeling?”

  Calmed in spite of herself, Annice sighed. “I’m fine.” Lately, Singing air left her feeling both faint and exhausted. She managed water marginally better, but fire had become even more capricious than usual. Earth, on the other hand, seemed to use no energy at all. “By the time the baby’s born, I’ll only be good for making mud pies.”

  * * * *

  “Well, there isn’t any reason why you shouldn’t Walk, but I’m still not sure I approve.” Elica stepped back from the couch, brows drawn in. “Can’t you stay at the Hall?”

  “For the next five months?” Annice sat up and reached for her clothes. “First of all, I’d go crazy. Secondly, although I’ve pretty much stopped throwing up, I’d like to get away from the smells of the city for a while just in case. Third, I’ll only be gone for three weeks.”

  “But it’s Fourth Quarter, the weather …”

  “Will be clear for the next few days, according to
the kigh. That’s why I want to leave as soon as possible. Clear and cold makes for wonderful walking weather. Besides, I’m going up coast where you can’t spit without hitting a fishing village. At the very most, I’ll never be more than half a day away from shelter.”

  “Half a day can make a dangerous difference,” Elica insisted. “In case you’ve forgotten, you’re going to have a baby.”

  “No?” After a speaking glance that took in the expanding shelf of her breasts and the dark line of skin curving down from her swelling navel, Annice shrugged into her shirt. “I guess that explains the stretch mark.’

  “Just one?”

  “So far.” She paused, pants half on and twisted until she could see the slightly indented pink streak that had appeared the week before, radiating in from her hip. “Can you do something about this?”

  “No. But maybe it’ll help if you think of it not as a disfigurement but as a medal of motherhood.” Elica burst into laughter at the bard’s expression, and managed to add a choked, “Maybe not.”

  “Medal of motherhood,” Annice muttered, shoving her head through the neck of her sweater and bending for her boots. “Spare me.”

  * * * *

  Winter winds roaring in off the sea had scrubbed the air over Elbasan to a purity that caught in the back of the throat and tasted like the promise of snow. Standing in the Citadel Gate and staring down at the city as it sloped toward the docks, Annice drew in a deep, satisfied breath.

  “I can’t believe you’re actually happy to be Walking in Final Quarter,” Jazep said, shaking his head. A heavyset man at the best of times, he was so bundled against the cold that he appeared to be as wide as he was tall. “And you know what the storms are like along the coast at this time of the year.”

  She turned an unworried smile at him. “I found one of my best songs in a storm.” Pulling off her mitten, she patted the bit of ruddy cheek visible between his hat and scarf. “Don’t worry, Jaz, I’ve still got enough contact with air to know the weather.”

  “Not enough to control it.”

  “So I’ll duck out of the way, just like everyone else has to.”

  He snorted disapprovingly. “Petrelis should be going.”

  “Petrelis has a fledgling to teach—what’s his name, Ziven, he needs instruction in air and water. And don’t say that I could do it,” she cautioned as Jazep opened his mouth to speak, “because you know I couldn’t. I’m so up and down right now, I’d tie the poor kid’s abilities in knots. Besides, I’ll be working on memory trances with all three of them when I get back.” She couldn’t decide if she was looking forward to that or not. “So, if you could lift my pack for me, I’ll be on my way.”

  Looking unconvinced, Jazep hefted Annice’s travel pack and jiggled it thoughtfully. “You sure this isn’t too heavy?”

  Annice rolled her eyes as she pushed her arms through the straps. “Trust me, Leonas spent so much time fussing over what I’m carrying and how much it weighs, he could’ve outfitted an army.”

  “He’s worried.”

  “I’m fine.” She pitched her voice for Jazep’s ears alone. “You’d think that no one’s ever had a baby before the way he’s acting, the way Stasya’s acting, the way the whole lot of you are acting.”

  Jazep’s slow smile crinkled the corners of his eyes. “Every baby born is the first baby born in the world,” he told her, speaking as she had, voice to ear. “You wait. You’ll see.”

  She snorted and shifted back to broader tones. “I’ve got to get out of here or I’ll never make the fort by lunch. Good music, Jazep.”

  “Good music, Annice.” He pulled her into a brief hug. “Circle hold you and Walk safely.”

  Returning the pressure of his arms, Annice fought to breathe against the sudden tightening of her chest. When he released her, she turned quickly, blinking the moisture from her eyes, and waved a cheery hand at the gate guard. “Good vigilance, Corporal Agniya.”

  The guard, who’d been leaning into the curve of the arch and yawning, straightened. “Good music,” she began, then stopped and looked confused.

  “Annice.”

  “How …”

  “Did I know your name?” Annice shot a rakish look back over her shoulder as she stepped away from the gate, out onto Hill Street. “I’m a bard. We know everything.”

  * * * *

  “Nothing as yet, Majesty.”

  “Nothing?”

  Liene barely managed not to bridle at the king’s tone. For reasons that were never discussed, the crown and the Bardic Hall had maintained a more distant relationship than was usual over the ten years of King Theron’s reign. Not so distant that it affected the smooth running of the country, Theron was too good a king for that, but enough so that he could easily avoid meeting with the young bard who’d defied him. “Nothing more than rumor and innuendo,” she told him levelly.

  “Which were investigated?”

  “Yes, sire.”

  Theron leaned forward on his desk and looked up at the Bardic Captain. “And your opinion?”

  “There’s definitely something going on—with this much smoke there has to be a fire somewhere—but we haven’t yet found the person—or people—directly involved.”

  “No mention of Ohrid?”

  “Only as concerns the business of the pass.”

  “And the duc?”

  “He objects to being Shkoder’s gatekeeper.” The king started and Liene hastened to explain. “According to the traders, it’s collecting the tolls he objects to, Majesty, not holding the pass.”

  His expression thoughtful, Theron nodded and slowly sat back. “I remember reading something about that in the recall. Also that he cares for his people a great deal and thinks we should be moving a little faster toward ending the isolation of the principalities.”

  “Our numbers are limited, Majesty, and Ohrid is a long walk….”

  “I’m not accusing you of anything, Captain. I am aware of both your numbers and how much country your people have to cover. But I think I’d like to talk to that bard, the one who was lately in Ohrid.”

  Although he read the recalls, King Theron never spoke to the bards and not the best control in the world could keep that thought from showing, for an instant, on Liene’s face. Well, isn’t that a bit of unenclosed luck. First time in ten years I’ve had a chance to throw those two together—and on the king’s command yet—and the fates conspire against us all. “She left on a Walk three days ago, sire, heading north up the coast. Shall I have the kigh tell her to return?”

  Theron stared up at the Bardic Captain, weighing her momentary lapse against the expression she now wore. Just for a moment, Liene thought she saw him reaching for the opportunity, then his eyes narrowed, and he said, “No. It’s important that contact be maintained up the coast, especially in Fourth Quarter when isolation can so quickly set in. After all, the whole point of recall is that it includes a complete observation.”

  No name had been spoken, but the identity of the bard filled the space between them.

  * * * *

  Annice paused for a moment on the edge of the cliff and looked down at the village tucked between sea and rock. From this angle, all she could see were the snow-dusted tops of cottages staggered up the hillside and the outside crescent of beach being rhythmically pounded by waves. Although she spotted a number of fishing boats pulled up on the gravel out of the sea’s possessive reach, to her surprise a single vessel bobbed around in a small circle almost at the mouth of the bay. It seemed a little crazy to her, considering that puddles of ice reflected the sun all along the shore, but then small boats on summer seas seemed a little crazy to her, too, so she supposed she was unqualified to judge.

  The sudden appearance of a pair of kigh very nearly flung her a disastrous step forward. Heart racing, she staggered and fought for balance, the weight of her pack dragging at her shoulders finally pulling her back onto solid ground. While the long, pale fingers of the two agitated kigh continued to tug at her clo
thing, she drew a deep breath to whistle them away. Far away.

  Then the message got through.

  She dropped her pack so hard it bounced, snatched up her flute, and threw herself down the path to the village, Singing as she ran. Twice she stumbled and the kigh caught her. Once, the earth rearranged itself under her feet. By the time she reached the first cottage, a group of astonished people were running out to meet her, calling out questions she had no time to answer, the village dogs barking hysterically around their feet. She pushed her way through the crowd, still Singing. If the kigh were right, she had almost no time at all.

  Finally she reached the water’s edge. Throwing the case to one side, she shoved the halves of her flute together and raised the mouthpiece to her lips. The first note was so sharp it hurt, but, forcing herself to breathe normally, she found the second and, eyes locked on the boat, threw everything she had left into the Call.

  Behind her, she heard the villagers exclaim as the fishing boat lifted on a column of water and began to rush toward the shore. Soon a stooped figure could be seen bending over something in the stern. As the boat came closer, the figure turned, became a woman, a sun-bleached fringe of blonde hair framing an expression part worry, part relief. Her mouth moved, but her voice was lost under the sound of the waves and the Song of the flute.

  The cluster of kigh beneath the boat continued up onto the shore. The villagers cried out and scattered. With the bow almost upon her, Annice turned the Song to a gratitude and the kigh flowed out from underneath it, returning to the sea. The bottom of the boat dropped onto the gravel, exactly at the high water mark.

  Annice let the flute drop away from her mouth and staggered back against a solid chest.

 

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