by David Drake
Sharina squeezed Cashel and stepped out of his embrace, though she continued to hold his hand. She looked between the women.
“The name is from my age, not yours,” Tenoctris said. “It was quite old even a thousand years in your past, however, and it’d vanished into the sprawl of shanties beyond Valles proper before the Change. I believe that in a tomb there I’ll find the ally which mankind needs.”
Is it safe to drag an ancient wizard from his grave? Sharina thought, and of course it wasn’t—but if Tenoctris was doing it, there wasn’t a better solution available. The realization made her stomach churn.
“We depend on you, Tenoctris,” Sharina said aloud, gripping Cashel’s hand hard. “Well, on you and Garric, but the Yellow King was a myth to me from before I could read. I’m afraid I still feel that way.”
“We’ll both hope you’re wrong, dear,” the old woman said, smiling wistfully. “When I was very young, I read Hohmann’s Grammar of the Powers in what was left of the family library. I found that I could make a feather lift in the air. I certainly never thought I’d be at a pivot of history, though.”
She shook herself or perhaps shivered. “Well,” she said. “Cashel, if you’re ready, shall we—?”
“Excuse me, Tenoctris,” Sharina said. She blurted the words without consciously meaning to, though they’d been on the tip of her tongue since the wizard entered the room. “I—something happened last night. Could I talk to you and Liane? It’s sort of … a woman problem.”
She glanced at her companions. Tenoctris was brightly quizzical, Liane was carefully neutral.
Cashel was Cashel, smiling softly and as firm as the bedrock. “I’ll go chat with the guards,” he said. “Besok was a shepherd on Cordin.”
He closed the door softly behind him. Sharina took a deep breath. She couldn’t have talked about Vorsan in front of Cashel.
“Last night when I returned to my room I saw a reflection in the window,” she said in a firm voice. “I fell into it, I don’t know how; I was concentrating on the reflection and then I was in a room with a man who called himself Prince Vorsan. He said he’d made a place to preserve himself from the Flood. He wanted me to join him.”
Her mouth was dry. She licked her lips and went on, “He said the Last would destroy us as the Flood did his world.”
“How did you escape, dear?” asked Tenoctris quietly.
“He didn’t try to hold me,” Sharina said. It sounded impossible when she tried to explain it. “He told me to look into one of his mirrors, and when I did I was back in my room.”
She paused, trying to focus on important details. “The mirrors seemed to be glass, not metal,” she said. “I’ve never seen anything like them.”
Tenoctris shrugged. “Your Vorsan sounds very interesting,” she said. “I wish I had leisure to learn more. Perhaps I could even meet him, but—”
Her smile was perfunctory; a polite dismissal.
“—I’m afraid I don’t. He doesn’t appear to be a serious threat, or indeed a threat at all. And other matters certainly are, I’m afraid.”
“I’m just to forget him, then?” Sharina said. She managed to keep her voice calm, but she was more angry than she’d have expected.
“Yes, dear, if you can,” Tenoctris said. “Or perhaps …”
She looked appraisingly from Sharina toward the door, then back. “If matters go as I hope they will tonight,” she resumed, “Cashel and I will be doing a great deal of traveling until the Last have been defeated. You and the kingdom will need a wizard to advise you in day-to-day matters while I’m gone, though. That person, my replacement, may feel otherwise about Prince Vorsan. I won’t be offended if you take his or her advice over mine.”
“You’re leaving us!” Sharina said.
“Yes, dear,” said the old wizard. “We’ll come back frequently, but I can’t promise to be available to answer your questions in a timely manner.”
She gave Sharina a lopsided smile and added, “Unless I fail tonight, that is. If that happens, it won’t really matter what else I do. I don’t see any hope for mankind if I fail tonight.”
“I see,” said Sharina, though she didn’t see. Her head was filled with buzzing whiteness; she wondered if she were about to faint. “I’ll pray for you.”
I’ll pray for all of us.
Tenoctris went to the door and opened it. “I think we’d best leave now, Cashel,” she said. “I’d like to have everything prepared at the tomb before sunset.”
“Yes, ma’am,” Cashel said, walking back into the room.
Sharina threw her arms about Cashel again and kissed him hard. He was too shy to’ve taken the initiative, but he held her firmly and kissed her back.
For what may be the last time.
TENOCTRIS LOOKED DOWN the hillside with a satisfied expression, then took three brisk steps to the right. Cashel followed, carrying the satchel with the books and powders she used in her wizardry. Instead of taking something out of it, however, Tenoctris pointed at the ground.
“Here,” she said to the officer commanding the soldiers. “There should be a sloping trench leading southwest for about fifteen feet. Lay it open, please, and remove what I expect will be a stone blocking the doorway at the far end.”
“You heard the lady, lads!” the officer bellowed. “Make me proud of you or you’ll never get off latrine duty!”
The double handful of soldiers were already at work with mattocks and shovels. They had heard Tenoctris, after all; they were close enough to touch her and she’d spoken in a normal voice. Cashel didn’t understand why soldiers—and sailors—seemed to shout whatever they were saying, but it was one of the things that made him glad he’d been a shepherd instead.
He’d followed Tenoctris back so they weren’t in the way of the digging. The men were good at it, no question; it was a treat to watch how one fellow broke ground with his mattock and the next shoveled the dirt into a wicker basket, all without getting in each other’s way.
They had nice tools, too, with metal blades. In Barca’s Hamlet, most shovels were shaped from wood with only a shoe of iron over the cutting edge. Lots of folks used digging sticks, even.
Cashel looked at Tenoctris. She’d taken a gold locket from under her silk robe and held it as she watched the soldiers. She looked, well, not as cheerful as usual, so he said, “I thought you might have to do a spell to find what you wanted.”
“Not here, I’m afraid,” Tenoctris said, smiling though she didn’t look around. “It’s rather like saying, ‘What sort of device do you need to discover a forest fire?’ Graveyards often hold a great deal of power, but here it’s not just death and reverence. The man buried there—”
She nodded to the trench. The soldiers had cleared the layer of dirt and were now digging out the slot cut in the rock beneath. It was porous volcanic tuff, as easy to carve as the chalky limestone of the hills around Barca’s Hamlet.
“—was a very powerful wizard. I don’t ordinarily care to work in a place where power is so concentrated.”
“What was the wizard’s name, Tenoctris?” Cashel asked. It only seemed polite to know a fellow’s name when you were digging up his grave.
She smiled again and this time met Cashel’s eyes. “I don’t know, I’m afraid,” she said. “I don’t even know how long ago he lived. Though I’m sure he was male; that I can tell from what remains.”
Her eyes drifted across the slope spotted with small cedars and outcrops of tuff. It wasn’t much to look at, it seemed to Cashel. There were potsherds in the coarse grass; he turned one over with his toe and found it’d been painted on the underside.
“That was a grave marker,” Tenoctris said. “On Ornifal in my day, people were buried standing. An urn with a hole in the bottom put over the grave. On the anniversary of the death, relatives and friends dropped wine and food into the mouth of the jar.”
Cashel frowned, looking harder at the bit of pottery. He couldn’t guess what the painting might’ve shown whe
n it was whole: all he had left to judge by were the parallel strokes of blue and blue-green against the earthenware background. “If they were dead, it didn’t matter, did it?” he said.
“It mattered to the relatives and friends, Cashel,” the old woman said. “And they were the ones doing it.”
“Ah,” Cashel said, smiling at himself for not thinking of that. He was pretty good at figuring out what people’d do once he’d been around them awhile, but not always about why they did it. Ilna was worse, of course: she got mad when folks didn’t do things the way she thought they should.
Ilna was smart, no mistake. Sometimes Cashel thought that he and his sister had about two people’s amount of brains between them, but they’d mostly gone to her. He loved Ilna, but he was glad most people in the world didn’t think the way she did. He was pretty sure Ilna was glad of that too, whatever she might say aloud about how most people behaved.
“Here, we got a stone!” called the soldier at the far end of the trench. He and his partner were down over their heads; other soldiers from where the cut was shallower had been carrying away baskets of dirt and emptying them for some while now.
The man who’d spoken dragged the pick on the other end of his tool into the crevice between the block and a doorway cut in the tuff bedrock. “Hey, it’s two stones,” he said. His partner shoved the handle of his shovel—not the blade, which would’ve bent—into the opposite crack. They levered the stone out alternately, working like a perfect team and all without needing a word between them.
The officer looked up. Cashel smiled at him, then nodded toward the soldiers now lifting the top block up for two more men waiting at the lip of the cut to take it. The officer beamed, pleased that somebody who understood the work was watching his men do it.
The lower block was twice the size of the upper stone that’d wedged it in place. “Hey, Top?” the man with the mattock called. “I think we’re going to need ropes for this one.”
“Let me try it,” said Cashel. “Tenoctris, will you hold this?”
He gave her his quarterstaff. He could’ve laid it on the ground, but he’d rather give it to a friend when he couldn’t hold it himself. It was just a length of straight-grained hickory, but he’d had it a long time. It’d been a friend when he needed a friend.
“Let me try,” Cashel repeated as he strode over to the cut. The soldiers had ignored him the first time. That didn’t bother him; it was the sort of thing you got when somebody new tried to join a group that’d been together for a while. It happened just the same with sheep.
The trench was three double paces long and sloped down to the depth of a man’s head at the doorway end. Cashel squatted, looming over the men there. “I can maybe lift that without ropes and people pulling from up here,” he said.
“He might at that,” one of the soldiers muttered. “What d’ye think?”
Instead of answering, his partner called, “Top, is that all right?”
“Yes, of course it’s all right,” said Tenoctris testily. “I’ll tell Lord Waldron that haste was important, if you like. Or I’ll ask Princess Sharina to tell him. I’d like there still to be natural light when I enter the chamber!”
“Right!” said the officer. The men beneath Cashel were already moving away to give him room. “If you want to try, sir, go ahead. But it looks like a load even for somebody as big as you.”
“Well, I’ll try,” Cashel said. He dropped into the trench with his left hand on the lip so that he didn’t come down with his full weight on his toes. He touched the block. It’d been chipped from the same soft stone as the trench was cut out of. Cashel wasn’t one to brag, but this wasn’t even going to be hard.
He rocked the block forward a little to make sure it was loose; it was. He squatted, placed his hands, and then straightened up from the knees. Everything was smooth as you please till the block was at the top of the trench and Cashel started to fling it down the slope.
“Get out of his way!” Tenoctris shouted. Cashel didn’t understand what she was talking about till he realized four soldiers had stepped into what’d been an empty space. They had their arms out, ready to take the block from him the way they’d’ve done if their friends had been lifting it.
The soldiers moved fast when they saw what was happening, but it was still close. Even Cashel couldn’t hold that much weight with his fingertips alone when he’d started it flying, but he was able to brake it enough that the men all scrambled clear before it thumped the ground and tumbled away.
“Sorry,” Cashel said. His breath was coming hard, as much from almost crippling a couple of people accidentally as the weight of the stone. “I didn’t expect anybody to be there.”
“By the blessed Lady,” said one of the soldiers who’d almost been in the wrong place. He didn’t sound mad. “If you throw stones like that, maybe we can carry you along with us instead of a catapult, hey?”
“Sorry,” Cashel said in embarrassment. “I wouldn’t make a good soldier.”
The men laughed. Cashel realized it’d been a joke, but that was all right since they thought he was joking too.
Tenoctris came down the opened trench, bringing her bag of gear and the quarterstaff both. Usually Cashel or somebody carried the satchel for her, but she was really a lot stronger than you might think to look at her.
“Please go inside, Cashel,” she said as she held out the staff to him. Though she smiled, she was also reminding him that he was in the way. “I’m quite sure I’d be more able to move the stone door than I would you.”
“Yes, ma’am,” Cashel said. He took the satchel, holding it in front of him as he hunched through the doorway. “Careful, there’s a step down here.”
Though the air inside was cool, it was dry and musty rather than dank as Cashel’d sort of expected. The covered passage was a double pace long, leading to a doorway with posts and a lintel. It was all cut from the living rock. Beyond was a step down into the tomb chamber. Cashel could stand upright there.
Tenoctris followed him in. There was a low bench on either side. Each had legs and a frame, but it was all rock. One was empty; the other had a stone coffin whose lid had been slid off. It’d broken when it hit the floor.
Cashel peered inside. The box was empty.
There was plenty of light in the tomb to see by for the moment. The doors and trench beyond lined up due west, so the low sun came right in.
Tenoctris looked around with the perky cheerfulness of a wren. She peered at the ceiling, then touched the carvings on the coffin with her fingertips.
“Where’d you like me to put the bag, Tenoctris?” Cashel asked. He hefted the satchel to call attention to it.
“Oh, just set it on the other bench, if you would,” she said with another quick nod. “I won’t need tools to summon the former resident, I’m now sure. I hadn’t fully appreciated just how powerful he was, Cashel.”
She smiled in a way that made her for just that moment look more like a puppy than a bird. She added, “How powerful he is, I should say, though for the moment he’s not present in this world.”
“Is that a problem?” Cashel said. He spread his feet a little out of reflex. This’d be tight quarters to fight with a staff, but a straight thrust with the butt could finish things quick even if there wasn’t room for tricks and spinning.
“No, quite the contrary,” Tenoctris said, but her smile seemed almost forced. “We came here to gain a powerful ally, after all.”
She cleared her throat and said, “I think I want something from the satchel after all; a lamp.”
As Tenoctris searched in the bag, Cashel eyed the coffin. It was made from alabaster carved so thin that you must’ve been able to see light through it when it was freshly polished. Even protected underground it had the frosty look marble gets when it’s open to the air for a while.
The long side toward Cashel was decorated with people in a city. When he looked closely at the carvings, he saw they were all dead or dying; from a plague, it looked li
ke. Some were sprawled at the altars in front of temples, some lay in bed or in the streets. A family held hands on a flat rooftop, all dead.
Cashel generally liked sculptures as much as he did paintings. He didn’t like this one, though, and he guessed he wouldn’t have liked the fellow who wanted it on his coffin.
He stepped around to look at the end toward the doorway. The carvings showed dead people again, this time being torn to bits by weasels. There didn’t seem much point in looking at the other end, let alone worrying about the side against the wall.
Tenoctris’ lamp was flat earthenware, the same as any house in Barca’s Hamlet—or anywhere—had, except words in the curvy Old Script were molded around the oil hole in the middle. She’d filled it from a stoppered bottle, also in her bag. Now she pointed her finger at the wick, which lighted with a pop of blue wizardlight.
“There,” she said, turning to Cashel with a pleased smile. “Before I get into the sarcophagus, Cashel, I have a favor to ask you.”
Tenoctris brought out the locket again from under her robe. She looked at it for a moment in the palm of her hand, then lifted it on its thin gold chain over her head.
“Please keep this, my dear,” she said. She pursed her lips, then touched a catch on the bottom and spread the two leaves of the gold case. In each side was a face painted on a disk of ivory. They were small and the sun was setting fast, but Cashel thought they were a man and a woman.
“My parents,” Tenoctris said. She closed the locket and placed it in his left palm. “I didn’t know them very well. I’m afraid I must’ve been a trial to them.”
She smiled with the touch of soft sadness Cashel’d seen before. “Not because I was bad, of course,” she explained, “but because I was very different from them and the children of all their friends. I embarrassed them.”
“Tenoctris?” Cashel said. “How long do I keep it for you? Just tonight?”
“Keep it until you feel it’s the right time to give it back to me, Cashel,” the old woman said. “And if ever I cease to be myself, destroy it immediately. Promise me this. There’s no one else I could trust with this duty.”