For the first time he wondered about Bйluchad. Eolt drifted here and there, sioll-bonded Ard moved with them, back and forth from continent to continent. Sometimes places made new words and if they were good words, Eolt and Ard put them in their songs-like stirring soup so the flavors blended. There was one speech everywhere and no need to learn how to learn another.
The mesuch were different. The ones over here spoke their own langue, as well as tradespeak, and probably others. He had no doubt the mesuch on Melitoлh were much the same.
He stroked his hand along the harpcase, remembering the made-look of the woman’s harp. Someone had put knife and plane to that wood, hadn’t lived with the growing matrix and shaped it with song and caress into a companion and complement. Some of the strings were metal with a harsher tone than his sweet singer but also one that was more precise, steadier. He wanted to hear it again, to learn its song. He wanted to tell Teseach Ruaim and Metau Chachil to shut their yammering mouths and listen to the song he could make with her and Melech.
He didn’t, of course. The relationship between Ard and Dumel was a prickly one, oversweet reverence with a backtaste of resentment. If it weren’t for the sweet bouncy flesh of Fior girls, he’d stop at a Dumel only when he needed to shelter from a storm. He caught here and there furtive glances from ordu girls on the benches and some that boldly challenged him. An Ard baby brought honor to a family and there seemed several here who’d like to try for one.
He looked up as Lebesair lost patience and stabbed a call for attention into the babble below xe, then he waited for an announcement that would match the imperious demand for hearing.
Into the silence that followed Ruaim’s song, Mer-Eolt Lebesair launched a great mourning bellow that battered at the court. Concentrated sorrow. Keening for the dead.
FIRE leaping to the sun an Eolt dies
sport for mesuch killing with light
FIRE dropping like rain death DEATH
CURSE the killers SOULless MONSTERS
FIRE mourn for the dead Mourn MOURN!
After the echoes of the final word had died, the Eolt shifted mode to simple-speech.
“Every day on Melitoлh Eolt and Denchok die, hunted like beasts by the mesuch. Others are driven from their Dumels and their fields. Fior males are killed or made slaves, Fior women are killed in terrible ways or live as slaves. A Sleeping Ground was burned a week ago and news has come that mesuch have gone back and ripped the husks from the few Sleepers still in life. This I leave for you to think on. Remember the Shape Wars. Remember the sorrows a thousand and a thousand years ago.”
Maorgan shuddered. The old songs had been leached of their anger and pain by the passing of centuries, but if that time was coming again, there were horrors waiting that put a chill in his soul. He thought about what the Scholar said-you can do worse than the Yaraka. He didn’t like these mesuch thieves-what else were they but thieves, taking what didn’t belong to them-but the contrast between the reports from Melitoлh and the way the Yaraka had treated Glois and Utelel and the rest told him she was right.
“The Meruus of Eolt and Fior are called to a Special Meeting. Tomorrow is Chel Dй’s day. The Meruus cry out to you to make it a day of meditation and prayer. Especially pray for the success of this meeting.”
Aslan listened to Shadith’s translation with fascination, distress and anger. She tucked away the name Shape Wars as something to investigate and steamed as she thought of all the omissions in the Yaraka Rep’s report. She was also angry at the Goлs; though he did try to persuade her to live inside the Fence, he hadn’t given her any reasons or said word one about these killings. Sniping between two Companies was one thing, this other business could lead to… well, she didn’t want to think where it would lead. If Id known, she thought, would I even be here? Is this going to turn into another Styernna?
Waves of chill ran through her.
Shadith’s hand closed round hers, warm and reassuring.
Her breathing steadied. I need to think about this. It changes things.
The Chave were killing sentients for sport. If they didn’t know that now, they would soon enough-maybe as soon as she sent out her first reports since the Ykkuval probably had bought out one or more of the Goлs staff. Once University heard about this, they’d work to get Chandava Minerals blacklisted on Helvetia. The Ykkuval responsible would likely be called home and stripped of his standing and the minute he realized that, this side-glance war would go real. Have to talk to the Goлs as soon as I get loose. Do I call this off now? Have to talk to Shadow and Duncan, see what they say.
She kept her listening mask firmly in place, but slipped in a quick glance or two at the benches. She didn’t know Keteng expressions yet, but the Fior were still Cousins enough that she could feel their fear and a rising anger.
“Ignorance is death, the Scholar said, and that is true. Sioll Maorgan has reported that the mesuch have a way of transferring understanding of strange speech. Strange and frightening as those devices are, the Meruus ask that some among you who are closest to the mesuch show the courage to undergo this, transfer. The Bйluchar must know what the Scholar knows and hear what the mesuch say.”
5
Shadith sighed as she passed on that last bit. Having to do all this translating made her feel caged, as if she were a machine bolted to the floor. I’m not a Scholar, she thought. Won’t ever be. I haven’t got that kind of patience. The body has some age on it now and I can look even older if I have to. Hm. Digby keeps after me to work for him. Maybe when this is over…
She glanced at Aslan. A muscle jumped at the corner of the Scholar’s eye; sweat beaded on her forehead and her mouth had a stiff look as if her lips were trying to tremble and she willed them quiet. She’s been scared half to death since that Eolt starting speaking.
“This is important because the Meruus think of calling the Scholar’s Harper to the Klobach so that she may contribute to the deliberations. They have asked this Mer to discover if such a notion would be wise. Harper, heed me. Sing for us. Not our songs, but yours. Show us your heart. Teach us who you are.
Shadith looked up, startled, then reached for the harpcase. “Happy to,” she said. “And if you have a wish to join in at any time, honored Eolt, feel free.” She smiled at Maorgan. “And you, Ard Maorgan.”
She bent over the small harp Swardheld had made for her, touching the strings lightly as she considered what she should play. Play your heart, the Eolt said. Which heart? She smiled as she thought that.
Something stirred in her-a need she hadn’t fed since she took Kikun home. I wonder… no, can’t think of him now. She closed her eyes. Dance for me, sisters. Let me have Shayalin again. You have to come alone this time, no Kikun to power you, no dream pollen to make you real again.
Shayalin was raided again and again to make slaves of the Weavers of Dreams. What the Eolt had said about the killings hit her; before this, she’d been detached, not really listening to the sense, letting her Gift change the words for her and pass them on to Aslan. Now…
The raiders came down on Shayalin, killing the Shallana males and the makers like her who were the fertile ones, the ‘tween generation born single, not six. Carrying away the Weavers to dance dreams for men who had no understanding of what they really saw.
She burned with memory and sudden kinship and hatred for the Chave who were suddenly all the raiders who’d ravaged her world and destroyed her family. She knew what she should play.
She stilled the strings, then began to play. Just music at first, not calling her sisters’ names to bring them back to memory.