She climbed up some steps and peered outside. The limbs of the vast tree swayed, and their shadow blotted out the sky overhead. But lit by flashes of lightning, Erin could see the batlike shapes of Darkling Glories sweeping across the sky in a vast flock.
Her heart began pounding. She slipped back from the opening. She stumbled down the stairs and raced deeper into the burrow, past the face of the carved woman that was sometimes lit by lightning, deeper into the hole where no light could find her at all. The journey took her down stairs that wound deep underground. At last she reached a landing where the echo of her breathing told her that she had entered a vast stone chamber. She could see nothing.
In total darkness, she halted.
Where is the owl? she wondered.
Owl, are you here? Erin shouted wordlessly. I need your help!
She called thus for long minutes, but there was no answer.
She thought back to the last time that she’d seen him. She’d told him then that she didn’t want to talk to him anymore. Perhaps he’d left.
Maybe he’s outside, Erin thought, fighting the Darkling Glories, or fleeing from them.
Or maybe he’s here, and he doesn’t risk answering for fear that his enemies will hear.
Very softly, like a whisper of thought, she heard his voice. “Yes,” the owl said. “Your enemies flock all around you. Can you not smell the evil? Even now, they bend near to hear your thoughts.”
Erin’s eyes came open. She found herself awake, heart pounding, beneath the great hickory tree. Its leaves had begun to hiss in a rising wind.
Down the hill, the knights of Crowthen watered their horses beside a small stream where clumps of lush green grass still hung above the waters.
King Anders and Celinor huddled together in conversation, and as she looked down at them, Anders gazed up at her. There was something suspicious in his stance, the way he watched her. Was he talking about her?
Celinor glanced up at her, too. Erin kept her eyes closed to slits, feigning sleep. Both men looked away.
They were talking about her, she felt certain.
Erin got up swiftly, hurried downhill. The knights had let their mounts forage, and the horses milled about, seeking lush grass. One of them passed between Erin and Celinor, and stood munching for a bit.
Erin came up behind it, heard King Anders ask, “Are you sure that she didn’t take a blow to the head in the battle at Carris? All of this talk of hers—it speaks of madness.”
“It was quite a row,” Celinor said. “The reavers were everywhere. But I’d have noticed if she got hit in the head. More likely, this madness was with her all along.”
King Anders sighed deeply. Erin hunched low and grabbed the horse by the bit, so that it would shelter her from their view. Then she stood, listening.
“You’re not upset that I married her?” Celinor asked.
“Upset?” Anders asked. “Dear me, no! You could not have chosen a better match. If she is Duke Paldane’s daughter, it puts you well in line for the throne of Mystarria, and perhaps even Heredon.”
Celinor had not spoken of Erin’s lineage earlier this morning. As a horse-sister of Fleeds, Erin’s mother had chosen the best man she could to act as stud, but she’d never bandied Paldane’s name about, and Erin had only told her husband that name in strictest confidence, realizing the potential that the revelation had for causing political turmoil in Mystarria.
Now Celinor had spilled his guts to his father.
What kind of man did I marry? Erin wondered. He’d gone to Heredon to spy on the Earth King and learn all that he could about Erin Connal and her suspicious lineage. He’d seemingly taken her into his confidence, telling her that he suspected that his own father was mad.
Now it seemed that nothing she told him remained secret. Could he be playing her and his father against each other?
After a long pause, King Anders spoke. “I worry about your new wife. If she keeps imagining that she has sendings, you know what we will have to do.”
“Cage her?” Celinor asked.
“For her own good,” Anders said, “and for the good of your daughter.”
Erin’s stomach did a little flip.
“My daughter?” Celinor asked.
“Yes,” Anders said. “When I Chose Erin this morning, I sensed not one life but two within her. The child that she carries has a noble spirit. It will be one of the great ones. We must do everything that we can to protect them both, to make certain that the child comes to full term.”
There was a long moment of silence, and suddenly Erin saw a shadow beneath the horse as her husband approached.
“Erin,” he said. “You’re awake?”
Celinor took the horse’s reins. He stood looking at her over the beast’s broad back. His eyes were cool and hard. He knew that she had been listening. She knew that if she weren’t careful, they’d put her in chains right now.
“Aye, that I am,” she said. “Did I just hear your father say that I’ve a child in me? A daughter?”
“Yes,” King Anders said, approaching with a broad smile. “By midsummer you’ll be a mother.”
Erin thought for a moment, wondering what she should do, how she could escape. To run, to fight, would be folly. The crows surrounded her. So she chose to be discreet. She reached over the horse and stroked Celinor’s chin, then kissed his cold lips.
“Looks as if I found me a grand stud,” she said. “It only took one night in the barn for us.” She smiled broadly, and Celinor studied her for a moment, before he smiled in return.
King Anders laughed, as if in relief. “Let’s saddle up. With this rising wind, I think a storm is coming. We should try to make the castle at Raven’s Gate before it gets too dark.”
Raven’s Gate was a vast and ancient fortress that marked South Crowthen’s border. Right now, it was bristling with tens of thousands of Anders’s soldiers, nearly the whole of his armies. And Erin recalled something her mother had once said about the fortress. “Deep have they delved the dungeons at Raven’s Gate, and none who enter ever escape.”
Book 12
Day 5 in the Month of Leaves
The Darkness Deepens
13
The Master
No man can hope to lead others until he first masters himself.
Gaborn studied the tangler as whipcords of vine lashed out and giant pods snapped vainly at the air. Even with all of his endowments, he dared not try to pass it yet. He saw where the tangler had caught Averan’s foot, the vines clutching her leather boot. Closer to hand, Averan had dropped her staff. Her cries still seemed to ring in the air, yet he saw no other sign of her.
“Up there,” Iome said at his back, “is where the reaver must have hidden, waiting for her. Are you sure that she’s still alive?”
“She’s alive,” Gaborn said, sensing deep inside himself. “But the reaver is getting away fast.”
“Even with all her endowments,” Iome said, as if in resignation, “she couldn’t get escape. She has endowments of scent from more than a dozen dogs. She’s learned the ways of reavers, learned their tongue. And one still got her. What hope do we have?”
“Reavers hide their scent,” Gaborn said in Averan’s defense. “I can’t smell that a reaver has been here at all. There’s nothing we could have done to avoid it.”
“Where do you think its taking her?” Iome asked.
Gaborn shook his head. “I...couldn’t guess.” He didn’t sense imminent death in store for her. So her captor didn’t intend to eat her now. The tangler was going quiet.
Using his reaver dart, Gaborn ran forward a couple of paces and vaulted over the beast. He stalked forward a few paces, stood on the land bridge, gazing down into the chasm. His opal pin would not let him see the bottom, though he could hear a river swirling beneath him. Farther above, he could still hear the sounds of reavers rushing through their tunnel, a constant thunder.