Read Strands of Starlight Online
Authors: Gael Baudino
She climbed faster now. She was learning the trick. In another minute, she and Terrill stood on the wall, looking down into the torchlit grounds.
The spring gardens were bright with flowers of all kinds, the paths carefully tended, the grass immaculate. Mirya wrinkled her nose. The studied formality of the design seemed an affront to the plants that grew there. But across ninety feet of essentially open ground was the granite curtain wall of the keep.
They followed the parapet around to the front. It looked easy: the gates were open.
Mirya consulted with the webs. Just within those gates was a maze of intersections of high probability. Images and futures blurred into one another. “We'll have to climb again.”
“Not so,” said Terrill. “We must take the gate. Look.”
She felt around the top of the curtain wall, then checked the lattices. Climbing, she discovered, would bring instant discovery.
“I still don't see how we can get in the gate.”
“That is because your training is not complete. We must descend, though. Guards are coming.”
They found stairs, descended quickly, and hid among some sacks of gravel piled at the edge of the gardens.
In contrast to the surrounding city, there was activity in the Chateau. Government, machination, and plot all worked throughout the night here, and when sunlight failed, torch and candle supplied illumination. Mirya knew that they would be seen by human eyes if they were not careful.
As they crouched in the shadow, the main gate of the Chateau opened briefly. A man entered, minced up the walk, and entered the gate in the curtain wall. He was a dainty fellow, with elaborately curled hair and a droop of a mustache.
“Probably breaks the hearts of the court ladies,” said Mirya.
“Or the bones of the prisoners.”
“How do we get in?”
“Watch . . . watch the patterns.”
She settled back for what she assumed would be a long wait and allowed the webs to shine clearly. She felt the ongoing life of the keep pulsing, moving, shifting. Far within its walls, though, there was something that disquieted her. She started to follow those strands to their source, but Terrill's voice brought her back.
“You will notice that there is an opportunity a short time from now. The probabilities are not good for us, though. We will need better.”
“So what do we do?”
“We make them better.”
For a moment, Mirya thought that he had gone mad, but a distant star blossomed and flared. She snapped back to normal sight long enough to see that Terrill was deep in concentration, his fists clenched, and when she went back among the stars she found that he was feeding light into the matrix of ifs and might-bes, shaping the future subtly but distinctly to his own ends.
There was suddenly a short gap in the vigilance of the gate guards. Terrill opened his eyes. He was shaking.
Mirya stared at him. “What . . . was that?”
“Something I did not show you before.”
“I didn't know you could do that.”
“I can, and you can also.” Terrill took a deep breath, and his strength returned. “But think before you do it: what is it that you intend to accomplish? And are you willing to take the consequences and the responsibility for altering them?”
Someone started laughing riotously at the main gate of the outer wall. Two men walked out of the keep's guardhouse and strolled across the garden to see what the matter was.
“Now,” whispered Terrill.
Event he torchlight seemed to flicker and die down slightly as they raced for the gate, bent low, taking cover behind the rosebushes. Terrill passed through the entrance first, grabbed Mirya's arm as she arrived, and pulled her farther into the courtyard and down the wall.
“Mere moments . . .”
The laughter continued and a soldier walked out of the door to the keep, across the court, and through the gate they had just passed. He was smiling, as though he anticipated hearing a good jest, which, Mirya knew from the webs, he would.
In a moment, they were in the keep, down a short corridor, and at the base of the tiled stairs that led to the upper floors.
“I know this place,” said Mirya. “I was hauled up and down these stairs many times.” The memory made her legs ache and her spine tingle.
“The ladies' quarters?”
“Up. The floor above the council chambers and the judgment room.”
As they ascended, they heard music. Trumpets, horns, drums. The music grew louder as they passed the kitchen level and the sitting rooms. A third level. “What is this?” said Terrill.
“Dining room. Servants' quarters off to the side. You can smell the reek of dinner.”
“I can.”
“Council chambers are the next level, then the sleeping rooms.” Again, something in the lattices made her bristle unconsciously.
She had little time to puzzle over it. The music peaked at the council chamber level, but the lattices had altered, the futures had shifted, and on the floor above and the floor below, a whiff of torch smoke entered the stairwell. There was movement on the steps.
“One coming up, one coming down,” said Mirya, catching her breath. There was no time to judge better, and Terrill was already moving. They darted down the corridor and into a window embrasure.
Hearts beating, they leaned against the marble wall. Ascending and descending torches drew near, paused, and passed. The music rose behind a door ten yards down the hall. If the men on the stairs said anything, it was lost in the din.
When the stairwell was dark again, they prepared to continue, but a sudden fanfare of trumpets and horns blared into the hallway. The doors were thrown wide. Bright light spilled into the corridor.
Terrill glanced through the open window. “Outside, quickly. There is a ledge.”
They scrambled out and perched. The ledge was shallow, but the wall was dark. They would not be seen. “It is good to know that this is here,” said Terrill calmly. He made himself as comfortable as possible and examined the layout of the surrounding courts and walls.
Mirya settled back into her stars, and her heart slowed. Inside, the fanfare ended and men began passing down the hallway. Again, she felt the strange discomfort. Very close now.
“Baron Roger,” came a smooth, urbane voice.
“What do you want, mouse?”
Mirya stiffened, eyes wide. Terrill glanced sharply at her.
“The papal legate, Monsignor Gugliemino, has been pressing for information. The letter that Clement received from the priest in the Free Towns was obviously effective in arousing a certain amount of suspicion, and the legate is not at all satisfied that Bishop Cranby is unavailable for questioning.”
“So? What of it? The bishop is most certainly not available. For all I know, the bishop may be lying in the middle of some road with his throat cut.”
“
Dear Lady.
” Mirya's fists were clenched, and she was staring, unseeing, into the night.
“Mirya . . . what is it?”
“
That's him.
” She was whispering, but there was savagery in her voice.
The men who were speaking stopped by the window. “A pleasant night, Baron.”
“For us, maybe.” Roger of Aurverelle laughed, and Mirya's anger flamed white-hot.
“I intend to have her questioned further tonight.”
“Do that. And tell that Hound of God to get some results. Gugliemino wants a reason for Clement to sanction the cursade, and so we have to give him something.”
“I will see to it.” The accent was of Maris: cultured, urbane, a trifle ironic.
A dry laugh. “You don't have much choice. Do you, mouse?”
“My lord, I would ask—”
“That I speak to you as an equal,
mouse?
That I actually treat you like a man?”
“Baron Roger, I do have recourses. Conceivably, the Church would be grateful to one who—”
There was a thump, and the man started to strangle.
“You will have me to deal with should any thoughts of that nature come into your head,” said Roger. “Do you understand?”
A muffled, choking sound.
“
Do you?
”
The sound of a body falling, then: “Aye, my lord.”
Mirya was fighting herself, for her instinct was to plunge back through the window, sword drawn. But that would have been the action of a fool, and she did not need the lattices to tell her that. Painful though it was, she held herself in check, eyes blazing, knuckles white.
“Are you certain?” said Terrill.
She nodded, shifted her weight a little, peered cautiously into the corridor. There, a few feet away, she saw the man who had raped her, the man she had sworn to kill. He was dressed in blue silk and red velvet. His surcoat bore the arms of Aurverelle, his gold chain of office those of Hypprux.
The man with whom he had been speaking slowly picked himself up off the floor. No one moved to help him. Mirya recognized the dandy who had entered the keep. “I shall be downstairs,” he said.
“Be sure you get something out of that whore tonight,” said Roger. “Monsignor Gugliemino doesn't sound like a patient man.”
The hum of idle conversation arose once again. Roger and the fop moved off down the hall, the music resumed, and the corridor cleared.
Mirya crouched on the ledge, unmoving, rigid. Terrill examined her uneasily. “Mirya?”
“I'll be all right,” she said softly. “Now I know.”
They climbed back into the corridor when the last footfall had died away. Mirya stood, forced herself to relax, searched for the stars from which she had been torn by the sound of a terribly familiar voice. Her anger burned in her belly like a mugful of vinegar, and her hand dropped to the pommel of her sword.
“Servants will be coming along soon,” said Terrill. “We must act quickly.”
Mirya was still fighting herself. The man's unexpected appearance had taken her completely off guard, and she was stumbling in her efforts to regain balance. The stars. Where were the stars?
Terrill touched her. She did not notice. With a glance at the hall and the doors, Terrill put his head to hers. Mirya's night sky blossomed suddenly, and she sighed. “My thanks.”
“You will have to get over that,” he said. Footsteps in one of the rooms. “Come.”
Their feet were silent on the parquetry and on the stone stairs. Up one level were the sleeping chambers and the women's rooms, but they paused to examine the lattices and to listen.
The upper floors were quiet. “Sleeping or vacant?” whispered Mirya.
“It is hard to tell. Ah, there is a guard.”
There was indeed, but something seemed odd about him. Mirya wondered for a moment, then: “He's asleep, the idiot.”
“Have you any idea how you will look in on Janet?”
She shrugged. “I've got an idea. It's not very subtle, though.”
Terrill smiled. “Whatever is appropriate is good.”
“The guard is asleep. I'm . . .” She looked at him as though for permission. “I'm an Elf. . . .”
Terrill nodded.
“I should be able to avoid waking him.”
“More than likely,” he said. “Be at peace.”
Words came to her lips unbidden. “
Ai, Elthiai, ea sarena
. . .”
Terrill's eyes flickered at the Elvish words. “Have no fear. When you are in the room, call up your memories of George and Anne and find Janet's lifeline through them.”
She climbed slowly, cautiously. Her soft boots were soundless, but accidents could always happen, and no amount of attention or foresight could guard against every possible permutation of future potentials. She chose her steps with care, kept a hand on Rainfire.
She watched the guard's awareness. He was deeply asleep, beginning to snore. Images flashed by her: a hard day sweeping out the stables, a heavy dinner, a little too much wine. . . .
Silently, she slipped by him, pushed aside a thick hanging, and entered the large room. Curtained couches lay against the walls, and the sleepers were breathing softly.
I am here in the Chateau . . . and George and Anne are in Saint Blaise, but we are all a part of the Dance . . . we all stand upon the same earth, breathe the same air, partake of the Lady. . . .
She let her mind drift back to her memories of the mayor and his wife. Gradually, George and Anne became as distinct as if she were looking at them. They were sleeping, Anne curled up against her husband. Her head was on his shoulder and his arm was about her.
She realized that she was seeing them—across distances, miles, forests, rivers—as they were at that moment.
Peace. Be at peace. The hand of the Lady be on you.
For a moment, she wondered at the faint shimmer that seemed to surround Anne as she lay with George, then she descended into their thoughts and waited quietly until she saw Janet. In moments, she saw—felt—the girl's birth, her growth, her joys, her sorrows . . . the sparrow she once kept as a pet. . . .
Shaking herself away from individual memories, she concentrated instead on Janet, examined her life, felt it until it was familiar and easily recognized.
She slid back to the present and the Chateau and cast about in the room, sorting through the patterns of the sleeping women. For a minute, she was afraid that Janet was not in the chamber. But then she saw the familiar weave of her life, and she slipped silently down the length of the room and stood over the sleeping maiden. Janet was safe, and as Mirya scanned her potential futures, she saw that the girl probably would continue to be so. It was impossible to be sure, but she had done the best that was possible, even for an Elf.
Janet slept soundly, and Mirya was reminded strongly of Lake at those times when the half-elven infant dipped into human sleep. But there was another similarity, too, for Mirya became aware of the shimmer about Janet's body, like the one that had surrounded her mother. And standing in a darkened room that was filled with the sounds of the even breathing of many women, Mirya knew that in some time long past, there had been love between mortal and immortal, that Janet and Anne could trace some part of their heritage back to the same blood that now flowed through her own veins.
But just before she broke her link with Janet, Mirya saw one future that broke away from the others, crossed a complex network of lines and probabilities, and finally entered a knot where all potentials became obscure and muddled, the same knot in which she would meet her rapist for the last time. Shuddering, she let the vision go and wound up staring at the wall above Janet's couch where hung a small painting of the Virgin.