The Diviner (41 page)

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Authors: Melanie Rawn

BOOK: The Diviner
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“Recognize?” Alessid asked. “What does that mean to you?”
“I felt at home there.” He shrugged elegant shoulders. “Maybe it was just hearing stories about it all my life, but maybe not. It just felt
right
, being there—as right as it does when I go to Sihabbah where your mother was born. Nothing tasted strange, the way it did when we went to Joharra.”
“Tasted—” He regarded his grandson with astonishment. “That's it, you know. That truly is proof.”
“Of what?”
“Do you remember, when Zaqir first came from Rimmal Madar to marry Ra'abi—”
The boy laughed. “Ab'ya, I wasn't born way back then!”
For a moment Alessid was startled. Such was his love for Qamar that it felt as if the boy had been in his life all of his life. “Someday you'll be an old man, too, and plagued with a pest of a grandson!” he scolded, but with a smile. “Ra'abi and Zaqir traveled the length and breadth of Tza'ab Rih, showing themselves to the people, getting to know them and the land. They were in one of the smaller villages beyond Sihabbah, dining with some people who had actually known my grandfather al-Gallidh. With the qawah and sweets at the end of the meal, nuts from their own groves were served. Zaqir swallowed exactly one of them—and began to choke to death.”
Qamar's eyes could hardly get any bigger. “Why? Poison?”
“Don't be absurd, boy. Everyone ate from the same bowl, and no one else became sick. But if a Shagara healer had not been with them—Ra'abi was pregnant at the time, and taking no chances—Zaqir would have died. His throat swelled almost closed. He was from Rimmal Madar, where such nut trees are unknown.”
A frown darkened the usual bright whimsy of Qamar's face. “If what you imply were true, then we ought to eat nothing that doesn't come from our native soil. I ate everything they put in front of me in Joharra, and so did everybody else, and nobody—”
“Zaqir's case was extreme. But let me tell you why this thought occurred to me.”
He was only halfway through an explanation of how place and people belonged to each other when Qamar suddenly cried out in surprise and pain. Green wax had been melting all this time in its little glass bowl set in a bronze scaffold, gently heated by the small candle below it. But the candle had flickered and flared in an unruly draft. The luxuriant feather quill Qamar had been twirling idly between his fingers had caught fire, burning his hand. “It's all right, Ab'ya,” he said at once. “It doesn't hurt—I was only startled. Here, let me set the seal, and then you can tell me the rest of your ideas.”
“Leave it be,” Alessid told him. “I'll call for a healer.”
“No, it's nothing. I want to hear more.” He didn't wince as he smoothed out the page, then folded it neatly so that the four corners met in the middle. He ran a singed and slightly bloody fingertip over the matrix of Alessid's personal seal, making sure there was no lingering wax to disfigure the impression. Green wax was poured, the seal was set, and the letter set aside.
 
Rihana and Ra'amon pleased each other very much. The people of Joharra were equally pleased. The man they considered their rightful ruler had returned. The woman he married had openly declared her love for their land and had all the power of the Empire of Tza'ab Rih behind her to keep them safe. His conversion to the Glory of Acuyib troubled them but little, for they saw it as an expediency. Joharra was worth a change in liturgy.
A few months after the marriage, Alessid received a letter from his granddaughter that confirmed everyone's wisdom, including his own. Love there was between Rihana and Ra'amon, and great joy; as far as each was concerned, no other man and no other woman existed in all the wide world; and she was already pregnant with their first child and hoping for a girl. Rihana praised everything from her new husband to her new Joharran-style clothes (their women dressed even more oddly than their men, imprisoning themselves in tight bodices and voluminous skirts). Alessid decided Mirzah ought to read it as well, and accordingly made his way to her apartments.
“ With regret, al-Ma'aliq, the Empress is indisposed.”
Alessid regarded his wife's maidservant, his eyes narrow and his lips taut. He had heard this same sentence a hundred times and more. He saw Mirzah only at official functions nowadays. She never even sat down to dinner with the family, preferring to stay in her rooms. He had indulged her even more disgracefully than he ever had Mairid or Qamar.
“Open the door.”
“With regret, al-Ma'aliq—”
“Open it.”
The woman's hands twisted. “I cannot,” she whispered. “She has ordered whippings if—”
“Open the door or
I
will order your tongue cut out and your eyes burned blind,” he snarled. He would never have done so, of course—not only was he disinclined to physical cruelty but terror was no way to rule an Empire. But the servant was already in such a state of nerves that she believed him. With a shiver, she opened the door she guarded, and he was admitted to the rooms of the Empress.
He had not been inside for years. This entrance was not the one that led to the fountain room with its tile garden; instead, he came in another way, by the portal from which she emerged in all her finery to receive ambassadors. There were servants here, too, and fear in their eyes at the sight of him. Alessid was more determined than ever to discover what was in his wife's rooms, that she so seldom and so unwillingly left them.
When he finally saw, he wished he had not.
Mirzah sat in the center of her bedchamber, on a priceless rug from Dayira Azreyq that had been a gift from the late Sheyqa Sayyida. She was filthy, her graying hair lank and unwashed, her body reeking, her robe stained with food. She was rocking slowly from side to side, humming as she stroked the yarn hair of seven dolls in their cradles, lulling them to sleep.
“She believes they are her babies,” said a familiar voice behind Alessid. He turned to find Leyliah, suddenly bent and old, sorrow thickening her voice. “She calls them by their names . . .” She hesitated, then murmured, “And sometimes, the one that is usually Kemmal, she calls Qamar.”
Alessid refused to feel. “How long has she been like this?”
“Until recently, it came rarely and went swiftly.”
“How long this time? How long will she be like this?”
Leyliah shrugged. “Another day, or forever.”
“Do something for her.”
“There is nothing to be done.”
“There must be!”
“Nothing, Alessid. It is not a thing a Shagara can heal—or the al-Ma'aliq can command.”
He could not bear Mirzah's humming. He drew Leyliah into the outer chamber and kicked the door shut. “What happens when the people discover this?”
“They will not discover it. Her servants are few, loyal, and silent.” She paused. “Qamar sits with her each day for a little while—she thinks sometimes that he is Azzad, when your father would visit the Shagara tents.”
“But—you said that sometimes she—the doll—”
“Yes. Sometimes, when Qamar sits with her, she uses his name when she sings her children to sleep. He is very good about not being shocked by his grandmother's madness.” She trembled briefly. “There, I have said it at last. My daughter is mad.” And she covered her face with her hands and wept.
Alessid left his wife's rooms. He sat alone in his maqtabba for several days, and emerged at last to declare that the Empress, as befit a pious woman, had decided to spend the rest of her days in solitary devotion to Acuyib, praying for the happiness of the people of Tza'ab Rih. They revered her for this, sending tribute of the land's bounty: oranges, wine, silks and woolens, gems, candlesticks wrought of iron. Alessid thanked them in Mirzah's name and quietly distributed the gifts among the poor.
When Mirzah died, the whole Empire mourned. And when Leyliah followed her daughter into death a few months later, Abb Shagara himself came to take her body home to the desert.
He also came to speak his piece to Alessid. In the privacy of the great tent in the gardens, he confronted the al-Ma'aliq.
“It is you who drove Mirzah mad—your use of her sons and grandsons and the magic she gave them—you used them to make war.”
Alessid said nothing.
“Be advised, al-Ma'aliq, that there are those among the Shagara who oppose you. While Leyliah lived, they kept silent.
I
kept silent. But now—”
“Now you will rebel?” He laughed without humor. “Look around you, Abb Shagara. The Za'aba Izim, the Qayshi, the Ibranyanzans, the Joharrans, the Granidiyans—half a million people look to me for law, protection, governance. Your handful of rebellious Shagara are nothing to me—magic or no magic.”
“They are angry,” he warned. “So am I.”
“And so am
I
! You accuse me of misusing the Haddiyat—and yet they supported me like everyone else when I made Tza'ab Rih into a nation. No one denounced me then! Not when I was making the Shagara into the most powerful and revered tribe in all the country! And now you say it was I who caused the madness of my wife. Do you know, Abb Shagara, that many years ago she refused me her bed—me, her husband, father of her children—she denied me any more children, because she did not want any more Haddiyat sons. A Shagara woman bears Haddiyat proudly and rejoices in them. Mirzah did not. And because of it, she went mad. How can I be held responsible for this? I cannot. And you and your dissident Shagara know it.”
“She—”
“Silence! Take your anger to the most obscure corner of my Empire and trouble me no more with it. Be assured that if I hear anything about dissension, I will treat the Shagara as I would treat any traitors to Tza'ab Rih.”
Abb Shagara sucked in a breath. “You would not dare!”
“Would I not? Get out!”
A year or so later, he heard that Abb Shagara had died. Not that he was Abb Shagara when it happened, He had renounced the honor, a thing that had never been done before, and with a score of like-minded cousins, both male and female, set out to find a new home. He died along the way. The rest of the group established a small community, no one knew exactly where. They sent word back to the Shagara tents that they were safe, and anyone who wished to join them could come back with the messenger. Some did, finding the prospect of solitude and study appealing.
The men among them, some Haddiyat and some not, were dedicated to the preservation of the ancient traditions. The women, all of whom had Haddiyat in their lines, declared themselves unwilling to see their sons ride off to war—or their gifted sons craft hazziri for death and destruction rather than to help people.
“And how,” Alessid mocked, “can they possibly help anyone, living no one knows where?”
Qamar made a face. “One suspects they intend to help only themselves. Who cares about them, anyway? Come, Ab'ya, Shayir has sired a new foal, and you must tell me what you think.”
That was how it was between them: Alessid spending himself as always in the work of ruling until Qamar beguiled him from the maqtabba or the audience chamber or the now threadbare tent in the garden. They were wellnigh inseparable, the man in his seventies and the boy not yet twenty. He could not help but recall what Leyliah had said: that Qamar had soothed his grandmother Mirzah with his resemblance to Azzad. And then he invariably recalled also that Mirzah had believed Qamar to be Haddiyat.
Nonsense. The woman had been mad.
Qamar was a scapegrace of the first order, with a hundred broken maidenheads and broken hearts already to his credit. If he had any sense of duty, it was well hidden. As for dedication—only in pursuit of pleasure. Even aware that he was a copy of Azzad, Alessid loved the boy. Perhaps, he thought,
because
Qamar was so like Azzad, the father Alessid had once adored.
It came Alessid's time to die, peacefully and without too much pain. There was time to finalize certain arrangements—to further endow the hospitals that had been Mirzah's pride, to distribute money among the poor, to order the planting of yet another small forest of trees. For each of his descendants he chose a small memento: a ring, a bracelet, a necklace, something to remember him by. In looking through the jewels given to him over a lifetime, he found the armbands given him the day he had wed Mirzah.
Love
and
fidelity
,
fertility
and
happiness
. His lip curled at the sight of the talishann carved into the metal, and he was about to toss both armbands from him when he remembered slim fingers drawing the same symbols on the corners of a letter. And a burning feather. And a thin smearing of blood.
“No,” he whispered to himself. “No. Not Qamar.”
“Al-Ma'aliq?” asked the servant who was helping him sort the jewels. “Is anything wrong?”
“Nothing,” he said, and heard his voice quiver, and said more strongly, “Nothing.”
To Qamar, who was the only one with him when he died—by Alessid's own order, as he felt death approach—he gave the chadarang service of carnelian and jasper long ago rescued from the ashes of the house in Sihabbah, and the topaz that had belonged to Azzad, and the pearl of Bazir al-Gallidh, and the hazzir from his own breast.
He watched through dimming eyes as the boy slipped the chain over his head. If Acuyib had been so cruel as to make Qamar what Alessid was terrified to admit he might be—
No. He would not die in uncertainty. He would believe, and it would be as he believed, for had not his belief created an Empire?
And thus was extinguished the light that was Alessid al-Ma'aliq, ruler of Tza'ab Rih. His daughter Mairid ruled wisely and well for many years. After her came her Khalila, and then Numah, and Qabileh, and Yazminia, in an unbroken line of succession, mother to daughter. The Empire flourished.
So too the Shagara—both those who remained with the tribe, and those who had splintered from it to dwell in their mountain fastness, no one quite knew where.
And so did Qamar flourish as well, although in the year after his grandfather's death it seemed to him that his life had been made a deliberate misery by his mother, who decreed that at twenty-one years old, it was time and past time for her wastrel son to learn the responsibilities of being a Sheyqir of Tza'ab Rih.
In brief, and to his horrified indignation, she made him join the army.
—RAFFIQ MURAH,
Deeds of Il-Nazzari,
701

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