The First Book of Lost Swords - Woundhealer's Story (34 page)

BOOK: The First Book of Lost Swords - Woundhealer's Story
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“Help me, then! Help me!”

      
And Karel did.

 

 

 

Chapter Twenty-Five

 

      
It took the experienced wizard even a little longer than he had anticipated to soothe and quell the elementals down into quietude, for their rebellious power had grown great. But eventually even their gargantuan energies had been tamped and dampened back within the earth. The local clockwork of the world was ticking on reliably once more. The image of the ancient-looking wizard in the unintentionally comic dress had disappeared, and Karel did not expect ever to encounter it again.

      
Once the job of settling the elementals was done, Karel remounted his riding-beast—the animal, relatively experienced though it was in these matters, required some soothing first—and proceeded on his way.

      
The unruly portion of the world had quieted—if it had not exactly gone back to its original conformation—and the local geography was once again almost completely stable. Almost, because Karel could see the farm still there ahead of him, and he knew from past experience that the farm had a way of its own with geography. He was not really surprised to see it right before him now, though the last time he had seen it (under quite different circumstances) it had been many kilometers from here.

      
When he reached the tall gate, with its green wreaths of vine and its decorations of horn and ivory, he found it unlocked. That was no more than Karel had expected. He rode on in, remembering to close the high gate carefully behind him lest any of Still’s livestock wander out. Here on the farm you always had to keep such practical matters firmly in mind.

      
As Karel approached the house he saw that he was expected, which by now came to him as no surprise. Outside the front door, two people were standing waiting for him. The first of these, to Karel’s great relief, was young Zoltan. The boy looked older than when Karel had seen him last, and a bit banged about and bruised, but essentially unharmed. Zoltan was dressed in clean farmer’s garb, and his half-curly hair was damp as if he might just have had a bath. He was holding a piece of pie in his fist, and his mouth was full.

      
Bulking beside Zoltan was Ben of Purkinje, still grimy and smeared with dried blood as if he had just come from a war. Ben was looking somewhat confused—Karel, remembering his own first visit to the farm, could sympathize. Ben welcomed the appearance of Karel as that of a familiar face in a strange land.

      
As Karel dismounted he smiled reassuringly at Ben. When the first round of greetings was over, he told the huge man: “There is magic, Ben, and then there is magic. Not all of it is accomplished with a chant and a waving of the arms. Not all of it turns parts of the world upside down.”

      
And then the Stills themselves were coming out of the house, and Karel spent some time in the joyful task of greeting his old friends in the way that they deserved. He showed them great respect, and also some of the envy that he could never help feeling when he visited here.

      
The Stills were prompt to assure him that Prince Mark himself was safely on his way to join them and would be arriving at the farm presently.

      
And now one more figure, a small one, had appeared in the open doorway of the house. Prince Adrian stood erect, looking at Karel with clear blue eyes; and then he somewhat shyly held out a hand in greeting. Karel was much moved. He half genuflected as he grasped the child’s hand and muttered something.

      
A minute later the gathering had adjourned to the kitchen—something that always seemed inevitable in this household—and everyone but Mother Still was seated at the table while she bustled around it, dealing out heavy plates and cups. A feast was rapidly taking shape before them.

      
Ben, who had stopped at the sink first to wash the stains of combat from his arms and face, was marveling at the seeming ease with which these preparations were being accomplished. Karel caught his eye, and said to him in an aside: “Whatever the task on this farm, working or fighting, it will be done well and quickly if someone works at it. That is the secret magic that these people have.”

      
Ben smiled vaguely, wanting to be reassured, not really understanding as yet. It took most people several visits, Karel had observed.

      
Adrian had been listening. “And it works for reaching the farm, too,” the child said. “Don’t forget that. My father is going to find it, because I’m here, and he’s really working at finding me.”

      
It seemed to Karel that the preparations had hardly started, the last clean plate dealt out on the table, before Mother Still was announcing that the feast was ready and taking her own chair at the table. At that point conversation was abandoned for a time except for the terse courtesies that were required to maintain a flow of serving dishes from hand to hand around the table.

      
Everyone took part in the cleaning-up that followed, and again it was all done almost before the visitors were sure that it had started. Each of them felt faintly disappointed that there had not been time for him to contribute more.

      
And then the party were all seating themselves in the parlor, and Farmer Still was lighting the lamps there against the first lowering of the shadows outside.

      
When Mother Still had established herself comfortably in her rocking chair with her knitting, she turned at once to Karel across the table and asked him: “Tell me, are you blood kin to the Princess Kristin? Or are you this child’s relative by marriage only?”

      
“Indeed I am blood kin. The mother of the Princess was my sister.”

      
“That explains it, then.” Nodding with satisfaction, the goodwife rocked her chair and shooed away the calico cat that was menacing her supply of yarn. “I thought as much,” she added.
      
“Then the child has a powerful inheritance of magic on both sides of his family.”

      
Adrian, sitting close beside Father Still at the moment, was listening intently.

      
“How’s that, Mother?” The farmer squinted at his wife. Meanwhile his large, gnarled hand had paused over the lamplit table, where he was starting to show Adrian the game of pegs.

      
“Father, I do wish you would try to keep up with family affairs.” The goodwife’s needles clicked. Her chair creaked, sawing at the floorboards, back and forth.

      
“Haven’t heard much from that part of the family,” he grumbled mildly. “All busy over there wearing crowns and being royalty and such.”

      
“Never mind,” his spouse chided him. “It’s still family, and they have a lot of things to worry about.” The cat (who was really quite ordinary in appearance) now sprang right up into her lap. Rocking industriously, Mother Still added: “His grandfather on his father’s side is the Emperor himself, you know.”

      
“This lad? Oh yes, I know.” Not appearing overly impressed, Still was now jiggling the Princeling on his knee.

      
“When,” Adrian asked them all in a clear firm voice, “is Daddy going to get here? I want to see him. I know he’s on his way, but when?”

      
Ben had turned his head and was looking at the child again with profound amazement. The huge man had eaten well at dinner—it was hardly possible to do otherwise in this household—but had had little to say, before the meal or after. Continuing to wear his battle-harness, and still showing some of the marks of war, Ben sat in a chair and marveled silently.

      
“The Emperor himself,” Goodwife Still repeated with quiet emphasis.

      
“Yes, of course,” her husband agreed. Either he had remembered all along about the Emperor, or he was trying to sound as if he had. Now he went back to teaching Adrian the game.

      
No one had yet answered the Princeling’s question. “Your father,” Karel said to him, “is really safe, and he is really on his way here. The people who were trying to harm him are either dead now, or far away.”

      
“I know,” said Adrian.

      
“Good. Well, then, about your father. People, or certain people anyway, can find this farm whenever they really start to look for it. At least they can if it’s anywhere near them at all when they start. And you’re here, and I’m sure your father is really looking for you. So he’s going to be here very soon. If you’re impatient, you could look for him yourself.”

      
“I’ve walked so much today that my legs are tired,” the small boy said. And in truth he looked and sounded physically exhausted. “And I don’t want to do any looking with magic. I don’t want to do any magic at all for a while.”

      
“A wise decision,” Karel nodded.

      
“Then play the game with me,” Still encouraged the child. “It’ll help you keep awake until your daddy gets here.” Then, having caught yet another pointed glance from his wife, he protested: “I
did
remember about the Emperor.”

      
“And I, for a time,” said Karel, rubbing his eyes, “forgot about him, and that Adrian is his descendant. To my own peril, and that of others, I forgot.”

      
“Will someone tell me one thing, clearly?” Ben of Purkinje boomed out at last, startling everyone else. “Why couldn’t Woundhealer help the lad? And what’ve you done for him now that’s worked this cure?”

      
“The Sword of Healing could not restore his sight,” said Karel, “because he was never blind.”

      
Ben only looked at him. Ben’s mouth was working as if he were getting ready to shout again.

      
Karel sighed. “I did not express that well. Let me say it this way: Adrian’s eyes, and the nerves and brain behind his eyes, had nothing wrong with them. He simply had not learned to use them yet.”

      
Mother Still, busy with her knitting, smiled and nodded. The farmer frowned at his pegboard game. Adrian was looking from one of the adults to another, and his expression said that he was too tired to talk just now unless it became necessary, and at the moment they were doing well enough without his help.

      
Ben muttered exotic swearwords under his breath. “Then why, by all the gods and demons—?”

      
“He began to use his eyes to see with,” Karel went on, “as soon as a real need arose for him to do so. He was ready by then to use his eyes. When that time came, he turned away from the world of magic, for almost the first time in his short life, and he entered the world that is shared by all humanity.”

      
Ben was still staring—now, the wizard thought, with the first glimmerings of comprehension.

      
Karel pressed on. “Take Woundhealer’s blade and draw it through the legs of a day-old infant—the babe will not jump up and begin to walk. Its legs have not been healed, because they were not crippled to begin with. The child is simply not ready to walk yet.”

      
“Talk about children!” burst out Mother Still. Her fingers continued their tasks with yarn and needles, but she gave the impression of someone who was unable to keep silent when a favorite subject had come up. “If you’ve ever had little ones about and watched ’em closely, you’ll have noticed that they generally work at learning one thing at a time. The important things, I mean, like walking and talking.”

      
“And seeing?” Ben was trying to grasp it.

      
“There are different ways of seeing,” Karel continued. “To Adrian—who has, I think, the greatest natural gift for magic that I have ever encountered—the most natural way to see is not with the eyes at all.”

      
Mother Still impulsively threw her needlework aside and held out her arms. Adrian, faced with this silent summons, jumped down from her husband’s lap and came to her on tired legs.

      
She lifted the boy into her own lap and passed a hand across his forehead. “These little eyes are learning to see now. But for a long time there was no need—or so it seemed to the little mind behind them. Because there were so many other things for that mind to do. So much to be learned, to deal with the other kind of vision that he has. Things that vision brought him might have hurt him badly if he had not learned how to deal with them.”

      
“To my shame,” said Karel, “I never really looked at him until today.” Turning to Ben, the wizard added: “Until now, Adrian has seen every person and every object in the world almost exclusively by the auras of magical power and potential that they present. It took me decades to learn such seeing, and I have never learned to do it as well as he can now. It is of course a fascinating way in which to perceive the world—but for a human being it should never be the only way. And for a child of seven there are certainly dangers—you remember the seizures he was subject to.”

      
Ben said: “He’s not been troubled with those, I think, since the Sword touched him.”

      
“Nor will they bother him again, I trust. Now he should—I think he must—put away all the things of magic for a time. Let him look at the world by sunlight and moonlight and firelight. Let him see the faces of the people in it. Let the struggle that has separated him from them be at an end.”

      
“For a time,” said Adrian suddenly, and they all looked at him.

      
“For a time only,” the wizard confirmed, “let magic be put away.” He looked around at the other adults. “It is a shame,” he said again, “that I did not understand the problem. None of us understood it—but I might have. Only I did not take the trouble. When I considered the child at all, I wasted my time, looking into the air and space around him for evil influences, spells and demons that were not there.”

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