Authors: Marion Zimmer Bradley
wry grin stole across his lips. "Damn, but you make me feel old!"
16
Margaret woke.
For a moment, she was not sure where she was. Then the faint moan of the wind
against the stone walls of her room bought her fully awake. She listened to the gusts
and smelled the odor of wet snow mingled with woodsmoke and the particular scent of
the silken hangings around the ceiling of the chamber. She was at Neskaya Tower, and
the storm that had battered the walls for two days was passing. Margaret realized how
weatherwise she had become in so brief a time, and had a pleasant sense of
accomplishment. Anticipating the weather was so much easier than mastering
telepathy.
She had been dreaming again. She thought she had been dreaming about the
dormitories at University, but now she realized it was another place with endless
corridors. Looking for something again. She sighed and turned onto one side,
snuggling beneath the covers.
What had she sought? If only she could remember!
It felt as if she had been looking for something all her life, running along dark
corridors and past shadowed rooms. There had been a time when those night journeys
had been full of terror. Now she knew the source of those memories, and they no
longer frightened her. Or, she told herself truthfully, they did not scare her quite so
badly.
Istvana Ridenow, who was now her teacher as well as her friend, said she would
probably never be completely free of the shadow which Ashara Alton had cast over her
for so many years. She had instructed Margaret in techniques that calmed her mind,
and that had helped. Still, just the thought of that terrible woman, who had enthralled
her when she was a child, was enough to set her shivering. Intellectually, she knew that
Ashara was no more. She her-
self had destroyed what remained of the Keeper months before. Emotionally, she didn't
quite believe it.
Margaret Alton smelled the balsam-scented sheets and blankets that covered her body,
and that other odor, the strange smell of the great matrices, charged with energy,
working above her. When she looked up, she could see the swathes of silk which hung
from the ceiling, now casting huge shadows in the dimness of the room. Her little harp
stood in one corner of the room, and there was a holo of Lew and Dio, but beyond that,
there was nothing very personal in the chamber. She had been tempted by a few things
in the marketplace, where she had gone with Caitlin Leynier, but she had only bought
some shawls and a set of petticoats. They were not up to Aaron's quality, and she knew
she was spoiled. She could have been packed and ready to depart from Neskaya in less
than an hour. Why was she so reluctant to settle in?
Maybe it was because her life had been so peripatetic before she came to Darkover.
Margaret knew this facile explanation was not the real reason she was not comfortable
making Neskaya her home for the foreseeable future. In spite of Istvana's efforts, and
the warm welcome she had received from the others at the Tower, she remained an
unenthusiastic student.
Margaret was restless, despite her efforts to be otherwise. Something deep within her
knew she was not going to remain at Neskaya very long. She could not define the
feeling, but she had it in her bones. It lacked the power of a foretelling, but it was
strong enough to trouble her. She had not discussed her feelings with Istvana, and had
done her best to conceal them. But Caitlin had asked her several times what was
bothering her, and she had been forced to make up excuses that left her feeling
dishonest. It was not a logical feeling, and after years of depending on logic, she felt
wary of trusting it.
After six months, she felt she had spent a lifetime on Darkover, and not a very quiet
one at that. No; closer to seven, she realized, and her heart pounded a bit faster. Soon
Rafaella would come back and take her away to Thendara for Midwinter. It had all
been arranged. If the winter storms didn't mess things up for her, she would be seeing
her father soon, and Mikhail as well. Sternly, she
banished her fears from her mind. The thought of him was too painful to dwell upon.
Margaret lifted her gloved hand and slid it out from beneath the covers. She held it
away from her, staring at its silhouette in the dimness. The matrix hidden beneath the
silk marked a division in her life, one she had not yet become reconciled to. She was
still Margaret Alton, Fellow of the University. But with each day, she became more this
other
person, this Marguerida Alton. Her marred hand seemed to represent all that she
had lost and gained.
It had been bad enough to find herself suddenly a telepath, but the addition of the
command voice was almost more than she could stand. She had worked on it with
Liriel at Arilinn, and after her adventure in the hills, it had seemed wise to ask Istvana
for additional help. She had not told the
leronis
about the bandits, but she had told her
about sending little Donal into the overworld. Margaret knew that Istvana was aware
she was holding something back, but the empath was too tactful to press her.
It had been a good choice, for Istvana, with her well-earned reputation for innovation,
had devised several useful exercises that gave Margaret a better understanding of this
part of her
laran.
If only the rest of it were so easily tamed!
She lowered her arm and tucked her hand back under the covers. The remnants of the
dream intruded on her musing with a rush. She had been deliberately avoiding thinking
about it for several minutes. She could feel the dream, simmering like a pot of water,
right at the back of her mind, getting ready to come to the boil.
What had she been looking for? The dream had gotten hazy as she became more
awake, but there was a disturbing
something
that lingered, like the odor of smoke in an
empty house. She hadn't been looking for something, not really. No. It was more as if
someone were calling to her.
At that thought, Margaret's mind immediately went to Mikhail Hastur. He was in
Thendara now, and hardly likely to be up in the middle of the night trying to reach her.
He had done that occasionally while he was at Halyn House, but since his return to the
city, he had only contacted her during daylight hours. Of course, he might have been
dreaming about her. It would not be the first time they had
trysted in a dream. That was always so sweet, so tender, that she always woke up
smiling.
Well, not always tender, she admitted, feeling her face heat in the darkness. He was,
after all, a man, with the healthy sexual energy that she knew men possessed. She had
caught the edges of a few dreams that were so passionate, so profoundly explicit, that
Margaret felt ravished when she woke. It was thrilling, but it made her squirm at the
same time. She still could not bring herself to think about the actuality—the hot,
sweaty, moaning event that might someday await her. All the years of overshadowing
had left her with a distaste for the physical, and she was not certain she would ever
overcome it.
Margaret wrenched her mind away from those memories and tried to think of
something else. Poor Mikhail! He felt so dreadful about how he had handled things
with Priscilla Elhalyn and her children, even though Margaret had told him that he had
done the best he could. He was, she decided, a little like her father, with an overlarge
sense of responsibility, and a perfectionist as well. That thought made her smile in the
darkness.
How ordinary I am, to fall in love with a fellow like my father. After all the
trouble I had with Lew, you would think I would have jumped at the chance to choose
an ordinary man like Rafael Lanart. Not Gabe, though. There is dull, and then there is
maddening; Gabriel Lanart-Alton would have driven me over the edge in a tenday.
Margaret did not like how much she missed Mikhail, how his absence was like a hole
inside of her. It made her fee} powerless and out of control whenever she let herself
think about him, and she hated that. All the feelings she knew she should have learned
as an adolescent—the healthy, natural lust, the feeling of being madly in love with
some handsome boy—had been repressed by Ashara's interference. But she could not
escape the longing for his laughter, the way his eyes crinkled and the pure sound of it.
And Mikhail was the only person Margaret knew that she felt she could discuss
anything with—even her father was not so accessible.
Reluctantly, Margaret drew her mind away from the image of Mikhail, and tried to
focus on the dream still fluttering in her mind. She had had many dreams of this
sort, lots of corridors and closed doors, shadow places. Sometimes she dreamed of the
dormitories at University, but other times she walked a maze which resembled Comyn
Castle. She had always thought she was looking for something, though what it could
be she did not know.
This dream was different. She did not feel so much that she was seeking something as
that something was seeking her. Calling her.
name.
Was it just some dreamer, Mikhail
or another, or was it something else entirely?
At the thought of her name, Margaret Alton, she had a sense that whatever it was was
no dreamer at all. Whatever it was, it felt old. No, ancient was a better term. She
shivered and huddled down under her blankets, drawing them tightly around her
shoulders. The thought of something ancient calling to her brought up memories of a
shining chamber and Ashara Alton. Hadn't she destroyed the last remnant of that old
woman in the overworld?
Her palm burned beneath the soft glove, and Margaret could feel the throbbing along
the lines of energy. It was not particularly painful, but it was powerful.
Nothing is ever
entirely destroyed, is it?
she thought.
I don't want to have to go back into the
overworld! Not now, not ever! What do you want from me! Whoever you are, why can't
you leave me alone!
She was trembling and breathing as hard as if she had been running kilometers, not
lying in her bed. Margaret tried to still her rising hysteria. It had been weeks since
she'd had an attack of the terrors, and she had thought she was over them. Ashara Alton
was no more, and she could not hurt her again. Tears began to spill down her face as
she struggled with her fears.
There was a light tap on the door, and Margaret jumped at the sound. "What is it?" she
called, her voice high and childlike.
Istvana Ridenow opened the door and entered. "That was my question. My dear child,
half the technicians in the Tower are having the cobwobblies. It is fortunate we were
not doing anything very vital! What's wrong?"
"Damn the Alton Gift! I didn't mean to broadcast, and you would think with all this
silk around me, I couldn't! I had a dream, not a bad dream, but a rather spooky one.
The dream itself was just the same old thing I've been
dreaming for years. I was in a place with a lot of halls and closed doors. I've always
had those, but they seem to be more frequent recently."
"Yes, I know. You told me about one or two of them. How was this one different?"
"I felt as if someone were calling me, and that made me think of ... of
her!
That was
what panicked me."
"There, there,
chiya.
Ashara is gone, and she can't hurt you any longer."
"Tell that to my subconscious!" The anger charged along her blood, and some of the
fear dissipated. Rage helped, but she hated being angry. It was all too reminiscent of
Lew Alton's inexplicable furies when she was younger, even though she never smashed
dishes or roared in the night. It made her feel stupid and helpless, in spite of its
cleansing qualities.
Istvana did not answer. Instead she sat down on the chair on the other side of the room
and closed her eyes. Margaret waited 'quietly, and the remaining terror faded away. She
looked at the petite woman, blonde hair now faded to silver, and a smile began to play
across her mouth. She was very like Dio in appearance, and she had some of the same
quality of assurance that had never failed to calm her. But it hurt to look at her, because
she did not know if she would ever see Dio alive and whole again. Sometimes the
physical similarity between the two Ridenow women was almost painful, but not
tonight.
"Yes. You are right. Something called you. I heard it,
too, though I didn't pay much attention. I think I must
have assumed it was Mikhail." Istvana spoke slowly, as if
still deep in thought.
.
"Why?" Margaret felt her cheeks flame.
"Chiya,
all of us are aware of ... well, it is hard to ignore how much you two care for
one another. It's very sweet, actually. I mean, ordinarily young love is rather like