Authors: Marion Zimmer Bradley
Then Marguerida raised her left hand, and Mikhail felt his fatigue begin to drop away.
Their shadow matrices mingled, meshing perfectly, and they stood warm and secure
within a pillar of blue fire.
How long can we keep this up?
A long time, Mik.
Are you sure?
No, of course I am not sure! But I don't feel as if I'm consuming my energies, nor yours
either.
"By Aldones! What is that!" The sound of a man's voice came from the whiteness, and
then the complaint of a horse. Mikhail released his concentration, and stepped back
into bitter cold and blowing snow. There were half a dozen figures riding toward them.
In a minute they were surrounded, sheltered by the bodies of the horses. Lew Alton
dismounted stiffly.
He did not speak, but only pulled Marguerida into the folds of his enormous cloak. As
one of the Guardsmen handed Mikhail a cape, he wondered how Lew had gotten there,
and how long he had been searching.
Lew Alton reached out and drew Mikhail against him. The older man pressed his lips
against his daughter's cheek, muttering incomprehensibly. Mikhail caught murmured
words of endearment, and then, to his astonishment, he felt Lew kiss his face as well.
There was a trickle of wetness on the bearded mouth that touched him, and he realized
that Lew was crying.
"I have been nearly out of my mind. We've been looking for you for hours!"
"Hours?"
"Can we have this tearful reunion indoors? I am getting frostbite!" Marguerida's voice
was brusque, but the wind muffled the sound of it.
"Quite right, daughter!" Lew turned, and a Guardsman dismounted. Mikhail saw that
he was leading their horses, his bay and Marguerida's Dorilys. Another of the riders
was untying the blanket that lay behind his saddle. He handed it down, and Mikhail
draped it around Marguerida. She clutched it closely.
In a moment, they were mounted, and trotting away from the ruins of Hali Tower.
Despite the cape, Mikhail was still very chilled, and it took all his endurance to stay in
the saddle. He could tell that Marguerida was having the same trouble, for she was
trying to keep the blanket around her while guiding her horse. Finally, one of the men
reached out, took the reins from her trembling hands, and led Dorilys.
Just when he was sure he could not go any farther, he saw the lights of the inn
gleaming faintly in the whiteness. There was a red light in the east, and he; realized it
was almost dawn. Had Midwinter Night just ended? Had merely one night passed in
their own time while they had spent days in the Ages of Chaos? Mikhail felt a peculiar
sense of disorientation. Lew Alton had said "hours."
The door of the inn opened, and welcoming light poured out onto the trampled snow in
the courtyard. Mikhail managed to get off Charger,
but
his knees buckled under him.
Two Guardsmen grabbed his elbows and half carried him inside. Lew had already
gotten Marguerida off her horse and carried her into the blessed shelter.
The warmth of the inn touched his icy cheeks. He could smell wood-smoke and
cooking cereal. His mouth watered. Then he shivered all over, for his robe was soaked
with melted snow. He was so tired.
At the same time, he felt remote from the present, as if part of him were still in the
past. He tried to push the-feeling away, but he could not shake the idea that a lifetime
had passed for him—another life in another world. He glanced down at the ring on his
trembling hand and sighed. It was going to take a long time to sort everything out.
The Guardsmen helped Mikhail into the common room of the inn, half dragging, half
carrying him toward the roaring fire, and set him down in a large chair. Incuriously, he
watched Lew set Marguerida down into a chair a few feet away. Her hand dangled over
the arm of the chair, the now bright metal of the
catenas
bracelet shining in the
firelight.
"Let's get them out of these wet clothes! Samel!" Lew shouted as he stood up, his face
a little ruddy in the firelight. "We want dry clothing—now!" The innkeeper nodded,
and hurried off. He returned almost immediately with some of the servants from the
inn.
Mikhail felt himself being hauled to his feet, as the sopping indoor gown was dragged
over his head. From the muffled protests across the room, he knew that Marguerida
was being stripped of her wet garments as well. He heard some scandalized squawks
from Samel's wife, and then Lew telling her "Modesty be damned!"
Mikhail collapsed back into the chair, relieved that someone else was in charge. When
a thick mug was thrust into his limp hand, Mikhail lifted it to his mouth and drank. It
was hot cider, so sweet it made his teeth ache, with something else, a dark underflavor
concealed in the sweetness. He felt a jolt of energy course through his body, and knew
it was bladderwort, a powerful stimulant. His body was screaming for sleep, which
would be almost impossible
now, but he knew it would help him resist the effects of the cold.
Warmth seeped into his body. Remoteness and exhaustion faded as the bladderwort
entered his bloodstream. Now, if he just had the strength to pull off his icy slippers!
But before he could rouse himself to movement, Lew knelt in front of him and pull off
his footwear. Mikhail was shocked and oddly touched. This was no task for a lord of
the Domains, and yet it seemed right to him. His father-in-law—the term rocked his
mind for a moment—never had been one to respect convention.
Mikhail looked over at his wife. She was wearing a thick blue robe now; her face was
very white and she was shivering. One of the servants had a towel and was trying to
dry her tangled hair with it. His beloved gave a little yelp of pain and pushed the
woman away with a weak gesture.
The bladderwort continued to do its work, and he almost wished it would not. He felt
acutely sensitive—as if he could feel every single thread in the robe he was wearing.
The light of the fire which had been so pleasant a few minutes before now seemed eye-
searing. He blinked away tears. It began to feel as if fire-ants were racing around his
body, both within and without, the sensation of invisible feet and clicking mandibles
almost real. He would gladly have jumped out of his skin.
The feeling lasted for only a minute, then faded away. His cheeks felt hot, and he had a
blinding headache. He rubbed his brow with a trembling hand, and felt the pain lessen
immediately. Without thinking he had used the ringed hand. How was he going to live
with this thing? How had Varzil managed? He sighed as the tense muscles in his neck
started to relax.
A grizzled head penetrated his field of view, and a spoon moved toward his mouth. The
innkeeper grinned at him, and Mikhail opened his mouth, feeling quite childlike, and
found mealmush on his tongue. It was something they fed the very young, after
weaning, and the very ill or old. It was thick and not very pleasant, but he swallowed
it, and let Samel continue to feed him, as Lew was feeding Marguerida.
After a while, he shook his head. "I can't eat any more right now, Samel. Thank you."
"Very good,
vai dom.
You just give a holler—well, a croak, then—if you want more."
"What I want now is some plain tea, the mint sort, with some honey. My throat feels
terrible." It did, but he was not surprised he had not noticed it earlier.
"Surely, surely." Samel bustled off, and in a few minutes, someone handed him another
mug, mountain mint sweetened with the famous honey of Hali. Mikhail gulped down
half of the mug, and felt his body accept it with greed.
He looked up, and found Lew Alton sitting by the hearth a few feet away, watching
him intently. Then he realized that Lew was not really looking at him, but at the ring
which sparkled on his hand. Mikhail followed the gaze.
The object on his finger shifted in the light, growing larger and smaller, almost pulsing.
It was never the same from one second to the next. Mikhail looked at it, felt his
awareness fall into the corruscating facets of the jewel, and then withdraw. He could
sense that it contained a vast amount of information. Each time he looked at it, he
seemed to learn something in a burst of energy. He shook his head and lifted his eyes.
He was too tired right now. It would take him years to understand the strange gem. No,
decades.
Mikhail shook his head, trying to clear his mind. He frowned. Something had
happened to him while he was in the lake—and he and Marguerida must have been in
it for a long time. He had had no sense of time passing, but he remembered that the
moons were not supposed to conjoin for forty days after the dream in the deserted
kitchen. If he counted the two days there, and the four they had spent captive, that left
thirty-four unaccounted for. And there had been a voice, he thought, instructing him,
while he floated in that peculiar place.
"Fascinating," Lew commented, interrupting his thoughts. Then he quirked an eyebrow
and waited for Mikhail to speak. When he did not, Lew added, "I have seen some
remarkable things in my life, including the Sharra Matrix, but nothing quite like that."
"No. It is unique. I do not feel entirely worthy to wear this, but I do not have any
choice." The tea had soothed his throat, and he no longer sounded like a crow. The
crow! All the grief he had not had time to experience welled up
in his chest, then sank away. He was still too weary, numb, and confused for it.
"No choice?" Lew sounded amused, as if he knew that condition very well.
Mikhail forced himself to respond to this playful tone, letting his sadness diminish.
"You could say that I freely accepted my destiny, and am now having a bit of regret."
Lew roared his wonderful laugh. "I think I know how you feel, Mikhail."
"I'm glad someone does, because I am not entirely sure I know how I feel. Glad to be
here, sad, bewildered—those are some of the more obvious ones. Were it not for the
ring, and this," he added, lifting his left arm a little so the bracelet showed, "I might be
able to convince myself I had dreamed the entire episode. I hope you do not mind, Lew
—but it really does not matter a bit if you do."
"Mind? That you have managed to accomplish what I could not? No, I do not mind,
though I am curious about how you came by those bracelets. The design is ancient, and
I also wonder who performed the marriage."
"Would you believe Varzil the Good did? In the Ages of Chaos?"
Lew had just taken a swallow from his mug when Mikhail spoke. His eyes bulged, and
he choked. He coughed for a few seconds, then glared at Mikhail. "No, I would not!"
"I did not think you would," Mikhail replied, with a deep sense of satisfaction at Lew's
astonishment. It was such a clear emotion, free of ambiguity, almost refreshing.
"And Evanda, I think," Marguerida added. "She was the witness, and she made some
excellent stew that I ate. A pity Mik did not have a chance to sample it, for how often
can one boast to have eaten the food of the gods." She laughed weakly.
Lew looked confused and slightly angry, "in did not know the two of you so well, I
would think you were making the entire thing up to irritate me.
Varzil? Evanda?"
"Well, I cannot be absolutely sure it was she, but she looked very much like that
painting on the ceiling in the grand dining room at Comyn Castle, after she stopped
disguising herself as an old woman, except her hair was brighter and her eyes were . . .
indescribable." Marguerida
sighed. "And, truly, seeing her was not the most remarkable thing that happened, was
it,
cario?"
"After she stopped . . .
chiya!
Can you at least try to start at the beginning, for the sake
of my aging wits?"
They both appear to be well enough, but they are so different. I
want to believe them, but it is so incredible, and
Dom
Gabriel is not going to swallow
any tales of Varzil They have both lost considerable weight in what has only been a
few hours, and . . . damn!
Marguerida looked toward Mikhail, their eyes meeting. He felt her tiredness and her
passion, her steadfastness, and something more. It was a change he had noticed earlier,
but the rush of events had kept him from realizing the meaning of it. She had seemed
different, more calm, and she had a glow which he saw she still possessed. Reflexively,
he swept her with a rapid monitoring, feeling his hand warm beneath the great stone.
My darling
—
you are pregnant!
Am I? Is that why I feel so peculiar?
But, how . . .?
We did make love for days and days, you know. And I have heard rumors that this
activity often leads to children. I have been so tired and so busy that I did not take a
good look at myself, but now I see. Yes, I see Domenic Alton-Hastur quite clearly. Very
healthy, and large for being only a week old.
Mikhail was overwhelmed. He could not speak for the feelings that rose in his chest.
He tottered up on unsteady legs, went over to her chair, and bent down. He brushed the