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Authors: Sarah Zettel

Under Camelot's Banner (36 page)

BOOK: Under Camelot's Banner
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Instead, seeing Brendon quiet on his pallet, Gareth crawled out of the tent and stood up, bending backwards until his back popped.

It was a night full of stars. The waxing crescent moon hung low above the valley walls. He could see the torches of the men outside the walls on watch. Gareth stretched his shoulders until they cracked and swung his arms up over his head, letting the chill air clear his head.

Movement caught his eye. While Gareth watched, a figure in a dark cloak made its way down the ragged aisle between the tents, the banked fires and the sleeping bodies. The figure walked with a slightly rolling, slightly limping stride, and Gareth knew it for Lynet. He smiled. Another chance. He'd be courteous and correct. She'd have his apology, and she'd see he understood her worth.

But, abruptly, Lynet turned away. Walking fast, clearly trying not to break into a run, she hurried toward the fortress's far corner, where there stood the remains of a lean-to shed stood.

Gone to relieve herself?
Gareth thought, a little dazed. But the lady did not emerge, and worry claimed Gareth, though he did not know of what. He followed her path to the ragged shed, angling himself carefully, so that he could pull himself back into shadow quickly, if he was seeing only a private moment's struggle with nature's call, he peered inside.

Lady Lynet knelt on a pile of moldering straw. Her hands were cupped together, and a soft silver light unlike anything Gareth had ever seen before shone softly up from them. He gasped, then held his breath, lest he be overheard.

But Lynet heard nothing. She only looked at the light in her hands, her face void of expression, her eyes staring. She did not move. As he watched her for a long moment, his own heart hammering hard, Gareth was ready to swear she had ceased to breathe.

Gareth pulled back until he could not see that faint, fae light anymore. He stared at the shed. Then, he walked back to Brendon's tent. He sat down beside his fellow squire, and stared at the brazier. There he stayed until the dawn came, not moving, not able to move, only trying again and again to understand what he had seen, and what it could possibly mean.

Chapter Seventeen

Peran
.

Laurel stood atop Cambryn's western-most watchtower and breathed in the air from the sea. She tasted the salt like a balm on her lips, and felt the yearning pull. She heard the faint whispers without understanding them and felt the rhythm of the tide in her blood. She needed these things like she needed the beating of her own heart. They gave her strength, taught her secrets, and helped her keep the distance that let her see clearly enough to keep her promise to her mother.

Peran.

She sent the name out on the wind that was the gift of the sea. That wind wound its way into the yards of the
castell
. It would slip between the very stones of the hall if necessary and find him. It would wake him from sleep and tease at him like the whisper it was. It would make him find some excuse for the watchful Mesek, and it would bring him up here to her.

Peran.

She had never done this before, not deliberately, not for such a purpose. Yes, the sea wind had carried her messages before, and brought her news when she asked. But the only time she had sought to use the wind to compel a man to her side, it was the searing cry for help she had sent out to their father. The cry that had brought him to his death.

It was no more than a written message would have done, she told herself that morning. No more than as if she'd sent a rider on a fast horse.

But it was more. She knew it then, and she knew it now. But then, as now, she did not know what else to do.

Peran.

She hated the pall of desperation that stood between her and the calmness of mind she had always believed her special possession. But even now, her thoughts would not still themselves, nor had she found any certainty since Lynet had come to her last night. It was not just the news she brought — that Peran was indeed fighting both sides of the conflict that squeezed Cambryn — that so disturbed Laurel. It was that Laurel had seen Lynet so clearly. The shape her sister sent forth was growing stronger, and more real. That could only mean the flesh and blood woman was growing weaker, giving more of herself over to this other existence adrift in the invisible countries.

It was that which frightened Laurel more than anything she could name. There was only Lynet left. She had failed in every other way to keep Cambryn and her family safe. If she failed Lynet, she failed her mother utterly.

No.
She gripped the parapet stones. She was done waiting. Help would not arrive soon enough.

Not from the queen,
came the treacherous thought.

That was the worst of it. She knew she could summon help instantly, powerful and willing help. The wind whispered of its passage, getting further away, but still it could be reached. If Laurel just stretched out hand and heart, there was another woman, with a soul very like her own, who would hear her. That one had offered her all the power she needed to make sure she was never trapped again, and so that she was never so helpless that Lynet must risk herself as she did …

Stop.
Laurel squeezed her eyes shut.
Stop.

It had seemed the best idea. Get Lynet out of the keep. Then she could face their enemies without endangering her sister. But what had happened since? She had done nothing. She had sat here, in relative safety, with her shuttle and her needle, with these men breathing down her neck and her own people walking around on tiptoe. She had watched, night after night, while Lynet tore herself in two.

She heard voices below. The wind brought them, softly to her.

“Is she still up there?”

“And like to be all morning.”

“I think we've had about enough of this. I'll go pull her down off her perch.”

“Better you than me, Master.”

“You have anything to say about it?”

“You want to try to comp ell my lady Laurel to go when she wishes to stay, then God help you.” That was Taff. She'd sent word to him by Meg this would come. Good man, he'd obeyed her instructions, although she knew he'd been sharpening his knife, in case, just in case.

She heard the sound of boot soles ascending the steps. The wind swirled around her hems and blew her cloak back from her shoulders.

What are you thinking Master Peran? Why do you believe you've come?

The hatch lifted, and fell open, slamming against the stones. A moment later, Master Peran heaved himself out of the hole. His burns had at last begun to truly heal, she noted. Helped by Morgaine, the angry, mottled redness had begun to fade back to the pink of healthy skin, but it was much more pale than his untouched flesh, giving him a strange, patchwork appearance.

“God be with you, Master Peran,” she said.

“You do not seem surprised, Lady Laurel, that I should violate this sacred grove of yours.” He scuffed the stones with his heel.

“Nor am I,” Laurel answered. The sea wind teased her hair ends, circled her waist and drew itself across Peran's healing skin, waiting for her, not patiently, but waiting all the same.

Peran took a step forward, bending to get a closer look at her eyes. She let him, lifting her gaze to meet his. She could feel the sea light kindling within her. That light filled her, fed by the tide and the wind.

“You did this, didn't you?” he breathed. “You called me.”

“I did.”

His hands opened and closed, once, twice. “Why?”

“Because, Master Peran, I would know what truly happened to your son.”

“I thought that was what the queen was travelling all this way to discover. You cannot wait another handful of days?”

“My sister is in danger, Master Peran, body and soul. I will not wait.” The wind blew hard, from her to him, carrying word and breath, will and cold fire. “What happened to your son, Master Peran? You can tell me now.”

This was another deed she had never before committed in cold blood. She knew sometimes that the person before her had spoken only because of her anger, because of the cold light and tide within had her reached out, but she had never called on it before. It would be wrong. Mother's watchful spirit would not approve. Still, she had known it was hers and it was real. It was power like Morgaine might wield.

Let us see how it may be used against her slave.

Peran's face slackened and his shoulders slumped. The wind combed his hair back and ruffled his cloak. He turned away to look out over the greening country. It did not matter. Her wind had him now. She had no more need to see his eyes.

“He was a hero, my son,” Peran whispered. Although she could no more see his face, his whole attitude was of a man laying down a burden that had become too heavy to bear. “A hero like the bards sing of. He was taller than I, with hands that could bend iron, and a laugh that could make the willow gladden. He would have lead our people to greatness. Greatness.” He leaned his hands on the parapets. Laurel made no move. The wind gusted hard, once.

“How does illness take such a one?” he asked plaintively. “How does the winter's cold take his breath and turn his face blue and choke him to death? He was so strong, how could that be?”

Laurel made no answer. She was not Bishop Austell to speak of God's plan. She wondered what the bishop thought of that plan where he had gone.

“It was enchantment,” Peran said. “Poison. I knew it. I saw it in his eyes as they looked on death. And when death came … I … I carried his corpse to Morgaine. I laid him down in front of her and begged her to redress what had been done, to give my son back his life.”

Laurel could see him, this proud chieftain on his knees before Morgaine. The body of his son, dead eyes closed at last, lay between them. He did not weep or rage or shout. He pleaded with a father's grief over something too precious to be regained.

“She told me it was not magic that took his life. It was the illness that gripped him. Then she told me, if it was what I wanted, she could bring him back for me.

“She warned me it was a difficult thing, and that he might not live long. It was against the way of things, but it could be done.”

She could see this too, the sorceress, calm and sympathetic, warning with one breath, tempting with the other. She could have chosen to send this man away, to bury his son and mourn him. But she needed him, and so she took hold of his grief, and she used it against him.

“I told her I would give anything, do anything. She warned me again, and she made me swear. And I did.

“And she lit a fire and she burned resins in it until its flame was green as poison, and she heated an iron cup over that fire. What was in it, I could not tell, but she made me lift up my son's head and prise open his mouth, and from that cup she poured three golden drops.

“And in my hands he stirred, and opened his eyes, as if waking from his nights sleep. He was alive. My son was alive, and he called me father, and asked why I was crying.”

Laurel had gone cold. Her wind wavered, blowing hard, then dying suddenly away, as if it too wanted to flee from what it heard.

“But he was not the same, my son, now that he returned. His eyes that had been so warm, that had drunk in life so fully, had gone cold. Now he quarrelled with every man over the smallest slight. He rode into battle like Jove in his chariot, always into the heart of it, where the fighting was fiercest. When there was no fight, he prowled about, looking for something he could not find, looking with those cold, furious eyes.

“When, Morgaine sent word that I was to find a quarrel with Mesek, I actually blessed her for it. It would give my son something to do. His restless rages were becoming harder to contain, and men were beginning to whisper.

“So we took some cows to where they would be seen. We left slight guard so that they could be taken. The rest … the rest is as it was, except the end. The very end.” His voice went hoarse and halting with remembered pain. “When he saw the fire, a great peace stole over him, there in the midst of the screaming and the stampeding animals and the men with their knives and their swords flashing. He just stood there, gazing at the flames as if he had never seen anything so beautiful in his entire life.

“He walked into the fire. He did not even look back to tell me farewell.

“It was my fault, what happened. I did not watch him closely enough. I did not understand how his death still haunted him. I must serve her, you understand. I must. If I serve her well, she will bring him back again.”

These last despairing words Laurel would not have heard had the wind not carried them gently to her.

Peran's head bowed down and his whole frame shuddered. Laurel could only stand as she was and watch as he straightened, slowly and painfully, like a much older man.

“What have I been saying?” he asked heavily. “What have you done to me?”

“Nothing, Master Peran,” she whispered. “You have said nothing important. I am ready to go with you now.”

The wind fell away, becoming nothing more than a breeze to blow unimpeded around their heads, full of the scents of salt and spring. The light of the human soul kindled once more behind Peran's dulled eyes.

“Good,” he said. “And no more of this, my lady. You want to talk to God you do it in the chapel, is that understood?”

“As you say, Master.”

She walked docilely down the stairs before Peran, and she let her guard fall in behind her without comment. She walked to the hall and took her place at board, eating and drinking what was put in front of her, and tasting nothing.

All her mind filled with what Peran had said, and what Morgaine had done.

She had thought to hear a tale of simple deceit, something she could threaten him with. Being able to prove him a liar in public should have been enough to coerce him into some bargain without waiting for the queen. But this … what was she to do with this?

BOOK: Under Camelot's Banner
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