“What have you been told?” Gil asked.
The eyebrows lifted again, and the cool gaze took her in, shabby and dirty and bedraggled beside his immaculate height, wordlessly expressing regret at the type of people Ingold chose as friends. “That Ingold cannot, or will not, let you return to your own land. Surely he spoke to you of it.”
“Why not?” Rudy demanded. He had come hurrying, unnoticed, in Gil’s wake.
Alwir shrugged. “Ask him. If he is still in Karst, that is—sudden arrivals and departures are his specialty. I have seen nothing of him since he left the meeting, quite some tune ago.”
“Where is he?” Gil asked quietly. It was the first time she had spoken with Alwir, the first time, in fact, that she could remember the tall Chancellor taking even a passing notice of her, though there was an uneasiness in her mind associated with him, quite apart from her suspicions about who had ordered Ingold’s arrest.
“My child, I haven’t the slightest idea.”
“He’s been staying in the gatehouse,” landchief Tirkenson grunted, his big, grimy hand gesturing toward the narrow fortification that overspanned the court gate. “I haven’t heard he’s left town yet.”
Gil turned on her heel, making for the tiny door of the gatehouse stair without a word.
“Gilshalos!” Alwir’s voice called her back. In spite of herself, she stopped, compelled by the command in his tone. She found she was breathing fast, as if she had been running. Wind stirred the tall man’s cloak, and the blood rubies glittered on his hands. “No doubt he will have good reasons for what he does—he always does, my child. But beware of him. What he does, he does for his own purposes.”
Gil met Alwir’s eyes for the first time, as if she had never before seen his face clearly, studying the proud, sensual features as if she would memorize them, the droop of the carved lips that showed his disdain for those beneath him, the arrogance in the set of the jaw, and the ruthless selfishness in the glint of the eyes. She found herself shivering with a pent-up rage, and her hands remembered their grip on the hilt of a sword. “All men have their purposes, my lord Alwir,” she said quietly. She swung about and left him, with Rudy following.
Alwir watched them go, vanishing into the black slit of the gatehouse door. He recognized Gil’s hatred for what it was, but he was used to the hatred of his inferiors. He shook his head sadly and dismissed her from his mind.
Neither Gil nor Rudy spoke as they climbed the black, twisting stair. It led them to a room, hardly wider than a hallway, situated over the gate itself; warped windows of bull’s-eye glass admitted only the cool whiteness of the light and blurred swimming impressions of color and shape. The place had been built as the quarters for the gate porter, but was now used for the storage of the Guards’ food. Sacks of flour and oatmeal lined the walls like sandbags on a levee, alternating with wax-covered wheels of scarlet cheese. Over a low pile of such provisions at the far end of the room a blanket and a fur rug had been thrown; a small bundle of oddments, including a clean robe, a book, and a pair of knitted blue mittens, was rolled up at the foot of this crude bed. Ingold sat in the room’s single chair next to the south window, as unmoving as stone. The cold white window-light made him look like a black and white photograph, etched mercilessly the deep lines of age and wear that ran back from the corners of his heavy-lidded eyes to his shaggy temples, and marked with little nicks of shadow the scars on his hands.
Gil started to speak, then saw that he was looking into a jewel that he had set down on the windowsill, staring into the gem’s central facet as if seeking some image in the heart of the crystal.
He looked up at them and smiled. “Come in,” he invited.
They picked their way cautiously through the clutter of the room to the small patch of clear floor space by the wizard’s bed. They found seats on sacks and firkins.
Gil said, “Alwir tells me you’re not sending us back.”
Ingold sighed but did not look away from the bitter challenge in her face. “I’m afraid he’s right.”
She drew in a deep breath, pain, fear, and dread twisting together within her. Crushing emotion under an inner silence that she could not afford to break, she asked quietly, “Ever?”
“Not for some months,” the wizard said.
Her breath leaked out again, the slow release of it easing nothing. “Okay.” She rose to go.
His hand closed over her wrist like a snake striking. “Sit down,” he said softly. She tried to pull her arm away, without replying, but his hand was very strong. “Please.” She turned back, cold and angry; then looking down she saw something in his blue eyes that she’d never expected to see—that he was hurt by her anger. It shook her to the heart. “Please, Gil.”
She stood apart from him for a moment, drawn back to the length of her arm. His fingers were locked around her wrist as if he feared that if he released her, he might never see her again. And maybe, Gil thought, he’d be right. She saw again the vision of her delirium: warm, bright images of some other life, another world, friends and the scholarship she had hoped to make her life, distant from her and guarded by some dark, terrible form that might have been the Dark and might have been Ingold; she saw projects, plans, research, and relationships falling into a chasm of absence, beyond her power to repair. Rage filled her like dry, silent heat.
Behind her, Rudy said uneasily, “Months is a long time to play tag with the Dark, man.”
“I’m sorry,” Ingold said, but his eyes were on Gil.
Trembling with the effort, she let go of the rage. Without it to sustain her, all the tension left her body. Ingold drew her gently to sit on the bed beside him. She did not resist.
“I should have spoken to you before the council,” Ingold said quietly. “I was afraid that this would happen.”
Gil still could say nothing, but Rudy ventured, “You said something about that yesterday morning, when you were taking off for Gae with the Guards. About how, if the Dark showed up, we maybe couldn’t get back.”
“I did,” Ingold said. “I feared this all along. I told you once before, Gil, that our worlds lie very close. Close enough for a dreamer to step inadvertently across the line, as you did. Close enough for me to step quickly from one world to the next, like a man stepping behind the folds of a curtain. In time this closeness will become less, as the conjunction between worlds comes to its end. At that time, Dark or no Dark, it will be safe enough for me to send you back through.
“I am aware of the Void, always and subliminally, as I am aware of the weather. The first time I crossed it, to speak to you in your apartment, I was aware of a weakening all through its fabric in the vicinity of the gate, that I had made. Even then, I began to fear. The Dark Ones do not understand the Void, but I think then they were first aware that it exists. And after that, they watched. The second time I crossed, escaping the battle in the Palace at Gae, I felt the single Dark One follow me across. The opening that I made caused a whole series of breaks in the Void. Most of them would not have admitted a human, but the Dark, with their different material being, were able to use at least one. That was why I tried to get you away from the cabin, Gil. But naturally, you were both too stubborn to go.”
“I was stubborn?” Gil began indignantly. “You were the one who was stubborn … “
“Hey, if you’d told me the truth, man … “
“I did tell you the truth,” the wizard said to Rudy. “You simply didn’t believe me.”
“Yeah, well … ” His grumbles trailed off into silence.
Ingold went on. “I felt that sending you back yesterday would be marginally safe, with the Dark Ones fifteen miles off in Gae. But now it’s out of the question. The single Dark One who crossed with me increased their awareness of the Void. And they know, now, that humans exist in the world on the other side.”