It was unexpected: that’s why. What Eremis did was unexpected. His abilities were unexpected. No one could expect the unexpected. By definition.
Then she had it, had it so suddenly that she seemed to reach her conclusion without taking any of the steps which led to it.
Yes.
Oh, yes.
“Geraden.” She grabbed his arm, pulled him around to face her. “We’ve got to get back to Orison.”
Geraden stared at her in shock; his jaw dropped. For one moment that felt sickening, like a fall from a bad height, she thought he was going to protest, Do you want to run away? Then that danger passed, and as quick as it was gone another took its place; she could see it in his face: What are you talking about?
Oh, Geraden, don’t ask, we haven’t got time!
But he was Geraden, the man she loved; instinctively, he had always put her needs ahead of his confusion. Instead of making protests or demanding explanations, he said, “We don’t have a mirror.”
“Master Barsonage does.” With the ballroom of Orison in the Image.
“Flat glass. You can use it. I’ll go mad.”
That was right. Oh, shit. “Are you sure there aren’t any others? Didn’t the Congery bring any other normal mirrors?”
Hurry. Please. The creature was going to come through the rubble at any moment. And both King Joyse and Prince Kragen were down at the foot of the valley, vulnerable to those teeth—
As if the fact that he didn’t know what was going on only made him more resolute, Geraden wheeled toward the mediator.
“Master Barsonage. Do you have another mirror? Did the Congery bring any other mirrors?”
Barsonage blinked some of the wildness out of his eyes. “Why?”
“Do you have one?”
“Why do you want it?”
Terisa pushed herself beside Geraden, tried to make the mediator notice her. “We’ve got to get back to Orison.”
She was putting too much pressure on him; her demand seemed to increase his air of being lost. In a hoarse, dry tone, he asked, “Will you abandon King Joyse to his doom?”
Geraden clenched his fists, breathed, “No,” as if he were defending her.
Unfortunately, that just put more pressure on Master Barsonage. Terisa shook herself, forced down her fear, tried to give the mediator a better answer.
“I need to use Havelock’s mirrors.”
She had other reasons as well, but she couldn’t take the time to think about them, much less explain them.
At least now she had the Master’s attention. The effort to think clarified his expression, made his expression at once sharper and more human.
“What will you do?”
Hurrying past illogic, impossibility, uselessness, she replied, “Find Master Eremis’ stronghold. Stop him.”
Now Geraden stared at her the same way Master Barsonage did. At the same moment, they both asked, “How?”
“Unexpected abilities—” she began, fumbling for words, “unexpected actions—He can’t expect the unexpected. You said so yourself.”
Strictly literal, Master Barsonage returned, “I said nothing of the kind.”
No. Listen. Let me think. “I mean me.” Why couldn’t she think? The monster devouring the rubble might have been eating her mind away. “I’ve done something unexpected. Twice.”
Abruptly, with the beast already halfway through the piled stone, and the valley in panic, and Geraden and Master Barsonage staring at her as if she were demented, her sense of urgency and horror became too great for confusion. She knew how to think; she knew how to survive. She knew how to fight.
As if she were calm, she said, “When I got away from Master Gilbur, that wasn’t really unexpected. By then we knew I had some kind of ability. But when I changed the Image in the flat glass in the laborium – the first day after I came to Orison – that was unexpected. And when I changed another Image to escape from Master Eremis, changed it across all these miles – that was unexpected. We’ve never even tried to explain it.”
“Talent—” suggested Master Barsonage thinly.
She shook her head. “I don’t mean that. I’m talking about something else.” She faced Geraden squarely. “When you tried to translate me home, I ended up near the Closed Fist. That was your doing. You’re the one who works with curved glass. But it was the Closed Fist in spring. It was augury. You changed the Image across time as well as distance.
“But when I changed the flat mirror,” in shock, by reflex rather than conscious choice, “my Image showed the Closed Fist the way it really was at the time. In winter. How did I do that? How did I know what it looked like in winter?”
Geraden watched her as if she had staggered him and he was struggling to keep his balance. “I never thought of that.”
“And when I escaped from Eremis—” Now she addressed Master Barsonage as well. “I used the same mirror that got me away from Gilbur. That makes sense. I was familiar with the Image. But the Image itself had changed in the meantime. The only time I actually saw it, when I used it to get away from Gilbur, it was full of wind. But when I used it to get away from Eremis, there was no wind. The Image was different. How could I change the Image in that mirror when I didn’t even know what that Image looked like – when the Image I remembered was gone?”
Master Barsonage gaped. He would have looked foolish if the situation weren’t so desperate.
“You mean,” Geraden murmured softly, eagerly, on the verge of a revelation, “that’s part of your talent. You don’t need exact knowledge to change Images exactly. Something in you compensates for the things you don’t know.”
Right. Now she was focused entirely on the mediator, urging him to believe her, urging him to act. “I’m familiar with at least one of Havelock’s mirrors. And I can’t concentrate here, with that thing coming to get us.” And she had at least one other reason. “I need to get back to Orison. So I can make an Image – an approximate Image – that might take us to Master Eremis’ stronghold. It was dark, I couldn’t see. But I remember a lot of details anyway. Maybe they’ll be enough.”
For a moment, Master Barsonage went on staring at her as if her ideas were inconceivable, imponderable. He had the soul of a fence-sitter: he didn’t like hazardous decisions. Just when she was about to start yelling at him, however, he lifted his head and smiled, and all the wildness fell away from him.
“Why did you not say that from the first?”
Turning, he headed toward one of the Congery’s wagons, shouting for other Masters to join him as he ran.
Terisa was about to follow when Geraden snatched her exuberantly into his arms, whirled her in a circle with her feet off the ground and her breath gasping. “I knew it!” he shouted to the blue sky and the chaos and the slug-beast. “I knew we weren’t supposed to be here!”
Even though she couldn’t resist kissing him, she was thinking, Put me down you idiot we’ve got to go.
He put her down. Together, they raced to the wagon.
The Masters were unpacking a mirror which showed a limitless sea glittering under hot sunlight.
“I brought it on a whim, really,” Master Barsonage explained as the other Imagers set the glass as securely as possible in the wet snow. “It served us so well when we rescued you from the champion’s destruction of our meeting hall, I thought perhaps it could serve us again. When you demanded a mirror, I was reluctant to risk it. I was trying to imagine how it might be used to drown that monster.”
“I won’t break it,” Geraden promised. He was already beside the mirror, already stroking his fingertips along its beautiful woodwork. Despite the running and cries of the men, the desperate commands of the officers, the loud ruin of the monster’s teeth, he seemed to have no difficulty concentrating. To Terisa’s eyes, he shone with confidence and strength which made everything possible.
Nothing happened to the Image of the sea. Waves went on rolling their long, slow unrest from edge to edge of the frame; the heavens remained an immaculate blue unmatched by any color in the world except the sky’s hue above the valley.