The Lord of Niccon stared at him like a man asleep with his eyes open and nodded. “Yes.”
“I will bear the cost for them.”
“When do you want them?”
Rok smiled a little. “Soon, but there is no great hurry. I am sure Drede will wait for us.”
He put the Lord of Niccon into Lynette’s care when he had done with him, and she took him, puzzled, half-drunk, but enthused, to the same chamber where the Lord of Hilt had slept a week before. Sybel rose and paced a little through the empty hall; Rok watched her. “What are you thinking?”
“If I bring the animals into the battlefield, will Coren see them?”
“He can hardly avoid seeing Gyld. But the others… In the crush of men, the close flash and thrust of battle, he will probably notice nothing he does not expect to see. Why would you risk them, though? There is no need.”
A little, tight smile played about her mouth. She said softly, “The Prince Ilf went one day with fifty men to capture the lovely daughter of Mak, Lord of Macon; on the way Ilf saw a black mountain Cat with fur that gleamed like a polished jewel. The Cat looked at him out of her green eyes, and Ilf gave chase and no one saw him or his fifty men on earth again. The three strong sons of King Pwill went with their friends hunting one day, and saw a silver-bristled Boar with great tusks white as the breasts of their highborn wives, and Pwill waited for them to come home, waited seven days and seven nights, and of those fifteen young men only his youngest son ever returned from that hunt. And he returned half-mad.”
Rok stared at her. “So will Drede be, seeing parts of his army vanish before his eyes. Will they do this for you?”
“Yes.”
“Even the Boar? You said he did not approve.”
She traced a meaningless design on an oaken tables with her forefinger. “He will do this if I command him to. The Swan I will send to Tam, to fly with him to Eld Mountain if at any moment his life is in danger. And Ter Falcon will guard Tam.”
“And Gyld?”
Her eyes narrowed in a slow smile. “Gyld will bring Drede to me.”
Rok’s head moved once from side to side. “Now,” he said softly, “I am beginning to pity Drede.”
There was a step without. They turned to see Coren, his hair bright in the summer light, pause at the open doors, one hand on the stones. He looked at Rok and asked softly,
“Why did you lie to me about Eorth?”
Rok sighed. “Because I was telling lies to the Lord of Niccon, and I did not want you embarrassing me with the truth.”
“You are lying to me now.” He stepped forward into the quiet, sun-streaked hall, came to stand so close to Rok there was scarcely a hand’s breadth between them.
“Why did you need my wife beside you while you told lies to Derth of Niccon, who could barely recognize truth if it leaped like a salmon from the bottom of his wine cup?”
“Coren,” Sybel said, but his eyes did not move from Roles face.
“There are things I do not understand about this war you plot. There are things I am not sure, now, that I want to understand. How you persuaded that old man, Horst of Hilt to your side, when last winter you sent me to him and I found him terrified of Drede, wanting only to live out his days in peace, to forget his unfortunate daughter and the chaos she made of Drede’s love. Why Derth of Niccon, whose older brother you killed at Terbrec, would come and sit beside you, drink your wine and plan a war with you? Why you planned this war before you even spoke to them? And why, if there are simple reasons for all these things, you did not have the courtesy or the regard for me to tell me before I had to ask?”
Rok was silent. He drew a long breath, his eyes hidden in his still face, and Coren’s hands closed at his sides.
“Do not lie to me again,” he whispered.
“Coren,” Sybel said. His eyes moved slowly from Rok’s face to hers, and she saw in them the dark, reluctant blooming of his doubt. For a long moment they stood motionless, their eyes locked, still as the sunlight falling against the crushed summer flowers on the hall floor. Then Coren moved away from Rok, went out of the hall, down the steps to the yard. Rok watched his head gleam in and out of the shadows. Then he heard the sharp catch of Sybel’s breath and turned.
“What did you do?” he breathed incredulously.
“I did not mean to—” Her hands rose, covering her mouth. “I did not mean to— Not to Coren—not Coren. It was— I did not know what to say to him—and it was so easy—”
“But what did you do?”
“I made him forget what he saw today, what he asked you. I am sorry.” She began to tremble suddenly, and tears slid glittering between her fingers. “I am so sorry. It was so—easy.”
“Sybel—”
“’I am frightened.”
“Sybel.” He went to her, held her gently by the shoulders. “It was no worse than lying to him.”
“It was! It was! I took things from his mind—as—Mithran would have taken them from mine—it was a thing no one should do, in either love or hate—”
“Sh. Sybel, you are tired from the work this morning, and you forgot what you were doing. There is no great harm done. It is better for him this way, and you will never do it again.”
“I am afraid.”
“Hush, you did little harm, little more than lying—you will not do it again.”
’No. “
“Then do not worry.”
Her eyes, staring wide out of the empty doorway, came back to his face. “You do not understand. He—he thinks I am honest. And I have lied to him since the day I married him.” She looked down suddenly at his hands, as though realizing for the first time that he was holding her. She pulled away from him, ran to the door.
She saw Coren walking out the main gate toward the open fields and ran after him through the yard, past the billowing smoke of the smithy, the pound of hammers from the carpenter’s shop, the startled faces of farmers and warriors, moving aside so she could pass. Coren heard her call finally and stopped on the dusty road. He waited for her, the smile on his face fading as she neared him. He lifted his hands, caught her, and she crept close to him, her head against his shoulder.
“Hold me, Coren,” she whispered, and his arms formed a circle of peace about her. He felt her trembling.
“What is it?”
“Nothing. Just hold me.”
“You have been crying.”
“I know.”
“What has made you cry?”
Her eyes opened, dark, to the hot fields and the shimmering sky. She felt his hold tighten. “I was thinking,” she whispered, and the words burned through her throat, “of myself without you… and how I could not bear it.”
“Sybel, what can I say to comfort you? There will be no comfort in this war until it is over. But you were right somehow: Rok is not mad and there is, through some magic I do not understand, a chance for Sirle. So perhaps it will be brief—though that cannot comfort you much either, where Tam is concerned. But I am so glad that you still care enough to cry about me in spite of this.”
“I care. I care.” She stirred finally and his arms dropped. He glanced around puzzledly at the green fields.
“I forgot why I came out here. You frightened me, running toward me with your hair like a silver wake and tears on your face.”
“Yes. I made you forget,” she whispered. “I am sorry.”
He put his arm around her, and they walked back together to the house, black crows fluttering upward from the fields around them as they passed.
She spoke to her animals that evening. She had called Ter Falcon from Mondor; he came in the twilight, shooting like a star from the blue-black sky. He perched among the rich green leaves of the summer trees, and she said to him,
Ter. Tell me of Drede.
He is a man afraid to the core and the bone, said the glittering-eyed Falcon. He shouts in his sleep at night, and a torch burns always in his room. He is afraid of the night shadows. A fear beyond the fear of battle grows behind his eyes like thick, winter ice. There are whispers that he is going mad, but he contains himself, saying little.