Roric stared for a moment, then started to laugh. “Are you still trying to get me killed, or is this one more challenge by which I prove my manhood? No, Hadros,” rising to his feet, “if the Wanderers still want me they will be able to find me, and if they do not I see no reason to attack an unsuspecting kingdom. I simply do not believe you that Karin loves Valmar rather than me. Tomorrow-no, today-I shall leave for Kardan’s kingdom to see her myself. I would prefer you to release me from my loyalty to you first.”
The king rose stiffly, glaring. “Valmar is my son and heir. You are pledged to him through your pledge to me. And I do not release you from anything!”
“Then I forswear my loyalty to you!” He tugged at the ring Hadros had given him when they first swore their oaths to each other, the ring the Weaver would not take. This time he got it off. He held it in his hand for a second, breathing hard, then hurled it at the king’s feet. “And I defy you as an untrue lord!”
Roric slammed out of the hall and rushed toward the stables, half expecting Hadros to shout for his warriors. But there was no sound behind him.
Also no Goldmane in the stables. He saddled one of the geldings as rapidly as he could. No time to go back to the loft for his small store of possessions. The knife the Weaver had returned to him should buy him passage if he could find a ship going to Kardan’s kingdom.
He galloped through the courtyard, hooves echoing, out the gate, down the hill and across the troll’s bridge. This was a fast horse, one of the fastest in the kingdom after his stallion. But there was no sign of pursuit.
Twenty miles along the coast was the little market port where Hadros sold his horses every year. There should be a ship in the harbor there, Roric thought, willing to take him. A mile from the castle he saw a raven perched in a tree, watching his approach with its head cocked to one side. Roric pulled up hard. He would send Karin a raven-message if the bird would carry it. It would take him at least two days’ traveling to reach her, and if she had turned to Valmar in despair, thinking him gone forever, he wanted to let her know he was coming.
He whistled to the bird, trying to remember just what one said when speaking to ravens.
3
Valmar and Karin walked by the seashore. She was restless all the time now, and Valmar walked or rode with her wherever she went, but if she knew herself what was wrong she was not able to tell him.
King Kardan, Valmar thought, did not yet seem to realize that his own father was busy planning their wedding. Karin had not spoken of it again, and it seemed too impossible to be real. But last night he had surprised himself into wakefulness from a dream of lying in her arms.
It was only the sudden change from his father’s court to this castle, he told himself, only the unusualness of seeing Karin dressed like a queen, that made him think of her as other than his sister. And it was the same change that had made him begin to think there might be more to life than the future his father had laid out for him, that his attempt to run after Roric had been more than the folly of a boy. At this rate he would soon want to be like King Thaar in the old tales, he thought, riding out to protect Karin from a dragon-except that no one had ever seen a dragon in this part of the world.
Karin looked out to sea; the north coast of the channel was too far away to be seen. Valmar looked instead at her, her great gray eyes, the angle of her cheekbones, the fine blond hairs around her forehead which were too short to be worked into her braids and blew back in the breeze. If she too had dreams, they were certainly not of him.
“Look at the ravens,” said Karin. “I wonder what they’ve found.”
A pair of ravens hopped along the strand, giving harsh cries and disturbing the gulls. Their jet-black plumage stood out among the light-colored sand and pebbles. They stayed just ahead of the waves that broke rhythmically against the shore. But there was nothing obvious washed up on the sand to attract them.
And then one of the ravens spoke. “Karin,” it said.
The word came out all sharp-edged and harsh, but it was certainly her name.
“It’s a message!” Valmar cried. “It must be a message from-” But here he stopped. His father, he knew, was one who spoke to ravens, but this was a strange way to send word to his foster-daughter.
But she had already rushed forward and dropped to her knees on the wet sand, heedless of her dress. “Yes, I am Karin,” she said, looking from one raven to another.
One spoke: “Karin. Roric is coming.”
And then the other: “Karin. Valmar. Beware of Roric.”
Then with deep caws the birds rose, almost in her face, and flapped away, back over the dark, foam-dotted waves of the channel. A single black feather drifted down to the wet sand.
Valmar hurried to Karin and helped her up. “Was that one message,” he asked, “or two?”
But her face was joyous, transformed. “Roric is coming! That means he’s safe!”
“But the other raven said to beware of him!”
“It must only have meant to watch for him. Valmar, he’s coming!” She startled him by hugging him hard, then took his arm to walk back to the castle.
“So he’s returned from the land of the Wanderers-or wherever he has been,” said Valmar. “Do you think he’s won treasure there?”
“I don’t care,” said Karin, still smiling so widely everything she said came out as a laugh. “I just want him with me again.”
“It will be good to see him,” Valmar agreed. With Roric here-although he did not say this to Karin-this plan to have him marry his big sister would all be forgotten. He told himself he would be glad for that.
Karin turned suddenly. “I cannot return to the castle. I must go down to the harbor. He may be crossing the channel even now!”
Valmar held her by the arms until she looked up at him. “Karin,” he said quietly, “it’s time for dinner. I don’t know if you’ve noticed these last few days, but your father is worried about you. That’s part of the reason I’ve always been with you-to keep him from sending his warriors along to watch you. Do you want him asking Queen Arane to come analyze what is wrong?”
“No, no, of course not,” she said with a laugh, but she looked yearningly toward the harbor as he steered her back home.
But at first light she went down to the harbor alone, not waiting for Valmar, not saying anything other than that she would not be back all day.
King Kardan took Valmar aside. “This may sound curious coming from her father, lad,” he said, striding back and forth in the middle of his hall, hands behind his back and his eyes down. “But I no longer feel I know my daughter. She grew into a woman in the years she was away, and I cannot hug her or tease her back into good humor the way I might have ten years ago. I had expected her to be joyful to be home again.”
“Oh, I’m sure she’s happy to be here,” Valmar stammered.
“She may have been at first,” said the king, shooting Valmar a quick glance. He had the same direct gray eyes as Karin. “But since we went to the burial mound-or even since that second day she was here, during the All-Gemot, when she went on that long ride with you and suddenly decided to spend the night in King Hadros’s tents again-she has been distracted, uneasy… I would have to call her miserable.”
Valmar actually agreed but did not want to say so.
Kardan put a hand on his shoulder so that Valmar had to join him in his restless pacing. “She told me she thinks of you as her little brother.”
“I am not her little brother,” Valmar startled himself by thinking. “I am going to be her husband.”
“She seems more content to be with you than with anyone else,” said the king, who fortunately could not read his thoughts. “Do you understand why she is miserable? Can you stay with her, cheer her as you may?”