8
Deep in the Underworld, Flain
met many evils. He knew pain and shame and bitter loss. As he
walked, all their shadows clustered at his heels.
Book of the Seven Moons
“I’M THE STRANGER,” Solon
said quietly. “So I feel I should speak first.”
They sat around the table in the great wooden
room. From the garden the sun streamed in, lighting the tall images
of Flain and Soren and Theriss in the colored glass of the windows.
One shimmer lit Solon’s hands and bony wrists, showing clearly the
long, twisted scars.
“The choice is yours,” Tallis said to him kindly.
“No one expects it of you.” Her shape had changed. Now she was a
young woman, her long red hair plaited. He smiled at her.
“Yes, but I expect it. It will be a relief, in any
case, to be able to speak freely after so long.” Looking around at
their faces, he breathed out and said, “My friends, my full name is
Solon Karner. I have been a Relic Master of the Order for over
thirty years now. My master was Caradan Sheer of Tasceron. When I
was very young, even before the Emperor fell, I studied with her at
the Shrine of the Shells at Ranor.”
“The shrine!” Galen looked impressed. “Were you
there when it was burned?”
Solon’s face went bleak. “I was seventeen.” He
paused, fingering a bruise on his face. “I remember the columns of
the Watch riding up the hill to us, the running, the panic, books
being snatched up, relics hidden. But there were so many relics
there, how could we save them all? The beautiful gifts the Makers
had left—precious things, never to be made again in all the ages of
the world! I saw the Watch sear them with torches, rip down statues
and smash them. None of us could believe they were doing this. I
saw keepers fixed by crossbow bolts to the walls of their own
shrine, heard their screams, saw the Makers’ faces and hands hacked
out and trampled. I saw such things there, my friends, that I
prayed to God all my life for the power to forget them.”
They were silent. Carys flicked a glance at Raffi,
but he was looking desolately down at the table, away from her.
Galen’s face was set. In the next room, very faintly, they could
hear Felnia chattering to Marco.
Solon took a deep breath. “It is so hard to
forgive, Galen. Caradan was killed there. I had already made the
Deep Journey, and I escaped. Sometimes that too is hard to
forgive.”
“The Makers needed you,” Galen said gruffly.
“They did, my son.” He gazed over at the bright
glass image of Flain, standing with his hands out in the Field of
Gold. “And yet I have sometimes wondered why they let me live. I am
not greatly learned, not . . .” He smiled and shook his head.
“Well. Enough of that. For years I worked alone, among the people.
I gathered relics, prayed the Litany, fought the evils of Kest. I
made copies of all the books I could remember, beautiful copies
too, brilliantly colored, when I could beg the paper or make my
own.”
“What did you do with them?” the Sekoi asked
curiously.
“The books? Gave them away, my friend. Many people
hunger for knowledge of the Makers, now that the Watch have
forbidden it. So much has been lost, so much destroyed.”
The Sekoi nodded, but Carys noticed its baffled
glance and almost grinned. “Where did you live?” she asked.
Solon looked at her. “In many places. It wasn’t
safe to stay anywhere long. Villages up in the Mara Kush, mostly,
where people would hide me. I taught the children, held the feasts,
worked with the trees and the land where such energies could still
be reached. But relics were few and the Watch stronger every year.
Also, Kest’s work is growing. The Unfinished Lands spread; there
are many famines and diseases. I helped at outbreaks of these. Once
or twice, I was given the privilege of Healing.”
Tallis looked at him closely. “That’s a high gift,
keeper. You say you made the Deep Journey. May I ask what branch of
learning you reached?”
Solon shrugged. He seemed a little reluctant.
After a moment he said, “The twelfth.”
It obviously meant something. Raffi looked
awestruck and Galen sat back, gazing at the keeper with dark eyes.
“That was a great achievement,” he said, “for a man who is no
scholar.”
“My son, the Makers give. The achievement is
theirs.” Solon glanced sadly down at his scarred hands. “It was
because of the Healing that I met Mardoc.”
Carys jumped. Galen sat upright in excitement, his
face edged with the reflected colors. “Mardoc the Eighth? The last
Archkeeper!”
“The same.”
“Where?”
“In a village not far from Tasceron, two days
after the fall of the city.”
They waited. He seemed unwilling to go on, as if
the memory were a devastating one.
“Mardoc was hurt?” Tallis asked gently. “It is
said he was carried from the city, after the great
explosion.”
“Yes. He was hurt. I thought that was why they
sent for me.” Rubbing his face with the edge of his hand he tried
to keep his voice even. “It was a terrible night, there was deep
snow. The Archkeeper lay in a ruined barn, out on the hills, in
great agony. Only two scholars were with him. A villager fetched
me, then fled. The Watch were everywhere, searching the farms, the
villages, closing all the roads. The smoke of the Wounded City
could be seen for miles; the terrible stench, the broken lines of
power.” He smiled wanly. “Mardoc knew the Watch would find him
within the hour. One leg was shattered; he could go no farther. He
ordered me to leave him and to take the two boys with me. He made
me swear by the Book that I would take them and not look
back.”
He put his scarred fingers together, folding them
tight. When he went on his voice was hoarse. “We prayed together. I
offered him something for the pain, but he refused it. He wanted
his mind clear. We both knew that he would be tortured without
mercy.”
“Then you should have killed him,” Carys
said.
Solon looked up at her in horror.
“Did he explain,” the Sekoi put in hurriedly,
“about what had happened in the city? About what had caused the
great Darkness?”
“He said things. Meaningless phrases. Something
about the fires, and Kest. He mentioned the Coronet of
Flain.”
“What?”
Galen and Tallis said it together, and their eyes
met in surprise.
Solon was too absorbed in his memories to notice.
“He was such a small man, gray and shrunken and old. But he had no
fear, Galen, not even then. And he said to me—he put his hand on my
shoulder and sent the boys outside and whispered to me—that the
Order must go on, even if there was only one keeper left
alive.”
He looked up, eyes wet. “I have never told this to
anyone, my friends. But this is Sarres, and now seems the time to
make it known. Before I left him, Mardoc made me the next
Archkeeper. He gave me the ring and prayed the words of Succession
hastily over me while I kneeled in the muck, unworthy as I was. The
Watch say the last Archkeeper is dead, but only I have known, all
these years, that they are wrong. Because I am here. Solon the
First.”
There was utter silence.
Then Galen stood up. He went around the table;
Solon rose to meet him. For a second they were still, until Galen
kneeled, and Solon, hesitating, put his hands around the keeper’s
lifted hands, and said the words of Blessing; strange, meaningless
sounds to Carys, but to Raffi syllables of power.
And around the linked hands they saw it form, the
Ring of the Archkeeper, one of the Order’s most ancient relics,
long thought lost. It was blue, fine as steel, and it rippled and
ran as if it were a line of raw energy around the two men’s wrists
and fingers; even as they stared at it Solon’s skin absorbed it
again and it was gone, as if it had never been.
The Sekoi stood reverently.
Tallis had caught Raffi’s hand and they kneeled
too, and Carys stood up awkwardly, because she didn’t know what
else to do. She had rarely seen Galen so moved; for a long time he
kept his head bowed as if unable to speak, and when he did his
voice was raw with emotion.
“You should have told me.” He looked up, his gaunt
face keen with joy. “On the way here. You should have told
me.”
“I know.” Solon lowered his hands. “Sit down, my
friends. Please. Raffi, Tallis, please.”
He seemed embarrassed. And yet the authority he
claimed showed through; he was calm and could even smile now. “I
can’t say how relieved I am to have told someone. Such a secret is
a great weight. But it must go no further, and must make no
difference here. I was only chosen because there was no one
else.”
“You know the Makers act for a reason.” Galen
stood slowly, easing his stiff leg. “You are the rightful leader of
the Order.”
“Ah, but who knows how many are left?”
“How did you stay free?” Raffi blurted out. “How
did you escape the Watch?” He was fascinated, Carys knew. His eyes
shone as if he were hearing an old story come to life; she could
feel the excitement in him.
Solon shook his head. “We left Mardoc. I’ll never
forget looking back from the hills and seeing the black figures of
the Watchguard that surrounded that place. Nor how they dragged him
out . . .” He glanced again at Flain’s window, as if for help. “But
he had outwitted them even at the end, and though he went to the
torture, they say the Watch has never found the House of Trees. One
old man defied them. I pray his sufferings were short.”
The House of Trees. Carys wondered what he’d say
when he knew they’d been there. That she’d been there.
In the stillness the fire crackled. A leaf-scutter
rummaged in the beech tree outside the window. Felnia put her head
around the door. “Marco’s thirsty. Can I get him some ale?”
Tallis turned quickly. “Yes. Open a new flask. And
Felnia!”
The little girl came back. “What?”
“Stop listening at the door.”
Carys grinned. Felnia stuck her tongue out and
vanished.
Solon looked nervous. “Will she tell Marco?”
“No. She’s . . . been trained to keep
secrets.”
He nodded absently. “I must finish my story. I’ll
be brief. For years after Mardoc’s death I eluded capture somehow.
One of my scholars died—my dear Jeros, shot by a Watchpatrol as we
fled through a town at night. We had to leave his body lying there
in the dirt, without even a blessing. The other . . . he lost
faith. He renounced the Makers. That was an even more bitter blow.”
He cleared his throat. “Finally, last year, I was caught, digging a
relic up from some farmland. The farmer had his house burned and
went to the mines. I was . . . interrogated.”
He sat very still. Carys bit her lip and looked at
Galen, who stood up and stalked to the window, looking out.
“Where did they take you?” she asked.
“A Watchtower.”
“Number?”
“I’m not sure. Forty-five? At Feas Hill. A black,
bitter place. I had no idea there were such places.”
“What was the castellan’s name?
“Timon. I think it was Timon.”
Galen half turned and glared at her. She sat
back.
“I don’t know how long it lasted.” Solon’s long
fingers rubbed the scars on his wrists; Carys knew he would have
more, all over his body. “A stinking cell, endless beatings,
torments. They have worms of Kest that devour flesh, burrow into
the skin . . .”
His voice broke.
Tallis reached out and took his hand, and he
smiled at her. After a moment he struggled on.
“All the brutality you have heard of the Watch, my
children, all of it is true. I heard men tortured in other cells
around me, screaming to die. And I was no hero. They broke me down
soon enough. I would have told them anything they asked, because
after a while there is only pain. The agony in your body fills all
the world. I forgot the Order, but the Makers did not forget me. In
one corner of my cell I scratched an image of Soren. No one else
would have recognized it. In all the delirium and fear and darkness
I sometimes thought she was there, speaking to me . . .”
Galen swung around. “And the Ring?”
“They never found that. As you know it cannot be
seen or felt unless I wish it. I managed never to wish it.”
“You were lucky,” Carys said bluntly.
“I was. I knew so little that was of any use to
them. I had seen no other keepers for years, knew no safe houses,
no passwords, no networks of hiding places. In the end, I suppose
they just grew tired of me. The Watch always have more prisoners to
ill-treat. I was left alone for weeks. Then, one day, we were
chained up and brought to Telman, to the Frost Fair, eleven of us.
One died on the way. Marco and I were shackled together on the
journey, the iron cutting into our legs. We became friends—unlikely
friends, I admit, but then, we both fully expected to die, and I
wanted to convert him. I thought I had accepted death. Until you
came running up to me, Raffi, and the ice shattered. I still do not
understand how that was done. But I thank Flain for his mercy.” He
smiled gently at Tallis, drawing his fingers back. “And you,
Guardian, for your peaceful island.”
She nodded, but from the window Galen said
bleakly, “How much do you know about this Marco?” He turned, and
they saw his face was dark. “Why were they holding him?”
“Ah.” Solon looked awkward. His fingers stroked
his neck as if he felt for awen-beads that had been long lost.
“Yes. Marco. He’s a good man, Galen. He tried to get free one night
and they beat him with chains for it. He may not think quite like
us, but . . .”
Galen came closer. He looked grim. “Archkeeper.
What had he done?”
The older man smiled unhappily. “You won’t like
it.”
“I can see that. Tell me.”
Solon scratched his cheek. Then he said, “It
appears Marco went back on a business deal with them. He cheated
them. I’m afraid he is—was—a dealer, Galen. He sold relics to the
Watch.”