24
In the night the innkeeper
crept into her room. The purse lay on a table; stealthily he opened
it. One gold coin fell out. Then another. And another. The
innkeeper capered with delight. He ran down the stairs and called
to his wife.
“We’re rich!” he cried. The
gold kept coming. More and more of it. And then he knew he couldn’t
stop it.
Agramon’s Purse
SHE SHOULD HAVE KNOWN he
wouldn’t be surprised. For a moment he almost smiled at her.
Then he gave the Sekoi a sharp look. “Is it
true?”
The creature made a mew of disgust. “Of course
it’s not true! I would have told you at the beginning!”
“You might not have known.” Dangerously tense,
Galen turned on the Council of Seven. “Tell me the truth,” he said.
“I ask you in the name of Flain and all your own secret gods. Do
you have the Coronet?”
The seven Karamax exchanged glances. Behind their
masks their eyes were sharp and uneasy. Finally one of them
shrugged.
“All right. We do.”
The silence in the tent was immense; it was the
Sekoi who broke it. It snarled angrily in the Tongue, all the fur
on its neck swelling with rage.
The Karamax spoke back, rapidly, three of them,
but the Sekoi flung away, disgusted. “Galen,” it snapped, “I swear
to you I had no knowledge of this. None!”
“Liar,” Carys said calmly. She folded her arms.
“Admit it. You knew the whole time. And this Watchspy business.
There is someone else who knew about the
Crow. It’s you!”
“Stop it.” Galen’s eyes were black. “We don’t have
time. The Coronet is what we’re here for.”
He watched the seven closely. “You must let us use
it. I swear we won’t try to take it from you. You say our enemies
are yours—then work with us. Help us!”
A Karamax with gray fur and a black and gold mask
shook its head. “Unthinkable. We don’t know your reasons.”
“Indeed,” the red-furred female said kindly. “You
must plead your case. On the strength of it we will make our
decision. And it will be final. Agreed?”
Galen turned. “Well?”
The Sekoi shrugged angrily. “You’ve got no
choice.”
“Solon?”
“Yes, my son. And I will speak.”
Galen turned back. “Agreed,” he said
heavily.
The sentinels went back to the door. Carys pushed
past Marco and sat by Raffi. She poured out blue sherbet water.
“Glad to see me?”
“What happened to you?” he whispered.
She drank thirstily. “Tell you later. I want to
hear this.” Only Solon was standing now. Around him the red tent
rippled and flapped in the rising wind; before him on silk cushions
the Karamax sat, eyes bright in the slits of their masks. The gray
owl flew soundlessly onto its perch. It preened out one downy
feather that drifted to the floor.
Solon seemed uncertain how begin. “Friends,” he
said at last. “You’ve heard our story. Our search for this relic
has been a strange one, and time is running out. The Makers have
told us that the Coronet is a device that will stabilize something
they called the weather-net. It will also, we hope, arrest the
movement of the moon Agramon.”
The Council eyed one another.
Marco shifted, restless. “Come on, old friend,” he
breathed.
Solon licked dry lips. He gave his kindest smile.
“Believe me, we understand that gold is precious to you. But this
relic is small. It weighs little. And because it was Flain’s, that
makes it the property of his successors, that is, the Order. I am
Solon, Archkeeper of the Order. I am the last successor of
Flain.”
Marco’s eyebrows shot up. He looked at Raffi.
Raffi nodded, silent.
“The weather is decaying,” Solon went on, holding
his hands out. “Anara is dying. From all sides come reports of
hurricanes, floods, destruction. Whole populations of birds and
animals swarm and panic. We will all be killed if it worsens, both
Sekoi and Starmen. I beg you to listen to us. We are not the Watch,
my friends; we want only what is good for us all. Too many have
suffered already; we have seen men and women injured and weeping
over their children’s bodies. Soon more will be homeless; there
will be famine and disease. For Flain’s sake, for all our sakes,
let us use the Coronet. It is little enough to ask. You are a
gentle race. I know you will help us.”
He sounded so wise and anxious that Raffi felt a
great hope. They could never turn him down.
Solon let his hands fall.
The red-furred Karamax stood and looked at the
owl. One eye open, the owl looked back. The crimson walls rippled,
rain pattering on them.
The Karamax cleared its throat. “Thank you,
Archkeeper,” it said softly. “We are saddened at your distress. We
see the marks of the pain you have suffered. Because of that, we
have decided to tell you things here that few others of your kind
will ever have heard.” To their surprise it reached up and took its
mask off, and they saw a young female, with a tribemark under one
ear. “First, your claim as successor of Flain. We cannot admit this
as a factor. The Sekoi own the Coronet now, we have had it for
centuries. We have no laws of inheritance or restitution.”
The Sekoi sighed, and shook its head.
“Secondly, the weather. This decay has long been
predicted.”
“By whom?” Solon asked, startled.
“You are not the only ones with sacred stories.”
It smiled slyly. “My people know the Makers will return. Before
they come, many evil portents will occur. It is said that the sky
will darken and the moons, one by one, will fall from the sky. The
land will shake and the things of Kest, even the Margrave himself,
will be destroyed. The planet will be cleansed. This is what has
started to happen. We do not wish to interfere.”
“Then you must be alarmed . . .”
“Not at all. For we are ready. The Sekoi will not
be touched by this disaster. We have ... places. Secure places,
deep underground. Here we will wait until it is safe to emerge.
This is the reason for our gathering. Soon every Sekoi will vanish
from Anara, and no Starman will know where we have gone.”
Except me, Carys thought idly. But no, the Palace
of Theriss would have a fit if it had to accommodate all these. She
wondered just how many secrets the Sekoi had. The Watch had
underestimated them all these years.
“What about us?” Marco demanded. “The rest of
us?”
The red-furred Sekoi looked at him. “We do not
know. Maybe your Makers will come in time to save you.”
“I don’t believe in the Makers.”
The Karamax blinked. “Then you are a fool,” it
said quietly.
Marco looked so astonished that Raffi almost
smiled.
“So you will let the world be ruined?” Solon was
appalled. “Allow hundreds of people to be killed?”
“It has been foretold. The Coronet is only a
circle of gold. It can do nothing to stop the decay.”
“But it can!” Galen couldn’t keep silent any
longer. He leaped up, the shadow of the Crow crackling around him.
Side by side with Solon he faced them. “We know it can! Surely your
obsessed lust for gold is . . .”
“You do not understand.” The Karamax pointed.
“Your friend there. He understands.”
The Sekoi was huddled miserably among the
cushions, gnawing at its nails. It gave Galen a bitter look. “It’s
no use. They won’t give it up.”
Galen spun back. “Explain. Tell us!”
“It concerns the Great Hoard.”
Immediately the owl made a small chirring noise.
The female Karamax went to it and spoke, then stroked its plumage.
“For hundreds of years my people have collected gold. Your Order
and the Watch have always wondered where it went. Some thieves”—its
glance flickered to Marco—“have even tried to find it. No one ever
has. The purpose of the Hoard is a hidden one, but because you are
the Crow, Galen Harn, and this is the end of the age, I will tell
you what it is.”
It stepped away from the owl, slipped its mask
back on, and moved to the center of the Seven, sitting complacently
on the silk cushions.
“The purpose of the Hoard is to buy Anara.”
Outside, the wind gave a great roar. The canvas
billowed, slapping against its ropes and pegs. Raffi’s sense-lines
swung with it, dizzying, a huge aftershock.
“Buy?” Solon whispered.
Galen’s stare was dark and even. “From the
Makers!” he said.
“Exactly.” Another of the Karamax was speaking
now. “The world was ours once. When the Makers return, it will be
cleansed, and we will ransom it with an enormous treasure.”
Solon looked at Galen. He seemed too astonished to
speak. Finally he plunged his hands through his silver hair. “You
really believe this? That the Makers will . . . sell the
world?”
“Yes.”
“But you have no idea . . .”
“And you have never seen the Great Hoard.” Behind
its mask the creature’s eyes were bright with greed. “It holds more
riches, keeper, than you could ever imagine. It will buy the Sekoi
their world back. And every fragment of it, every ring, every coin,
every little gold circle, will be needed.” It looked at the other
six, who nodded. “The Coronet will not be given up. That is our
decision.”
“No!” Solon threw his arms out. “Those who die . .
. !”
“Must die.”
The wind screamed. For a moment Raffi thought
Solon would fling himself to his knees in complete despair but
Galen gripped him gently and turned him, small energies rippling
around his hands.
He looked down at Raffi and Carys.
There was nothing left to say.