28
Flain was the last to enter the
door. He looked back and it is said he wept for the Finished Lands.
“I see now,” he said, “that we are the world. Deep in our souls
lies the evil one.”
Tamar came back for him. “Not
unless we wish it,” he said.
Book of the Seven Moons
IT WAS A CIRCLE OF GOLD and
they were all inside it.
For a second Raffi knew the vast arena with its
treasure was a huge replica of the Coronet; as the Sekoi argued up
to its people in the Tongue, he felt the consciousness of the
gathered tribes slowly and reluctantly enter it, the sharp anger of
the Karamax like seven stabs of pain.
“What’s happening?” Carys muttered. She still had
the bow aimed at Solon, but he sat still, as if listening.
“They’re joining in.” Raffi glanced down at the
still form that was Kest. “The power of this will be
incredible.”
“Like Tasceron?”
“Better.” It was building already, a hum and
murmur of energy that abruptly assaulted all his senses; left him
blind and deaf until he knew that he was one and many, that the
Coronet and the arena were tiny concentric circles far below him,
and that this icy silent nothingness was space. It was black, an
emptiness, darker than Maar. It stretched into infinity and all
their minds together could never reach to the end of it.
Until, like a miracle, something existed.
It was a globe, pale and smooth, bright with
reflected light. The curve of its edge was perfect and
breathtaking. It hung from nothing. He turned, looking for the
others.
They were all around him; the Coronet of Moons,
Agramon a little way out of line; impatiently he gave it the
slightest nudge back into place and it drifted like a bubble. Raffi
smiled.
“It’s a sophisticated form of
neural integrator,” someone was saying, but he ignored that,
knowing that the circle was smooth again, that he wore it like a
Coronet, that the mingled lights were in proportion.
Now for the weather. But where was Anara?
Then he knew that he was the planet. He was the
world. In his body were all the aches and agonies, the vortexes and
storms; he searched for them and flexed them out, absorbed.
“Not Solon!” the wind
protested, but he hushed it, smoothing the roaring waves on the
beach. Someone was bleeding on the gold moons; he wiped them clean
and put them back in the sky. Snow stopped falling into his eyes.
Carefully he opened his hands and let the small flowers stir, the
trees blossom in the cracks of his palms.
“Bring me a present!” a
small voice wailed. So he rolled up winter and threw it away,
unfolded a field of gold and spread it like an eiderdown over hills
and valleys and mountains. “What a joke,”
Marco laughed, from underneath.
And a thin, brown-haired man opened a door in a
vortex and stepped out, the storm shriveling behind him. “The
others will deal with the rest,” he said. “But you I need to warn.
Give me your hand.”
Raffi held it out. Kest took it and turned it
over. “Look at this.”
They were deep scars. Seven wounds in his own
skin, seven deep pits. He stared at them in horror, at the poison
seeping from them; then he gasped with pain, his hand still
clutching Kest’s.
But the voice that spoke had a reptilian hiss. And
it said:
“Raffi.”
His eyes snapped open.
The arena was cold and empty. A faint breeze
drifted over the heaps of gold. On one of them the Margrave
sprawled, looking at him.
Its long, jackal-snout was a profile of horror,
the moons casting bizarre shadows of its sharp-eared head and dark
coat.
“What do you want?” Raffi whispered.
It gave a lipless smile. “You know what. And I was
so close! Solon even held the device in his hands, and it was your
fault that I lost it. But then, I have learned about so many other
things! The Crow! Since my dark creature met Galen at Halenden I
have known my ancient enemy was back. Sarres, of course. And the
Great Hoard. I’ll send a whole Watchforce to collect this. And now,
I have you.”
Raffi shook his head. Terror was creeping over him
like an eclipse. “No. No you don’t.”
The Margrave laughed, a harsh rattle. “You and I
are linked, Raffi. Ever since you came into my room in your vision
you have intrigued me. I learned more about you in those few
seconds than you think. We are linked. I have rarely talked with a
human soul like this since Kest came to plead with me in my
prison.”
Its small eyes stared at him, the lids swiveling
like a lizard’s. “I’m going to find you, Raffi. Bring you back to
my room. I know you have hidden qualities; your master doesn’t
value you enough. I’m sure you’ve often thought that.” Its tongue
flickered in a sly grin.
“I need a companion and I have chosen you. You
will be my apprentice.”
Raffi gazed at it in utter horror.
Beside him suddenly Carys came back, then Galen,
stepping moodily out of the dark. On the ramparts the Sekoi tribes
blurred out of nothingness and in the sky the moons came on like
Maker-lights.
The Sekoi, tall and astonished, reached up for the
Coronet and took it off, staring at the gold ring in
amazement.
Only Solon sat on the pile of gold.
The Margrave left him. They almost saw it go, saw
the absence creep into his eyes, saw him become in an instant a
heartbroken, devastated old man, unable to look at Marco, unable to
look at any of them, huddled up and sobbing.
Carys turned away. It was Galen who went and
crouched before him.
“Leave me!” the old man moaned, hiding his face.
“You see what I’ve done!” His eyes caught the knife handle; Galen
moved in front of it
“It’s over,” he whispered. “The evil is gone from
you.” Solon looked up, his eyes wide. “I couldn’t keep it out! Dear
God, I couldn’t!” His cry was an agony of remorse; he looked
imploringly around at them all, rocking with pain. “Three years,
Galen. That was how long. Every day, every hour they tormented me.
Never letting me sleep or think.” He gripped his hands together.
“You can’t imagine how it was. On and on, lights and questions. I
couldn’t eat. I forgot who I was. I forgot how to pray.”
“I know.” Galen held him firmly. “It’s over now.
We’ll get you to Sarres.”
“And then he came! He explained how I could help
him. He spoke softly, and I let him into my mind, Galen, I let him!
I couldn’t bear it anymore, the filth, the pain, the darkness. I
couldn’t even bear the smell of that room. I wanted him. He made me
strong. He gave me power. In the end I was begging him to
come.”
There was a bitter silence. Then Galen said
harshly, “None of us can judge you until we have been through such
a hell. But Mardoc’s Ring. All the things you told us. Were they
true?”
“True. But he forced me to tell him. He found the
ring and wore it, mocking me. I have betrayed everything I loved!
And yet I would still do anything rather than go back to that
cell!” Solon clutched his head in despair. Galen watched. When he
asked the next question Raffi knew it had been an effort.
“And the child? The one you cured?”
“He did it.” The old man looked up, seeing Galen’s
eyes close in despair. “He’s clever, much too clever for us. It’s
over. He has all of us now.”
“Galen!” Carys’s voice was sharp. “Look at
this.”
Above them, in the air, a door was forming. They
stared up at it, Raffi gripping the beads at his neck in silent
awe.
A narrow door, with a silver staircase that
unfolded silently and smoothly like a ripple of light to the
Sekoi’s feet, so that the creature jumped back in alarm.
They waited. No one came down. The door stayed
shut.
Around the arena the Sekoi tribes watched in
fascination. “Are the Makers here?” Carys asked. She felt a sudden
panic, as if she wasn’t ready; she stared at the door as if Flain
would open it and walk down. It sparked a sudden memory. “I forgot!
He told me something else! He said, ‘Tell the keeper I’ll see him
soon.’ ”
“It’s the portal.” Galen’s gaunt face was
shadowed, his eyes dark with joy. “Remember? The console said the
Coronet could make an emergency portal. This is it! A door to the
world of the Makers!”
He gripped the handrail and for a moment Raffi
thought he would race up and fling the door wide, the desire so
keen in him that Raffi could feel it.
But he didn’t. He jumped down, hauled Solon to his
feet, and put his scarred hands roughly on the rail. “You go,” he
said.
“Me?” The Archkeeper was aghast. “I betrayed them!
I’ve done evil, welcomed evil. I can’t face them!”
“We all have to face them.” Galen stepped back.
“No one is turned away. This is your chance to make up for your
weakness, Solon! Do it for Marco, for all of us. Get them to come!
Tell them how much we need them, that the Unfinished Lands will
still spread, that men’s faith has grown cold.”
Solon glanced at the others.
“No!” Carys crossed to Galen and faced him
angrily. “It should be you! He’s weak, you said so yourself.”
“Weakness can hide strength.”
“Don’t give me that rubbish!” She glared up at
him, but he wouldn’t look at her. “He betrayed us, Galen! You must
hate him for that!”
Then he did look. “Not him. And the Crow has work
still to do here.” For a moment the hardness of his eyes softened.
“Don’t tempt me, Carys,” he whispered.
Shoving her aside he said to Solon, “Go
quickly.”
The Archkeeper wiped his face. He took a small
bronze ring off his finger and dropped it into Galen’s hand.
“Choose a better Archkeeper,” he whispered, and turned and climbed
the stairs as if each one was an effort of will. When he reached
the top, the door slid open.
And for a second they glimpsed another world; a
pale sky, green fields, a warm breeze that lifted Solon’s hair as
he walked fearfully into it, fluttering his coat in a scent of
alien leaves, lighting his face so that in the instant before he
vanished he seemed young, laughed, held his hands out to someone,
and Galen had taken two steps after him before the door closed and
the light was gone and the staircase dissolved into
moon-shimmer.
It was very quiet in the arena. The snow had
stopped. In the black sky the moons hung, each in its appointed
place. “I wish Marco could have seen that,” Carys muttered.
She bent and picked up a leaf that lay there and
handed it to Galen. It was long and narrow, some sort of willow,
Raffi thought. And alien.
“It seems to me,” the Sekoi purred, looking up at
Agramon, “that I moved her.”
“It was me.” Carys threw the bow down.
“Me,” Raffi said.
“All of us.” The Sekoi stared at the Coronet. “How
can I tell you how it felt? Like the joining of many stories, all
at once.” It looked up, yellow eyes sharp. “The Karamax are coming
down.”
“Will they let us go?” Carys asked.
It shrugged, laying the Coronet reverently between
Kest’s hands. “It may be they will. Things have changed now.”
Suddenly remembering, it took off its money belt and emptied a
stream of coins onto the heap. They tinkled and rolled. “Though I
fear all this must be moved to a more secret place.” It looked at
Carys sidelong. “I have to say, Carys, that I have been wrong. I am
sorry.”
She nodded. “So you should be. Mind you, at one
point I suspected you.” She grinned at Raffi, who was pale and
still. The Sekoi turned. “And you, Galen, don’t let the darkness
fill your soul. Despite the deaths, we have achieved our
aim.”
The Relic Master came forward. He put both hands
down and gripped Kest’s coffin, and Raffi felt a sudden sickening
jolt of terror.
“Galen!” he muttered.
The keeper’s face was harsh and set. “I swear,” he
said, “by Kest and Flain and all the Makers. By all the Moons. By
all the Books of the Order . . .”
“Galen, don’t!”
“. . . By all that I’ve ever believed—I swear the
Crow will hunt the Margrave down into the deepest pit of hell for
this.”
His fists clenched. “And when I find him there,
I’ll kill him. Because of what he did to Solon. And for
Marco.”
He turned, his hair glossy as a bird’s wing. “I
swear it, Raffi. I will never forgive this.”
Raffi felt as if all his nightmares were drowning
him. He looked at Carys.
She shrugged and picked up her bow.
“Be careful, Galen,” she said quietly. “I somehow
think that may be just what he wants.”