CASTLE TOP
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Karigan awoke in a strange bed. She was buried
beneath a pile of blankets, with a bunch of hard, warm lumps
settled against her side. Rocks? She felt around herself. Yes,
rocks. Stove-warmed rocks to stave off a winter’s chill.
Winter? Had she somehow slept through the last of summer and
autumn?
Impossible.
With a pang of fear, she realized it might not be,
the memory of her journey to the past—and future—just returning.
Maybe she’d been drawn too far into the future and had lost months
of her life to the traveling. What if it really was winter?
And those thoughts brought a flurry of memories of
the traveling, and of Fastion and Mara flaring like beings of
light, drawing her out of the dark. She had been so very cold. She
remembered Fastion leading the way through dark passages, or did
this belong to some older memory? In any case, she recalled little
else after they had found her.
Now here she was, in a strange bed. Drapes were
drawn across a small window, leaving the chamber in a gray light
that dimpled across the grainy texture of stone walls.
Stone walls—maybe she’d been trapped in time after
all. What was this place?
She fought the layers of blankets, which shifted
the rocks, making them clink together.
Her right arm stabbed with pain at her fussing. The
left was oddly stiff and cold. She laid back, breathing hard.
Think.
If she had been in as bad shape as she felt when
Mara and Fastion found her, it wasn’t likely they’d have dragged
her all the way back to Rider barracks. It would have been easier
to leave her at the castle. She sniffed the air, and caught a whiff
of the herby scent that usually pervaded the mending wing. It made
sense.
She nestled down into the blankets, calmer now,
grimacing at a rock that had wedged itself uncomfortably into the
small of her back. She didn’t feel too bad, though there was the
lingering residue of a monster headache, and her gnawing stomach,
not to mention a growing desire to use the chamber pot. The pull of
sleep, however, proved stronger. She was so tired, drained to the
core.
She began to drift off, her eyes drooping, when she
saw a tiny flutter of light at the foot of her bed. She blinked,
but saw nothing, and so began to sink into sleep again.
—hold them together.
“Hunh?” Karigan dreamed she opened her eyes and saw
the ghostly figure of Lil Ambrioth standing at the foot of her bed.
An otherworldly phosphorescence defined small details of her
features—the curve of her lips, a tendril of tawny hair, the glow
of a golden brooch, but the gray light of the chamber absorbed far
more of her than was revealed.
Lil was speaking to her, but few of the words were
able to pass whatever barrier existed between the living and the
dead.
—always in bed, Lil said, with what sounded
like a note of exasperation. Dreams were funny that way, causing
the characters within the dream to do and say things that made
little sense.
The door will close shortly, Lil continued.
—must be quick. The Riders are—You must hold them
together.
When Karigan did not respond, Lil began sweeping
back and forth across the room in agitation, a luminous blur. She
spoke rapidly, and Karigan could not understand any of it. Moments
later, like a candleflame blown out, Lil faded away.
Some final words emerged from nothingness: Hold
them together, hey?
The dream ended, and Karigan closed her eyes,
falling asleep for real this time.
Sometime later, Karigan awoke again, overheated and
sweating from all the blankets piled on her. Her need to use the
chamber pot was overwhelming her. She kicked off the blankets and
attended to her needs.
Afterward, she padded about the room checking out
her surroundings. A more golden light suffused the drapes now. She
threw them open, squinting her eyes at the day, wondering exactly
what day it was. At least it wasn’t winter! Whatever the answer,
the rainstorm was long gone, and had left behind a brilliant blue
sky.
The window looked out upon the north castle
grounds. Down below were the kennels, more stables, and
out-buildings. Guards moved upon the wall that surrounded the
castle grounds, and beyond on the horizon, the Green Cloak Forest
rose up on rounded hills and tucked into deep green folds of
valleys.
Someone had dressed her in a short, rough gown, and
she plucked at it with distaste. She felt fine, though hungry, and
she wanted to get on with her day. Maybe it was the blue sky
outside her window pulling at her.
She searched the tiny chamber for her uniform, but
it was nowhere to be found. There was a stand with a pitcher,
washbowl, and towel, and after splashing her face with water, she
went to the door and flung it open.
Standing there in the doorway with his hand poised
to knock was a young man in the pale blue smock of a mender, a
journeyman’s knot on his shoulder. He goggled at her in
bewilderment, clearly not expecting her to be up and about.
“Where are my clothes?” Karigan demanded. “It’s
time I got ready to leave.”
Hand still upraised, the mender said, “Um, sorry.
Wrong room, I think. Wrong patient.”
He reached for the door to close it, but she
grabbed his wrist. He glanced at her hand in surprise.
“I am not a patient,” Karigan said, “and I
want my clothes.”
“I can’t—I’m not allowed—”
“I don’t care,” Karigan said. “Just show me where
my clothes are.”
“Now, now, what have we here?” The voice belonged
to Master Mender Destarion. He ambled up the corridor, appraising
the scene with narrowed eyes. The young journeyman stepped away
from the doorway with obvious relief.
“Rider G’ladheon, there is no reason for you to
trounce on poor Ben here. He is only newly made a journeyman and on
his first rounds today. Furthermore, you are a patient here,
and you may not leave without my permission.”
Karigan thought up an angry retort, but took a deep
breath to suppress it. “When will you give me permission to
leave?”
“That is not known until I have had a chance to
examine you.”
“But—” Destarion’s stern look made her clamp her
mouth shut.
“Now, Ben,” the master mender said to the
journeyman, “you need to hold your ground, hmm? You cannot let
troublesome patients have the upper hand.”
“Yes, sir,” Ben said.
“Troublesome!” Karigan sputtered.
“Green Riders are notoriously troublesome,”
Destarion continued, as though lecturing a class. “They come in
injured and mangled, we put them back together, then they stand in
my halls making demands. A thankless lot to be sure.”
Karigan’s cheeks heated with outrage. “But I’m not
mangled!”
Destarion ignored her outburst. “And our most
notorious patient is that captain of yours.”
Karigan blinked in surprise, and nearly burst out
laughing. Destarion, noting the change in her attitude, smiled
warmly.
“Ben,” he said, “see if you can find Rider
G’ladheon here biscuits and broth, and a pot of tea.”
“Yes, sir.” The young man hastened off.
Destarion gestured for Karigan to return to her
chamber and followed her in. “What I’ve asked Ben to do is an
apprentice’s duty—fetch and carry—but I don’t suppose he’ll mind
just this once.”
After giving Karigan a cursory exam, he said, “You
certainly seem in fine fettle, considering yesterday. How does your
arm feel?”
Karigan tried to flex her right arm. Threads of
pain shot through her elbow, but it wasn’t the dagger-grinding pain
of before. “Getting better, I suppose.”
“Actually, I was wondering about the other
arm.”
“My other—?”
Destarion nodded. “When you were brought in
yesterday, you had the body temperature of one who had been caught
in a blizzard. Your left arm showed signs of frost-bite. I am not
even going to hazard a guess as to how you got into such a
condition in the midst of summer.” He rolled his eyes. “I’ll leave
that to your captain.”
“It—it feels fine.”
Destarion looked her arm over critically. “So it
is.” He pronounced her fit, but would not allow her to leave till
she finished off the broth and biscuits Ben brought.
Karigan was pulling on a boot when Captain Mapstone
appeared in the doorway.
“Glad to see you up and about.”
“Thank you,” Karigan said. “I was just about to
come report to you.”
“Do you feel up to a little walk?”
The question surprised Karigan, but it took her
only a moment to respond. “Yes.”
She draped her greatcoat over her arm and followed
the captain into the corridor. They passed through the mending
wing, Captain Mapstone asking her a few polite questions about how
she felt. The mending wing had a subduing, sober atmosphere. It was
very quiet, with thick carpets underfoot to muffle sound, and many
hangings on the walls featuring pastoral scenes. They encountered a
few menders in the corridor, and a soldier hobbling along on
crutches.
To Karigan’s surprise, the captain did not turn
down the stairway that led to the main floor of the castle.
Instead, she turned right as they exited the mending wing.
“Where are we going?” Karigan asked.
Again, the half-smile. “Since you have spent so
much time in dark abandoned corridors, I thought you’d like to see
the castle from a new perspective.”
Intrigued, Karigan gave the captain a sideways
look, but she seemed content to keep their destination to
herself.
As they walked, the carpeting grew more plush, with
intricate designs that could only be Durnesian. Large portraits
hanging on the walls depicted fine noble ladies and gentlemen, some
wearing armor and royal crowns. Along the walls were chairs with
velvet cushions, and small tables with fresh-cut flowers arranged
in vases. Lamp fixtures were golden and glittering. There were
marble busts, too, of princes and princesses, kings and
queens.
This was the west side of the castle they had
entered, which contained meeting rooms and offices for the king’s
personal staff, all hidden behind ornate oak doors. Guards stood at
attention at intervals along the corridor, their leather and metal
gear at high polish.
Well-dressed persons passed them, some in earnest
discussion over some matter, others hastening on to wherever they
needed to go. A few military officers mixed in with the civilians,
nodding to the captain as they passed by.
Karigan had never been in this section of the
castle before, though she had heard enough about it from Mara,
whose recently acquired duties had her here on occasion. Captain
Mapstone appeared very familiar with it.
They came to a pair of grand doors. Carved in
relief upon them was a crescent moon hanging above the spires of
evergreens. Two Weapons guarded the doors.
“The king’s apartments lie beyond,” Captain
Mapstone said.
To Karigan’s disappointment, they weren’t going
through those doors, but past them. She found herself imagining
what those halls must be like—they had to be far more luxurious
than even this corridor they now walked. She wondered what it was
like for the king having all that space to himself. Was he lonely?
There must be a great hall for dining and gatherings, a nursery for
children, parlors and dens, probably a personal library, not to
mention sleeping chambers.
Perhaps much of his private apartments was like the
abandoned corridors—left in darkness by lack of need. Karigan found
herself feeling sorry for the king, that he hadn’t any close family
members with whom to share all that space.
Soon the king’s doors fell well behind them, and
Captain Mapstone turned a corner into a stairwell and started
climbing. They kept climbing, spiraling to the highest floor of the
castle, of which there were five levels, if one didn’t count the
tombs far beneath.
They passed through a wrought iron door into a
small chamber, and another flight of stone stairs appeared, leading
upward to yet another door. Karigan glanced questioningly at the
captain, but the captain merely jogged up the steps to the door.
When Karigan joined her, she smiled and opened it. Sunlight and
fresh air rushed in, and Karigan took in a deep breath,
sighing.
“Welcome to the top of the castle,” Captain
Mapstone said.
They stepped out onto the battlements. A soldier on
guard near the door greeted the captain when he saw who it
was.
“They don’t let just anyone up here,” the captain
informed Karigan with a smile.
Karigan, reveling in the freedom of the open air
about her, whirled around and around. She took in the network of
battlements and guard towers, busy with soldiers. It was almost
like a whole other city up here in the sky. The castle sat atop a
high hill, and being on top of the castle was like standing among
the clouds.
Captain Mapstone followed along as Karigan
explored, her curiosity leading her to look over the edge of the
battlements to gaze down at the west castle grounds, and southward
into Sacor City. The city’s buildings sprawled out before her,
edged by avenues that ran between them. The Winding Way curved away
from the castle entrance through shops and homes and passed between
the city walls.
As the city had expanded over the generations, new
walls were built to protect the population, so now there were three
walls, including the one that encircled the castle. Their gates
were deliberately not aligned, for defensive purposes, just as the
Winding Way traveled a circuitous route to confound an invading
army.
Carts and carriages and people down on the Winding
Way were very much toy-sized, and in the distance, ant-sized.
Captain Mapstone had brought her up here for a different
perspective, and it certainly was. Usually Karigan only got to look
up at the castle, but here she got to look down on the world.
She saw features of the castle up close that she
had only viewed from a distance, such as the waterspouts carved
into shapes of fierce catamounts and bears, eagles and fish.
Rainwater flowed along a miniature canal system of gutters on the
battlements, and drained through the mouths of the stone animals.
From there the water poured into catch-basins down below, where yet
another drainage system of underground aqueducts allowed the water
to empty into the moat. In times of siege, the flow could be
diverted to the castle’s cisterns if other sources of water dried
up.
The drainage system was as ingenious as it was
intricate, and with good reason. Alton had once told her that a
stone structure’s greatest enemy was water, especially when it
froze and thawed. With a nod to Alton, she made sure she looked
over the drainage system with admiring eyes.
The strangest structure atop the castle was an
enclosed dome on a platform. “What’s that?” Karigan asked,
pointing.
“The king’s observatory. It houses a large
telescope so he may watch the stars.”
Karigan glanced at the captain incredulously. “Have
you ever looked through it?”
Captain Mapstone chuckled. “I’ve been invited, but
I never liked the idea of coming eye to eye with Aeryc or one of
the other gods peering back at me. The king often hosts star
masters to watch the night sky and chart the movements of the
heavens.”
Invigorated by the fresh air and sunshine, and
vastly impressed by this uppermost level of the castle, Karigan
leaned contentedly against a crenel and looked down into the city
and toward the green patchwork of farmland beyond.
Captain Mapstone turned her back to the vista, and
leaned upon a crenel of her own, gazing at Karigan. Karigan
gathered that the leisurely aspect of this little expedition was
over, and that Captain Mapstone was ready to hear
explanations.
Sure enough, she said, “Mara and Fastion told me
they found you deep in the abandoned corridors yesterday afternoon,
in a room Fastion had never seen before, and he claims he knows
those corridors pretty well. Mara said you were faded out—beyond
faded. And that you were incoherent. What were you doing back
there?”
Karigan watched a gull glide by on the thermals.
She took a deep breath, and launched into her story, beginning with
the day she had witnessed the disappearing footprints in the
abandoned corridor. She linked it to the realization she was seeing
a future vision of herself.
She almost listened to her own story in disbelief,
of how she followed a tiny light into the dark, only to witness
visions of the past. Standing here now in the bright, open air, she
could only feel she had been overcome by some temporary madness.
However, when she told of seeing the young Laren Mapstone and
Zachary, the captain’s eyes widened. She stroked her neck
scar.
“That . . . That actually happened. I remember that
incident just the way you’ve described it. You speak truth.”
Karigan was rattled by the captain’s
intensity.
“I’ve not called him a ‘moonling’ in years,” the
captain murmured.
Karigan thought there was more underlying the
captain’s reaction—unhappiness, distress.
Her gift is failing.
Karigan jerked her gaze about wondering who had
spoken the words, but no one else was nearby.
She decided it must have been her own thought, but
she wondered about the word “gift.” Did it refer to the captain’s
special ability? If so, it was not a word she, or anyone she knew
of, used to describe a magical ability.
Karigan shrugged and continued her tale. She
described seeing the bier of King Agates Sealender and listening in
on the conversation between the castellan and the priest. As she
spoke, she felt strongly that someone else watched and listened,
but none of the soldiers were near enough to hear a word, and none
looked their way. Then she sensed a presence just beyond Captain
Mapstone, and in a blink, it was gone.
“Something wrong?” the captain asked.
Karigan hadn’t realized she’d let her story trail
off. She shook her head. “N-no. I—I don’t know.”
Captain Mapstone raised an eyebrow.
Karigan began to wonder if one of Dakrias Brown’s
ghosts had followed her from the records room, but she shuddered it
away, and began telling the captain the rest of her incredible
story. The ending became a bit jumbled, as Karigan had been unable
to distinguish past from present, or present from future at the
time.
When she finished, Captain Mapstone turned toward
the vista, folding her hands atop the crenel. She was silent for
many moments.
Finally she spoke. “I’m not sure what to make of
your tale, but every part of it rings true.” Here she hesitated,
and Karigan thought she was about to reveal something, but instead
she simply continued. “It’s extraordinary, Karigan, to see what
you’ve seen, to see our history—the First Rider even.” And
here she smiled. “I’d have loved to be in your boots.”
Karigan rocked back on her heels, stunned. She
hadn’t looked upon the traveling as a privilege, but as an
extremely strange and frightening experience.
“Tell me again,” the captain said, “what did she
look like? How did she act?”
Karigan thought hard, trying to recall all the
details she could, amazed by the expression of delight on the
captain’s face.
After she finished, there was another long silence.
The captain grew distant as she continued to gaze out to the
horizon. She rubbed her chin with her forefinger.
“I cannot even begin to guess what brought this
experience upon you. It has a tang of the Wild Ride.”
The Wild Ride had allowed Karigan to travel a great
distance in a very short time. “There were no ghosts this time, and
I didn’t really cover a distance.”
“Not a physical distance,” the captain said.
“The feeling was different. With the Wild Ride, I
felt carried away by the ghosts. This time I felt pulled by . . . I
don’t know.”
Captain Mapstone shrugged. “I guess we’ll never
truly understand any of it, but you seem to have an extra dimension
to your ability, of being able to slip between the layers of the
world.”
Karigan didn’t know what to say. Whatever caused
the traveling, it wasn’t something she had control over.
“Report to me,” the captain said, “if anything
remotely like this ever happens again.” Then she grinned. “Perhaps
you’ll be able to fill in the missing gaps of our history. I don’t
ever recall hearing of Mornhavon’s friend—”
“Hadriax,” Karigan filled in. “Hadriax el
Fex.”
“Yes.” The grin vanished. “I’m going to tell you
that yours is not the only strange story I’ve heard recently. You
may have heard some of the rumors.”
“About D’Ivary Province?”
The captain frowned. “No, that’s not what I was
alluding to, though it is a matter consuming much of the king’s
attention these days.”
Karigan thought she detected some deep sadness
within the captain.
“No, I meant tales brought to us from folk in the
countryside. One such was of an entire forest grove turned to stone
in Wayman.”
Yes, Karigan had heard rumors of this, but when the
captain told her of the game warden’s report, she found the rumors
hadn’t been too far off the mark.
“There is also talk of something haunting the
western fringes of the Green Cloak,” the captain continued, “a dark
presence that freezes the souls of men and frightens the forest
creatures into silence.”
Karigan shuddered involuntarily. “The wraith from
the clearing?” She had avoided thinking about it, hoping the
nightmare creature would simply evaporate into the ether.
“Who’s to say? I just want you to be aware that
there are unexplained things going on, and to be watchful. I’ve
already discussed this with Mara. With the king’s attention focused
on D’Ivary, someone has to be paying attention to these oddities.
Most people just see them as superstition, or isolated occurrences.
I don’t.”
“I don’t think I do either,” Karigan said.
The captain put her hand on her shoulder and
sighed, as if relieved by her support. “Maybe it only makes sense
to those of us who use magic.”
Without another word, the captain strode away
toward the door that led back into the castle. Karigan hesitated
before following, taking in one more grand view of the countryside,
wondering what force was at work out there.