Chapter Twenty-one
Princess Beatrice, finally uncovering stone under
the dust and packed dirt of centuries, gazed at it blankly. The
level line of outcropping she had freed with such painstaking care
had become as firmly defined in her mind as it was entrenched in
the earth: an old brick mantelpiece, maybe from a basement
apartment that had succumbed to the silt and water of the Stirl
swelling over its bed. Something chipped, hollowed, worn, but as
recognizable and prosaic as that. She would find the rest of it
farther down under the protruding ledge: the walls, the
hearth-stone between them, with probably some smoke staining it and
bits of charcoal mingled with the river silt.
So she had thought.
Her silence slowed work around her; the others
glanced up, vaguely aware of broken patterns of sound, the pause of
predictable movements. Campion, working with her at the other end
of the protrusion, broke off his brushing to see what had
mesmerized her.
“It’s stone,” she told him. “Not brick.”
He shrugged. “That’s common, fieldstone used for
chimneys, mantels.”
“It’s not fieldstone. It’s yellow. Like the
standing stones.”
He dropped his brush. Behind her, Ida scrambled off
her knees from where she was worrying at something on the floor of
the dig. Curran, picking at a bump in the wall, straightened. They
all came to look at it. What she had thought was bricks and mortar
looked like a solid ledge indented with lines carved into the front
of it.
Campion whistled. Curran brushed at the hair over
his eyes, left a smudge.
“Looks like that disk I shoveled up,” he grunted,
peering. “Those lines. More runes. Princess, what on earth have you
found?”
“I think,” she breathed, “the Circle of
Days.”
Campion cocked a brow. “The what?”
“It’s an ancient runic system.” She started
brushing again, violently enough that the others backed up behind
her. “It was on the disk, too. Campion—”
He had his own brush working again by then, raising
dust storms.
“I’ll help,” Curran said abruptly, and Ida nodded
vigorously, her hat sliding over her eyes. Hadrian picked up his
tools, shouldered in among them.
“Master Cle will definitely love this.”
“I’m already in love with it,” Campion murmured.
“Looks like the oldest thing we’ve ever found.”
“It looks like the oldest thing in the world,” Ida
sighed rapturously, and splashed a dusty sneeze across it.
They worked carefully but energetically, impelled
by the mystery revealing itself under their brushes and picks.
Hours passed. One by one, they climbed up the ladder to eat their
sandwiches and came back quickly, before they had quite finished
chewing. They managed, with more haste than method, to bare the
long face of the ledge, with the pattern of lines running from one
end to the other, and had begun to brush away the packed earth
beneath it. They slowed, as the familiar daily shafts of light and
shadow in the hole shifted until they stood in shade, and the line
of light began above the ledge.
The floor was beginning to dampen. Beatrice sighed,
stepping back reluctantly.
“It doesn’t look like any kind of a fireplace,” she
commented, studying it. Curran moved back to join her.
“Looks more like a door, to me. That’s the lintel
stone we’ve been dusting off.”
“Is that possible?” Hadrian wondered, unkinking his
thin shoulders.
“Reminds me of things I see in the countryside. One
flat stone balanced on two ...”
“Can’t be a door,” Campion said. “No wood
there.”
“Well, there might not be, after all this time;
might have rotted away.”
“A door to what?” Ida wondered.
“I’m feeling stone where a door would be,” Campion
argued.
“Nobody makes a door out of stone,” Ida scoffed.
“What kind of a door would that be?”
They were all silent then, gazing at one another.
They bent abruptly, gathering tools, hats, paraphernalia, before
the floor got any wetter.
“How early can we get back tomorrow?” Ida asked.
Hadrian consulted his tide table; they scheduled a time to meet
where the princess picked them up near the bridge. She dropped them
there before she drove the crowded road upriver to the castle,
puzzling over their find and scarcely hearing the music rising from
one corner of the street and running into the next, played by
musicians in every kind of antique costume.
She left the car in the chauffeur’s hands and made
her usual path through the back gardens toward the door nearest her
chambers. The harping she heard then seemed so much a familiar part
of the city those days that she only noticed it when she realized
that she had stepped into a garden full of women in flowing silks
and flowery hats. With an inner jolt of dismay, she remembered she
had promised to be there among them two hours earlier.
Of all the faces turning to stare at the
dust-plastered apparition wandering into the queen’s garden party
for Lady Petris, she saw her mother’s first, rigid as an ice
sculpture and as chilly. Her aunt Petris seemed equally frozen;
only her eyelids moved, blinking rapidly above brows about to take
flight. Beyond them, Kelda harped a love ballad, watching the
princess gravely. Everybody else had gotten very quiet for a crowd
of women carrying plates full of exquisite morsels and glasses of
champagne. Only Sophy Cle, reaching for a salmon croquette at the
table, missed being transfixed. She turned around, caught an eyeful
of the walking disaster that was Beatrice, and smiled with
pleasure, stepping immediately toward her.
But the queen got to her daughter first.
“I am so sorry,” Beatrice said softly.
“Go and change, please.”
“I forgot. We found something—something very old, I
think, and wonderful—”
“Bea,” Charlotte interrupted. “You look as though
you’ve been buried alive. Marcus, stop patting the dust clouds from
Bea’s boots; they’re unspeakable.”
“We found—” the princess tried again, desperately.
“Well, we hardly know what it is, but Father will be so intrigued,
and Master Cle—”
The queen closed glacial blue eyes, opened them
again. “Please.”
“Yes, Mother.”
“We’ll talk when you are presentable.”
She sounded dubious. The princess made her escape,
found her lady-in-waiting patiently waiting, and was delivered in
short order out of her clothes and into a bath, where the patina of
centuries rained gently from her hair to float upon the
water.
Neatly coiffed and disguised from collarbone to
shin in flowers, she went back to the garden party, hoping that her
mother would mistake this aspect of her for the good and dutiful
Beatrice and forget she ever saw the other one. Suddenly ravenous,
she lingered at the table, filling a plate with the odd bits still
remaining of smoked trout, marinated vegetables in aspic, little
pastries shaped like the suits of playing cards and filled with a
bright concoction of sweet red peppers and hearts of palm. She
could hear her mother’s voice as she ate, reassuringly at a
distance. Her brother’s betrothed drifted up to talk to Beatrice
about wedding-candle colors, so Beatrice could let her own thoughts
flow underground again to puzzle at the mystery, while suitable
noises came now and then out of her mouth.
“Beatrice,” Charlotte interrupted, descending out
of nowhere, it seemed, onto the tool-strewn floor of the dig with a
jam-faced child in her arms. “Our mother and I have come up with
the most perfect solution. Idea, I mean. You must come and spend
the summer in the country with me and Great Marcus and Small Marcus
and Tiny Thomasina.” Beatrice, appalled, inhaled a crumb; while she
coughed, Charlotte tumbled on, a glint in her eye alarmingly like
their mother’s. “Just think a moment about it. Small Marcus adores
you, and it would get you out of a city swarming with ragtag
musicians from every corner of Belden—”
“But—”
“But what about Damon’s wedding, you mean? We’ll
all come back for that, of course. And I do so want you to meet one
of our neighbors, so charming, connected to a distant branch of
Peverell cousins, with a stableful of horses and running what he
calls his hobby farm.”
“I can’t just—”
“Of course you can. We’d love to have you, wouldn’t
we, Marcus? Marcus. Where did that child run off to? Oh, Marcus,
leave the bee alone!”
Marcus, poking at a rose on a bush nearby, opened
his mouth suddenly, so hugely that he seemed about to devour the
flower. Then came the wail, like a steam tram trying to break for a
drunken sailor. Charlotte darted off to rescue him. Beatrice,
watching, mute and horrified, absently crammed an entire diamond
pastry into her mouth.
“Princess Beatrice.”
She turned, chewing hastily and trying to smile at
the same time. It was Sophy, she found to her relief, who chattered
amiably about the lilies blooming in the fish pool, until Beatrice
could swallow her bite.
“Of course, I really came over to ask you what you
unearthed—besides yourself, I mean. You looked positively
extraordinary, earlier, like a walking artifact. Your mantelpiece
at last?”
Beatrice nodded, grateful for the chance to talk
about it. “Yes,” she said, and lowered her voice so that her mother
wouldn’t hear. “Only it’s covered with runes, and we’re thinking
it’s not part of a fireplace at all.”
“Oh, how marvelous. Does Jonah know?”
“We haven’t seen him yet. Please, tell him when you
do. We’re all so excited, and dying to know what it is.” Out of the
corner of her eye, she saw her mother on the move, looking
purposeful, still chatting as she pulled Lady Petris and an
entourage in her wake, a bouquet of hats, it looked like, on
colorful, slowly swaying stalks. On the other side of her,
Charlotte had pacified Marcus with another jam tart and was leading
him to Beatrice’s side.
“It sounds quite mystifying and exciting,” Sophy
said, seemingly oblivious to the gathering forces. “Along with
something else I learned today. I wasn’t sure he would actually do
it, he’s seemed so distracted lately with his paper—which is
finally coming into being and so brilliant, I think—but he is, and
I couldn’t be more pleased.”
“About what, Sophy?” the queen asked curiously, she
and her bevy reaching them at the same moment that Beatrice felt
Marcus sit on her feet to eat his tart.
“Phelan,” Sophy said happily.
“What?” Charlotte demanded. “Is he engaged,
too?”
“No, I don’t think so. At least, I haven’t heard.
He is going to enter the bardic competition, compete for Quennel’s
place. I’m so thoroughly proud of him. Of course, you must stop
your digging, Princess, long enough to listen to him play. I’m sure
Jonah will understand even though he’ll be so impatient for you to
continue work on such an important find.” She turned her candid
gaze to the queen. “Of course, the king will be impatient as well,
when he hears, Lady Harriet, don’t you think? Our children are
accomplishing such amazing things.”
The queen looked slightly dazed for a moment.
Charlotte said blankly, “Well. Beatrice can’t, of course, do any of
that. She’s coming to spend summer in the country with us.”
Sophy found nothing to say to that, only smiled
pleasantly, rather bemusedly, into the sudden silence. Beatrice,
eyeing the table helplessly, felt something already in her mouth,
growing and clamoring for exit, like an irritated wasp.
She let it out finally. “No.” She swallowed under
Charlotte’s stare, and said it again. “No. Thank you, Charlotte. I
will be extremely busy this summer here in the city. And I would so
very much appreciate it if you would stop Marcus from trying to
stuff his tart into my shoe.”
“Marcus!” Charlotte cried, glancing down without
interest. “Stop that. But, Beatrice. We’re already expecting
you.”
Beatrice slid off her heel, bent, and shook the
crumbs out of it. Before she straightened, she realized what had
put the edge in her voice, and that it had little to do with a
hoary stone covered with incomprehensible words.
Her mother wanted her to go.
Phelan’s mother wanted her to stay.
“We’ll discuss this later,” the queen said calmly,
and with that the fascinated faces around them had to be
satisfied.
The queen signaled an end to the harping soon
after; Kelda packed up his instrument and slipped away. The guests
began taking their leave of her and Lady Petris. Beatrice drifted
with them unobtrusively back into the house, then angled down a
quieter hallway toward her father’s collection, where she could
consult with Master Burley about the new find and hide from her
mother for a while until the queen got distracted by more
interesting matters than her dusty daughter.
A black back vanishing into a wall in an empty
guest chamber caught her eye. A door in the wainscoting clicked
shut and became invisible. She stopped, blinking. She knew that
secret door: she had discovered it when she was a child exploring
the ancient castle. It had been there for centuries and last used,
according to chronicles shown to her by Master Burley, by King
Severin to visit his mistress late at night when his queen, in her
bed-cap, put down her book and her sherry glass and began to
snore.
It wasn’t the ghost of Severin Peverell blurring
into the walls. He didn’t have that black, glossy, engagingly
disheveled hair, nor could he have played a note on the harp
hanging from the broad, black-clad shoulder.
It was Kelda, sneaking around in her father’s
house. Kelda, who knew the language of the Circle of Days and had
loosed its power at Phelan. Beatrice stepped out of her heels,
picked them up, and stuffed them under the pillows on the bed as
she passed it. She pressed the wainscoting until a panel gave under
her hand, and the narrow door opened. Ahead, in the dark, she could
see the light Kelda had kindled and carried on his palm as easily
as a stolen jewel.
She followed him.
He had led her, she guessed from the cessation of
random, distant noises on the other side of the walls, and the
change under her stockinged feet from floorboards to flagstones and
then to dirt, beyond the castle and underneath the main courtyard,
when she lost him. The glow in his palm vanished, left her stranded
in the dark, abruptly motionless, and breathing as quietly as
possible. She strained her ears, listening for a shift of earth, a
soft footfall too close to her. Her skin prickled, anticipating the
harper’s touch out of the blackness.
Nothing happened. Kelda had just gone his way
without her. Perhaps he had sensed someone following. Maybe he had
simply turned down a side path, an old sewage channel connected to
a different part of the castle. They all merged into a main passage
that went to the river, she knew. She could find her way back, if
she didn’t go wandering off perpetually down side paths. Her mouth
crooked at a thought: what the queen would say if she caught her
shoeless daughter coming back through the wrong door in the castle
with filthy stockings and cobwebs in her hair.
It wouldn’t just be summer in the country with
Charlotte; it would be the rest of her life there.
She took a step forward and heard voices.
She froze again. They seemed to be coming toward
her, and they weren’t trying for secrecy. The students in Kelda’s
Circle of Days, meeting out of sight in the abandoned shaft? Was
that where Kelda was headed, to teach his dangerous magic
practically under her father’s feet? The voices, both male, their
words distorted slightly, bounding flatly off earth and stone,
became suddenly, hauntingly familiar. Her brows, already quirked
over the headstrong bard, leaped even higher. Phelan and Jonah Cle
seemed to be arguing underground and in the dark somewhere ahead of
her.
“What on earth are you doing down here?”
“What are you doing here?”
“I’m following you. You know who I am now; will you
get that light out of my face?”
“What exactly are you researching, boy?” Jonah
demanded, sounding intensely irritated. “The ancient sewage system
of Caerau? Or that insidious bard?”
“What?”
Beatrice couldn’t see so much as a glimmer of
light; she blundered on helplessly, feeling her way along the
stone-and-dirt walls, in the general direction of the
argument.
“Do you have any idea what dangers you are
tracking?”
“Don’t tell me Kelda is down here, too,” Phelan
said incredulously.
“Beneath the castle of the Peverell kings,” Jonah
reminded him pointedly.
“What are you suggesting? That he’s intending to
blow the place up with his magic? If he’s that powerful, he doesn’t
have to skulk around underground to do it, does he? Anyway—”
“Kelda—”
“Kelda has nothing to do with why I’m here. I saw
you come in. I wanted to know why—I wanted to know—”
His voice veered suddenly off-balance. He stopped;
so did Beatrice, struck by the strange uncertainty in him. She
stood motionless, scarcely breathing, trying to hear in the silence
what she could not see in the dark.
“What I do is my business,” Jonah said finally,
harshly. “You should not have followed me. Period.”
“How was I supposed to know that you were sober at
this hour of the day?” Phelan retorted weakly. “You could have
gotten completely lost down here.”
“And which of us is carrying the light?”
“How was I to know that until you switched it on?
Why would I turn around then and walk out of here without the
slightest curiosity about what my father might be doing wandering
around underground? And why did you bring the light?”
“So that I could see what fumble-footed creature
was stumbling after me, why else? Now that you’re here, let me show
you the way out.”
Princess Beatrice moved forward again at that. She
couldn’t see their light yet; they must be down a side path, but
there was no reason why Jonah, crotchety as he sounded, shouldn’t
rescue her as well. She wondered how he had figured out that the
bard might be in this unlikely place. Finding Phelan on his heels
explained his fit of temper. But Phelan seemed oddly shaken by
something beyond his father’s acerbity, and she wanted, deeply and
irrationally, to know what.
“You’re looking for Kelda,” Phelan said, echoing
her thoughts. There was that odd tone in his voice, that mingling
of wonder, fear, and uncertainty that halted the princess again,
midstep. “And I’m searching, through a thousand years of poetry,
for you.”
There was dead silence in the tunnel. Beatrice was
overwhelmed with a sudden, urgent need to see their faces. She
lifted one foot, set it down in a cautious, silent step, not
wanting so much as the sound of a shifted pebble to distract
them.
Phelan continued finally, to the wall of Jonah’s
silence. His voice shook again, badly. “On a plain of bone, in a
ring of stone ... That’s when you last played your harp. You
brought down the school tower. And then you vanished. You were
supposed to be in that third coffin that Dower Ren wrote into the
school records. But nobody found your body. Because. Because you
hadn’t died. You are Nairn. You are the bard who failed the Three
Trials of Bone Plain, and now there is no end of days. And no
forgetting.”
Beatrice took a step, felt air beside her instead
of earth. She turned toward it, saw them finally. Or at least she
saw Phelan’s face, completely illumined by the electric torch Jonah
sent glaring into it. Jonah himself was hardly visible: only a
sleeve, a hand that had begun to tremble, making the light waver on
Phelan. Beatrice had no idea what Phelan was saying, but her own
eyes welled as she saw the tear flare down his face, disappear into
the dark.
The light bobbled so erratically then that Phelan’s
face blurred into shadow. Jonah lowered it finally, moved toward
the tunnel wall, slumped wearily against it. Phelan followed after
a moment, leaned beside him. The light illumined two boots now, one
glossy black with polished buckles, the other earth-colored,
battered and cracked.
“You can’t possibly imagine,” Jonah said at last,
his own voice soft, frayed, “how many times I have wanted you to
know me. You, of all people in the world, could understand the
poetry. But I was terrified of my own hope—that’s why I threw so
many obstacles at you. I was terrified that even you might fail,
might go through your life never saying my name.” He paused,
finished heavily, “Or that, knowing it, you might regard me,
rightfully, with utter contempt.”
Beatrice, hearing an inarticulate sound from
Phelan, put her own hand over her mouth to stifle a sudden, indrawn
breath.
A sharp exclamation bounced off the walls around
her; the roving light caught her in the face. She stared into the
dark beyond it, weeping without knowing exactly why yet but
beginning to glimpse pieces of a tale as ancient as the runes above
the door made of stone.
“Princess Beatrice,” Jonah Cle said,
astonished.
“I was—I was following Kelda,” she whispered. “I
lost him. Then I heard you.”
Phelan pushed himself away from the wall abruptly,
followed the path of the light Jonah had lowered to the ground
between them. He found Beatrice’s elbow, then her wrist, tugged her
gently forward to join them. She leaned against the wall beside
him, fumbling for the ineffectual scrap of monogrammed lace in her
pocket.
“I don’t even know why I’m crying,” she said into
it. “Except that you are. It sounds so desperately difficult. I’m
sorry. I shouldn’t even be here—”
Phelan said nothing, just put his arm around her
shoulders, tightly. She felt his lips move across her cheek,
tasting her tears, then find her mouth through the monogram.
He said huskily, his forehead tilted against hers,
“You understand ancient things. You love them. Where else would I
want you to be?” He raised his head then, turned toward Jonah. “Who
is Kelda? I can’t find him anywhere in your long life, and yet he
must be far older. Old enough to know how to pronounce words that
haven’t been heard for a thousand years and more. He has all that
power. Why all through history has he been so silent?”
Jonah flicked the light around them as though the
bard might be standing quietly in the dark as well.
“Not here,” he said tersely, and pulled himself
away from the wall. Beatrice saw him put his hand on Phelan’s
shoulder, very gently, and her eyes burned again. “Thank you,” he
breathed. “Thank you for looking for me. I hoped you would, but
it’s a cruel thing to wish upon a child.”
“You got used to yourself,” Phelan said huskily.
“So will I.”
The light illumined Beatrice again: her flowery
frock, her torn, soiled stockings. “Ah,” Jonah said. “Sophy did
mention some sort of garden party. That explains the dress. But why
did you do away with your shoes?”
“Heels,” Beatrice explained. “Far too noisy.”
“You can’t walk up into the world like that. We’d
better take you back the way you came.”
“No,” she said adamantly, as her hand slid down
Phelan’s arm, groped for his fingers, and gripped them. “No. I’m
coming with you. You know who you are, and Phelan knows who you
are, and I don’t even know for certain why you both just broke my
heart. Tell me, Master Cle.”
“It’s a very long story,” he warned her. “And
possibly the oldest. I thought I knew it, until I met Kelda. He
taught me what it really meant, and I have been sorry ever
since.”
She felt her fingers chill, even holding Phelan’s,
but she walked with them through the dark toward the light of day,
which she saw, as though with Jonah’s eyes, as something endlessly,
tirelessly old as well, waiting patiently for yet another
night.