- Patricia A Mckillip
- The Forgotten Beasts of Eld
- The_Forgotten_Beasts_of_Eld_split_008.html
THREE
The winter
closed around them with a cold, strong grip. Great peaks of snow
drifted against the house; the swan lake froze until it lay like
the crystal face of the moon amid the snow. Ice ran in bars across
the windows of the white hall, dropped downward in frozen tears
before the door. The animals came and went freely through the warm
house, found dark, silent places among the rocks to sleep. Gyld
slept curled over his gold; the black Cat Moriah spent long hours
drowsing dark and dreaming beside Sybel’s fire. Sybel worked in the
silent domed room, reading, calling through the black, fiery skies,
through moon-colored day skies for the Liralen. She sent her calls,
searching and sensitive, across the whole of Eldwold, southward
into the deserts, to the Fyrbolg marshes in the east, and the
Mirkon Forest in the north, and the silent, unexplored lake-lands
far beyond the rich lands of the Niccon Lords in North Eldwold.
Silence answered her always, and patiently she would call again.
Tam moved through the winter oblivious of it, spending days away in
the small stone cottages tucked in the curves of the mountain, or
lying long and silent with his arm across Gules, staring into the
green fire, or hunting with Ter on his arm. He came one morning in
midwinter to the domed room and found Sybel still motionless on its
floor, after a long night of calling. He knelt beside her and
touched her. She came back to herself with a
start.
“My Tam, what
is it?”
“Nothing,” he
said a little wistfully. “Only I have not seen you for days. I
thought you might wonder where I was.”
She rubbed her
eyes with her palms. “Oh. Well. What have you been doing? Have you
been with Nyl?”
“Yes. I help
him feed the sheep. Yesterday we mended a fence that fell beneath a
snowdrift, and then I took Ter into the caves. They seem so warm in
winter. And then... Sybel...” She watched him, waiting, as he
frowned at the floor, rubbing his hands up and down his thighs. “I
told—I told Nyl about Coren and what he—what he said—and Nyl
said—if he were a king’s son he would not live up here feeding
sheep and running barefoot in the summer. And then—for a while—it
was hard for him to talk to me. But tomorrow we are going to the
caves again.”
Sybel sighed.
She rested her head on her bent knees, silent awhile. “Oh, I am
tired of all this. Tam, have you told anyone but
Nyl?”
“No. Only
Ter.”
“Then make Nyl
promise he will tell no one. Because others might come for you, try
to take you away whether you want to go or not. They may try to
hurt you, those that do not want to have you king. Tell Nyl that.
Tell him to answer no questions of any man he does not know. Will
you?”
He nodded.
Then he said softly, looking; at her, “Sybel, would my father come
for me?”
“Perhaps. Do
you want him to come?”
“I think—I
think I would like to see him. Sybel—”
“What?”
“Is it such a
bad thing to be?” he whispered. “Is it?”
She sighed
again, her fingers twisting absently through her long hair. “Oh, if
you were older... It is not a bad thing, itself, but it is a bad
thing to be used by men, to have them choose what you must be, and
what you must not be, to have little choice in your life. If you
were older, you could choose your own way. But you are so young and
you know so little of men—and I know so little more.” She drew a
breath. “Tam, do you want this thing?”
He shook his
head quickly. “I do not want to leave you and the animals.” He
paused a moment, quiet, his eyes vague as though he looked into
himself. “But Nyl—his eyes went so round when I told him, like
owl’s eyes. And I felt strange to myself. I would like to see my
father.” His eyes slid to her face. “You could call him for me. He
would not have to know me; I could just see him—see what he looks
like—”
She touched
her eyes lightly with her fingertips, aware of Tam’s eyes, intent,
hopeful on her face. “If I call him,” she said, “it may be that you
will have no choice as to whether you stay or
go.”
“He will not
know it is me! I will pretend to be Nyl’s brother—Look at me,
Sybel! How could he know I am his son?”
“And if he
sees your mother in your face? My Tam, he would look once into your
bright, hoping eyes and they would tell him more than the color of
your hair or the shape of your face.” She rose. Tam caught her
arm.
“Please,
Sybel,” he whispered. “Please.”
So she called
the King of Eldwold that morning in his warm house with its floors
covered with rich furs and walls shimmering with ancient,
embroidered tales. Three days later he rode with two men through
the crusted snow, dark, small figures like brown withered leaves
against the white earth. The wind lay frozen in the ice-sheathed
branches; their breaths hung in a white mist before their faces.
They rode slowly on the winding path upward from the city. Sybel
watched them come from her high place as they moved in and out of
the trees. She felt the King’s mind, powerful and restless, like
Ter’s mind, filled with the fragment memories of faces, events,
with war lust and love, with the cold, black stone of jealousy and
the iron core of loneliness and fear like a white, chill, perpetual
mist in the corner of his mind. When he neared her, she sent a call
to Ter, flying with Tam, to bring him back.
Cyrin brought
the message of their coming to her gates. He walked beside her
through the snow, his broad back heavily bristled in a silver-white
winter cloak.
I saw a
man once leap into a pit to see how deep it was, he commented. But
no doubt you are wiser.
Sybel shook
her head. I am not wise where
Tam is concerned.
It is
an easy thing to call a man into your house, but not so easy to
have him leave.
I know.
Do you think I do not know? But Tam wants to see his
father.
She opened the
gates of her yard and stepped out to meet the three
horsemen.
“Are you the
wizard woman, Sybel?” the King of Eldwold said to her. He looked
down at her from his black horse, his gloved hands resting on its
neck. He was dark-cloaked, simply dressed, as were the two men with
him, but she looked into his gray, weary eyes with the web of lines
beneath them, and at the relentless stillness of his mouth, and the
helm of gray hair on his head, and saw only
him.
“I am
Sybel.”
He was silent
a moment, and she could not read the thoughts in his eyes. He
dismounted and stood with his reins in his hands, his voice hushed
in the great still world.
“Do you know
who I am?” he asked curiously. She smiled a
little.
“Do you want
me to say your name aloud?”
He shook his
head quickly. “No.” And then he smiled, too, the lines gathering at
the corners of his eyes. “You have a little of—of my first wife in
your face. You were kin. You know that, of
course.”
“I know. But I
know little else of her family—indeed of anyone living off this
mountain. I have nothing to do with men’s
affairs.”
“But that is
difficult for me to believe. You would have great power meddling in
men’s affairs, especially in these troubled days. Has no man ever
offered you that power?”
“Are you
offering it to me? Is that why you have come up the mountain in
midwinter?”
He was silent
again, his eyes wandering over her. “Do they not consult you,
people from the city—buy little spells, favors from you to heal
their children or cows, perhaps? Ease a little life out of a rich
kinsman? Seduce a weary husband?”
“There is an
old woman, Maelga, down the road who does such things for them. Is
it her you seek?”
He shook his
head. “No. I came—on impulse. To ask one question of you. Have you
heard of a boy living on this mountain yet belonging to no one of
the mountain? Think carefully. I will pay a great deal for the
truth.”
“What is his
name? His age?”
“He is twelve
years old—thirteen, come spring. As for his name—it could be
anything.” He heard shouting suddenly through the trees and turned.
Tam and Nyl ran down the mountainside toward them, laughing,
awkward in the deep snow. Tam’s light voice came clear across the
stillness.
“Nyl! Nyl,
wait! I saw riders—”
The King’s
eyes moved back to Sybel. “Who are they?”
“Mountain
children. They have lived here always“ She spoke absently, seeing
Ter pick up speed, fly ahead of Tam in a swift, dark line toward
her. He landed abruptly on the King’s shoulder, and she caught his
blue eyes and said,
No.
The King stood
quietly beneath the heavy talons, his mouth twitching a little. “Is
he yours?”
“Yes. He is
good protection for a lonely woman.” She gave Ter a single word:
Off, and he moved after a moment to the wall behind her. The King
drew a soundless breath.
“I have never
seen one of that size. I wonder that you do not fear
him.”
“Surely you
understand power.”
“I do. But...”
His voice softened; a little, frayed smile came into his eyes like
moving water behind a film of ice. “I am always a little afraid of
those I have even that much power over.”
Nyl and Tam,
slowed to a silent walk, reached them, their eyes slipping warily
over the faces of the King’s guards.
“Sybel,” Tam
said, and Drede turned. “Maelga wants you.” He reached out
instinctively to soothe the King’s horse, a question in his wide
eyes, and Sybel said gently,
“This man is
from Mondor; he has come in search of someone he
lost.”
Nyl came to
stand beside Tam, his breath pulsing white in and out of the air.
The King said to them, “Do you know of a boy your own age living on
the mountain who was not born here?” Nyl shook his head, and the
King’s eyes flicked to Tam. “Do you? There will be a
reward.”
Tam swallowed.
His hand moved slowly up and down the horse’s velvet neck. “No,” he
said at last. His voice caught, and he said again, “No“ The King’s
iron brows knit a little.
“What are your
names?”
“I am Nyl,”
said Nyl. “This is my brother Tam“
“Your brother?
You do not look alike.” He touched a strand of Nyl’s black hair,
fallen across his bony, freckled face, loosed from his
cap.
“We never
did,” said Tam. And then he was still as the King’s hand touched
his head, pulled back the hood of his cloak to reveal his ivory
hair.
Ter Falcon
gave a cry behind them. The King lifted Tam’s face with one hand
and Tam’s mouth shook. Then it pulled into a smile that blazed
across his eyes. The King closed his eyes. He loosed Tam and turned
to Sybel.
“I must speak
to their mother. Has she told you anything of her sons? Anything
strange?”
“No,” Sybel
said. “Nothing. They are simple children.
The King’s
eyes held hers for a long moment. “What do you know of this truly,
I wonder, you who know me. I think perhaps I shall come to see you
again.” He turned, put a hand on Tam’s shoulder. “Take my horse.
Lead me to your home.”
“Our mother is
not home,” Nyl said suddenly. “She went to help Marte, who is
having a baby. Shall I get her?”
“Yes. Go,”
said Drede, and he ran ahead of them swiftly through the trees. Tam
turned the horse, murmuring to it. He gave Sybel one flash of his
white face as they left. She turned and went back through the
garden into the still house, to the domed room where she sat, her
hands quiet in her lap, her eyes unseeing.
Tam came back
after a long while. He went to her silently, crept close to her
under the fall of her long hair as though he were a small child
again. For a long time he was silent. Then he said
softly,
“Nyl ran
ahead, and told his mother what lie we told the King. So—he left
unsure of me. Sybel—”
She felt him
trembling. “What, Tam?”
“He—we talked
a little. He—” His head dropped suddenly onto her knees. Her hand
moved gently over his hair as he cried, his hands crumpling her
skirt. He quieted finally, and she lifted his face between her
hands.
“My Tam, it is
not such a terrible thing for a boy to want his
father.”
“But I love
you, too! I do not want to leave you, but—I wanted—I wanted—to say
I was his son and watch his eyes—to see if he was pleased with me.
We talked of Ter—he said it was a marvelous thing that I was not
afraid to hunt with him.” He stared up at her, heavy-eyed,
desperate. “I do not know what to do. I want to stay and I want to
go. Sybel— If I go—would you come?”
“But Tam, what
would I do with the animals?”
“You must
come! Bring the animals— Sybel, he would want you to come— Coren
wanted you— You could do things for him—”
“Against the
Lords of Sirle?” she said a little sharply and he was silent. “That
is what he would use me for.”
“I do not care
what he would use you for,” Tam whispered. “I want you to
come.”
She shook her
head, her eyes dark. “No, my Tam. I will do anything for you but
that. You have your life to make and I have mine. I am sorry, but
you must choose between us. I will always be here in this mountain
when you have need of me— No, do not cry, my Tam—” She smiled, her
own eyes wet, and wiped the tears from his face with her fingers.
“You were so small and soft once,” she whispered, “and you fit so
surely in my arms... I did not know then that you would grow up to
hurt me so.”
“Sybel, come
with me—please come—”
“My Tam—” she
said helplessly, and he rose suddenly, ran from her through the
house, and out into the yard where she heard his cry to Ter through
the softly falling snow.
She rose
slowly, went unseeing to the fire and held her hands to it. The Cat
Moriah watched her silently, emerald eyes unblinking. Then she put
on her cloak and went out, down the path to Maelga’s
house.
She sat down
wordlessly on the sheepskin beside the fire, resting her face
against the stones, staring at the flames beneath Maelga’s
cauldron. Maelga moved softly through her house, doing odd work,
while the gray cat wove in and out of her path. After awhile Maelga
knelt beside Sybel and put her arms around her, and Sybel’s face
dropped hidden against her shoulder.
“My child,
what is it?” Maelga whispered. “What lies so frozen in your eyes
that you cannot even weep?” Her hand stroked the pale, gleaming
hair again and again, until Sybel whispered, her voice dry and soft
and distant,
“Tam is
leaving me. Do you have a spell for that?”
“Oh, White
One, in all the world there is no spell for
that.”
Tam spoke
little to her the following days. She saw him rarely as he came to
eat and sleep, then left, silent, dark-eyed, with Ter on his fist
or Nyl at his side to roam the winter world. She worked little,
sitting for long hours with half-finished tapestry on her lap or
pacing restlessly before the fire. The animals were silent around
her, moving with soft secret steps and still watching through the
house and the yard. Finally one gray morning she went to the domed
room and stared out at the white, cold world, at the endless,
soundless flakes of snow. And there she sent a call down to the
city of Mondor to trouble the heart of the Eldwold
King.
He came that
day alone through the winter. She met him at her gates, with Gules
Lyon and the Boar Cyrin watching behind her. The King looked at
her, silently, faintly puzzled, and she said,
“I called
you.”
His face
smoothed, incredulous. “You called me?”
“I called you
and you came. So my father and my grandfather called the ancient
beasts of Eldwold to them.”
His head shook
once from side to side. “It is not possible,” he breathed, and she
smiled, her face bloodless in the chill.
“I called you
before, so that Tam could see you and choose.” His gray eyes
narrowed as at a word he had heard but half-forgotten, and she
continued slowly, “Twelve years ago—thirteen in spring—Coren of
Sirle brought a child to my gates and begged me, for the sake of a
kinswoman I had never seen, to care for her child. So I loved that
child, and cared for him, and watched him grow, and now... at his
wish, I have called you to return him to the world of
men.”
The King’s
eyes closed. He sat still, the snow catching on his face, on his
shoulders, and she saw the breath move out of him in a long, slow,
white mist. He dismounted.
“Where is he?”
he whispered.
“Out, with Ter
Falcon. I will call him back soon, after we have talked a little.”
She opened the gates. “Come to my hearth. You are cold. And I am
cold, too, a little.”
He followed
her in. She put another chair beside the fire for him. He untied
his cloak and dropped it wet on the stones and held his hands to
the blaze. They trembled, and he dropped them and
sat.
“Tam,” he said
softly.
“Tamlorn. Are
you pleased with him? He wanted you to be.”
He smiled
wonderingly, the worn mask of his face loosening. “How can he doubt
that? He is so tall, so strong and free-voiced, with his mother’s
hair and her eyes...”
“No, I think
they are your eyes,” she said judiciously and his smile deepened,
caught in his eyes like sunlight in a pool. He reached across the
distance between them and took her hand between his own long,
scarred hands.
“How can you
give him to me?”
She drew a
breath. “How can I not, when he wants you?” she whispered. “I do
not want to give him to anyone—anyone, because I think he will be
troubled by powerful men, by things he does not understand. You
will make a king of him, and he will learn much of hatred, lies and
things that lie nameless in the deep pools of men’s hearts. But he
looked at you, and I saw his smile. He is your son. He is nothing
to me. I have loved him for twelve years, and you for—twelve
minutes, but I cannot hold him here. I can hold a great Falcon and
an ancient powerful Lyon, but I cannot hold one sweet-eyed boy
against his own wantings.”
His gray brows
knit a little as he listened. “You are so strange, Sybel. You ask
nothing from me and yet you surely must know how desperate I was
for him.”
“There is
nothing you have that could have bought Tam from me,” she said
swiftly.
“Perhaps.
Powerful men have been looking for him to sell him to me. They are
not so kind to an old, scarred lion. Ask me—anything.
Anything.”
“Only love
him,” she whispered. His fingers tightened.
“I am sorry,”
he said, and she shook her head.
“No. Be happy.
It is a good thing to have a child to love. He is a very loving boy
and he likes powerful things, which is why, I think, he was drawn
to you. You are a little like Ter.”
“Ter?”
“The
Falcon.”
“Oh.” He
smiled, the hardness melting from his eyes, his mouth. He lifted
one hand toward her, then dropped it, and memories filmed his eyes.
“Rianna had such white skin... Rianna. I have not spoken her name
for twelve years. Silent out of anger... then silent out of grief.
She was a sweet, warm wind in my heart, a resting place, a place of
peace where I could forget so many things... And then I saw her
give a look to Norrel one day, a look like the touch of a mouth.
And so, I lost my still moment of peace. Here, sitting in your
quiet house, I have found a little of it
again.”
“I am glad,”
she said gently. “And I am so glad that—” She checked, a little
color in her face.
“Glad of
what?”
“That—Coren
Sirle was wrong. He said you were a bitter man with no love left in
you. But I think you will love Tam.”
The smile went
from his eyes. “Coren,” he said tonelessly. “He came here. For
Tam?”
“Yes.”
“You did not
give Tam back to him. Yet I have heard of his clever tongue and his
sweet smile.”
The flush
deepened around her eyes. She said tartly, “Do you think I have so
little love for Tam that I would give him to the first sweet-voiced
man who came wanting him? I would not have given him to you if I
thought he could not love you.”
“You would
have let me die heirless?”
“What concern
of mine are your affairs? Or Coren’s? What kind of peace would
there be in me or in my house if I took interest in the wars and
feuds that you weave in the courts below? I do not understand such
things. I understand only what lies within my
walls.”
His eyes were
still, a little hard on her face, as though he were seeing her for
the first time. “And yet you are so powerful... You drew me without
my will out of my house—you could do anything you chose with me and
I could not fight you. Did Coren of Sirle seek you as well as
Tamlorn?”
“Of course.”
she said steadily. “He asked me the price of my
powers.”
“And.”
“And I told
him. I want Tam’s happiness. I want a white bird with soft,
trailing wings. He could not give me either. So he left
me.”
Drede eased
back in his chair. Sybel watched him silently awhile. The melted
snow streaked the gray mane of his hair to the sides of his dark,
lined face; fire coiled in a blue stone on one strong, taut hand.
He sensed her watching finally, turned suddenly to meet her
eyes.
“What are you
thinking?”
“Of Gules
Lyon. And the Falcon. And a little of the
Dragon...”
He smiled. “So
you also are drawn to powerful things.”
She looked
away from him, startled, and felt her face slowly warm with blood.
He leaned forward, and she felt in his nearness a disturbing,
unfamiliar power. His fingers touched her face lightly, turned it
back to him.
“Come with us.
Come back to Mondor with Tamlorn and me.”
“To work for
you against Sirle?”
“To work with
me, for Tamlorn. Bring your animals, so there will be whatever you
love at Mondor. We will make a king of Tamlorn. Come. And, if you
like, I will make of you a queen.”
The blood
beat, hot in her face. “It is more than Coren offered me,” she
murmured, and suddenly she rose, turned away from him and felt
around her the cool, white walls. “No.”
“’Why?”
“I do not
know. But, no. I could not—I could not work against
Sirle.”
“So.”
She looked
down at him quickly. “It has nothing to do with Coren. I do not
want to choose which one of you I must love or hate. Here, I am
free to do neither. I want no part of your bitterness. You do not
have to be afraid of me. I would never work with the enemies of
Tam’s father. You are safe from me. And so is Sirle, because I will
not take your hatred as my own.”
He was silent,
his brows drawn, and she could not see his eyes. “You are too
powerful,” he murmured, “and too beautiful... You are an
uncomfortable thought. But I believe you. You would not work
against Tam.” He rose, too, restlessly, then turned at the sound of
the door opening. Tam stood shaking the snow off his cloak. He
closed the door and came toward the fire and saw
them.
He stopped.
The blood flared into his face. Drede held out his
hand.
“Come.”
He was still a
moment, his eyes flicking back and forth, uncertainly between their
faces. Then Drede smiled and Tam smiled back slowly, swallowing. He
came to them, stood between them, holding his hands to the blaze.
Drede said softly, “Look at me,” and he turned to meet the King’s
eyes.
“Give me your
name.”
“Tamlorn.”
“And your
mother’s name.”
“Rianna.”
“And your
father’s.”
His mouth
twitched, steadied. “Drede.”
He rode back
that afternoon with the King. Sybel watched them leave from her
gates. The snow had stopped falling; the world was soundless but
for their quiet voices. Tam stood before her wordlessly a long
moment, while the King waited, mounted behind him, and she looked
smiling, her eyes wet, into his eyes. She touched his face,
smoothed a lock of hair away from his eyes. Then she
said,
“Tam, I have a
gift for you.”
She spoke
Ter’s name and the great Falcon came to settle on Tam’s shoulder.
He started.
“No—Sybel, he
will miss you“
“No. He is a
king’s bird. And if you ever are in danger he will protect you, and
when I call his name, he will tell me from far away that you are
well and happy.” She lifted her eyes to Ter’s blue eyes, and for a
moment he said nothing to her. Then words came.
I did
not think there would be a place for me again in the world of
men.
There
is one place, she said.
Guard him well and
wisely.
I will,
greatest of Heald’s children. And if ever you need me, call, and I
will come freely.
She
smiled. Farewell, my great
Lord of Air.
Tam hugged her
so tightly that the mist of their breaths in the chill air stilled.
Then he mounted behind Drede, the Falcon on his arm. Drede bent
low, took Sybel’s hand.
“There will
always be a place for you with us if you choose it. And if you do
not, there is one place in my heart where your name will be, in
silence.” He held her hand a moment against his mouth. Then he
turned the dark horse onto the mountain path, and Sybel watched
until Tam’s face, turned always toward her, was lost among the
trees.
She turned,
shivering a little, and went back into the garden. The snow began
to fall, light, silent, endless. Gules Lyon appeared silently
beside her; she trailed her hand absently through his mane. She
went into the quiet, darkening house and sat down before the fire.
Moriah came to rest at her feet. She sat there while the fire crept
into embers and pulsed within them secretly, and while they burned
themselves to blackness, and the night fell, cold, around her, and
the snow fell across her threshold, blotted the last footprints of
Tam, and the crescents of the prints of the King’s horse. That
night, the next day, and the next night she sat there, hands
motionless on the arms of her chair, her eyes unwavering, as if she
could still see the dancing green flame, and the white hall was
cold and silent about her.
She stirred
finally, blinking. She saw her animals about her, even the fiery
mass of Gyld, curled silent on be stones, and the beautiful,
secret-eyed Swan watching her from the doorway of the domed room.
She turned and found Cyrin’s red eyes behind her. She smiled a
little, her mouth stiff in the cold.
“I am here.
Are you hungry?”
Her voice
faded, unanswered, among the stones. Then Gules Lyon pushed beneath
her hand.
Get
up, he said. Tend the fire. Eat.
She rose,
sighing, and knelt before the hearth. Then her hands checked,
wood-filled, over the grate. She turned, feeling the nameless Thing
with her among the animals. She searched for it, her eyes narrowed,
in be shadowed comers, behind the folds of tapestry. It stood just
beyond her eyesight, just beyond the circle of her mind, formless,
nameless. A thought, the sudden pulse of a memory, flicked through
her head. She put the wood down and went into the domed room. She
unlocked a huge, gold-leafed book, one of Ogam’s, with parchment
pages of ancient writings, the collections of forgotten tales as
old as the reign of the third King of Eldwold. She leafed through
the pages, searching for a few brief lines, and found them finally.
She sat down on the floor, the heavy book on her lap, and read
silently:
And there is
that fearsome monster, which awaits men around dark corners,
through dark doorways, in the blackest hours of the night. Only the
fearless survive looking upon it. It is called Rommalb, when spoken
of, for to speak its name truly is to summon
it.
She smiled
slowly. “Rommalb,” she said aloud, and turned the name around on
her tongue. “Blammor.” And looking up, she saw it
finally.