CHAPTER 9
AFTER the council, Ted and Patrick retired
to their room, where Patrick lay on the rug and read Inherit the
Stars, and Ted sat in the window seat and read the book Celia
had given him.
Its framing narration was written for
ten-year-olds; but it quoted copiously from Shan’s journals, from
later commentators on them, and from a variety of other sorcerous
and historical works that were hard for Ted to puzzle out and would
have been far too much for a ten-year-old. Maybe you were supposed
to begin with the framework and grow gradually into the quotations.
Ted plowed doggedly through them whether he understood them or not;
maybe they would wake up Edward’s knowledge, or spur Edward to make
some enlightening remark.
He was reading the story of the wizard and the
animals. The old man in all the tapestries and carvings was
Prospero, who had been Master of the Red School, where Shan had
started out as an apprentice. In pursuit of his studies, he had
been sent to a place called Griseous Lake, to watch a song happen.
This made no sense to Ted, but there was no explanation. He had
lost his horse and arrived too late for the song, as the result of
which a young Blue Sorcerer had died. At Griseous Lake, he had met
Melanie, and after a time had quarreled with her because she had
made him immortal. Ted, remembering that immortality came from the
blood of a unicorn killed by treachery, could understand a
reluctance to profit from such a deed; but Shan, besides that,
seemed also to object to immortality itself.
The Red Sorcerers all had animal companions, whom
they called fellows. One of the early tasks of an apprentice was to
find his inner ear, wherewith he could understand his fellows, and
his inner voice, wherewith he could speak to them. Shan, who had
been clumsy and backward in this regard, achieved both voice and
ear suddenly in the course of gaining his immortality. He had not
meant to cheat, if you could call that cheating, and he did not
want the immortality anyway. But the Red School dismissed him from
its service.
He had taken from the body of the dead Blue
Sorcerer anything he thought the man’s friends might find valuable.
He accordingly took this collection to the Blue School, which
welcomed him happily and invited him to join its ranks instead. His
first task was to discover exactly what had happened to the Blue
Sorcerer. That was a separate story, which Ted reluctantly skipped
because it had little to do with Shan.
The discovery took Shan about ten years, during
which he made up his quarrel with Melanie. He still had his fellows
with him, cat, dog, horse, and eagle. He had refused to tell what
few secrets of the Red School he knew to the Blue Master, but he
found himself telling them to Melanie. Melanie, who had a
long-standing grudge against the unicorns, enlisted the aid of a
dragon and managed to turn a unicorn into a fellow. When Shan found
out, he was outraged; Melanie refused to release the unicorn, and
moreover had told the Blue School about her achievement. The Blue
School was half fascinated and half horrified; it was certainly
very pleased to get the information it had wanted about the methods
of the Red School. Shan spent much fruitless effort seeking a way
to free the unicorn, and finally, at the unicorn’s request, killed
it. Then he resigned from the Blue School before they could kick
him out.
“What a hideous story!” said Ted.
“It’s suppertime,” said Patrick.
Ted told him about it on the way downstairs, and
had the satisfaction of seeing Patrick blanch. They found their
respective sisters in the crowded hall. Ted sat down next to Ruth
and requested that she pass the salt.
“Do you know where Fence is?” she said,
pushing the heavy cut-glass salt cellar in his direction so
carelessly that she spilled its silver spoon and a good pile of
salt. Ellen made an exasperated noise and began spooning the
spilled salt back into the cellar, along with a few crumbs and some
cat hair.
“I haven’t seen him since this morning,” said Ted,
looking away from this operation and concentrating on Ruth’s face.
She seemed to be trying not to cry, and Ted felt it necessary to
justify having lost track of Fence. “I’ve been reading.”
“So have we all,” said Ruth, darkly. “Fence has
gone to beard Meredith in her den, and he said he’d see me at
supper.”
She explained what had happened. Ted couldn’t blame
her for worrying. It was Fence’s nature that, if he said he would
see you at supper, then he would see you at supper. Ted said,
“Where’s Meredith’s den, Ruthie? Should we go rescue him?”
“What do you suppose we can do against a bunch of
sorcerers?” said Patrick.
“Quite a lot, probably,” said Ruth. “They’re sworn
to abjure violence, and there are five of us. But we aren’t
supposed to know anything about it.”
“Where’s Randolph, then?” said Laura.
They all looked around; it was crowded in the
Dragon Hall, and all the red and pink light made it hard to
recognize people. Ellen finally located Randolph by standing on the
bench. He was sitting with Matthew and Celia at one of the shorter
tables to the right of the fireplace.
“Benjamin’s with them,” said Laura, also standing,
rather precariously, on the bench.
Ted got up. Sure enough, between Randolph’s wild
black head and Celia’s smooth, braided one loomed, six inches
higher than either of them, the graying, dark head of Benjamin and
his big, brown-clad shoulders. Matthew, sitting across from the
three of them, caught Ted’s eyes and favored him with a steady, if
blank, look, probably intended to tell Ted to behave without
attracting Benjamin’s attention.
“Well, he’s got to look at us sometime,” said Ted,
and started to climb over the bench.
Ruth caught hold of the hem of his shirt and
dragged him back down, upsetting her ale into her plate. “Not
today,” she said. “We were specifically ordered to leave him alone
today.”
“Do you want to help Fence, or don’t you?”
There was a furious silence.
“Well, for heaven’s sake,” Ellen said. “You’re the
King, aren’t you? Get a page to fetch Randolph.”
At a formal banquet Ted would have thought of this
himself. There would have been pages everywhere, and he would have
been stuck up at the head of the table feeling silly. But in this
hall you served yourself and sat where you pleased. “Seest thou any
pages?” he said.
“I see John,” said Ellen.
“Well, wave to him and then get down off that bench
before Benjamin sees you. Laura, get down before you fall
down.”
Laura got down. Ellen also did as she was told with
remarkable meekness. John came up to them smiling, leaned over the
table, and said to Ted, “How may I aid you?”
“Could you, of your courtesy, go to Lord Randolph
and tell him—privily,” added Ted, “that I need to speak to
him?”
John looked not as if he were going to refuse, but
as if he were puzzled. Ted said, on impulse, “Benjamin is vexed
with us.”
John grinned a grin of perfect comprehension and
said, “As Your Majesty wills it,” in a tone that any one of the
five of them might have used, playing. Then he charged across the
crowded room to Randolph. Randolph got up promptly, crossed the
room, sat down next to Ted with his back to the table, and said,
“What is your gracious will?” in a perfectly serious voice.
Ruth told her story for the fourth time. Randolph
frowned all through it. “You have been with the cavernous magicians
these three months, and knew not sooner?”
“How was I supposed to know sooner?” said Ruth, so
sharply that Ted blinked. Randolph seemed unaffected; and also
unconvinced. Ruth said, “I spent those months as a disgraced
apprentice; because of the Nightmare Grass.”
“Oho!” said Randolph, as if something had suddenly
become clear to him.
“Yes,” said Ruth. “So I didn’t know. But your Lady
Ruth knew right where those books were.”
“The next question,” said Randolph, slowly, “is,
knew Meredith that she knew?”
“You think she might have been as sneaky as I
am?”
“Sneakier by far,” said Randolph, looking her in
the eye until she turned red.
“Shouldn’t we all do some sneaking?” said Ted,
impatiently. “You don’t know what may be happening to Fence.”
“But look you,” said Randolph. “Ruth must not seem
to have betrayed her to Fence.”
“Well, you won’t find out by speculating,” said
Patrick. “Let Ruth stay here.”
“Come on, then,” said Ellen, jumping up.
Randolph stood up from the bench and surveyed them.
“All of you?” he said.
“Say Fence asked you to come for him if he was
late, and we were all with you and would not be gainsaid,” said
Ellen.
“And that’s no more than truth,” said Randolph. He
stopped in the act of turning away, and looked at Ruth again. “Will
you guide us so far as the door?” he said.
“Good heavens, don’t you know where Meredith’s
study is?”
“How should I?” said Randolph.
Ruth stood up and shook crumbs from the white folds
of her skirt. “It’s in the old wine cellars.” As Randolph simply
went on standing there, she added, “Fence knew where those
are.”
“Shut Fence in a wardrobe,” said Randolph,
precisely, “and he’ll find the loose plank i’the back before
thou’st turned the key i’the lock.”
“I’d think,” said Ruth, exasperated, “that rival
schools of magic would spy on one another.”
“So they have,” said Randolph, in extremely grim
tones. “But one of ’em hath been o’er-trusting. Come your
ways.”
They followed him out of the noisy hall. Ruth then
led them to the back of High Castle, out of the regions Ted was
familiar with. Nobody said anything until she marched down the last
narrow stairway and flung open the door into a dazzle of gold
light. It smelled of flowers and greenness and grass baking; it
smelled like the soul of summer; it smelled as the whole outdoors
had smelled on the day of the Unicorn Hunt. Something stirred and
stretched in the back of Ted’s mind, and, incomprehensibly but with
a pleasing rhyme and rhythm, Edward said, “The fieldis ouerflouis /
With gowans that grouis, / Quhair lilies lyk lou is, / Als rid as
the rone.”
“I never knew this was here!” said Ellen,
indignant.
And Patrick said, “They can grow trees
underground. One point for us.”
“What’re you doing,” said Ted, irritated, “keeping
a list of everything we got right in the game?”
“Shut up,” said Ruth, from the far door.
Randolph had already joined her there; the rest of
them hurried up. “Now, then,” said Ruth to Randolph. “Meredith’s
study is the second door on the right.” She took him by the elbows
and shook him slightly, as if he were Patrick. “Now watch
out,” she said. “Meredith is a demon. She’ll say awful
things that go around in your head for weeks afterward.”
Randolph said, “We’ll heed your warnings,” and Ruth
let go of him. He opened the door softly, and they followed him
through it.