# # Chapter ONE # #
(PROOF
COPY -- Not for distribution.)
Blue moonlight filtered through leafy oaken limbs in a small, forest
glade where the Veil thickened, where a cloaked woman walked
alone, her thoughts weighed down by the irony of a decision.
She
paced purposefully through damp autumn leaves, feeling the dew seep
through the soles of her doeskin boots. Pale fingers brushed back
long waves of flaxen hair as she turned her face to the sky,
confirming the position of the stars through gaps where the trees had
shed their fiery coiffure. She had come to the correct place on the
proper night. The only task left to her was to wait--a skill she had
never mastered.
She
did not doubt the choice she had made, but she pondered its cost.
Little more than a year ago, she had defied one of the highest laws
of the people who had adopted her as their own, one not even their
sworn enemies dared to break. Pariah would be too kind a word among
those like her. She had once believed in the law--and much of her did
still. It had not been the arbitrary decree of a power-mad
royalty--though truthfully there were more than enough of those. The
order she had willfully violated was necessary, and its alternative
was chaos.
Portents
of death did not move her. She had shed a sea of blood without
remorse and would do so again if it became necessary. Chaos left
unchecked was another matter. With her own eyes she had witnessed the
cost of power without control and was sympathetic with her Queen on
that count, if no other.
It
was on that point that her resolve had weakened, but whether due to a
tendency toward self-justification or a newly discovered wisdom, she
could not say.
Was
chaos truly the enemy of order or merely a precursor to it, raw
material coaxed into life and beauty by the structure of law, all of
which were long-held values of good? What was order if not chaos
brought to rein, the power of pure possibility shaped by the will of
those daring enough to embrace it? Fire and water were champions of
destruction but wrought wonders when harnessed by might and vision.
If she were right, chaos was not to be feared as much as a lack of
imagination and the courage to act.
It
was a dangerous justification, and she knew it, as dangerous as the
Veil, where words like possibility meant nothing. At best, her
Queen would be furious. The woman's life, and the lives of those she
loved, were forfeit if she could not protect them, and that is what
brought her here on the last night of harvest.
The
tresses of her hair hung loosely around Cion's forest-green cloak,
catching fragments of light around her head in a broken halo.
Cionaodh, the man she sacrificed everything for, had made decisions
of his own and paid a dear price for them. They would both be hunted
for as long as they lived and they would live long if this night bore
its promised fruit.
All
began with a promise, though not to her Queen. Betrayer though she
was, oath-breaker could not be listed among her crimes. The Queen had
known her servant would always place the greatest value on her own
life and welfare, and believed that this simple motivation made her
predictable, pliable, and required no oath. That thought brought an
involuntary smile. It was Cion, a mere human, who had taught her that
life, like love, was not a jewel to be hoarded, but a flowing river
that widened and deepened and grew as it united with others. It stung
the remains of her pride that something so fleeting and fragile could
bind her as utterly as she had once tethered her prey.
The
first and hardest thing she had sacrificed was her pride. It had not
been burned away so much as starved into an impotent specter,
protesting weakly from within, after she had accepted a place among a
people she'd always considered beneath her; those who were, only a
few months before, little more than cattle. That pride lived on only
as a memory of her past, of the person she could become again if she
allowed it.
The
fall was painful but not without grace, and it changed her less than
she would have thought. Her dignity remained and would until the day
they tore it from her along with her beating heart, but she was not a
goddess, as many had believed--as she had almost come to believe
herself. She was a woman, and to her very great surprise, she
discovered it was enough.
Clearly,
she lacked the wisdom of a goddess, she reflected, considering she
had come to this place because of a rumor without the least assurance
she would meet the one she hoped to see. The conditions were right,
and now she waited, walking only to pass the time.
Bushes
crashed behind her as something vast charged through them. She did
not startle. Divine or not, she had power; woman or not, she would
not hesitate to wield all of its considerable might in her defense.
The
thing drew up behind her and stamped its hooves and finally, she
turned. Ivory and silver ornaments hung from the moss-covered antlers
of an enormous, black elk. On its back, several feet above the
woman's head, rode a little girl.
"What
is your purpose in my wood, demon?" came the voice of a
child--no, not a child, a fully grown woman, though small, with
brilliant, red hair, dressed in a short, white gown, and barefoot.
"I
have come to see the Fool," she answered.
The
girl cocked her head. "An assassin comes to this place, on this
night? Are you here as a challenger for the title?"
The
woman ignored the insult and took a step toward her, and more
crashing followed by heavy, padded footfalls, broke from the woods at
her back. This time she faced it. A huge barghest--what some called a
dire wolf and others a hellhound--loped into the glade but slid to a
stop in the fallen leaves as the girl put up her hand.
"Wait,
Galgo," she said serenely. "Let us hear her. There will be
time for you to play with your meal after."
The
woman turned again and spread her arms, again choosing to ignore the
gibe. "I seek asylum."
That
brought quick laughter from the girl, a musical, playful sound. "You
have convinced even me that you are, yourself, the queen of fools."
Then her eyes went wide and with a gasp she leaned forward, palms on
the broad back of the elk. "Does that make me the supplicant?
Oh, dear, this has become confusing."
"Do
not toy with me, forest child. Summon your master."
The
girl's taunt ended, but her teasing smile returned. "I have no
master."
A
rare moment of confusion darkened the tall woman's features. "You?"
The
girl inclined her head almost imperceptibly. "What brings you so
recklessly to this of all places? I am curious to hear what method of
insanity could court a demon to its death."
The
pale woman scoffed. "I am no more a demon than you are a child.
Your reputation suggests something--I would say, greater. If the
Queen knew what you were, she would--"
"She
would do little she has not already tried. I do not fear her,"
the girl cut across her sharply. "She is not my queen. The King
may have died long ago, but I serve him still. What do you want, Left
Hand?"
"I
hold that title no longer. Mab seeks my head."
The
news brought more laughter from the girl. "Oh, dear spirit, why
do you torment me?" Then, with more rancor than humor, "shall
I mourn for you, slayer? May she find your skull a suitable ornament
for her mantle." The woman bore the mockery in silence. When she
failed to give a response, the girl spoke again.
"Why
do you come? Tell me truthfully."
"I
have a son."
The
entire wood fell into a grave silence at her words. The girl became
suddenly, coldly serious.
"You
lie."
"He
is named Drustan ap Cionaodh. His father is a good, kind man, and
both their lives are forfeit. If you will not help me, then I ask
you, please help them."
"You
come to me with a 'please'? What can you possibly need that I can
provide?"
"Trickery
and deceit. You have hidden many from the courts. I have no talent
for subterfuge."
The
little red-haired girl barked a humorless laugh but said nothing.
They locked eyes, neither turning away though moments dragged on.
"How
can I trust you?" the girl asked finally. It was not an
unexpected question.
"I
have nothing to say on my behalf that you will accept except that I
come begging for the life of a changeling boy and a human man. Surely
that alone is evidence of my motives, but if you need further
proof . . ." The blonde woman held up a bronze
collar. "Do you recognize the symbol?"
The
torc was cast in a braid with two heads facing each other, one a wolf
and the other a bear, bracing a knotwork seal between them. The girl
stared at it with something close to shock.
"Dead?"
"It
belongs to my husband, Cionaodh, son of Aodh, son of Amorgen. A
bard."
"Not
a bard only if that is his. I knew Aodh, and the life of his son's
son holds nearly as little value to me as your own."
"That
is why my beloved sends this gift. His father and grandfather are
slain, along with their grove. He would not have come by this if even
one of them lived." She shook her head at the girl's unspoken
question. "Not at his hand, but by his betrayal."
"A
druid does not leave the Brotherhood."
"A
good man might."
The
diminutive figure slid off the side of her beast, dropping a dozen
feet to the ground, and took a step nearer.
"You
claim your man has betrayed the Brotherhood and you have betrayed the
Court, and this is your evidence? Your bloody, burned, and mutilated
corpses would be more convincing. And you say all of this is because
of your son?"
"It
began before. I was sent by the Queen to claim Cionaodh as answer for
his crime in the name of the grove. I . . . failed."
The
little girl's eyes softened for a moment, belying her next words. "I
should let you hang, Left Hand, for the pain you have caused."
"I
would have earned it many times over, but I told you, that title is
no longer mine. I can defend my family, but not forever. They need
succor, a place to hide until they are forgotten."
"Mab
has a long memory."
"I
am aware."
The
redheaded girl pondered, staring into the trees for a long time
before answering. "I require payment."
"You
what?"
"I
will help, but you deserve no charity. What do you offer?"
The
question appeared to stun the woman. "You never--the reports--"
She put a hand to her throat. "I lost all when I abandoned the
court, what is left for me to give?"
"I
will hide your son in the name of compassion, and your husband for
his torc. For you . . . we should kill you and be done. Perhaps Mab
will reward us," she speculated, her last words rich with
sarcasm.
As
though they had been waiting for that moment, two hulking Fomorians,
which the people called firbolgs, lumbered out of the shadows.
Though they moved slowly, the woman knew they were immensely strong
and notoriously difficult to harm. From her other side, a far
dearig, also known as a redcap, and a gray-skinned woman she
thought might be a kelpie or a hag circled behind her.
She
spared each of them only a glance. "I did not come here for a
fight, but I will not allow you to take my son from me, or me from my
son. I am not apologizing for my past, nor asking your forgiveness.
If you will help, then help. I will offer you whatever service I can
provide in exchange, along with whatever worldly wealth you require.
If you will not, then stand aside, or learn why the Queen chose me
among all her people to enforce her commands."
The
girl considered her words for several tense moments, then nodded with
no trace of either humor or fear. "Two years."
"What?"
"You
offered whatever service you can provide. Submit to serve under me
for two years, during which you will not see your husband or your
child. I will take them somewhere safe. If you convince me in that
time that you are reformed, I will reveal their location and you may
join them."
"I
cannot! I must--"
"You
want them hidden," the girl interrupted, "and I will see to
it that they remain so while you keep your oath. That is my price.
Accept it or leave this place at once."
The
woman's face darkened, her mouth tight and her eyes hard. The Fool
only stared back, without scorn or contempt, simply determined.
"Very
well," the cloaked woman finally replied with some effort. "I
accept your terms, but understand that if anything happens to my
husband or my child . . . "
"You
will kill me, naturally," the girl waved it off with her hand,
then she turned to the redcap and whispered something to him. He cast
one wicked grin at the woman and ran off through the woods.
"You
put the safety of my family in the hands of this far dearig and
presume to cast aspersions on me?"
"I
trust Ragnall with my life. I would not trust you with breakfast."
She looked back at the woman with an ironic smile that did not reach
her eyes. "You have two years to change my mind."
# # #
# # END # #
PROOF COPY Not for
distribution
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